The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 28, 1912, Page 1

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TCH FOR PINK EXTRA, OUT RIGHT AFTER THE WOLGAST-RITCHIE FIGHT, WITH FULL ACCOUNT OF BATTLE, AND STORIES OF BIG FOOTBALL GAMES = The Sea seasons its Thanksgiving turkey to- ___THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPEI ID WEATHER IN EAST In New York city today howling blasts and swirling snow are hampering the car service, In Canton, N. Y., 26 inches of snow has” fallen, All the way from Texas to Georgia, and from there north to Canada, a heavy snow storm is proving a serious setback to the joys of Turkey day. In the Middle West and the Rocky mountain region the temperatures are also very low. ‘Transporta- balmy air, almost cloudless skies, Bis ideal temperature of about SO de- Fn 22 years, since the U S° Weather h street e been established here, the lion Turkey day has averaged 193 ‘and snow has been an unknown quan- The average temperature was 43 de- All over the Pacific coast, the same conditions exist tod VOL. 14, NO. 234 Picked Up on Beach at Los ngeles Overjoyed to Learn He Un ildhood Wire. ae Sweetheart. LES, Nov. 28—‘It's Mary! Oh, I knew it I never could have/married anyone else,” cried Ryan of San Diego. at the central police , when he was reunited with station here today recovered last Sunday from a mental lapse of four @ ee Flood of New York, he went to Arizona for to his story, during which time he had mar- to whom he had been engaged his health. He was told last he was a married man with two children, and since has waited in an agony of apprehension lest the phe married was not ti w York. _ The Ryans departed toget i ‘to himself lying on ‘Oceanside, and came to seek work. He a San Diego man who told him two children in could pot remem- San Diegan, thinking notified the po- for a weal- York, and was ¢n-| Miss Mary Flood. He members of the club to Phoenix, Ariz, im search of health 1908, and Ryan says nothing from the the train in New kissing his fiancee good De awoke at Oceanside. eae “he e se No? CAUSE Health Commis wer ¢ is protecting the wily attempts of to instal) heat in cars against our whee lay us open to the ets of tropical germs. we anticipate the of two elec Week and another tn ese everyone's wages ite will be raised the ‘of the year—annual event, USE we're all shopping Making th ¢ salesgiris & Congressman Hum- Is going to repudiate the and work hand In hand Progressives in Con- the Puget Sound Co. is going to cut out Cents graft for parlor Seats on the interurban . the meat trust has Pem busted and everyone can Mave turkey every day th be gitl he loved and had left her to celebrate Thanksgiving. RAH-RAHS CUT UP ON STREETS; DRAW CROWDS ‘The annual ear-bust was with us las: night. One thousand rab-rah boys lined up {n the “nightie” parade to adver- tise today’s football game between ashington and Pullman Two} | students appeared without clothes, | They wore barrels. The “pewrity | squad,” a tall young chap and a red-! |headed female “conatibule,” saw to lit, however, that the barrels were not abandoned at any th lk waa the biggest ight shirt” stunt ever perpetrated in Seattle. Besides the liberal variations In the “nightie” effects, there were several high cla: ‘take-off: One was ‘he display of the much- | advertised chimes. From a large) wooden affair, to represent the belfry tower on the campus, swung an odd assortment of cans, pans and tin pails. A sign proclaimed they | were “Our $12,000 chimes.” There were female impersonators | galore, a bazoo band and a Princess Fatima, who smoked a cigarette and danced to Oriental music. ‘The parade drew a monster crowd on the downtown streets. COIN FOR WIDOWS EXPLOSION VICTIMS WAUKEGAN, Ill, Nov. 28—Un- | | der the @ workingmen’s compen. | sation law, the families of the men | | killed in the explosion of the Corn Starch plant of the Corn Products | Co., here, will be compensated to the extent of $2,500 each, according | to announcement today. Did Your Landlord Ever Try This Out?) BELLINGHAM, Nov. 28.—A landiord has at last found a way of keeping his tenants happy and contented. C. I. Roth, owner of the Roth apart- ment house, has presented each of his families with a Thanks giving turkey. MyWAKLAND, Cal—Because H. H dumped {y into the bay, b fo raise it. He says no COFIA—Five English and Fr brought here from Of bribing sentries to get { PORTLAND, Or.—Announceme: home of Counciiman Wilhe Of the city council under t a ae SAN FRANCISCO.—1 siamme Decaiine the cat stole our N Who seeks divorce FAMd a phonograph concert wh |guards here at the island says to . Hart's $4,500 automobile was ut Capt. T. P. Whitelaw, a wrecker, car can hoodoo him. ench war correspondents under ar- Jamboll, Bulgaria, where they are nformation of military movements. nt of the visit of the stork to Im was officially made at the he heading “General Improve- him inthe face with his cat, ew Year's dinner,” confessed Mra. “And then he treated a woman to fle I was in the hospital.” NO FAT TURKEYS FOR PIL NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—| Another Mayflower—a May-/| flower of 1912, bigger and| more marvelous than our Pil-| grim fathers ever dreamed of} —has just steamed up, not to Plymouth Rock, but to Ellis! Island, the Pil-| grim fathers of today And these third class. pas- sengers of the Mauretania have arrived just in time to celebrate Thanksgiving How will they do it? Well, there is Patsy Hayes, late} of County Cork. Patsy in «big, fine, raw-boned Irish youth of 28, typical Pilgrim Father of 1912. In the great detention “pen” at) Ellis Island 1 found him with, sev eral hundred other immigrants. As he hove near, the strong smell of antiseptics seared the air~-for Uncle Samm sprays ail the twentieth) inet mental as well as physicat contary Pugrime. me collapse threatened him, Rev. Butt Patsy was walting at Bilis Island) geoger, 60, pastor of the German for his “girl.” She was coms Hethiehom church, Columbia City, from Hartford, where she has been |i. today lying in the Bonney-Watson working in the knitting mills all morgue, a suicide. those years since she and Patay His body was found id Lake parted “beck in old Ireland Washington yesterday afternoon, “And we were going to get marlite had been missing since last ried Thanksgiving day,” Patey told Thursday. In his coat pocket was me, ruefully, “but now it's likely sound @ bottle that contained chio- that we cannot. P'raps we'll be! poform having {t put it off til! Christmas.”|" geegor had been in fll health for “And why is that, Patsy?” two years, and was to have left for “Work—that’s all,” sald California, according to his phy: ust WORK! ,|sician’s instructions, last Friday. “You see,” he said, “a friend 0’) gaying he was going to visit his mine got me a job before | came| physician, a Turkish bath and here. I'm to be a motorman on the)the barber shop, Rev. Seeger left subway, and I'm to work on all hol! his house, 3750 Angeline st., last idays the first year—all except) Thursday afternoon, and never re- Christmas. turned, “It seems awfully funny to me.| When he failed In Ireland they tell us that all they do in America on Thanksgiving day is to eat turkey and have a good time. And now one of the DAY LET NO ONE GO TO HIS TOIL” Thus spoke the first of the ploneers to settle in New Eng land « 900 years ago, and thus was born the firet of our American nations! holidays where Thanksgiving. come grim Pathers of 1912 who came over here in the steerage of th Mauretania. TODAY Anton oman ie standing cz: MINISTER A BODY FO Driven to frenzy by the thought Patsy. to come ba OPEN UP NEW HOME Seaitle aerie, No. 1, the mother of the Fraternal Order of Baglea, is giving ite second annual house warming today at Bagles’ hall, Seventh av. and Pine st. The festl- val began at 2 o'clock and will last till midnight. Between 3 and 6 p, m., and 9 and 12 o'clock, there will be dancing. The entertainment in free to Eagles and their lady friends. me, says he: “ ‘Aw, pal, it’s all bluff. Why, turkey costs so much now that only millionaires can eat it. And besides, s he, ‘what would be the use of turkey, anyway? You wouldn't home to eat it, most likely, It's Getting so that these holidays ain't for the poor folke any more. One day's just like an- ek pe ii other to us.’ BELLINGHAM, Nov. 28.—Coun+ “Now, that seems queer to meé./efiman 8. BE. Mullin was arrested The girl—she'll feel awful.” today with a dozen others on the While Patsy is driving his rum-|charge of bootlegging, He gave a bling train through the subway,| bond of $200 in the superior court. Anton Sladovitch, too, will be “cel-| Dr. F. 8. Sandborg was charged ebrating’ his first Thanksgiving In| with abusing his prerogative by is- “the land of the free.” suing 36 prescriptions in one month, Anton {# another one of the Pil-|for straight whisky in each case, SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, NOVEMB A LESSON IN. KINDNESS ER 28, 1912.ONE CENT SOF TODAY; NO, INDEED! NO SURCEASE FROM TOIL; DON’T DO IT THAT WAY NOW the fierce white-heat ‘of a steel mill furnace just outside Pittsburg. = With @ iron shovel he ie hurl wetted coal on the flames before him—fiames that singe eacne tn and seem or * from his watering eyes. “And there he WILL etand— @oubiing and doubling himself Hi the whisties screech six neon he eate his THANKS ING DINNER, He eats {t from! may figure in a cu’ tin pall. a that pail he ! He will get three “chuck- sandwiches made with thick ON TRAING AND NEWS STANDS be (ON RIGHT) AND A P ILGRIM MOTHER WITH CHILD brown bread, dry and unbuttered. Also two apples and a piece of baker's mince pie. And tonight, when he goes home to hia little room in “the Polish quarter,” he will fall on bis hard Iittle béd, exhausted. Soon, how- he will get aecustomed to it, and when he comes home too tired at night, be will go to the saloon and drink tll he for his weart ness. And then, some morning— perhepe NEXT Thanksgiving, be is affray. But not THIS Thanksgiving. For Anton is still a clean country boy altogether too weary, and not drunk, jICIDE; IND IN LAKE Thursday night hie family notified the police and the sheriff's office, ' No one had seen him since Friday afternoon, when a friend saw him fon a car going in the direction of home. It is thought he had ed then against ending his . but again changed bis mind, fe yesterday afternoon the ater’s body was seen floating near the Dearborn st. shore by two boys, Charles Nuess and Arthur) @arison, They called A. Nash, 33rd wv. 8, and Dearborn st., who, not! the police, and the body was sRev, Seeger came to Seattle from Port Washington, Wis, about six years ago. He |g survived by his widow and four children, Blsie, Clara, Emil and Oscar, The funer- al ‘will be held Sunday from the par- 18 of the Bonney-Watson under- taking establishment SEATTLE EAGLES, CUPID HAS BIG RUSH _ THANKSGIVING DAY Everybody's doin’ it. Doin’ what? Getting married Thanksgiving day. “At least that’s what Cupid's right hewer on Profanity hill, Marriage License Clerk Gage, thought yes- terday. Forty-three couples took out marriage licenses during the day. The previous high record for one day was 38, Gage was present: ‘ed by one couple with a big, fat chicken, | FOOTBALL SCORES, EASTERN GAMES At Providence — Carlisle 32, Brown 0. ~~ IKILLS HUSBAND — OF HIS FRIEN NAPA, Cal, Nov, 28.—Because he objected to the attentions of Chris Carey to his wife, Fred Neuenschwander followed the pair as they went buggy riding, en-| gaged in a fight with Carey, and, | as a result, is bere today, with | bullet through his head. A posse is on the trail of the slayer, SANE ANSWERS TO FOOLISH QUESTIONS How wai sound dore, that man hurt on Puget yesterday ?—Inquiring — Ina- He, , Was blinded by the dust and wot in the track offa fish race. } What this about ?—Historian, Tt about over, on / I lost my left arm in a freight | wreck Can you tell e what will make it grow on ag Wingte. Yes, ub a mixture of red paint, ground glass and mutton tallow on the fingernails daily before break- fast. fialkan war all is tripe, mined ?—Hortense. Tripe is an amphibious insect with green freckles, which reaches its greatest perfection at the Greasy Spoon restaurant, on Wash ington st. What and where ts it A indy to whom I never have been Introduged, bat whom I meet on the street several times a » has smiled at me several times and spoken to me. If she speaks to me again, what shall | do?—Worrled It is not possible to answer this question without more details. Will “Worried” please describe what kind of a looking lady she is? how to prevent the of my neck from a! we tell the b er out.—H. J How do you wish it to grow—in? HOME_ EDITION tion is greatly demoralized AND HER MOTHER RYTHER KIDDIES HAVE REAL ‘FEED’ ——~" — 1Seven Turkeys, and — Cranberry Sauce, and Pies---Slathers of ’Em ---and 65 Youngsters at Table. At the breakfast table t made a speech his morning Mother Ryther Ps am going to be very busy in the kitchen all morn- ing,” she said, “and I want you children to be good. Stay in the front part of the house into the dining room at all Chorus: “Yes’m!” There at Mother Ryther’s home. Enc ging, crawling hours that seer From the kitchen there wafted odors. or in the yard. Don't come Promise!” ensued hours of awful torture for the children liess hours of torment med century long. Appetizing odors, Drag- Delicious oders. _ And those kids were hungry 10 minutes after breakfast was finished. kids—on Thanksgiving Day Noses made sensitive by hunger sniffed the breeze. They interpret- ed the smells, The biggest and beat smell was TURKEY, browning in the hot ms. Seven turkeys, roasting and sizzling and crisping) all at once. Kids Reve! 'n Smells. Then there was the stuffing smell. redolent of spices. And the pastry smell. And the bread smell. And the fruit smells, And the vegetable smells, And the cranberry smell. | Each smell has its own delicious fragrance, its peculiar appeal it gripped and wrung little tum-tums. It made mouths water. Byes were wistful and longing. It was hard to! play, with those smell« teasing the The morning passed. It has to pass sooner or later. That thought alone sustained the kids, And DING-DONG! DING-DONG! Mother Ryther was ringing the dinner bell. Whoo: Balle and! bats were dropped. Dolls were! |. | then— flung away and left to lie upstde- | '* down, or any old way But at the door the rush was checked by the habit of orderly dis-/ cipline, and the kide—more than 50 of them, counting the bables— marched in, each to his or ter ap- pointed chair, Sixty Children at Table. Mother Ryther wiped h hands | on her apron and waited for abso- lute quiet. She was pretty tired al- ready, for it is hard work cooking for a family of 75, When the room was still she clos- ed her eyes and bowed her hea: And 60 kids wiggied in their chairs while grace was being said. Their eyes were glued on the door lead- It is always that way with ing to the kitehen. Presently it opened. And into the dining room marched 14 destitute mothers, smiling. They brought gastronomic marvels — turkey, brown and stuffed to bursting, bowls of steaming gravy, mounds of jelly, heaps of vegetables, slathers of cranberries, and--and—pieg and ples and ples. Leave them now. Your own din- ner is waiting. Will you have white meat? Or dark? Or a little of both? A second helping? Sure! Only remember that there's more to i dinner, A rice sh E=f48 fiver fe : : i785 it, Now cry st Star it to ‘em. for Sunday. my 3 7 i at =F i ¢ a 3 Ea % 8 $ : i anyhow. Name? Mine? Oh, never mind. Gotta be going now. So- tong.” The Star is in receipt of a letter signed by A. R. Gilpin. a money order for $13.25 for the Ryther home. It is contributed by the men of the Day Lumber Co.'s camp. The money order has been turned over to Mother Ryther to- gether with 50 cents givem by @ modest mah whose identity is not known in this office. ACREAGE AT BARGAIN PRICES Purchased at a reasonable price today, no invest- ment offers such inducements for future profits as acreage. The “back-to-the-soil” movement has just commenced, and as this movement gains impetus, so will the prices of acre age advance, The ad of Calhoun, Denny & Ewing, on page 3, in today’s Star, tells of some excellent buys. This firm handles many such excellent buys, and if you are in the market for acreage, it will pay you to talk with them. And if you are in the if you have anything to market for a want ad— buy, sell or exchange, it will pay you to place this want ad in The Star. Over 40,000 paid copres to Elliott 44 or Main 9400, daily. Phone your ads or call at the down town office at 229 Union st., with the Souvenir and Curio Shop.

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