The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 1, 1913, Page 1

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, peory Dallct on the ine tap t propositions that come up Tuesday for the people's de yesterday. The ballot this year is the ‘Mazest one Seattle voters have ever had to tussle ait Aude fon is printe on page 6 ay. ¢ Star's recommendations on the eleven charter amendments were te from the selection of three councilmen, there are exactly twenty questions to be voted upon, and some of e pea intricate propositions. Save The Star’ i , I q are 8 advisory ballot; it will help you to mark your official ballot the way you want it. \ RAIN t TGHT AND &St DAY; INCRHABING BOUTHP Ca TERLY WIN DE ° JEALTHOGRAM ‘ « DAILY t 2 WHAT WOULD YOU HAVE Good ventilation Is the speed bess in the DO ? the school room and the office. Get the A . NE - BH thermometer habit Don't let’ the Supposing you fall in love with an unknown rattire go above 68, High temperatures girl you see on the street car! What can you ‘are harmful. Cool air is the essence of good THE es a - do? How can you speak to her? That's what ventitation. ; ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE HOME EDITION Cynthia Grey is asked today, Page 6. VOL, 15. NO. 2. SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 1913. QNE CENT ¢Xttainyaye, . ce Looking up! Snapshot photographs by — taken for The Star. Certainly! It’s the forty-two-story L. C. Smith building that’s doing it. tom ——— sca alttacall Paraiy * hat — ideas naiicainaaillll The till look The novelty of the big building basn't worn off 1 leas ,. Young, old, tall, short and every kind, they stop to gaze up at MOST POPULAR OF = Jthe tower he 42story Smith buliding ACTRESSES--WHO? The snapshot re taken on the triangle across the street. Most] ms he subj re so interested ip the building that they did not} ~ ¢ c camera, Out 0 people that crossed the! orth end of 1 © miaw ‘ooked up at the tower, | In t re a th results from ti ing the bead back and Fi There has been so much piffle, so much holier-than-thou bunk peddled from| aaing aight up into the @ir?” asks the policeman on the} bench by berobed men called judges that The Star is glad to give especial Therein, and if it's as bedves 4iMeenas: t's awte e \ inence to the plain, human talk made by Judge Everett Smith yesterday in| Torticollis (from L. tortus, twisted, and collum, neck), wryneck; | My LW.W ti 4 contracted state of the cervical muscles, producing twisting of the | : . injunction case. neck and an unnatural position of the head | ‘ There are judges on the bench, probably right here in Seattle, who, in Tadue| No fatalition have been reported wa Yet, but, according to the pottee-| Smith’s place, would have shown injureddignity instead of horse sense. ‘ : eae se Pea Sates” ee » Judge Smith did what few judges have done. He looked beyond the mere === = eee Tega! technicalities in the case. He interpreted the controversy in terms of human | rights. He did more. He looked forward to the probable consequences of his ON GAY Gus BOOM | | decision. ener ; ; ; a Ph ‘ 5 hex 2 He had brains enough not to clap a score or more of men into jail and Sess! itip Graham, the footed, ran to the box. Neighbors : ae 4 * na a seh grandson of O. K. Graham, night|5@¥ him leave the box and rum pitate a senseless, expensive business-demoralizing conflict, such as brain- |watchman at the sawmill of the |Pack in the direction of the fire, public officials brought upon San Diego a year ago. | |Harber Island Lumber company, | His, Was the last seen of ime | ben the boy was found to be Seattle’s business men owe Judge Smith a debt of gratitude far greater | ee was totally destroyed by|missing, little anxiety was felt for early is morning, is believed his safety In the belief that he had ‘Bhat of the srikers. His decision was for the COMMON GOOD OF SEATTLE. IN N te have perished in the flames af-|gone to the ‘home. of other telae ; iin - i }ter having gone in his bare feet! tives here in town Inquiry today, hae block to turn in the alarm. | however, reves no trace of him, jozen men are today search-|His grandfather thinks he was im BACHELOR GIRL Wieited trate taaeed wire, ing the ruins for the body of the|the sawmill when the roof fell in. GETS MARRIED | |, SGTON, March 1—-With! BREMERTON, March 1—With boy. B he arrival of the fireboat { * ct Wilson slated t0 arlene navy anal tn ts After unsuce y attempting} Duwamish, which was on the j » final furbelowe in ber [moet fest the boom to the blaze discovered in|scene within 12 minutes after the ; i ing of guns, with Governor Lister,| he boiler room at 1:45 this morn-|alarm had been turned in, the mill arest to Caval| savor Cotterill of Seattle, most of ng, Graham, 67 years old, ran to|proper was doomed, Efforts were Le men and crack the members of the legislature his home nea’ ‘ rousing the/directed in an attempt to save the « are arriving (nn erie and ne ungster, sen m to turn in the/dry kiln and what lumber was are fa equaling \Sleeetths alarm at fire box a block away. | piled in the yard. The fire was bed dra ores ° | comme . he boy puille his trousers | che fore the kiln had been ir ite prominent |Sommercial b : ver his night clothing, and, bare- | seriou aged nto th eee , |the world’s greates ke was| — wtte th dedicated Breme at noon to-| atten negoti s now on at gro Wer Oregon was coremc y docked. | the Pacific's tes Tele me and the otel upon bi The dock we lig ‘teleption fi 8 arrives Monday, will also be give a Who Is she? i ft b hea: : , hc ane | We'll tell you this much. She Cc ; | | Maorees | CALLED A FRAMEUP , pp elmer ere Ms DOLL . t a j lar actress in the United States. Ae HIN TEA ; 14 riiike Nttended. in|. That ought to make it easy e {IN penoee ar 1. ( 1 . 5 There isn't going to be any Old sour doughs, who know Alas-| located so far, most of which : lery,. thelr. tinwess | ORO i a prize in this contest. The Star [ka like a book, are chuckling in| have been staked by Indians. : Ps rs rte se eens ie just wonders how keen its read- | their sleev Jay at the stories of The strike was made last fall. : ’ vuttrage I ere are on recognizing familiar |a great £0 ike near Fort Wr ulways that way,” said @ “wei om New York wy Ha mle Pte Bang faces in print. Maybe you'll | gle h are being told here by| pioneer of the Klondike. “The out- r crv hggr pote ner i iadta Pron Chilberg of| 9uess it first thing off the bat. | Skook Jim, who was or rid neve ars of a strike " : jeader, at | of} Ses a a a ag ra Maybe, then, we'll tell you to when they put the “K” in Klondike the cl have been ; 1 er 7 er shal aibttana citinare cal others aleni .mecrew. who.ene te They say it is another attempt by There was a great rush to waid rst Dect pee ee b ; " She Or, maybe, if you prove dull, |the steamship companies to reap a when the thousands — ° r lech bo ino Pe bo The sitnaste Chemie’ tha. whks We'll print another picture of harvest by starting a rush to paid good money over to the . ogi y P 4 ge id prily - i nr) her, and give you another | Alaska ortation companies arrived, d q tf te 3 rahaaeger | Come on, now, who is she? ceded by a dispatch from Juneau] the tops, taken ¥ : i te. me: Seatingo au : | that he had the ¢ ona i There is lots of gold in Alaska HOLDS UP CAR bed fe” toge with C the ILE. modern var paia| HE WANTS $70,000,000 | The day he arrived here he| still undiscovered, and strikes will : . ft the modern , , . a need he would not the ade all the time, bt ne tran pester tn erase er and] FOR BEING TRAITOR |{ineunce’, he vould not tell the) be made all tha tims, but 1 Jey a 2 1 ry inaugura cheered and applauded A | conferred th George Carmack, | profit To run er every rush, = h ‘ PARIS March D i his old partner nference starting from this ance, is worse ‘ M an G. Fi ¢ \ = = = ‘ is due him from Jay rred yesterday her Car-| than foolish, but t re of gold ts bg f e e this morning at 1:3( ” = to that countr & the Japa In the meantime H. Molin- | heim transportation companie . 1 a by a lone bandit, masked | =< What’ s That? He Won’ t Pay nese-Russ var, Russian Baron} eaux, superintendent of road | , h a black handkerchief, and pre-| MISS FANNIE ROSE Yeor Til is in Geneva today,| construction in the Atlin die. | KLAMATH FALLS, March 1— 1 ting a pair of businesslike revol-| | PITTSBURG, Pa., March 1 preapring to is el ac] trict, arrived from the scene of This city today claims the dis . pproved Western fashion.|The Bache olub had cording to v h from that! the strike, which, he says, is 70 |tinction of having the younges' nl n the result of his enterprise he| hardly the shock city. It is stated both the Russian! miles east of the east end of ne k Fe n Fr es . : fe pe with $18 g tojcaused by the elope t and ma Any owe you mone The aft m, wh the land and Japanese government will in Tastin lake.” Me says that gx j°OD* COsmier <2 Oe See) ee ro € mpany as jage of its presider Miss Viola | Want to collect it right away lady capitulated vestigate the matter streams have been staked, and Siemens of the First Trust and Sav. " The man conducted his opera-|Brubach, when they learned that) oisy> Here's your pay,” she sald that about 400 claims have been gs Bank is not yet 20 years old. | ons in a brisk manner, which, to| Minn nnie Rose, 19 years old,| © re “and, for the love of heaven : 3 j the admiring eyes of the street car|and one of the most steadfast mem keting is the game that set out of my sight : | men, could have been acquired by|bers, and Merton Hughes, a news-| will turn the trick! F eiccee, belay ae sii’ Seach, SANE ANSWERS TO | |nothing but long practice. paper reporter, had quietly slipped So says J. H. Lawrence, un for his further sojourn in the FOOLISH QUESTIONS | off to Cumberland, Md., where| til recently janitor of an apart eighborhood, Lawrence as they were married. on Capitol Hil gured the lady that he would | 4 oy aaevahes * | a - Three week ago, when Miss and the landlad trouble her no more. He de [bending Mra, Ht fe Brubach was about to become Mrs apartment house disa parted with his $14.75 Spaghetti can be prevented from at S THREATENED Wilbert Ingram, Miss Rose tried to Lawrence left. He left |bending by inserting a fine silver| ECON( yM Y e : r dissuade the club's president r, without his pay, the wire through the center from one] th ar While Ing with her friend at| maintatning thet he [OUR PRECISE ARTIST end to the other. The wire should y 4 ae " House Bill No. 581, Intro- |the railroad station Miss Rose was would pay him when the be inserted when the spagh 8 ve oe cee duced by Phil Adame, of Kitti- |introduced to Mr. Hughe money was due, as per the f dry, but should it prove too britt! Household economy does not necessarily a ed tail to asics ; tae, & doeleetek whe hae ban original contract. But Law and break, dampen it and hold it] f ith th fs i ite in court pss working with the house organ rence. wanted his money then \tightly in a vise while pushing the| mean the doing away with the maid, or the | ization, contains a vicious joke gitating the matter, the ire Into position giving up of the social life because of the which would endanger the wed janitor chanced to see , incid 1 th : Scent fare maximum within the picketing job being done ’ | ricane how to make doug expenses incidental thereto. It consists of TRUST ity limits. by the I. W. W. on Union 4 < Perce es wba niobate wounal buying the same quality at the lowest price. The bill, as pointed out to: at, Jt gave tim @ bunch hol nd. surround them with| That h if ho h id and h day by Corporation Counsel Thin was Tuesday 41 F halve. ands ‘surround itham wit at housewife who has no maid and has gy rane Srace es = | Bradford, substitutes for the , ‘ante ar ie ree oe ribs Fi RY (i es SA ianibee All avenue’ tenn no social life, but who purchases extrav- cy ts nickel m, the right o | ne igges r fs sawrence appearec vefore e: 4 4 = ications 01 9 railway pe Mi te fix a the: Menioina) lenane the apartment house and took vg” opens Im, |the ho agantly, is no economist. Household econ- | ey Maat at ihe § he ma-| “just end reasonable rate noon today at the Lincol ol,| up the picketing, At 10:30 a 74 ay, ie | tailing omy mainly consists in the careful reading o b f the congrem reports of the éommittees of| policeman, summone@ by_ the b B} | “4 ' nt - fs in: Ti sion x which f | the charter revision amendment} indignant fandlady, took Law i KOR of the multitude of shopping offers in The money | ex are ex | CELL INSTEAD OF and the propositions ite come up rence- a petro Fegan 7 L wd , Pralt fe le ‘ hair a oy Star ads every evening. Watch the ads. acted h lolowed out for a vote next Tuesday, drawing ie has oO we and natur here a fa ow . he BRIDAL CHAMBER [i large representation of the mom.| where he pleases, #0 len, as <9 Take advantage of the bargain offers, and sok ership. The league will vote It he molests no one,” said the ve, » fie ott fot 6 tenn of : “you really practice true economy. And aoe DENVER, March 1.—Accus- |recommendations of — the ariou police captain, — Na fro n 0 dy hi Rar be to ed of the theft of a $250 ring |méasyres following therdiscussion.| At 6 o'lock Thursday morn | i} yee eK Dichee ane: ates the money saved this way would offset, in 4 Soun's on the eve of her wedding, + ing Lawrence in began hi ey, : one month, what you would pay for two, or _ T Mrs. Bee M@Intyre, of Colora VANCOUVER.—A contractor, W.| walk. At noon he took a few - ie: a PE ee 4 i - ’ ‘ orld | do Springep is in jail here to. |M. Darby, met death insw sewer] minutes off for lumghy and r je f desing: & wnall oollartoct. -W even three, maids. Try it for a few weeks. 4 70 r a| day. She has returned th on Kauffman av. Friday, when the| turned to hts at. = The ‘ fey l Nick and shovel and remove ; tonal Bank of New Yerk, and the| ring to her fiangg, A. I Davie, [supports Lave. way, letting elght| neighborhood enjoyed it. He .—-—_—________— the loose ea@th in a steam wheel Read every Star ad carefully. Wye ; National City Bank of New York | OF Gan Afenio tess \teet of dirt fall on him stuck it out until € delock in“ Ay ved by the spirit.” bart {

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