The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 4, 1913, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

RAIN TONIGHT AND BATURDAY; INCIWA UTHERLY WINDS, PROMATI Ire 1 1 ToONiGUr AND SATURDAY ENIE, meenie ned 1, PIDOLE, DIDDLE! The cat ar A Cateh @ co oner by the toe; The Judge wept: “Give me « Chuck him in jail? — let him got The county commieh eloped with je, meenie, minie, me But would not epend $7, the stingy old th val ssioners WERE In contempt, ys ” Aas ad ti, those (Rotten meter, and the last line doesn't even qv len't_ muc! money, anyhow.) y rhyme, but the meaning Is plain.) " THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE HOME EDITION VOL, 15—NO, 31 SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1913, ONE CENT Nitwettanbs te aattle, oo of Success, Coast’s Greatest Fishing Center 00 MILLION POUNDS OF SEA FOOD BROUGHT INTO THIS PORT IN YEAR The crabs and shrimps at the oysters smile, and fish will be handl 1 inefease of 1 Anacortes and from San Francisco for years in a more ot The sal feel grin at the salmon on the bar, per cent at less haphazard way, but now that the Grand Banks off ‘ is now er a. Eig ent of Pies thei Jing igang ge da Ean | The erection tt I st plants for fish | Newfoundland have been fished out, the Massachusetts le sa n pach ts a fish. It's a fish. It’s a fish ; i considered by th te astern pack cod men are flocking to Puget sound Sse id ep One es. Figure fion pow ts bey } There are far better cod fish in the Bering sea than r n at t C ther 1 es The val try to Seattle is $50,000,000 | have ever been caught on the Grand Banks, according to t of this port ers f ted out B. year | the vanguard of the men o' Gloucester, who have come here San Francisce t , ers | es for outfit ( ' f t ess of id This y« timated t 110,000 tons of fish | to seek new fields. Cod fishing has been going on out of | ting and } dic | t | en are effort to keey LY FOLK, [Fa] PACK COURT SIFFRAGETS | namite Railroad MASS MEETING TO ASK ACTION IN SPEED PERIL Residents of "University District Aroused Over Killing of Little Girl by Motorcyclist. Cee eet nm ne manly art today, as a re sult of witnessing a fast three round scrap between Sailors Tom Hirschfeld and Walter Jores on the deck of the battle ship Wyoming, during the naval maneuvers off Hampton Road bout very much, as did six cat ation and Train to|] ts members who also were Laundry Driver Af- present Avenge Mrs. Pank- ter His Wife’s Con- a REFUSE TOFREE |‘ [Deed Press Teased Wire By Press Leased Wire LONDON, Apri! 4 ST. PAUL, Minn. April En manipulated by Ortie Mc the police, and trampling down i, the American dyna t om Lew ‘ women and children, a mob stormed , militant suffragettes to . sae meret 5 the courtroom here today in a rush 7 — dynamited the railroad sta ‘a letter written for seats to witness the trial of Jering fire of sentl|Prof. H. K. Benson, of the chemi» at Oxted, in Surrey ‘ f tial Geeer 6 ho shot and motor speeder: try department of the university, The clock, set for 3 a m v : ree Pro mre Oley ne ares e circulated the petition and then found in the wreckage with ‘ : prican killed Clyde ee ng ae " red waited on Mayor Cotterill and Po ed ie : bei ot Kenna refused to re siteged etsie a) “4 Ole n : affec the ! Chief Bannick “speach ae Eme : or | lean A According to the chief, the gamelan lg a rears “= ie ; whole of the university district, Mans one ween hurt afte elas a rey egy " Paya - M Pow: é acs Green Lake and the Walling- ace epeniy ‘ x aan sera k ° ford district, having a popula- en “retaision for” tne , » . ; : us been tion of about 40,000, is patrolled ot ak thitince tae a r ; Again and by only seven men on a shift, a, agg aig i : : c has because the council has refused eer, Yestscsey. Some . pay : : f fir in the past two years to give ‘ life. As a result the ded that b i ‘ t ha ¢ r him any extra help }. ae He a 4 + rang 7 like According to university residents, Western and Midland Secs a ‘ ce m in the coun- the motorcycle as become ys today issued a general ” se . 2 A 80 great that the sidewalks g to the public, and sta . a ‘ say f little Dorothy West |are no longer safe extra guards about their 8!!! : , 4 a storm of pro-| George W. Dulin, the motop tunnels and tracks z bs : ho the city against cyclist who ran over the West girl, i. ; acy of the present laws released on $500 bail, pending tow Ue Raliroad Train SANE ANSWERS TO : ; The mass meeting tonight will ion of the coroner's jury | Press Leased Wire 2 ” . ; ss se |held at the branch public library in Mre. H. Stromberger, 2640 Bag meet. Eng. April. FOOLISH QUESTIONS A |the university district, 50th and 9th Pike st. miraculously escaped sere eee is ; : ; ay. N. E. Forty members of the ous injury when she was run ove? tN egeee geal : ; ahr i ; : faculty of the University of Wash-|by a motorcycle driven by F. Ay 7 , ; ington joined in the call for the, Tiornelon, at 14th and Madison ac ~ - iH re meeting. Prof. H. G. Byers and | yesterda E Barden wa * WOMEN MUSTN'T yinany silt races in this] STRADDLE HORSES Ms tear exviodter in Horne le are Today is Apple day ind-class carriage. Exar aurant was opened in under tt ted Con Yes, we know you have been reading that tomorrow is to be Apple showed the car had been sat ott ao an : ty ace tg dex day. It probably will be for you, as the governor has issued an edict | a pegs end fragments Of; nn thist—M. W jen cP. loka ekusant ae to that effect. But the governor has no jurisdiction over us and our powder canis were; 7°u ¢ et ay ag (a ea -arwiads ae friends, the girls who study domestic science at the city schools. To» a lesa the rietor has a chain of that the method of ding Tip to the Historians. restaurants, In which case the ex-|is not in ty with id _ planation ts easy pressed er time before A Caesar sold a consignment tox, and that in future pa las week to a dealer in ve wisdom te 7M. M. the United Veterans womea shall ed men have Iptick to the side saddle ~Redgranite (Wis.) Herald MARIE CAVAN By Fred L. Boalt | Marte Cavan was “made tn Amertoa” but "finished fn vermany | © wae born in a tenement on thé Bast Side of N York city about fhe time “Down Went | Meg ool bad passed the heyday of it# popularity and was being taken up by the hurdy-gurdies (one spaghetti power with a monkey auxiliary) which was about the only music the tenement-dwellers of the Fe, East Side eV worrd | Back to Pioneer Days After Dayton’s Flood — s first utterance Was a not ufmagieal wail, A Neopolitan’s burdy gurdy was wheezing in the | morrow will not be a school day, so the girlies cooked apple pies today, street seven stories below, and bis simian partner in discord was climbing the fire escape in quest of} And such apple pies, 2,000 of ‘em. pti | A wagon backed up to the front door and left The Star a case fres® Marte ai Koes the story, was tinh to cotneide with the last feapairing Rasp of the Bordy surdy from the school ovens. Prizes running all the way from a sack of flow? r Down Went Me aty! nd Marie's proud and hap ther declared, wi dean ” : , a 7 holed: the tawsboracuitel the lant line of the verse | to a box of spice, were distributed among the little cooks by Co). H. B, I > Hardt, who thinks he is an apple ple enthusiast. But say, for real gen- | 4 gested to Marie's father interes and brothers that she ported ple eaters, which are far more important to the ple ine | at oF donna, they would have greeted the n with loud guffaws of mirth-| qustry than mere enthusiasts, we respectfully present The Star's staff, t Girls, 8, here's to you and that greatest of all fruits—the apple, ‘ the official biographer, “Miss Cavan entered upon a business career | But you come first r lite way of paying that she got a job in a broker's office Her} a ta =Snee Sat bel t 1 SP did not oweve ev po eg “fre yuna tk "¢ a pay w ¢ © carried herdubeh tn a phoney music roll, She did not, } ver, chew gum. | ificial eye saved Job Owen from death at Shamokin. A rifle Reverting one ore to the polished and high falutin dictim of th her, “at that th Miss | bullet fired by an unknown hit the eye, but was tuned aside Ca Kht of % an artistic profession, as her advanced ideas coursed toward commercial : : get it don’t you? She played the-typewriter with technique and the loud pedal, and at the night class of the business college learned to compose lilting little melodies in shorthand which com- mer 4 John Smith, De Sir Your of the steenth inst. to hand, and beg to state,” and concluded fortissir with, “l am, Dear Sir, your obedient servant, etc.” AND ALL THAT TIME MARIE CAVAN BIDN'T KNOW SHE COULD SING! r ove ear ‘ ood mune ®Bhe heard the rumbiir r » and roar of th elevated trains. t wt x h ygurdiea She h 1 equalling babies, peevish women, angry men, | hoe ¢ ‘ 1 typewriters, the curt voice of her bald-headed employer giving dictation— | Tawar * eae one | Nearly Every Day in 1 ) t the commenuplace But th bh rapher {8 an artist Ile gives no warning hen came the turning point in herilife. She visited the opera for the first time in her life, and immediately decided to become a prima donna.” t { te weliew that Marie immediate decided to become a prima donna. licious discontent The Star Her own recollect eve t she was dazed and filled with a mysteriou | j @ lot of mone the dpera, She went on al rations for k to accomplish it.|f} | ; S fe reer Te The £ ent t one large dollar, It was “Tannhausser booming “Tannhausser 3 es feature is exclusive in d asked Ma then ab the “motif” of “Tannhausser he wouldnt have known what you The Star. No other pa- Y lieve that the bald-headed broker had trouble with his private secretary after that. She j per maintains a woma le iat « Vt help singing. And the popular songs of that day didn’t sound good to her any more. She 5 partment day in and day out, rimped and saved, and went to the opera again—and again ¥ A ‘ ng she announced to the assembled Cavans; “I'm going to take singing leasons. . I Burke, the charming | If you can imagirie how you would feel if your own daughter were to announce casually:. ‘I'm ee, young actress, whose spright going to Join the harem of the sultan of Zanzibar,” or, “i'm going to buy a@ balloon and go to the moon,’ ea of how Father and Mother Cavan and all the little Cavans felt when Marie sald y common — sense you have some agi Bit too: Her Clase teacher Harriet Ware, the composer. And Harriet Ware guessed right : ; Be nee Fg rth ‘a he nd a voice of wonderots promise, By and by Marie gave A bunch of swagger | yo t other feminine % \f ‘ ‘ farie nearly died with fright, but she didn’t show it marvelously, And} ae so enthusiastically aot amall chunk of mone « h, maybe, to erywhere, writes bo G 4 ud - . ent eo studied with ( She made that small chunk of money go @ long way.| * th H at home, b 8 : from their astonishment, had faith, and they ped all they Pri) ir nd ser ng and struggling, the m ul educa was eted | Then’ D Ge ythree Yearsayo, and he beamed all over bis face. And Mary Garden| _ _ paamnmrenietetl - * e ! the tenos And Dippel prepared a document, tu f lomal phrases, whieh | te All Formal en of Dayton Whose Homes Were Swept Away hen M ned it what d aL know that | among Labor Today, Side by Side With Their Husbands, as Did the Pioneer W i ontract t the @h Gran 1 Ope era Company, A SECRETARY OF ‘ ; J 5 Here i Picture of Mrs. B, #. Casey, Clad in Men's Garments, Hgjping Her Hue NOW SHE-RIDES8 AROUND IN A SPECIAL TRAIN, AND HAS A MAID, AND NM ~ ss of Seattle and Was y Wreckage of Their Home on Main et. She Also is Wearing He ‘Ceaster Bonnet,| HER OWN, AND OCCUPIES LU XURIOUS QUITES IN EXPENSIVE HOTELS. AND SHE GETS AN | her, Which Was Lost in the Ma@ Rush of Embarking off the Kitchen Réof in a Boa AWFUL PILE OF MONEY, JUST®FOR SINGING. 1 ln sing the gole of Mansel da “Hansel and Gretel” at the Moore theatre, Tomorrow ¢ noon Mart er Was High. .

Other pages from this issue: