The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 30, 1913, Page 1

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=i EVERY DIME DROPPED INTO THE HAND OF A CHORUS GIRL TOMORROW WILL TAKE ONE OF MOTHER RYTHER’S KIDDIES INTO THE COUNTRY “WEATHER FORECAST FOR SEATTLE AND VICINITY: SHOWERS TONIGHT, TUESDAY FAIR; MODERATE WESTERLY WINDS ‘ Sometimes we may learn more No strong character can be do ee Spa's cxrere than from his 2 veloped unless emphasis be laid upon Be ae aay good; be good for the thought of personal respon : Marion D. Shutter. something.— Thoreau. bility. THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS HOME SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1913 % CONE CENT oF chains oxo EDITION VOLUME 15 NO. 104 4 CONDUCTOR OF CAR IS ELECTROCUTED ee INDIAN IN CELL PENS $2,000 SHOW FREE! THATS PASSENGERS fy POEMS OF OLD-TIME | STARS PROGRAM FOR YOU SEE HIM GRAB All of the Big Stars of the “Hanky Panky” Show at the Moore Theatre— i Seven of Them—Will Sing All of Their Song Hits. The Dancers Will Dance and the Chorus Will Chorus. Incidentally, Pretty “Hanky Panky” Girls Will | Go Among You, Offering You an Opportunity to Help the Mother Ryther ; a Home for Children. The Star Wants to Give Her Sixty Little Kidlets Vacation. Come to the Show! There'll Be Some Big Doings at Fourth and) NMarry Winter's interest in the /and ‘ried to push the end of the ' ull-blooded Indian, who goes by the n ut wh aid to hav . . welfare of others cost him his life ®puttering coy ake oO! hd ' A full-bloode an, who g y a bu \ University. sidewalk. Like a thing alive {¢ k 8a number of aliases, is a prisoner at r trial " " { forg today. 5 ed and twisted, then sude | PH ing a check for $i5 on the Northern Banki Winter was a conductor on the q flew up and touched him om Morris, wh it is said, has been in prisor ur { “H. Clarence [Ree Unioe st tine. Aad car ves the hand oo PC gg RRR tiisle university, he is xpért per the first one out of the barn. As And he was dead Taylor,” is a rho all - A graduat f Carlisle university, he an exf pen it wae crossing the intersection of Fut modern medical science Ff man, bookkeeper and shorthand writer East Union and 27th st. the trolley doesn't give up to the man with the f He blames “white whisky” for his downfall ir pole flew off and broke a high scythe without a struggle these i voltage lighting wire. The wire fell days —— across the parking strip and side The motorman rushed back and BY FRED L.BOALT. | walk. called for a doctor and an ambue Lying in the gloomy duress. | “That is dangerous. It might kill lance. Under cold, stern Justice’ caress; 7 c ree went to raat 2 anaes * sorttal Mi ype diet Longing for the outside once more; each hour endless in its drawl; phone to notify headquarters to/ effort his Ife Thrice-mad phantasy, to heighten; send a wire crew, Winter under The brought into Feeling law's cold grasp a-tighten, |took to put it where no one could action. For an bour Winters Jungs as g he Fi ‘ouch 4 were ed to breathe in hope that Till an anguished life is deepened where the sad emotions fall While the few passengers, who the spark of life so often remaining ' 5 * eS * e ¥ - were out ear crowded to that in men shocked by electricity might e n rat] n hite wt y side of the car and looked on with be fanned into flame. 3 He, an In nk on white m isk | inguiattive he took a broom| Then the doctors gave up. J i by white fone to a schoe isle university—gover nec he starched linen collar. They filled his head with suct ‘Latin and Greek, mathematics, a smattering of the’ sciences, Then they turned him loose and a “bootle sold PHYSICIANS HOVER he might buy more whisky from the “bootleg fy: For this they put him in the penitentiary ds over! and made him work, work, work among & 7 ETTYSBURG HEAT And at night they locked him in a steel ca Indian desricens Up.was his nature to endure stoicall Though cere no sign tkhkte ehhh eee Gen. Bennett Young, commander in mistook this stoicism for sullen rebellion, and they Indian \* ETTYSBURG, June 30,-- ®,chief of the confederate vete: ards nfederate veterans, t night he wrote many beautiful letters in blank verse { Sisters,” * The = cial train bearing vet- % was escorted today to headquarters ; “ San ¢: nO ehh i Scaled a ‘ *® erans from the state of Wash- *|by a detachment of Blue and Gra @ poem bi he calls “Incarnation,” the first verse v iy ha already rea *® ington arrived today. All on # | vetera iy e is another: *® board were in good health and * Gen. Alfred Beers, co! > ers, commander it . t ‘reedom given, *® most of them preferred to ® Tis a thought to Freedom g % walk to the camp instead of | cief of the Grand Army of the Res *® riding in the autos provided. #|Dublic, is already on the ground. « ht incarceration-driven ; SEN ape. you with her backward to the old home-hearth a-glow; «And the-gloomy scene in turning: NR ee Leads the heart to anxious yearning. While you think stern Justice cruel that she will not let you go. * * * &# & BRR ER eRe EKER ER MRM, Only two hours a day will be dee GETTYSBURG, Pa., June 30.— voted to any set program, the Fully 30,000 veterans of the civil sicians fearing the veterans might war spent today living over again not be able to stand a longer strain, jthe terrific battle of 50 years ago The first formal function will take |when Gen. Meade and “Gen. Lee|place this afternoon when resi jturned their legions southward dents of Gettysburg will receive jfrom the hills of Gettysburg. About the survivors of Gen. Joe Wheeler's | 15,000 more will arrive tomorrow. cavalry and Buford’s union cavalé | The physicians attending the old rymen soldiers were apprehensive, but the Two veterans already have suc- | veterans all say {t is not nearly so|cumbed to the heat, and 50 others hot today as it was 50 years ago.|are prostrated. They let him go. - A “bootlegger” was waiting for him. Again he got drunk on white n's whisky And again he used his skill in penmanship to forge a check so that whisky from the “bootlegger.” And again he is in prison s * * * 8 # ight buy more long, narrow cage, it reinforced He sat in a steel cage in the county jail by a thick wire mesh. Next to him sat a pickpocket whispe th mesh to his| . Beyond the pickpocket was a murderer who sat { fear, while H Y h Bi ‘ Me kien on the cillar ‘akib: of the ‘test. sw an sobbed child » the we m-| ere You Are, the ig-Little sympathy, for it was » you w why the y ‘ t, too, sobbed, out ¢ g an’s skirt, and it, too, > ; Woman sobbed or why the man was in the cage, The woman was the child his child ‘ “My mother,” said the Indian, “bel | Cherokee. Both are « “They were good Paper Fuil of Good Things Some of the corking features on Inside pages of today’s issue BIG PROGRAM letbet omoietits chapters of Gouverneur Morris’ great story, to the Yakima tribe My father father and re i, to Sentinel lian must begun Saturday, “Captain England. to men FOR FREE SHOW | (730s ent atories, written by a miltary 's way 3 ‘ ; Ue GP Aebioad ac. whlte ced a4. whit expert, on the battle of Gettysburg. as San) tenee for a house of wox Ve dressed as w en 3 e ~ age 5—Uncle S: i wr, ve uf inae for» Rone of De eure ta ar TIME—2 o'clock Tuesday. the wee coun one Gives the housewife some aid in combatting omen lb nae es agen PLACE—Metropolitan Park, Fourth Page 5—The prize-winning letter from a married woman on ¢ Estee I wanted t low in the + white men The and University. “How To Be Happy Though Married.” ‘And I—because I wa ) : Th rm by ‘ Page 6—How they're cutting ten days off the ‘round-the-world flaw? There is a law against selling Pe, agen reet " REASON—Just for fun and charity.| traveling time by a railroad through the wilds of Canada, The white officers of the law wink at it. It my whisky a Max Rogers, Bobby North, Myrtle Gilbert and | Page 8&—The convict father and his four convict sons. Flo May will sing the song hit of the show, “Where the Edelweiss Is Blooming.” : | scresramensy nz ere com «60 NG MORE BETS —FEDERALS TAKE Florence Moore, “the funniest girl in the pry EE | BALL PARK WAR AVIATOR? been so easy. “Perhaps you can drink ky hefore you. Little by little their bodies became i jmmunity. It takes much whisky to make you drunk “Te is not so with the Indian. Nor the negro, for that matter “You came unasked among us—you white men. You took our land from us. You shut us up in reservations, and doled out to us rations of beef and blankets. “And because you let us live by your charity—we who had owned the land—and be-| cause you sent us to your schools, and taught us your book-wisdom, so that we came to You are a white man. Your fathers drank whisky | e to the poison. You rit th ur i 1eit ‘Circus Day: The “Sextet From Lucla,” the weirdest and — most comical ragtime parody of a grand opera classic ever Invented, will be rendered by Cla DOUGLAS, Ariz, June 30.—Fears Nine baseball “bookies,” as they |inat Didier Masson. the. Prenue ; | like the soft, easy life of those who live in houses—because you did these things you think] Smith, Florence Moore, Virginia Evans, Chric.|are charged, had thelr cases con-|aviator and soldier of fortuna Rik ‘we ought to be grateful to you.” tine Nielsen, Bobby North, Max Rogers and tinued this morning to July 10. been killed or seriously injured are For a long minute the Indian was silent | Harry Cooper, he of the tremendous tenor. This! Thoy were arrested Saturday af-|"tertained today in the rebel camp ; fone for me?” he asked at length in a dull m “He| is a scream—positively. We guarantee It. ligsuean Arba eahietiinan sates juaymas. Under fire while mak- “What has the white man don Ae : d tis aaa aca Florence Moore and Harry Cooper will sin: i anaaiarte ty: detour over the city, Masson's ar -we ot Id me must y Pp sing 4 : protector Your way is no’ old m n | Legate and McGill 1 mark ¢ roplane was seen to lurch and came to me posing as my the parody on “My Hero,” from “The Chocolat tn the rthand—and you *\ first arrests for “ga cend rapidly within the federal live in a house, and learn to read and write, to keep bo Soldier,” one of the hits of the show. a aa oe “ Nothing b trom must drink whisky.’ I believed him. I did these things a: A Aas mee Virginia Evans, alternate prima donna, will William Brack, who {s hi qfhien oe Dee bee “And the whisky poisoned me and made me mac And cause, while mad, I broke sing “Clounda Clo. Jhave had a “book” total The misery from heat, famine the white man’s law, I was put in a prison built by white men re is no surer way to Clay Smith, leading juvenile, will sing “The jin bets; A. H. MeCormick, who had and disease in the camps of both th Re man’s CS Re Dollar Bill’s the Flag That Rules the World.” $69.45 in his alleged “book;" J. R.yjarmies beggars description, . Bit gs Thdian than to Then Cooper will sing “On the Mi ippl,"|Gibson, Charles E. Strand, Al yatt-Fowells H “I would have died, I think—I prayed to the white men’s God t f they had not tha ame oorg: WRN Witch Ne bine “Pngcy| Welk, TT, Yomasaki, Harry Rhea fet me write in my cell. It is good to write one’s the ughts. Each night IT took my sorrow Panky” to a close, while the stars turkey trot.|thal, J. P. Kilmartin and W. M. |e} Sad and Wek who GE to my cell and, when I had written, 1 was forti ed to endure yet anotl ods 1. Shaw. All were released on bail. !ueetal. knowledge wi get.—Adv, “Writing is the one white mans g1 I prize Y hat ink men’s whisky, I used my poor skill to forge a check. For ‘he , fe aalivada aavat * i it) s—HARRY COOPER |sissipp!.” Imagine Florence Moore, est and best bad man. When sober heart is clean. But when drunk " » a ing ‘en |) 9. FLORENCE MOORE, the funn! girl on the stage, and | And the Chorus Girl ‘. aiaat 3.—MAX ROGERS. a “scream” in “Hanky Panky,” sing-} And the pretty “Hanky Panky” Pam a bea , woman and we were married. She was a student at] 4—MYRTLE GILBERT. ing and dancing “Circus Days” with| girls will go among you, and Eaenty Fars foley Os Tee Caslgtes” We shave: @ aon atid t r wife — her husband and partner, William whether she be a pretty, pert little the Haskell university GE Was Bhs ee iee ee ee ee ete seer eT will |,Something new and dazzling! |Montgomery. Imagine Max Rogers |pony, or a stunning, stately show and children live in ( homa ey love me, and stand by me, but they knc vat | will qnat's what The Star offers to- appearing before you with Bobby |girl, she will give yon an oppor- Ic be free.” morrow at 2 o'clock in that big North, another star, and those two/tunity to give what you can to the ever fone ” ay open alr show at Metropolitan park. pretty, dainty and charming Uttle | Ryther kiddies. \| “Time's up,” said the turnkey c ldicnaty! cose-and vanished when’ a door. opened (i teanl aiearaene cre heauttes, Flo May and Myrtle Gil-| If you Ike the show, give as you The Indian did not He simply ro arietoaig pi teal Pe ove |, In this show all the stars and all bert, singing “Where the Edelweiss are able. If you don’t like it, don’t Coupon No 2 And somewhere in the d ther door clangec ac, W ie ates NO) the chorus beauties of the musical/Is Blooming,” the big song hit of)give, But you'll give. re Ss lock rasped when 2 t comedy, “Hanky Panky,” which “Hanky Panky,” and DANCING be-| Several of the girls will also go ff eno a lock rasp * * * *” * scored such a glittering suceess at fore you on the platform! through the two office buildings | xi Bed ‘ the. Moore theatre last night, will There'll Be a Parade. facing the square, the windows of\[f Any four coupons clipped from ‘The So within the gloomy cures, give a performance for the benefit One of the most novel’ parades which look down on the scene of z Under cold, stern Justice’ caress; : lof Mother Ryther's Home for Child: ever seen in the streets of Seattle |the show, Star, consecutively numbered, when ,, Thiyking enrlless thoughts insentient; making flights in dying dreams. ren, sadly tn need of funds. ; i will precede the attalr. Alt: the | And ‘all this for charity ue " % ht t i i inking Think of it! ese high paid stars and a 6 chorus beauties e people of Seattle know abou! 7 :, Oh aie he y ot yell lla stars of musical comedy, getting will assemble at the Moore thentre| Mother Tiyther'n “home “for the presented at The Star office with 15 n my saddest, dis! ' 6 x64 P 500 and $600 a week, will appear! at 1 o'clock, Two big motor trucks, homeless little ones, They know, s To a life that lives by longing, which a deathless torture seems. tte In ene open air! Have you ever one containing a band and the other! because they have helped The cents, will entitle you to a 65-cent _ 7 heard anything life it? Has any containing tht full orchestra of 20 Star, time after time during the Bulgarians advanced, and, in a musical comedy company ever done’ pieces from the theatre, will be|past 10 years, keep that home |} pennant. A different pennant every W handt@hand encounter, routed anything like this? The cost of there. Twenty automobile dealers | going. : the Greeks at the point of the | such : bi” FS data dad would not be ie tpi 9 oH eS hae she Yen acatd aie ot Bothee boise. week. Pennants will be sent by mail bayo ° | eee J less than $2,000 their best and prettiest cars. jfor the benefit of the Ryther home. 7 rm . It is also reported that a bat- CLEVELAND, June 90.—Three and It's All Fred, narade will bea wondateiint walt hari abe nce i . fe. Cukess Bulgarien and | tie.te in Progress between Bul ltaborers were drowned and four| Imagine Harry Coopér, the groat-|tiNl you s¢e that, shaw! IN INDIA the agricultural de- if 5 cents ad: aes waaay Is ry progr garlan and Servian troops, others buried beneath tons of est agwidh cemedien in pe bei And the chorus oa pe opens bg aes Page ca is encl Leftera, according to dis- debris in the cavedn | of a sewer |2?pearing in the open air and lift.) We haven't mentions m_ yet, | Ing pri Y * ng losed. fear It ia not known | “Cale Dornick has carried a silver ing up that glorious tenor voice of but they'll be® there, too. The!cotton-seed off to the cactus to Be setts wane Ho d-cent piece for 30 years, waitin’ fer here tode It {* feared that the |his in some of his song hits from) hayghty Broadway show girls will|counteract the irritating effect of eer te stated “shat the it tor cormmand a@ premium. lentombed men also are dead, the show, Including “On the Mis-|all"he there, dressed in their new-|the thorns, 1 4 ‘

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