The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 30, 1913, Page 4

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)

2 MOM OF TH SCTIPrs NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEV © of thy 2 Seattle, Was clams matter ity, ae per Fi 80, your 08.98 ¢ Main ® rprron’s Norn tar Publishiag Co. the greatest 1 1 in Amerton the greatest Always the hand which co the purse has been Ln mllltary the power behind the throne | e three days’ bat In our day the center of gover nment has been, not in Washington, but in Wall st e st 1 The Day Before the Battle Wilson to the people through congress to make war on the| ays Miltary ewer private monopoly of credit is well ti ed, Morgan, the m ney |. Tae hod chased a. Pato czar, is dead, and no equally Y Jing successor heads} mac with the Confederate the yney trust. On the other hand, the plain folks have/army ear in June to threat in Wilson a leader who is capable, courageous and sincere.|en Philadelphia, Baltimore and shingto: ore So now, of all times, is the just e to fight out to a| Washington, in order to fur . ; " ther the efforts of the agents finish the issue—shall Wall st. or Washington be the na of his government in Europe tional headquarters? Shall the money trust or Uncle Sam/to obtain recognition of the i | Confede be cock of the walk? Confederacy ) i { . , | Lee also felt that carrying the Many fellows will try to confuse this issue by a mess Of | wa Se the aauaees Cen Cannas details about the currency bill. Don’t be fooled. Details civing the peaceful farmers of fixed . light of experience, if the first one| Pennsylvania a taste of treatment can be fixed up in the light of ex; oe lenat had n the portion of thone doesn't fir Rut there can never be a successfnl working of | living south of the Potomac for ‘two years—would strengthen the growing demand for peace tn the North and possibly bring the war }to a favorable end. Sends Four Corps there has been a clear decision of American institutions this main question Therefore, our advice is to stand by Wilson. You've got a president at last who is really anxious to! Ho sent his four army corps H ;, ti the North with the idea of do the big jobs. . |xetting as far as possible before Follow his lead. Advise your congressman. Jho had to give battle and at the ; same time maintain his commun LETS MOVE THE CAPITAL BACK TO fiiioos Stuart, with the cavalry WASHINGTON. jcorps, took one route, Ewell was ; : Jwent to Car and Longstreet <4 and Hill toward Chamber . » was placed tn nd Let’s Not Overdo This Baby Business » Union 7, June, 28, suc, ing Hooker. The yO i Poton was follow Lee's H Thi ng o ng careful of th by cro’ of course. nta to the North and was E This thing « f bei ig care f the baby er p is cou ; sea ead oath the a a good idea, a fine, big and bully idea; but, like all good ee ata | Lee Chooses Battlefield . ideas, it can be overt to give battle! | 4 For instance, here comes a writer in the Cosmopolitan | cheemmnatameen i yon new studi neredity which, in effect, says If either com it with a story on new studies in |b SE a hag whe | i to the young man tysbure as ttle, which “It's mot enough for you to exchange health certificates with the ¢ only gir! in all the world and to assure her that life without her would be an a izing blank. If you want to make sure that your part of the next generation is to be sound in wind and limb, you must know “That none of her granddads or great-granddads or ancestors on ee the maternal side back at least three generations had fit bad lung ‘or other serious social diseases; also that their tempers were even, their sense of humor in working order and thelr livers so well regulated that life for them was one grand, sweet song. “For, unless the ancestors of both yourself and HER can come through with an Al, blue-ribbon rating, there'll always be the poss! bility that some Inherited kink in the germ plasm will skip a few of years and suddenly break out in one or more of your children.” Far be it from us to make light of good ancestry. But marriage fot the average chap, what with high prices, eugenics and the feminist revolt, is hard enough now, without having it further complicated with the necessity for prolonged g ; logical research. In other words, there has to be a starting point in th is| effort to improve the baby crop; and why put it so far back Guess we can have a pretty fine lot of improvement by beginning NOW and letting the dead past bury its dead Don’t you think so? 7 The trouble is, if the bars are put too high, some of us may feel scared of the jump, and that wouldn’t help matters| a bit. on The army « in three ate corps, coming In two f nea lord Ballyrot, Steg Woodrow Wilson is brighter than Mr. Taft. Woodrow] agrees with William that the exemption from prosecu of labor unions and farmers’ organizations the Sh man anti-trust act is “unjustifiable in character and p but he signs the sundry civil appropriation bill whict vetoed because of that exemptory clause. But Woodrow assures the count tse the $300,000 prosecution fund named in the bill wi embarrass the department of justice in enforcing against labor and farmer organizations. Taft was, perhaps, too dull to see that to prosecuting Standard, Tobacco, Sugar and could be turned to prosecuting farmers and labor less of sundry civil appropriations under that not} the law other trusts men, regard-| Having finished my repast tn a dining room, you know, I © and requested of the waiter that he regain my hat and my walk Sound Policy ng stick fellow summoned lor Secretary Lane! e sounds m different.|a boy in uniform and addressed aa Good for S Lane! H 1 diff id 4 Pe He discovers that of Uncle Sam’s 1,200,000 acres of irrigable penta — a : i! an a ey, kid, his gen wan land, about half is in the hands o ulators, and he an-!14 and his lumber. Go over to 4 nounces that if anybody gets special consideration, it is going |the eoattree and off the "fruit until you come and he|stove toque and a ross A Kas to be the fellow who is actually farming the land, yellow swagger Proposes to reduce all present building payments. mast. Don't worry, Mister, The} ra aa ne pay kid'll fetch your freak kelly and| Uncle Sam, in much of his reclamation work, has been | your groper making money for speculators, rather than making it easy| My word! | | | for farmers to establish homes, and Lane's policy of encour-| Aaa So It Would, Too. aging the latter is all right | Lane seems to be one secretary of the interior who can| distinguish between the how! of a wolf and the bleat of a sheep. So hot back East that the editors are commenting on the people who are dead and happy. All except Cincinnati editors. They know, too well, too well, that there's no pos- sible relief for dead Cincinnatians over there. The reactionaries needn’t worry about Senator Poin-| dexter. His vote will not sustain the Payne-Aldrich tariff. | It was Senator Jones, it may be remembered, who voted for the robber tariff and championed Lorimer. He helped her tn her hobbled skirt. They were to seo a drama new. Oklahoma News man, chirping with hope of a strike of grad on a pend cas oil and gas near his town, says it will be “a merry day for| “It will be all off If you do.” rich man, poor man, beggar man, thief? That’s what we eee call a large day. Senator Boise Penrose says he is a Some like the old boy when he sat under the tree talking with Eve about that apple. The pulsating question now is: What will Judge Hum-|" phries do with the four flags in his court room dusty vaca- tion? More than half of the children of the U. ‘schooled in the one-room country school house. Only one more day before the Judges’ vacation sched- ule officially begins. Hip, hip, hooray! "Reno isn't in it when King county judges hit the high| ton ine b _ gear on the Saturday before vacation, And to her he did « “LT haven't seen much “The Chinese made noodles before man made recorded OH! Mabel are being All of this lovely day.” “Tt don't my fault,” she replied. “Ma made me dress this way,” Blight, city water, 4 blocks THE STAR-—MONDAY, JUNE 30, THE SEATTLE STAR THE STORY OF GETTYSBURG TOLD BY MILITARY EXPERT; WHAT LITTLE ROUND TOP 1913, eT Junzag HAPPENED WHEN GEN. LEE STARTED ox eh Sao OF THE NORTH BF ¢ APHILL JULY I SMS amos c Tony ML LoUGyBy RUE AP Wie Jury ZAy Sém, ey 14 Rice UNION LINE JUN S = - Eiphe & a> ee “te, Sa ~ eh. —— ILADELPHIA ® READING, RY bereeree WOLF HILL BLACK LINE THUS qm SHOWS UNION TROOPS WHITE LINE THUS Coa SHOWS CONFEDERATE TROOPS Clip this map and save it for reference. Then as understand the significa strung out along what was prac-/Confederates were tieally a single route. Kilpatrick's the north and we cavairy corps was abead of the troops from the no east main body division Ciipatr Lee's Battie Plans car « It was probably part of Lee's , c 1d hurl bis entire force at each section of Meade's army as {t can 1p, which would vastly Increase to the north Kilpatr tek his chances of beating It ford’s division into Gettsybure There wo have the situation as where he arrived June 30 On it was before June 30. The Con- the same day Reynolds’ first corps federate forces numbered 73,000 of the Army of the Potomac arriv men and the Union army had &2, ed there. 000 men. Curtously enough, the r battlefields have offered op A New York justice bas decided | ne Why do such simple t ts not slander to call a a skin questi jonas have to go to court? Miedirected energy A baldheaded man headed to make his hair grow . . A 70-yearold Scotaman who won| $250,000 on the Caleutta derby the} “It's come too | ¢ understand It, the old | man meant he had only a few years | « ther day, sald sadly, lal A left in which he could hang on to { But he may have meant It was| too late for him to learn how to/ spend It. eee Hurrah for Father! Marked tn its appointments! with beautiful William Calvert Barnard was solem nized this morning at 9:30 o'cloc The bride was given in marriage by | her father, whose girlish beauty was] never more striking than in her pure white gown c st charmeuse, fashior y entraine and slightly the neck.—-Norwalk, O., Journal eee “L firmly believe that Lam on my | the going bare of pronounced most | vw at] —=—LAUGH AND GROW FAT=— (FD LIKE TO, BUTS | | | | t. | k way to penitentiary,” says George W. Perkins. We wish we| Dance at Dream maha could be as optimistic about |———— ee me George's destination as he is. | eee | Flipper, the Foot-Man | Don't ‘or with your feet Have! them looked after, ©. F. Flipper,/ chiropodist.—-Advertisement in Tal | !ahasse *, Fla. Democrat. Please tell mo whether or not chicken ts an animal. A says it | B says it ie not. Who ts right? M. L. A chicken, as everybody should just know, is a nut. It has a shell, as the walnut, hickorynut and grap: nut have. AMUSEMENTS SEATTLE THEATRE Phone Main 43 Tonight—All Week “THE SHORT CUT” POPULAR PRICES Pantages Theatre “Unequaled Vandevilie Means Pantages Vaudeville” Today and All Week EMMA CARUS World's Greatest Singing Comedienne Other Big Acts. 10° and 260. onthly For a $250 Lot ‘15 minute car ride, city from the car, level cleared resdy for building. “CHEAP Dental Work Is CHEAP Dentistry” When you purchase a set of our True-to-Nature Teeth you are get ting value for your money. The may not be the cheapest, but they are the best teeth obtainable. A lot of artificial teeth make your mouth feel as full as the band mas ter at a German plonic. You want to soream, but you can't, True-to Nature Teeth are lght and cool and good looking, and do not drop and embarrass you every time you meet a friend Beautiful Sets at $5, $10 and $15 per set, according to material used Boston Dentists 1420-22 Becond Avenue. Opposite Bon Marche. In present location 11 years AT THE Angeles Cafe Our 28 R First Avenve Dinner you read the series of articles on the great battle in The Star this week, you will be able to determined the result. nce of the various moves that natural cond!-|left had a fafrly good field from) visitor to itmagine the titante strength of ar-| which to operate his troops struggle that took place there 60 tlle that on The battlefi today, with prac-| years ago. which irg wan tiea 7 aphical changes a fought since the day ‘troop ~ met, is a (in tomorrow’ Star will be told There were heights on which to beautiful spot a ies is easy for the} the story of the first Gay's batting bei \. O - - artillery and ridges from the of which th infantry could t of heavy The confit was a continuc struggle fc » possession of the May Manton Patterns heights, w forces most The str more on the is ra of emt s with high ground between here Union Army Formed line of hills curves to the Learn to east at northern end. Culp’s| [hill forms the eastern extremity, and the line curves from there around through Cemetery hill,! then straight along Cemetery | \ridge to Little Round Top, and then to Big Round Top, which | formes the southern extremity. The| |two hills at the extremities of the! line are the highest | It was on this curved Hne that | Howard formed the Unioa army a it had on driven in by t Sivisions of Ewell and Hill, And { tage of them was here that Meade vanced corps when he the morning of July 2 | Confederates on Offensive | The occupation of the best post |tlon for defense by Howard left! the Confederate forces no choice | but to adopt the offensive. Semi nary ridge offered Lee a fine base ot operations for the right and cen. ter of his line, while Ewell on the IN EDITOR’S found his ai came up on| are well worth $1.50. Special, a yard All-Wool reds, Mixed Suitings. values, a yard | extra weight | A Kick From a Grower line stripes, 50 Editor The Star: 1 am not much | inches wide, Extra of a hand to rush Into print, but it value, a yard— occurs to me that you might be of great service to producers in the }matter of sulpping to commission | ho 1ne8 | It is usual and understood that a/ “postal” notice is mailed on the day | jof sale, and, with products that can | | “hold over, received.” ! Some houses protest that this {s/ done in regular order, But the writ- er can show data that {t fs not done with any degree of regularity, and | occasionally not at all There may be some good reasons | for it, but you will see at once that deferred notice {s not in the Inter-| est of the growers. Yours very | truly, J. W. WILKI » Port Blakeley, Wasb., R. bolts . colors, per 6-yard bolt .. per set of three Other Collar Support: per dozen Silk Thread, ors (100-yard spools) Sexual Education Editor The Star: I read in your Saturday's issue an editorial article entitled, “What Is Your Plan?” to| those of us who look upon humanity | in general as co-brothers and sisters | in our Lord and co-heirs of that home for which we were destined when we Were created by our heav-| enly Father. Nothing is more pleas-| ing to read than the endeavor of a sincere editor to help his brothers | and sisters In solving the most vital problem of the age. Statesmen throughout the world are grappling with this question, France has framed many bills and made laws for this purpose, Many of our own states are endeavoring to attain per- fection of laws for our schools. A board of health physician at al public gathering in Reno, Nev,, an-| nounced, a while ago, that there | were over 100 cases of venereal dis eases among the little school ehil-|f dren, Nothing would sober up the | people quicker than good, careful selentific investigation | The people have been kept in ig-| eners, te rae 50c Chicken cccaual 11 @ m, Are ted In horance by not educating the little & ones, 6© much so, that today, If you | will ask 100 men picked at random | “Who made you, and {f God made! you, what did He make you for?”| with few exceptions the common | answer would be, “Darned if I know.” ‘With best mines beg to remain, yours igri JOUN KURNTZ, Gives instant relief. Gutle: TAquid Tooth Biller, All draggis 260,—Adv, ANTON & “The Economy Store” Second Av., Bet. Spring and Seneca Sts. of a Lower Cost of Living | By shopping at this—Seattle’s greatest “Economy —the store of little prices. cessful home management lies in economical buying. Here is where this store can help you. small margin of profit, we are quoting prices every day that mark distinct savings for women who take advan- Are you profiting by these savings? ] Fashionable Cream Serges All-Wool 54-Inch Crea mand at present for ladies’ suits and coats. These pias: All-Wool 56-Inch Cream Diagonal Serge especially a in making lactes’ tailored coats. An 36-Inch Serges in navy, tans, graye and black. an extensive showing of the new Extra All-Wool Novelty Cre; 3° brown, tan an grounds, with fine white hair. Little Things at Little Prices Skirt Braid, per 5-yard Scalloped Finishing Braid in all Combined .. “Komfy” Collar Supports, in many ‘col- The Koh--nor Dress Fast- 1 dozen on a card... The Diraco Lustre Cotton in many colors, a spool... The perfect figures you see on the stage, room and at the ball are due to correct corseting. NOON Co. [2 Solve the Proble ef i Half of the solution. of suc- Selling on a Main Floor. rges of medium weight are tn great de Our price, a yard Also Sultings in Copenhagen Malin Floor, 5c | Kleinert's Brassieres Dress Shields and tee tweens iD Garment and Hosiery | Driers ... | Twine Shopping Bags, c So, 65c, 500, 850 5 10c| 5c 10c 3c Watte Pearl Buttons, per dozen . Fancy Pearl No ed rae dozen..., 5c ncy Crochet Alco self-heating Curl- ing Irons .. : .00 in the drawing. KABO “The Live Model Corset” is the favorite with women who have to be sure that their figures are right. These corsets, fashioned and fitted on live models, must be right. We invite you to see the splendid ne of Kabo models row on display tn our Third Floor Corset Department, Among them are to be found the fol lowing numbers. Please bear in mind that there are many others, Style No. 1—Is a model for the average fig ure, medium bust and extra long skirt. The matertal is a good grade of coutil, trimmed with lace. Four hose supporters attached. Price $1.00 Style No. 2—Is designed for the medium full figure, low bust, extremely long over the hips, duplex side steels, A good, de- pendable grade of couti! is the material, which fs finished in a pretty lace trimm! Six gen cry) supporters are sttachet, extra hook and eye below olas; Price enn $2008 Style No. 8—This inva chic Httle model for slight figures, made of extra quality coutil, trimmed with lace and satin ribbon, Low bust and long skirt, with three patrs of pare supporters attached. rice

Other pages from this issue: