The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 2, 1913, Page 4

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THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1913 MEMNEN OF THE sCRIPra NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS Telegraph News Bervies of the United Press Association Entered at the postoffion, Seattle, Wreh., ne second clase matter, Published by The Star Publishing Company every evening except Su! PHONES “*\ tire with Si aapanegs, sme By mall, Aatiy, one Ay mosth in RATES Fy tiers Sat se Peale STAR 0,000 Men Lay Dead or Badly _ Wounded After Second Day’s | My Word! WHAT THEY’RE DOING AT THE KING’S GARDEN PARTY IN LONDON | A: WILL DYSON, NOTED CARTOONIS MAKES A DRAWING OF THE SWELL EVENT FOR STAR This very across the Atlar at W or castle, King George Queen Mary of England will sit on their fs i! thrones and 3 400 persons will bend their knees to them , p ? Fi ht G tt sb F and go through all the DELIGHTS of being received by the i @ Me | ig on ettyspDur ielg king and queen of England at a garden party! ae hf, Me. 2 a) (Editor's Note—Fifty years ago today was fought the terrible | 7 Last evening, in her palatial mansion, the duchess of Marl c second day's battle of Gettysburg. The following graphic story of the | 4 Te boro entertained these viks in regal fashion YL ata on July 2, 1863, Is told epectally for the Star by a military 5 ( and fed them, with the aid of ackeys and to the notes ae ars ’ of the sweetest music that cc in London The morning of the second day of the battle dawned with Ms wate = me ved ag a ' } the two forces drawn up, tense and expectant, in rigid battle | rh ; Bless you, they are folks w believe that white sla ‘ery lines, Lee’s orders were for an attack on the union left as | _ is wrong and they ve come to Lor lon to talk about it—AND soon as possible At te ¢at with the king and essen het fab? Beta . t Sickles, in command at this point, expected such a move-| Bags 300 Gaenepe Gnd. peers abd sateamieh: ahd smoeete ment and advanced his troops from their position between Doub! dors of France, Russia, Ge ry, Austria-Hungary pain, Servi Cemetery Hill and Round Top to take the first shock of the encounter. Longstreet, commanding the confederate right, was to deliver the attack Sickles’ men needed time to complete their defenses on and rich women and dukes and wn princess of Sweden and the Italy and our own America lords and ladies, and the archbishop of Canterbury a citar Gee fe neeveee Whitk slavery amnane the ridge they had occupied. All the work of the night before child con ho af when ae a siybrin a ph deg nip had not availed to finish the great, than an hour, While the marks children who we in ¢ « hov o keep st s task, The men, knowing their sit-|manship of the confederate artil companies from deporting white ve victims and how to uation, prepared to throw every |lerymen s deadly and the losses ounce of their strength into resis jof the me biue something ter. © of the attack rif the thelr ground and) Hours passed and Longstreet | beat back the charging host jmade no me Then, late in the CAPTURE CULP’S HILL. afternoon, the confederates came One section of the ling was| forward. Longstreet threw his| pierced by Early's foree and a bat- strongest brigades to the front. |tery of artiller » captured. But | The extreme left of the line bore fresh troops drove out the inva-| the brunt of this first attack ders and recaptured some of the) SICKLE’S MEN STAND FIRM. |gune. The assault on Culp’s Hfll| A rocky eminence occupied by on the extreme right of the union| LIE RICHARD firney was the prize of which the line wi partially successful and | EWELL, WHO COMMANDED confederate eye reeted They a force under Johnson took ground | OF THE CONFEDERATE swarmed about tt, pouring in @ on the slope which they managed | VISIONS deadly fire from infantry and ar-|to hold all night }fighting found the ¢6 tMery Birney held his ground Just at sunset Hancock ordered | with the advantage. Round Top and little Round Top|a charge along the line from Cem-| But when the last gun wag were successively attacked by the} etery Hill to the south, and the con-/and the surgeons and surses men in gray. The advanced line federates who had been threaten-|over the field on thelr eased ing this position were driven back! mercy to the dead and the o are the “sweethea { white slaves, and h to stop white slavery and how to om “making |} h men w puni how “nice” wo prevent men in love” to the girls who work there AND Not a duchess or a noble lady or a ce” woman in! the bunch has ever talked to a “white slave” to find out what} REALLY DOES CAUSE WHITE SLAVERY, and not a man in the bunch, even if he has ever talked heart-to-heart with a white slave, will ever admit it | Fach day’s work at this conference winds up with a gar-| den party, or a dinner of a reception hese folks blame the steamship companies, and_ the cireus managers, and the traffickers ar eVERYBODY |} ELSE, BUT THEMSELVES! They look for all sorts of reasons but the real one—| nen Cc ea-shops, restaurants and bars fr } POVERTY! Sickles had thrown out p They'll, eat with kings ar queens ar millionaires and back. Back through a peach or with heavy losses to the positions | 40,000 of the men who had ; listen to fine music in wonderful gardens and never once will chard the federals wero driven to they had vacated to deliver the at-/to Gettysburg with the armies s the high ground t& the east, where | ta \gtrewn over the fleld dead or way ought to be 1¢ supreme reason to hold LEE KEEPS 'EM BUSY. |perately wounded. wounded, his thigh, There was no part of the field (Tomorrow — the bone was shattered and he was where the fighting was not dew f the third da borne from. the field, but ‘the |perate during the entire afternoon. jStory of the third day's troops he had commanded held the Lee attacked every one of the | including Pickett's fi eminences they had occupled the strong ponitions and kept the | charge.) night before troops occupying them so busy that | To the north two divisions of there was no chance for one more| VOLUNTARY one of them so much as suggest t found TO END POVERTY—which why a girl sells her body | “Not one of all these fine “gentlemen” and “ladies” will} recognize the fact that a girl must eat and that with many girls, about the only thing they have to sell that will bring | é ' id them enough to keep them alive are their bodies 3 «A ae RR | Fiwe corps. were hurled atlaorely pressed to get assistance | bankruptcy has been filed 3 First Feartess White Siave “Crusader” to Second F. W. 8. C. (in a gush of triumph, having Just been (Cemetery Hill after that union from another where the tide of United States district court by “ H ? introduced to two bishops, a sir and a viscount)—-Yes, dear, what | think is so perfectly sweet about th: stronghold had been made the tar-|battle had not mounted so bigh. R. Stevens, showing Mabilities | Have You a Sleeping Porch? } dreadful things that exist Is that one meets SUCH Poder ca int el Kgain the end. of the Gay's $1,757.00, and assets of 676 Ss Vf /tOria!.) Isn’t it strange that so many folks who have the time of} 3 their life camping out in midsummer, with no conveniences, | the plainest of food and only pine boughs for beds, nahh Buy your celebration requisites Thursday. Store will be closed all day Friday, the 4h, back to the cities and want every tomfool luxury they see?) How we envy the rugged guides who live close to nature| See the dis- MAY MANTON PATTERNS. PHONE MAIN 6038, the year through! How we say, in the ecstacy of the vaca-)| . i THE HUMAN S$1DE. play of tion’s first flush, that we wish we might stay in the forest or | If Styles Keep Up Their, Wh; Sure. | We saw a lord a lingering to hear Ladtes’ by the lake shore always! Merry Pace. | yen | agpdhy bebe foo ov yse New Sailors ANTON & ONDON 0 And then how fast we beat it back to the white lights as bs $rr ve He bane 3 penned sah by all stile ened " soon as the chill of autumn puts in its appearance AReo But ah, my lord was human in his 980, on the eee Fact is, we're just grown-up, capricious children, crazy — gaudy, regal clothe Third : |For as | gazed, his hand upraised, for the excitements of a change fh But there’s one good custom forcing its way into our! feverish Seattle life as a result of this yearly summertime | exodus to the out-of-doors—the sleeping porch The person who has once felt the tonic of sleeping in the| open, in the stillness of the forest, beneath the silent stars, may later resume with eagerness the great fun of the non- senses of the stuffy city, but he doesn't recur with satisfaction to the stifling atmosphere of the unventilated bedroom Thus far sleeping porches have been mostly reserved for the rich. The majority of expensive homes and swell apart-| mients now have them. And we don't regret that, for the “The Economy Stere’’— Second Ave, Bet. Spring end Seneca and blew his royal nose. | Fleer. My lord he went a fishing far, with | fy The Meee nee ee vaiey anal Thursday Will Bring Its Quota of Unusual Bargains i hangers on of courte; And yet they were like other men, ° ig He named bis new dog “Aero for all the titled batch u plane,” Were liars when they talked about | ur ’ e f And when his friends asked who made the biggest catch. why, Ho said, “'Tis most appropriate co in Skye No woman can attend this event tomorrow and not be- come an enthusiastic buyer. | This teaches us it matters not of i whom we write or when; w be d fi al », His native p $ Hae enervated inmates of these abodes surely need them ah ay But every home ought to have its sleeping porch. Where | nna eee “ment There will be hosts of su- ine there’s room, a better plan would be for all the family to yond J. Redelsheimer nd call @ follow what you will, by Vinee, perb values that will greatly , i i f breathing fresh, pure air each | ’ x Se ee Madi inf; hh hasi in the yard. Eight hours of br 4 » P A | &C very much Ike other foike,| Made up increase the purchasing 4 day make a pretty effective antidote for most of the poisons | Hen: A. and human just the came, prett J power of your dollars. Our fi which we take into our systems during the workhours of ae Store Open ‘Tpereter Evening BILDAD, THE HITTITE, | ole les S highest aim is to please our ‘4 | 0 oO k . a the day. “Marry you? Imporstble! Why rican ics OO! (ast colored ff patrons. iq Uncle Kitchel Pixley wires: “Otis Talieyrand Jones, )0) couts' afford to buy my Ta - ae FLAGS! FLAGS! 4 . * dresses.” e hambray: le managin’ director of Mogadore’s tonsorial emporium, isn’t) “Well, {f the fashions wil! only galate id j 4 A jcontinne reducing the amount of linenettes § ,, going to marry Leotitia Beeswick in the bridle month of | material required. I can soon 40 it and per Ferriss A June, after all. Old Josh Beeswick says the last fain bey | . gales: mid. 35 —, pendence Day celebra- tion {8 com- <0 boosted timothy in his west lot that the only bridle busi-| Teacher Didn’t Kick. ness on his place this month is going to be connected with | follerin’ a horse rake. Hain’t no time for any social funcshuns | ceptin’ hayin’. It’s tough on Leotitia. At her age there} — don’t seem nothin’ that ought to interfear with marryin’.” | - Oh me, oh my! ‘Tis false, shrieks the reactionary sn & 4 ' | plain belted models. Many ais. tinetive ose igloos models, as out the use P 7 a they arepot man Lingerie Waists flags. We are quite fortunate in having an all new stock, so that all have the required number of stars in quisettes, lawns, etc., in both the blue field open front and open Wool Bunting Flags, in many styles, Beautiful trim grades, from $11.50 98c¢ of laces and embroideries, Second Floor. Snappy new models fn ‘avorite materials as trimmed with bratd and em broidery, and plain and = faney buttons and calls Congressman Bryan of Washington that short and ugly thing. The lieu land bill of the late Senator John L. “ had o ttt ; Wilson, it announces tempestuously, did not make a gift to hen @tuhate Oe te chin sem angenen: Ham tiz the Northern Pacific and the Weyerhaeuser timber barons of | pyrywhere that Mary went Sizes 2 to 14. $ down to ..... J cluding the Bulgarian color 450,000 acres of the choicest timber lands in this state. Nay,| The goat he butted tn. ~~ Choice ..... oes ieee 1.49 Stat trees from 715¢ 3o Sizes 34 to 44 1 | 500 ” $; y y 103680 acres. He followed her to school one day 9 ere ee 40 : nay, it shrieks; it was only 1 ee acre tian thet srotns he to | Le] ° Wash 5 i ar Flags one ee 5e ees oe | Jersey Since the council admits the juvenile department needs a A ‘wan deen stack yng gd ‘e: O- y Red, White and Blue 5c in plain white, also blue Contr help, why delay? If the dads really believe some other de- —nanenyes Judge-—Were you ever up before $1.00 and $1.25 Values Bunting, yard. red collars and cuffs. | a Take the front elevator to the very tastefully through dia oe Hammocks at Easy Prices And in all sorts of wooing col- ors that are eminently pleasing to the pi¢knickers—Navajo, Ort- ental and Roman stripes among others. Then there are the (Sizes for women and solid colors in white, khaki, Made up in the newest reds, blues and greens, in more of rep, pique, linen than two score of different enette, in black and kinds. The prices are $5.98 white dots, also plain co down to $1.98, $1.75, 98 of tan, cream and $1.48, $1.25 and..........JOC Bf plain two-piece Boy Scout Hammocks, with 4 high waistline, some in values that have beon 9 j, heavy duck. Sale $1 4 either belted or tucked ‘ D) Prices, selling at $1.25 and $1.48, but choose at.. 95c ‘out 1 75 $1.25 to .. Hammocks at ....... ‘ bO YOU CLEAN HOURS Screen Doors $1.49 Pure Aluminum W The Dustless Way? “Economy Base- Percolators, Roasters, and the fabrics are very The sizes range from § to 18 Prices 986, $1.25 $1 and ' partments have too much help, why not go to it in a straight-| forward and direct way, and cut down such superfluous at- taches to the payroll, instead of “passing the buck” to the| mayor and the juvenile department? | 2 RQ front balcony, where you will find a display of nifty Wash Suits; saflor or Russian style, in plain white and col eae, por otit..:.....000 Boys’ Straw Hats A spectal Fourth of July clean-up that includes black, brown, tan and white Straws, ° thie court? Wash Suits [ter tromacant say, ver! honor, What time do you get up? Best Short For Boys 1% to 10 N EDITOR’S STORIES of the Day She looked like a real old South: | ern mammy, and when she appear: | ‘ ed before Judge Marsh im the Bt Little Eva’s troubles are not over yet in spite of her! pieton polices court, over on Staten numerous ascents to celestial altitudes. State Labor Com-|isiand, as complainant in a charge missioner Olson promises to enforce the child labor law |0f Assault and battery against her : * A \Mege lord and master, her speech | against juvenile performers. , |did not belie her appearance. A ‘ | bottle of gin had been the cause of | One year ago, the progressive bolt put an awful crimp jai! the trouble, she sald, and added in the elephant and cinched that professorship for Bill Taft |that her husband was drunk most at Yale. lof the time, After Matening pa jz In Galatea, Chambray, Pique, Pereale and Linen Prices, $1.26 up. Straw Hats, 600 up. Pte at NEW WASH B8KIRTS “The white man’s whiskey and not his rifle conquered the| Indian race,” said Attorney Tom Horner, defending an Indian charged with forgery. Maybe there’s more truth than poetry in that. Anyhow, the jury acquitted Horner’s client. Mon ie Norfolk Suits For Boys 6 to 18 In fancy tan and gray mixtures and serges. “Practice What You P Editor The Star Wh don't some of the clabs practice what |they preach? They have done a |ereat deal of talking of what they are going to do for home products, hand yet many of the members of | these various clubs won't sell home products in thelr stores and give the little man a show. They howl Prices $5.00 up, |national advertising. They have millions to spend ‘for advertising where we have dollars, Perhaps in years to come, with a little help, we will be where the big fellows are today. We have found that people loyal to home products can't buy Seattle made goods in the big stores tlently to a long tale of oa aks | F L 1 Bo h h t Sa Pp Lipped Sauce , : ; lance, Judge Marsh remarked to the ‘or Little that the local manufacturer's goods | We carry a very large line of ment.” uce Pans, Lip) There's no place like home in Texas. New law there | itendant | ys aren't known and that those of the |[ the best Dustiess Mops and] Well seasoned, Tea Kettles, Coffee Pete makes it a crime to get drunk any place except at home ‘It what your wife says is true,|| Sults, Sizes 2% to 10, in Russian | astern man have the benefit of | Polisher heavily bracketed other Kitchen Articles of and Saflor styles. O'CEDAR MOPS—the kind that | Doors, any size, follows: 2-8x polish, dust and $ as deen. Price ns... --.PVAOO | ES, 210x610, and O'Cedar Polish seee+ 400 T time hasn't struck Smaller size of O'Cedar Polish | us yet, but It is tate 25e | coming, and you'll need the screens re = I should {magine yg to be a rather) bibulous person.” g “Bibulous!” snorted the olf wom-| Those Who Rely on re ER Rag kh but dat niggah doan know | the great home remedy which has proved its power to | 20 mo’ ‘boitt de Bible dan mah ats. | relieve safely and speedily the minor ailments arising | ‘*h's cat's tallan, what's mo’, An| from defective or irregular action of the organs of |,*"t &°t no slstah!”—Lippincott’s, | use. We offer the following clals: Medium size Aluminum 2 Frying Pans, special....-@@ S-cup size Coffee Percolators a new model $1. Prices $3.50 Up == er FREE!—A “Reach” Base- ball Outfit, consisting of Liquid Veneer saan of this city P “yhondlP) 4 - | ; Take t geet find themecives spared hours of suffering “How splendid tt was of Mrs. wit-|] Bat, Ball and Glove, given Wake up, boosters! Wake up! Small size of Liquid Veneer.28¢ | 7ake time by we special ..... a ward i i S. joughby t pave $50,000,00 | i , IP 8 Dust Absorbing Floor Mops that The Nelson nd able to off the attacks of serious sickness, | loughby to leave $50,000,000 to the|} away with every Boy's ist Absorbing Floo r up one or more of thakes 9 percnietnns at fit any mop stick—can be| these good, aub- old ladle home! I never sipposed | any coffee pot, price...++ 9 she would do ft.” Suit os Overcoat. A Plea From a Property Owner on|Mm Washed without affecting it's } stantial doors at it was nice of her, wasn't {t? But |f ———— jaahinncabinchianiail Leary Av. dustless propertias. Packed in} tho special f@ | Aluminum Tea she left me something better than | Editor The tSar: Will you please |fm Sesled cartons, Price. ......50¢ | price of .. r § Balls ......-- Complete Iines of Hats, Caps ‘and Furnishings for Boys. lgive us small home holders your} Jopinton in regard to the assessment | that is being put upon nos for the| Leary av. boulevard, that ts be- ing made lovely for the. use of the! automobile owners? Don't you think they are the ones who should be made to bear the expenee? 1 am| only one of many who live blocks | away, and yet I have one assess: [ment after another, until I see no wav for me to save my home. MRS. L. J. PF. ; , that.” | Dustless Mops on handles, | Cheaper doors at 79, ~ measuring never disappoint those who take them. They help the “Oh, aid she? 1 hadn't heard| ready to tise, prices.78¢ and 800 | $1.00 and seveeeces wu 1.29 iyoeah, per tt Ot three.. digestion, stimulate the liver, clear.the kidney and regu- | aout ‘that. What did she leave % late the bowels. By purifying the bleod they increase | yout” x cheerfulness and create confidence. As actions depend “I Inherited her coat.”—Chtcago on health and strength, those who know Beecham’s Pills Record-Horald, *a i POTLATCH DANOM and Grill ro hearsals, under the direction of joy | e Mrs. H. C, Saunderson, will be held Sold row hes 1. Beecham's Pille bi Para and Umbrellas. Ladies’ 25¢ Summer Special at 98c. See the win- for 19c Each, or 2 for dow display, incht@ing white Either sleeveless oF | embroidered Parasols and sleove, low neck and fancl many colors, In pongees, !in- yoke vests. enettes, etc. Choose at 98c each, Splendid Values In White Oxfords and Boots. Seo tho perfect fitting white J. Redelsheimer & Co. First and Columbia Sea Island Pumps, with hand turned soles, G4 69 at, a pair oe ¢ Embroidered , Special, Palty 1 Thursday at Christensen’s hall, in medicine in the World. tead of Friday, which is the! Fourth,

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