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

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Shae Aepe ene oe as, | they really need. OF THE SCRIPTS NOwTY Weer EWSPAPERS — Tele» @ United Press Asso post. (flee, Beattia += Pobiiabed te +6 BUY SEATTLE MADE GOODS. THAT'S A GOOD INVESTMENT Seth Mann on Conservation RESIDENT WILSON apparently when he sent Attorney to Alaska as his personal representative on the of Commerce excursion, just Seth Mann is a student, and For 38 days he has been formation about the great empire « back to make a report to the president ris ore 8 “Through misconstr ion, ary authority have stretched and bottled up Alaska “Alaskans are desperate, and to get the country opened up they would be willing to give anything to “Nearly every town in the population from 15 to SO per cent thr yemnt, the latter being impossi tation, and capital for de to secure without the former “A railroad m railroad are needed “I believe this road will never ment aid “There is a general plea for the opening of the coal fields. Whether this is to be done under the leasing system ‘or by the government, must be decided only after consideration. “Mr. Pinchot did not intend that conservation in Alaska ‘should bottle up the entire country mean that. But there were no eserves. The great Chugach forest reserve takes in hun dreds of miles of country where there are no forests was better that all be reserved until an adequate survey be made than that the most valuable public dgmain be allowed | to slip into the hands of a monopoly.” And this after Seth Mann ‘ They entertained Seth at a banquet last night. The very atmosphere was surcharged with anti-conservs ~ . Seth would have made a great hit had he arose 3 #1 am for the opening up of Alaska at once by private cap- Hal. Let the people of Alaska handle the situation But he didn’t say it saseises Rees 1 ¢ to know him. qwas he in the vanguard. 4 Judge McDonald leaves splendid achievement i “thard and diets harder. jworth of real food per week of more material food just the sam Sanitarium. can live on, but as to what it is best that she should live on We have ‘to consider the underpaid and underfed girls, “hut of the very highest importance is consideration h effect of their condition upon the nation and humanity in} That a girl in the soul-absorbing pursuit of music 50 cents’ worth per week | woman who is presiden tional homestead association (what lever that is), married couples knowing too much | P It takes @ great decide | deal of thought to arrive at that : general. ares for food to the extent of only ) | proves nothing, and it would make no argument against a “demand for $50 worth of food per week for girls. IMMIGRATION OFFICIALS have i ether a German tenor, traveling with a woman not his | conclusion. EFFECTUAL ife, is an “undesirable” or not. é P deuce with the artistic temperaments of opera companies. | Wolfe, 77, for breach of promise. years ago. _|eanyon. q (aks ored. conservationist conservation reservation e water to 1 . and then a lot of trails and wagon roads as feeders to tl TWEY SEEMED 10 BE YERY MucH AT HOME Conservation help in making HE STAR—WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1913, > surveys to Now we know how Congress: man Bremner of New Jersey got the cancer for which he is being treated by Viennese ex- 1 AN for 38 days hands of the Chamber of Commerce, conservation’s bitterest| jeat vacated by Senator Billy Hughes, whom Kirby desribed representative spending money to beat him. FTER You, ee The women do lot of foolish We never saw one get up in a car and give her seat to an| exceptionally dressed boy of an old man stand ee Seth seems to be a friend of the ultimate consumer. A Good Man Gone EATTLE and the staté of Washington lost one of its noblest citizens when the grim reaper, without warning, hed the life of Judge Frederick A. McDonald ‘ | = Always brimful of good humor, always ready with a} of encouragement, a smile, a cheerful pat on the back, | always actively in the fight for the people, Judge Mc id has been an inspiration to all who have had the nineteen and let to have police- beaches, whereat ther they will be they cannot swim? won't do worse than one police- man we know who saw a boy drowning and sent In an alarm for the fire department, which arrived too tat An Obiiging Manager. Wery latest pictures. venience for ladies and children. Perfect ventilation off our singer by general request the public.—Advertisement Leavenworth (Ka: Judge McDonald was 63 years old when he die no moment in his life did he lag behind the times. P We © He was among those who led the procession which con- aber tgp dbee me the state into the most progressive in the union the memory of n a long and useful life. Beth surgery snd doctoring have been resorted to case of the defective referen- dum petitions siclan’s bulletins indicate that while there is hope there is life. cee Of Course She Can ND now they've got to again jawing back and forth at § each other down East, over discovery of a girl who, | “while pursuing a musical education, lived for 20 weeks at a} ' pst not exceeding 50 cents per week for food | There's really nothing remarkable about this case. has “an artistic temperament” and somebody has told H that she would be a grand opera singer if she studies | Billy Sunday tore up a $50 check that was given to him for helping lay a corner stone “What was the matter with The entire number was swallowed by But it must be somewhat raging to the editor when he et that the only persons who will read the magazine who already believe the = Give a girl with much conceit, some the stage” and an “artistic temperament t iy a | who can exist for some time on 50 cents’ or 5 cents Flattery and music are the main food of such, and physicians will testify that it is won © derful how long some of them can exist on a mere moiety They simply live on their spirits, or} : rament, or whatever it is that enables © en ambition to reach high “C” when it’s high bacon that} m of vitality is rapid,} c, and, in many instances, the end comes in the After all, the question is not as to what a girl and you have a cts upon the A Seattle man aiways buys beer when his wife is ill. Says she takes the pilis in her d he t But the consumptior i Some commercial j unearthed a hotel porter who declines to take a traveler has NO, NO, AFTER You, REGINALD, AFTER You We're suspicious a “plant” by Grand Rapids of the | Chamber of Commerce to advertise “Many divorces,” says the Boston of each other.” It’s likely to raise the very You're “The Picture of Health” Nature Teeth and feel better. dent, too; they don’t drop and embarrass you every time you meet a friend EMMA MAHONEY, 70, of Wooster, ©., has sued John} lovers sixty-eight 3reach is no name for it. It’s a perfect grand You're confi- Today’s Styles Today Bradbury Clothing | + Men 1/4 Off Made for men, they are the best men’s clothing ever tail- Not a wrong stitch in You feel a Joy you haven't known before, Beautiful sets, mounted on vuleanite or celluloid, or gold, r, $5, $10 and $15 yrding to material Fully guaranteed, Boston Dentists 1420-22 Becond Avenue. Opposite Bon Marche. In present location 11 years. fo them. dressed at all times SURE HE WAS There was a bold man fn our town And he was awful wine, He put fly paper on his head To circumvent the flies. | He put the paper upside down The files got at him—nit, a friend asked how tt worked He said: “I'm stuck on it” Send your sult to the clean. ers, but send your will to the lawyers, eo they can make thelr clean-up. | Glad to Hear From You ‘Editor The Star: The articles |tweaks” and [For ner Toorsies | ON THE KML- AND HAD A “YUM YM SUNDAE’ f Lyf In Editor’s Destrayed Bunting Editor The Star: Among the # in the bill for damages sus tained fn the recent riot, submitted to Mayor Cotterill by the Fourth ward local of the soctalist party are “four dozen. American flags and ap proximately 30 yards of red, white and b punting.” The alists fail to understand why the patriotic defenders of the fag should tram ple upon and burn It.—Ida Peterson. you have recently published, writ ten by Boalt, regarding certain ieay Jand “heavenly twins” and “tango PHONES MN, Antiy, one manth in advance RATES psy tix tom, 1-90; one your, 1.28 By carrier, in clty, the @ wmonth The Second Avenue Parade! It’s the Classiest in the Country, Says the Stranger in Our Midst; the Man Reporter Finds the Stranger’s Right] * | | ther oval face Mke @ medallion frame incloses a photo grayish-blue plun @ most mar , and then curled down By a Mere Man Reporter. Fred P often, Always stops at the Wash rson visits Seattle quite ington Annex, where I was intro duced to him by John Perry. Peter- json fs a big gazook in the thmber business. Been up and down the Const, and spanned the continent, two or three dozens of times, In a splendid mixer, a good story teller, been through @ lot of experiences, and {s an all around likable fellow We were in the lobby of the hotel when a fairy flashed by Yes, a fairy. Dressed {n white from head to foot, in some filmy, Mimey, and, ah! such summery costume “Do you know” sald Pete “that Seattle girls know the kni rade is the most fas witnessed anywhere.” “Street parade?” I asked Haven't you fit by?” eee So. the next afternoon Vic, The Star artist}and | took In the street parade. Vic anxious to see a “transparency.” He had heard so| much about It. It’s a gown that has cloth or some a substitute for a piece of chee thing filmier yet the “slits.” 8 e My goodness! Are there no two girls in Seattle who dress alike? We couldn't see them, if there were such. And Vic kept his eagle rt and watchful. He was go- ing to spot that cheese cloth “trans parency.” We strolled up and down the ey bustling canyon on Second ay. It | Was a nice, sunny fternoon. And the “street parade,” as such, was not overwhelming in numbers. A few girls leisurely promenaded un- der parasol shelter. But we saw hundreds of Seattle girls, just the same, and they belong to the “street parade.” Where did we see them? Where? Oh, huckleberry. We saw them sipping “rubberneck flips” and “humpty dumpty fizzes” and “ deligh (7) or should I ' delight” for the plural “Bulgarian bingles,” and a few other concoctions with most remarkable names, invented} by the genius of the soft boose em- opinion, creditable to a paper that) porjums. has the standing possessed by The} Star. I have read your paper for a long time and consider a eriticiam per- missible, and perhaps beneficial, to the paper. Yours truly, Cc. R Yes, There Is Such a Law Editor The Star: Will you kind ly let me know, through the col umns of your paper, whether there fs an elghthour working law’ for women tn the state of Washington A certain firm on Western av. keeps ite help, an office woman, al- ars of the city were not, in my| most every night until 10 o'clock | and many times until she is not able to catch the last boat and has to remain in the city over night I have understood that Washing ton has this Jaw, but don’t know| Just how to go about making my-| self sure, 80 come to The Star for hel A READER ‘ADVANCE STYLES For Ladies’ Suits $24 to Order 801 Union Open to 7 P. M. Before buying Water Front Investigate VENICE. On Bainbridge Island Albert B. Lord Northern Benk Bidg. Pantages Theatre “The VIVIAN MARSHALL ‘(byetn] rf lett ‘Albany Cut-Rate the slightest trouble or worry. On Cre | He put limburger tn the trap, the mouses eat | No—when a whiff had struck them | They all were glad to beat it. WedsAuntWhom Uncle Divorced NEW YORK, July 80.—Warl Os- car Schenck, an actor, was married iy th@ city hall to nis aunt by mar |rfage, Mra. Marion Osear Schenck, A small payment down and a little each week or month— that is all. HOFBRAU _Restaurant and Cafe First Ave. and Madison St. jelerk that her first husband, Osear | A. #@henck, a brother of her pres and’s father, had divorced her in Columbus, Ohio, on June 17 fon counell announced that the marriage would be legal, 1332-34 Second Ave., Near Union & Seattle’s Reliable Credit House TONIGHT Mildred Fitzgerald Mr. Hanlon Ethy! Young Flo Emery Vera Lawrence Miss Putchett Rhoda Greenaugh Rose Barnes (Afternoons) JACK O'DALE Planist Vv : ALBANY Dentists Wr STAND BACK OF OUR WORK YOR 15 YEARS, GUARANTEE SIGNED BY US. For90 Days Only ‘The following prio our offices until Sept Come tn t are doing ae own prices t wilt be given at ber Int. Ay—don't put tt off. We > an than your e our work Set of Teeth, Guaranteed @A FAG BOW hin si ccccccncee te Solid Gold or Porcelain $3 ee) eee rere Gold or Porcelain e9 Bridge Work ...........00 Solid Gold Fillings...75¢ UP | Silver Fillings ......50¢ UP | Albany Cut-Rate Dentists Becond Floor Peoples Rank Building, Second and Pike, Take Blevator or Walk Up }little, | EXTRA ot | OUR PRICES WILL SURPRISE You OUR WORK WILL PLEASE YOU, They were at Stokes, and the | Palace of Sweets, and Haynes’, and Shull’s, and that new place on Pike st. and Frederick & Nelson's, They were very much at home in thone places. Anyone could see that. eee One trim little lady strofled into | Stokes’ all by her lonesome. My, but she was dressed swell. Had a ng-fitting hat that encased ANTON & the following $4.75, $3.98 and plain silk and flowered borders, Prig® ..6.: seeeeee sees . Our Instructor ts a native of Norway, and one of the most expert in the city, giv- ing FREE LESSONS to our customers in aN branches Hardanger and Macrame in- cluded, Lessons given in the Art Department on Front Balcony every afternoon, many "“Swim-Hasys” in the lot The materials afe cotton serges, wool mohairs, tly trim med and fin 3M to 44; ly soldat now at only,’ Main 9100. Priente exchange cam eoting with afl Bryertinenta. She was 4 young woman, and her dress fitted #o lightly did she move. She wore one of those that seem to have plenty of room they taper off almost to # sudden And of course her dress had TWO SLITS. 1 am sure of it, One on each side. had eyes for none as k tcame of classy dressing? Their street pa-| moat haughty. nating I've| “Ret she'll pick the last ’ ventured Vic dejectedly. Bat she didn't She stepped right up to the coun- er taken’an hour or|ter up front, seated herself, two off just to watch the fairies | unconcerned way, upon @ stool, res Jed her feet on the rail |green parasol across another st thelr street costumes. | “Yum Yum Sundae.” I always had an {dea that when language, or talk, of styles, or theatres, or some other ght or frivolous topics. But far be it from such. Frederick & Nelson's till late in the afternoon. And actually, there were a score of well dressed women discussing ways and means to get even with the council for turning |dulge in mushy rapher for the juvenile department. ordered more of that | Best modern outside rooms, 25c Stewart House, 86 West Setwart.—Advertisement. Odeon Theatre CHOICE, Reliance. HER FINAL DEATH'’s SHORT CUT, |THE NOTORIOUS cy EVE |ALL DIVERS MEET AT SEA, Bron- cho, one reel MARINE LAW; JAPANESE COURT- SHIP, Majestic. Firat Ave. Bet. Pike and Union. EVERETT -SEATTLE INTERURBAN RAILWAY SE. trains 10.30 a m Tick tle, Westiat. Greenwood. Ajax m., 12:60 noon, Y Piet etee, t08 hea kM Jeaves both cities Coupon Exchange Bureau—Third Floor. MAY MANTON PATTERNS. PHONE MAIN 6035, NDON Co. “The Economy Store’’— Second Ave. Bet. Spring and Seneca For Thursday's Careful Buyers The order to clean up stocks is being rapidly en- forced. When you think of economizing you should think of this store of little prices. supply your needs, while the opportunity lasts. Ladies’ New Tailored Skirts Second Floor. Representing the workmanship of some of Seat- tle’s best taflors in the very latest fashion-favored models in blue, red, brown and black. fold down side front and side back. All sizes and extraordinary values at.... Union-Made Shirt Waists Beautiful garments moderately priced view point of eve Now is the time to the most critically inclined, will be found of e worth, as they are made of the best qu équisettes and Batiste, with h Zand buttons, long or short sle high neck models. ming. Sizes 34 to 46. The prices are nd crocheted yoke; ve the Bulgarian trim- crepe in red, blue, tan, pink and old rose, with attractive figured designs, The backs are Empire style, and prettily finished tn Children’s Fine Lawn Neatly trimmed ‘lace and em- embroidered sleeve styles, These were for mesly marked Sizes 4 to 14. Choice, now, only. . Garment Section Clearance Sale of Bathing Suits Second Floor, Lot No, 1—In values up to $8.49,) Lot No, 2—You will surely want to go bathing Sunday, are some snaps in sults made of Easy models tn this lot alsa 98 to $3.49, on sale $i 8 . | a ci, animal Ror

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