The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 11, 1913, Page 3

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ue to < well confi. p and aven't od on gold, d $15 terial % i J H 7 ftom fo place the reape the receat riots by t re nad soldiers. Pope Leo XIII. d Socialism and the iid not er. In his first paragraph. he ed the class strug In his se para raph he proved that t wan a Glass struggle in societ setting forth the « ' In this third paragrapt concludes by struggle and criticism of Soctali t thought tt was HIS THIRD PARAGRAPH. competition. The evil has been increased by rapacious usury, Which, although mo demaed by the remember that the pope ve us this letter in May, 1891 enty-two years ago. Hie told us that @ remedy must be found quick- ly for the misery and wretchedness Of a majority of the poor. Let me ik, are not all poor people miser Sbie and wretched? And ts it not true that the struggle for existence makes them so an a poor family and feed rround fteelf with the iteelf and fs so dumb, deaf and dumpish that y do not know that “povert father of iguoranc at jorance is the mother of st ‘The workingmen’s guilds were de- stroyed bees they were an ob- Btacle to che exploiting class. and today we have what ed free labor. Tals means that the Iabor is free loiters, but the dal slave because he bis labor power ers in order to live. There- at the exploiters get from free to them profit be- ase the exploiters not work ey work the workers and take them the product of their toll, or what it takes to feed, clothe helter the workers In a meager “Public institutions and the laws diated the ancient religion.” ys the pope, but this was because public Institutions and o laws were relative institutions, emanat ing from the economic requirement of the dominant class in society, wh« by their mode of production and exchange of the easities to sustain human life. When the church stands in the way of the profit monger he sacri the church, because all humans. rule, are actuated by matertal actuated in the were interest fn turn material s8 in terests and dominated by economic power. We all know that in anetent times, common people have as today, the the land been driven from bed of their in but iis degrees it Rorkingmen tm lousness t ploy i the greed of unrestrained co: ro we see that industry domi- es the race. loyer takes all labor he wil! fail laborer for wages. tem puts the « and on the | The rapacious usurer product of the profit creature of min: itm urch demn the man, but th makes bim avarictou: The “working by concentration of x6 of trade in the han viduais” is mer natural de- velopment of capitaliom by organ {zing industry through machine pro the Socialist would few indi duction, or as say, the sock of industry is compulsory to capitalists in order that their capital may be kept In motion and do Its work of exploiting the workers of the surplus value The pope concludes his third paragraph by saying “That a smat! very rich men have been abi OOF yoke little better than slavery tse! Now, we Soctalista are all agreed with Pope i number of rich are subjecting th wage-workers and all of us to @ condition ef slavery, and we also know that the rich are as power Jess as the poor—the remedy is mu terial and econor and not re gious or spirttu The wealth or product of social social machinery Leo that a am 4 is the social labor created but the machinery faethe private property of the capitalist clans. and the wealt created goes to the machine owners The workers get wages and therefore wane-fiaves. We aa wealth Alatrib snp dad must h brought into production, collective Ow then for profit The Socialist capital t philosophy aftords the only remedy, Socialite tn te freadom ia the basi of ail Hociglism would abolish ‘ elie. the graft in public nd 6 and afford honest, nent the presen Pie rich today wear yoke of degeneracy, alarm Anxiety, while the poor wear Oke of slavery. Neither yoke can fo lifted without once and for all fiving to the race security in It economic right {To be continued in next Monday's], “Sta, want ade In the Bows i, BROWN, 713 Wiret Av. lay upon the manses of the} Two Pairs of Newlyweds Start on 1,000-Mile Honeymoon Trip Afoot Va the afoot hon chester complete exwecting n to Journe: ey not th Got a fine baby at home }to enter. In the various divisions Prizes totaling $500 are offered | “ ording to ages, $12 is offere “lin the “Better Baby” contest at the | {NC first prize, $8 second, aud a | Washington state fair, to be held in\e siiver trophy 1s offered the grand |North Yakima during the week of champion boy and of Washin, [September 29 ton, and $100 ts offered by th | The prizes go, not to the bables| Woman's Home Con n for the with the most perfect facial fea-| beat city baby the best rural tures. It's more [lk a livestock | baby lshow. The most perfect baby, phys | Entries close ptember 25, at {eally, will, after Judge Humphries,|noon. No entry fee ia charged. Of be the only pebble on the beach. [ficial blank entry forms can be se All babies up to 4 years of age,| cured by writing to Mrs. H. B. Ave and whose parents are bona fide | ill, chairman ries and rollme residents of the state, are eligible! committee, North Yaktn a Woman Gets $37,895 for Feeding Tramp That Master Turned Away EVANSVILLE, Ind, Aug. . oi with th it be giver Twenty-four years ago Mrs. Hattie the Hanoun, who lives in Vincennes,, Me Murran was found 4 ted Ind, was Mattle Dratn, a servant/in bis hut near thix city not long girl, 19 years old. One day Mar-|ago and was taken to the Southern shail McMurran, a wanderer, called | Indiana insane asylum, where died. Under the floor of his he was $50,000 In gold and sil brown paper has conveye of this to Mrs. Hannun, th at the house where she worked and asked for something to eat. The man of the house ordered him away but the girl took pity on the tramp LEFT TO RIGHT—J. RUSSELL KLINE, MRS. KLIN MRS L. ROSS. THE MEN ARE CARRYING THE BAGGAGE ON THEIR BACKS | FT. WAYNE, Ind, Aug. 11—/by October 31. Clad in the | Four re Wayne newly weds, forme of khaki and full aceC traveling as “the Hoosier hikers,” tred for the trip, the quarte have just begun the most unique young pedestrians got away a honeymoon journey on record, the cheers of a big crowd Russell Kline and bride friends Ross and bride, and) They topa at have started to cover 1,000| princty « out miles between Ft. Wayne and Win- they THE STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1913. Two Big Stores Noted For Low Prices TACOMA A TR FIT MATTE SEATTLE OUT OF THE MIGH-PRICED DISTRICT REAT MILL-END SAL FROM MILL DIRECT TO THE CONSUMER ) ALE STARTED MONDAY-—COMES BUT ONCE A YEAR C (s londay, a epartments with one accord unfurled their standard of verything at Mill End Price and a mult fe of happy cus « hurtied from sales table to counter, from stock to stock, to locate and lay hold of the b and greatest bargains from the limit of upplies, the bt king factories of the East Big things f money will be in this bu store while below cost ymetimes, Ne value alw the price remaining until each special lot old fSex Die 8 1-3c Mercerized Damask | 6c 29c ‘ash Toweling 4 1-2c Lace Curtains 15¢ Worth 8 a Yard Worth 50c a Yard Worth 10¢ a Yard Worth to $1.00. Worth 12/6 Each Hundred f yards ¢ finches wide, in # 26 Inches wide, from the Lons. ‘. Deep hem, size 42x36, pure he ed border g rr Samples, white or ecru, each : t don't miss It dale mills, bleach sh at 4%c a yard patterns; don’t miss | 16¢ | : Duckling Flee: Long Cloth Huck ‘Towels Window Shades 6 “See Outing Flannel =e ed 19¢ | 12 1-2c 8 13 7 :1-2c 8 1-3c Waiheke Worth 16 2-3¢ a Yard. -3C Worth 12\/c a Yard. Worth 12\4¢ Each waren: (os ach Duckling Fleece Fiannelette. Worth 12!4¢ a Yard. Soft chamois finish, put up 12 8 §x34, extra heavy, with Size 3 ft. x 6 ft. guaranteed | extra he best designs, fast Heavy weight, pretty plaids | yards to the piece; will cut any borders Spring Rollers, green oniy color, 1 and stripes length; 7%¢ ‘NECKWEAR | 29%: | Manufacturer's entire 2-1 brotdery fo in 506 and 6 terns sample line—the | zs | new things for fall, consisting of Bulgar- | ian, Irish, Arabian, Dutch Collars and | Jabots—less than half price MILL-END PRICES ON LADIES’ COATS, SUITS AND DRESSES Special Purchase of Ripplette 10c Worth 15¢ a Yard. a Yard. Fancy red 1 own if mont deairad Fancy stripes or plain white in this matterns and co! ‘othing be o pets Jr A, ] nh ey the efor Vin beautiful soft material that makes up so daintily BOYS’ SUITS $2.49 & $4.98 and launders so easily. m On, A yard, 64g¢ cheap an LADIES’ COATS Values to $30 --$8.98-- whipcords, full well tailored and novelties; Come down early. Choice ‘of serges, cheviots silk lined’ LADIES’ SUITS Tailored Novelties—Values to $25 some and fed*him. So impressed was|having been settled by ag y MecMurran that he went to the of MecMurran relatives, after a Men's $15.00 hand- Boys’ $6.00 Knick house of a neighbor and wrote his|court contest. MeMurran was a some Gray Norfolk sg : bocker Suits of cassi will on a plece of brown paper,| miser and eccentric poet ae Cy} Suits, in latest style, e mere, tweeds or chev. made of very service ~ . . lots, to close all odd able casaimere. Snappy 3 Choice of Bedfords and serges; skill- suits at this price: all sults, perfect In every oy tailored serviceable fabrics and sizes are represented detail, now colors Mill-End price— CHICAGO, Aug. 11.—Coroner Pe-| Franklin K. Lane. of Ladies’ $9.50 Linen Suite for Just .. ter Hoffman has been legally ad-\ 1.0 inte . a AOS vised that under the state constitu eng wi ; next bad Ladies’ $9.50 French Flannel Tennis Coa e tion men only can serve on a coro-| Sunday afternoon as the guest of Lot No, 2 was placed u ; “4 > A t No : adies’ 79¢ White Emb. Lawn Waists fi |ner’s jury. Hence he was faced |the Seat Prees club and the on sale last week; has ™ “ ste ioe 30 Also we have select- — the — . a Benge ang Rainier club. He will heen reinforce by $1.00 Black Sateen Skirts for .57¢ ed from our $7.50 line apology and explanation to #1x CDP bortiand in the evening about 15 more suits Boys’ Si cago women he had selected to act party, which Includes Mrs, Lan | These sults aro indeed ie _KRiak! Orit. pails, Nortoik ana. dba: as jurors at the inquest regarding! Mr and Mrs. Miller. and AA | tional; the ma ble breasted style; wool the death of Mra. Mary Halpin, of| sivors } ine LAE ant terials and workman: tweeds, cassimeres’ and 128 8, Ashland av., who was killed! peach ‘Tacoma, the secreta font all first class worsteds; good cele: by an auto truck recently mer home, Friday night.. They w ns hand to select from; also an igen wa a My Sak he make a trip to Mt. Rainier Satur and stylish. For. Si P ° a wool ‘bite® saree: ed out that chapter 1, section 10, Re! 4, Ines to 6.00. ts | “ “Ss ® Sean diate mecras: trsere-| “kg purpose ot Lans's trp, woe wer tanner wo 8200) | Simpson Prints, Several Cases | | #02 ice ners’ juries, expressly BONS | at this time is to look Into irriga-| “men” as being eligible. tion, Indian and N al park| 1 r@) Containing thousands of yards of most desirable Calicoes of Te 5 protiems in Montane, and: possibi ° to Se values; all colors, light or dark patterns; a yard ve 5 BEAR’ the Alaska situation | | ang ; P Boys’ H i SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Aug. 11 ‘DROPS TEN FEET Men’s Hats and Pants oys’ Hats, Suits and nat ae eae the ua and |" |XT LOWEST PRICES ST |baif brother of the sun and] yj Kueponp AT LOWEST PRICES BI R d d pve y' Aug i = brother: ot ihe 0008. 2erer | contenctces ave. battling with 1's Pants, broken lines, values to $3.5 blouses . ce uce add per id a 1ge condition Jave wa pair D ’ e ad ¢ * substantial assortment until he can | trang fon in Cave st. Th a palr . $1.98 Boys’ $1.25 and $1.50 Knickers ft American | ¥« of the street bas « Hats, values to $3.00 £2.00 ey hae ee Nay: ats Oe omg interesting report | {topped ten fect. The surface has| Straw Hats, values to $4.00... .98¢ Boys’ $1.25 Play Suits ..... .79¢ etree, is - ort evidently been nothing but a crust or Pants, value $1.00 3oys’ 75c Wash Suits 49 brought here from Bangkok by Mra. | 7yicenly oeen | ps but 4 5 ash Suits ......... ic si caaen Wititiaens, <Withy OF @ WORMy | ee MO. | Ret & DOR IEEE A: OAC, FOr y ser eatererseress ers \ SecoNnD AVE. AT JAMES St. BSc: BiBeines, is tieds talcoie rice planter of Siam {shell «: ay o way ai a P heoties phd. } Mrs. Williams says that red | ine 10,000 square feet went down since the Prince became enamored |!DF (00) fav Pipirwe re: of Mabel Gilman, the actress, when | 9 eu w ton showed quicksand! | Next to That 42-Story Buliding Agents for Standard Patterns he was in New York, in 1902, the| (0) or" ® ay by lea 600 wives left to him on the death be AR od 4 the bce cans walleye a ve os of his father haven't appealed to) cout two feet in thickness, him much and his eyes have been : Bi k S k Ki rT R ttle turned continually toward America. | ac nake His attier THE |] PASTOR MAKES MISTAKE ‘T0 WORK ON ROAD! The Seattle Star has two excep-| About to Attack a Woman M O V BOSTON, Aug. 11—Two teams il NEW BRITAIN, Conn, Aug tionally fine premium offers which sters, after battling for thre» hours 11.—Through misunderstanding SEDALIA, Mo. Aug 11—E. G.|it 1s making to new subscribers, or| STARTWOOD, N. J., Aug. 11) ped too, for he saw what human with a big 200-pound sea lion in the the Rev. J. C. Franklin went to} cassidy, president of the Cassidy |to old subscribers who send in| When Johr Blackford was about] beings rarely see, a blacksnake| At the Home Until Wednesday Streets of Cambridge, finally captur- ente instead of officiating at I) sercantile Com “oe ‘ _ to kill a blacksnake to stop its| fighting a rattler. The Amateur Highwayman,”| ed the anintal by lassoi * a plente Ini Mercantl mpa who 1s Pet-ltnheir renewal subscriptions. One i : ng it and ty: a funeral. tis county's we at citizen and|iq the latest varcel post chart, |ccct of csms, the theif earned {ts} The two stood aside and watched | “The Y Animated Weekly,” | ing it up in a waterproof canvas, R A message had been sent ask- |) weighs in the neighborhood of 250 po ih ates a fall aes chelate vita | liberty by saving the life of Black-| the conflict, whtch uneven from | “Mental Suicide | The animal ripped the canvas him to conduct the funera! serv) pounds, has agreed witli 8. nd information as to the use of the ford’s mother. the start The long slim black ens i ee | twice with its sharp teeth, and once ices for Dorothy Jobneon, @}) spencer Nehtw who is prea arcel post, ite rates, etc, This| Blackford had found the nest of| make was too quick for the more ie Olympian Until Wednesday | crashed through a cellar window in- child. Through an error, Dr. J) ident of the « Boosters’ Me it Ineiudes a map of the state /% hen that was laying its eggs in sluggish and heavier poisonous one. | The Wrong Road to Happiness,” |to a building, After being recap. Franklin heard nothing of the [) Club, to report Work On the lor Waaniieten aad a map. of the |® stove some distance. tram the) Win ite frat leap it had clamped |tWo reels; “The Phoney Singer," | tured, it broke away again, taking 4 |] engagement and agreed to at roads on the two days designated, tnited States. The other offer Is | house. He also discovered that the |!ts fangless jaws back of the|“Japan, — the Industrious,” "The | possession of a dry goods store into fe ] tend the plente. ny ¢ rnor Major his procla-|, complete Burham shaving outfit, | Dlacksnake had been devouring the| Polson head of the rattler and | Inventor's Sketch ‘i | which it floundered. Hurried messages brought the [| mation, Aug, 20 and 21 consisting of safety rasor, seven | °&RS fast as the hen lafd them,| Wound {ts body tight around the) ? - — minister to the house of mourn The men recently engaged in al guarantood ies, nickel-bandled He determined to ambush the other's. In a few seconds the life| At the Yesler Until Wednesday | |} ing, but the funeral was post- |) banter to’ whieh 1 do the shaving brush and shaving soap, all Sake | haa been squeezed out of the rat ace | ee yee of Death,” || AT THE THEATRES poned a day. most work, and they finally agreed |Paeked In neat. leatherette case, He and his mother watched the| a ian a : Brine iaite Wiatananicale tees 4 jto settle It with pick novel Halther the map or the razor {s wen?}hen and when an egg was de At “suiake can have all the! Bothentnew'e Visit THIS WEEK. i teats e th ai son this farm for all o' me HERE er tnt. cont Section at th a v ged ua fa wal h for tee thiol, «tna fow {remarked young Blackford when it| At the Good Luck Until Wednesday |] Moore—“The Passing Show,” ertptio Pm gular p oO wate « « epee and bovis ster Crac ni bi CLEVELAND, 0} Aug. 11 'T0 LIMIT BIRTHS? | $4.26 per year in advance. moments the blacksnake anpeared, afd pone) bf Saget Psa a “i gpg ry atte Metropolitan—Dark. 7 er cently reduced | steat creep! through the kill anothe 5 snake as “ 8 Cd bho nt ral st he « TWO, DOLLARS MISSING. | Geroruith Sie, Blackford was 0) 100K as I live Seattle—Dark. thout warning the tenants of hin NE " t jfascinated at the sight that she Orpheum—Vaudevily | purpose eer od sil Munied: S| gitdie Oo e hecing jo an | She was young, Also slender.| did not hedr a soft whirring sound OBJECTS TO THE COW. M4 ita Pi ine ne inex hastens 4 . ned he Also co ‘lored, She stopped Frank| close by her as she stepped back| She doesn't want the cow tied Empress—Vaudeville, “JUDGE KELLOGG NOW. ph len 7 Rte tpi aed V agner for juat a moment at Fourth |to give John plenty of room in outside No, indeed jars. Maurer, | Pantages—Vaudevilio, James Y. C. Kellogg, former coun-| eainat | Col. d Madisor ie next moment|which to dispatch the reptile 711 Houser st., emphatically told) (| = H @rand--vauserili Si iman, has been appointed by| © | ct M he minsed two round silver dollars | us the police so this morning, Said The “ugliest dog in Seattle,” as . eville and motion Mayor Cotterill as judge pro tem Whe: she said, “ar to/from his pocket, The police are} ntly the whirring sound did) cow, owner unknown, tied to a post |Coroner J. Tate Mason, its owner, picture for the police court for the remain | furnivh food for 2,000,000 on the job jnot ese blacksnake. Sud-|near her home, strayed upon the |described him to the police, is lost, | J Clemmer i Photoplays and [owt der of the month, while Judge Gor | children ese | - denly it # and Its whole body | sidewalk and ruined some parking | strayed or stolen, ‘The “doc” is dis- vaudeville. don is on his vacation Kellogg | We are wick of t argument of The president of the national | seemed to iffen More quickly strip. The police notified the stock | ¢¢ isolate. Melbourne — Photoplays and Ml take the bench Monday Col, Roosevelt. Motherhood must) master butchers association says}than the of Mrs, Blackford pound “He was the only one of his vaudeville, | Will take ws be limited if the ehild is to be fed| nobody will be eating meat in 1923. | could follow tt toward her, —————- | kind,” said Dr. Mason Where bra — Photoplays and Cost articles are usually found|and reared # the American chiid/ It’s an {ll wind that blows no good. |but a Ittle to the aide. As she “Some Star reader wants to move. could you find another English vaudeville, “Lost andjshould. If that be treason, make|If nobody is eating meat there'll screamed and Jumped back her son! Tell him about that furnished room bulldog with a black spot on his ear| Found” column. the best of it, be no Chicago pac ke rhe leaped to her rescue, but he stop. you have, Use a Star want ad. and on his tall? Dance at Dreamland tonight.—Advt : ; ' m i ; i eee . sistent ‘ es

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