Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE STAR—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1913. er ¥ : * nn . ere Sams Lake ‘ 7 | i 5 : ~~ THE DIARy — |What's the Use of Working When FARRAR’S CLIMB free aincoats Goadve RAINCOATS : Far FATHER Time \Work Won’t Prevent Starvation?) TOFAME RAPID ron men Go DOMVela ls FoR WoMN ff : B st 1 aee ee eming and of aeling: beet| glitz Anlety and oversrata have ct SUPERB ALL-WEATHER DOUBLE-SERVICE =f * Scotland, x ins tele ay oad premature Hnes of hopelessness on : Be riered «heavy fine | scat neta staan Cohn SPECIALLY PRICED FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY { pe clean as hands could make them |ing a brief concert tour this fall now purl 00 and $1 ga Sophia Cohen us five children 1] fs all ale j and I know my fader wonld want me to help her. Everything w }s0 from bending over sor es I erted with the pain. And It was IT only did 144 lady I don't know how k away my slips with th nun MRS. ZAMORA C. CAUFFMAN mercial Club and proprietor of the the world whose draw opera in Parts Miss Farrar is of Maine stock, her | be so different if my fader was alive. Now everything Just depended |father, Sydney Farrar, having been jon me. Be Weimer, in the next block, got m job by Schwartz’ | or the most far baseball shirt waist factory, 1 a quick finisher, doing 18 dozen) players of this country a day. Hut she only g | | The rise of his world-famous | Mo, I be as a tri haps you don't know bow {t {*,/daughter reads Ii fairy tale but trimming shirt waiste rrible hard work. My shoulders ached| There Is only one atic winger ne power is © Farrar's, and hot en you, with the trons and all. Sometimes 1 would greater than Geraldir t fall to the floor, The other girls that ts Caruso. | t and Farrar the highest pald wo walsts (16 dozen), but the|on regular pay roll of the an Opera jen’ Musical club has m ik kave back, W arantee required , Mra. Zamora C. Cauffman, pres! hd See as eee sought after bY | o'clock ull 6, Bo ! have been more than 50 dozen (600 shirt! f of this ce ; Fo o he manufacturers ist ' j % dent of the Seattle Woman's Com : waists) Isa § 4 Recently, one of the b All the time I key about my pay envelope and what/tifiat ng t f her porters and produ 1 wasn't ss ois r . for the ehildr #0 glad. even sorry Factory Hair Stcre, 1401 First av try, Samael Abrahams, of New ot going to ach pay day came the boss nevor ga gee, has just demonstrated that) York, found himself greatly over | me any an envelot I thought the s perve in business is not entirely | stocked, and offered Mrs. Cunff | prise w rried it to the hospital. My mamma eonfined to men, and that the mod-| man $15,000 worth of the very fin atmost cried wit when I gave her the envelope. She could hardly em business woman is capable of est hum hair goods at a bie asc ar to tear It op faking quick decisions involving rifice. “Make it $5,000, and II! And when s did—when she did, out came a fifty-cent plece " jsive you spot cash.” was Mr+ | and one nickel—that was all. After I had trimmed more than 60 dozen built up one | Cauffman’s answer. The following | shirt waists. Then we saw how little use it fs to work when work of the most progressive hair goods) dill shows how her offer was ac | doy not keep you from starving geablishies ° ts on the Coast, and’ cepted SVM evavewewR Isidore Schwartz, shirt waist manufacturer, 604 Market st, Phila delphia, was one of the nine firms arraigned and d by Magistrate Gorman for flagrant breach of the child labor laws. ‘AIN'T SHE SILLY? CHUMS IN DEATH WASHINGTON, Sept. 19.—Minas ST. JOSEPH, Mich. Sept. 19 Margaret MeChord of Kentucky, Lucy Beach, a 0, and Lawrence} daughter of Interstate Commerce Blakeman, aged 19, college mates the rich Commissioner McChord and sweethearts, rode to death est belle of the new democracy, an automobile through an oper }owns to @ pet superstition, namely, draw in a river bridge here jast 5 é Z night The tragedy was witnessed by scores of passengers on a steamer It ts sald proper danger signals were not displayed at the approach. | |that unless she wears a cer bluish green gown she cannot play the piano 1 expect some call it an ‘artistic temperament, persons would the Hitehy K the trot, the hug and the tango are combined, minus the objectionable features of all. | when containing a little dust, and negatively electrified on dusty and rainy days. e stalled and replied: “Just read the Sunday papers and you'll see. (Advertisement.) Mn. ‘Shout $15,000 worth of hair goods Wollet articles, ete. When asked What the intended doing with such PARCEL POST MAP FREE Read Tells All About the Parcel Post There are two large charts, 3x4 feet, and handsomely litho- hed. Black japanned roller at top ready for hanging on the ar There is a 3n4-foot map of the State of Washington, show- ing Parcel Post zones and giving every detail of information as to the rules governing the sending of packages by Parcel Post. This state map is in four colors, beautifully ilustrated and show- ing all railroads, rivers, cities and towns and the populations. The pos chart contains a four-color lithographed map of the United States and the World, each state in a separate color, cities, rail- roads, etc., with populations. You cannot afford to be without it if you use the Parcel Post. All information right at hand with- out going to your neighbor or to the postoffice for advice. This is a new map just issued and costs $3.00. A year’s subscription to The Star costs $3.25. Our offer is to send you The Seattle Star for one year and give you one of these beautiful maps for the cost of The Star alone—$3.25. Take advantage of this offer. There is no catch to it. We were able to secure only a limited number of these maps and are offering them to the first persons who write us. Simply fill in the coupon below and mail to us di rect (not to agents) and we will send you the map and Star. We will accept renewals of subscriptions also. The . Seattle Star 1307-9 Seventh Ave. SEATTLE, WASH. Star’s Offer The Seattle Star, Seattle, Washington. You will find inclosed the sum of three dollars and twenty-five cents ($3.25), for which send me The Seattle Star for the period of one (1) year, and one of the new Parcel Post Maps, containing a com- Plete map of the state of Washington, a complete map of the United States and a complete map of the world, as per your offer. Name R. F. D. No. ooo tee ROOFER 6. cc ccice coeces secvccvocveeerse State .. Renewals of Subscriptions Also Accepted art laughed Miss McChord today, “I rf fag 13 fo muman Hair 018,000. cannot play at all if I am not garb | : leas 66-273 ro ,000 os tn prose That must be my soul JUST SNEEEZE IT color, Spot Cash 5,000 - ees PITTSBURG, Sept, 19.—As far as — In observations jiast year at the organized dancing manors of Bloemfontein, South Africa, W. A. Western Pi psylvania anc castern NOTE.-(We ves « sateen sb the fra of ech month. whether ch nied D. Rudge found the alr always Ohio are concerned the tango is ta en Phas caine, cad coy rams wre bean, repent ot ce positively electrified when free | booed among dances and Its succes Cauffman already carries|a tremendous addition to her stock |from dust, practically uncharged |sor Is to be the “Hitchy Koc In LATTIGED LIMBS PITTSBURG, Sept. 19.—Latticed legs, fashion’s latest mandate, ap- peared on Fifth av., and tho three young women who displayed them caused such a senastion that two! policemen had to disperse a crowd and assist the is aboard a car. Tho skirts were of various colors They were slashed from the bottom the knee, and the crise-crommed with brilliant bons of silk tinted hose of very SAVES The observer caught) er |more than a vague hint of flesh-|a beef bone six inches long light material) tho eneath the lattice work of ribbon.| from choking to death THIS ONE CLINGS :::': texture Slip-ons, weet $18.00] fe" $15.08 Men's sur , All Weather English Gab- | Ladies’ and Misses erdines and Silp-ons,| $25.00 superb English ineluding many »* Gaberdines, English combination Ov double-texture and silk- and Raincoats lined Slip-ons and All ly $25 to $30, priced at Weather Coats, priced we see 816,50 Bidg.—614 SECOND} Exim srtculs Girls’ Ci $16.50. $18.00 Fou MEN AND women aif A nifty tan and blue ae it wtrap n ale ° $1.65 |STORE OPEN SATURDAY NIGHT UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK 95 cand $1.80 HER LIFE 19.—-Thrust- A mouth of a | removed leoparde REAL ESTATE cage, jumped on her back, threw his arms around her neck and/ ; ae her. CHICAGO, Sept. 19—Women of Spring Road and Vil Park, two communities on the Aurora, Elgin & Chicago electric road southwest Jof Elmhurst, arose in their might at the polls and prevented the Then he opened her mouth and the bone. Grateful, the} licked Crow ® hand. NW YORK, Sept. ng bis arm into the ypardess, James Crowley in the Central park xc beast’s throat and save | Latouche, the leopardess, which name of Woodrow from gracing |formerly showed {| vaudeville, the map of Illinois. The proposi- swallowed her dinner voraciously, ON BAINBRIDGE ISLAND |tion was to incorporate both crin- bone stuck, She was | munities into the village of Wood- coughing and spitting and writh-| ALBIRTB TOP DY) |row, named for President Wilson. ing when Crowley ran into her et _The vote was 139 to 7 PHILADELPHIA, Pa,, Sept. 19.— | The “cobweb gown,” made of pina} loth, brought from the Philip pines, is on view at the Commer cial museum here. Sev jocal stores have orde large ments of the fabric, which is more | diaphanous than voile and more| clinging than crepe de chine. T: i 0} MULES CAN'T BRAY | IN TOWN AT NIGHT | STRONG CITY, Kan, Sept 19.—Only quiet, dignified mules | can spend an evening in Strong | | City. The city council has pass. ed an ordinance making it un lawful for mules to bray at night ae, Brownie’s Spirit! ONTARIO, heavenly spirit w 1 guilty te 19. “My | not allow me 4 charge ¢ < the law,” was the state-| f R. R. Brownson, a resident d, arrested in this city for driving his automobile at an al leged rate of 34 miles an hour, when he came up for hearing before Judge J. R. Pollock | Neit w the man plead not| gullty d th only way the judg | could handle the caso was to re-| quire him to put up $5 ball and] then fall to appear at his adjourned hearing A Human Incubator SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 19.—Ma ternal longings and the mother !» stinect, heretofore ressed in “playing” dolls, led Vera Sotter, an inmate of the city and county hos pital, to secrete five eggs in her bed, with the reeult that three tiny | chickens were hatche to the hospital roll of Miss Sotter {# a Hungarian, 34/ years of age. Daily she asked for 1 hot-water bag and {t was placed | on the eggs. When the nurse made the bed she tucked the eggs inside | jor her clothing. tk kk eke keke kek we! KAISER APPROVES JOHNSON'S ATTITUDE IN BARRING JAPS #| SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 19. *| The kaiser, when I saw him, vehemently approved of Johnson's attitude This ts the letter statement by President Benjantin Ide. Wheeler to Attorney Guy .C. |® Earl of San Francisco, regent of the State university, to gether with other Europeen the Japanese law situation is a personal Wilhelm comment on anti-alien land Dg. Wheeler friend of Emperor and enjoys his confidence. He has been in Europe all sum mer, recovering from a serious illness TeTrTTrrcerrrrrrrrrr eres... a SSSSEEEEEEE ESSE REE EEE EEE KKK ERK KERR ee A German Masterpiece of the Drewer’s “Aré- oN Ail | IN or even night NT A PA, S— — —S 9 Oe me ——> <= =e a A Jadependent Brewing Oo. SEATTLE,U.S.A.