The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 21, 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)

MEMEER OF THR schirrs LEAGUR OF NEWSPAPERS chase matter NORTHWEST Tele Hee of the United Press Assool Entered at the postoffics, Seattle, We-h. ublished by The Star Publishing Company every evening except Sunday [Daicy HEALTHOGRAM | ‘ structive influence upon all Dodily disorders. aph News as second FEAR, WORRY, GRIEF, Ilwill Jealousy and tend to have a disturbing, avar ANKE bodily organs and functions and to proguce ” Let’s Leave It kes HERE may be some merit in the suggestion of Mayor George F. Cotterill that frecholders be elected in December and that the people vote Upon the charter prepared by this body at the regular city| election in March. But whether there is or not, efl will act wisely if it will permit things to stand just as they are. We fought this question out during the absence of the | Mayor, and it was finally settled, apparently to the satisfac-| tion of the great majority. a charter commission of 15 The Star believes the Eee Under the Griffiths plan, the one adopted by the council, we will elect our commission in March, ‘will either have adopted a new charter and elected the offi cials provided for under that charter, or will have determined and before next that our present system of government is satisfactory If the commercial bodies and other organizations of the city want to get together in the meantime and discuss charter affairs, to the end that there may be submitted suggestions ’ to the commission to be chosen, they are permitted to do so. 4 ‘embargo on arms would be the quicke: But don’t let us “muddy up” the water any more. fall AND DID you notice, yesterday, another afternoon paper claime it had published the first photographs of the burning liner Volturno? Moon edition of The Star, containing the FIRST pictures, was sold on the streets Monday an hour before any other afternoon newspaper was @ff the presses, Always get The Star for tne FIRST pictures. The EGYPTIANS, 5,000 years ago, had Incubators In which they placed 7,000 eggs at a time. WM. MURRAY has been declared Chicago's champion ice m: doesn't drink, smok chew, or miss a day. JOHNNY LIND, who has been setting on thor | Vera Cruz al! these weeks, may as well return. swear, It has taken a long time, but at last Chicago has ind somebody worthy a halo for virtue. leave short-weight chunks. They aren't a-goin g to} AGAIN IT must suggest itself to President Wilson that lifting the way to peace in Mexico. LONE STAR STATE citizens have entirely the wrong idea about a duel. each Killed the other. We're sorry, but Two men fought a duel In Bonham, Tex., recently, and PARK COMMISSIONER DUST of Detroit is considering bringing guilt against the Standard Oil Co., for alleged short-measure shipments judging from p. fear the oii wil! lay the dust iow. eer in captivity it performances of the ctopus, we Moving pictures will take the place of Sunday evening sermons in| Northfield, W. Va., farmer found a deer in his barn, eating hay and 5! @urned it loose when neighbors told him it was illegal to keep A few minutes later he learned it had escaped from see preserve, and that a reward of $100 had been offered for) & Los Angeles church, and the pastor expects a larger attendance. a wild THE STAR—TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1913. lOut From “Under the Lid,” Seattle Woman Writes Book to underworld pl country el From the very depths of the comes a stirring ea to the womanhood of thie to regenerate the so. jal system, Writing of her experiences of 20 long and gruelling years as a M Barker hotel, very soul are woman of the lower rs. Lydia Taylor, now at the Seattle, bares her to prove that “men absolute failure in world, an handling the vice problem. If there ts any good to be done, | or any to be gain says | Mrs. Taylor in her book, entitled From Under the Lid it will be done through woman, and will be t as a problem for woman to solve. I have faith in her and am| tisfled she can do tt, and will Her Indictment againat the male sex ts terrific Calis Men Depraved If we of the underworld have become low and deprave she BAYS, is ® rotten and deprav-| ed olen we deal with that makes is so. And Hus ds, brothe hearts | bar mor handle tn Under “From ont da ble code ty “The reason that men cannot immorality is: That they are just as immoral as we | | Because the hat plume of the woman sitting In front of him in aj ‘2e village goose herd es street car tickled his chin, a man whipped out his pocket/ Bite ana cat oft ina cut it off. Indignant passengers chased him, but he esca) ped Watch Carefully the Child’s Diet Good Laxative and Then Watch Their Food. ‘Start Them Off Right With.a| Mothers are often unconsciously | very careless about the diet of their | pation it should immediately given a mild laxative to bowels. By this is not meant anything like salts, . ete. the child requires is simply ers, is the ideal remedy The fact is that all foods children, forcing al! to eat the same | foods. do uot agree alike with different | Hence, avoid what seems | constipate the child, or to give} ee ligestion, and urge it to take| more of what {s quickly digested. | If the child shows a tendency to phrsic or purgative, for these never be given to children. pills, ete small dose of the gentlest of icines, such as Dr. Caldwell's ip Pepsin, which, in the opin- 0? thousands of watchful moth child showing a tendency to con- mn. So many things can jppen to a constipated child that is necessary Colds, piles, headaches, sleeplessness, and many ether annoyances @hould not have can that children usually be ‘traced to constipation. Many of America’s foremost fam- | Ailes are never without Syrup Pep in, Decause one can never tell ‘when some member of the “aged may need it, Thousands endorse it, among Ps well, M. E. Patten, Valley Junction, | cello, Il! and all can use who is never without for any | RALPH M. PATTEN the bouse. Mrs. Patten says Syrup Pepsin has done won for her boy Ralph, who was stipated from birth, but ts doing fine. Naturally she is thusiastic about {t and wants o' mothers to use it. Dr. Caldw Syrup Pepsin 1s sold by at fifty cents tle, and one dollar a the latter size being bot those who already know nd it Everyone likes Syrup Pepsin, |it is very pleasant to the taste. {s also mild and non-grip free trom injurious ingred Families wishing to try sample bottle can obtain paid by addressing Dr. W. 419 Washington St., ng ents, a it p Mo B.C that ders con-| now en ther ell's druggists bot ught its contains proportion- as It| and free| Dost ald onti A postal card with your it in'name and address on {t will do. The Convenience of Gas Cuts Down Costs It is the rule of modern industrial progress to devote much thought and even expense to the con- venience of the surroundings in which work is to be power, done. the light, The floor space, the machinery, the even the location of the plant itself—all are determined primarily for convenience. It has been proved that every added convenience reduces the cost and increases the output of in- dustrial operations—the two vital elements in busi- ness success. Gas requires less time, less {abor and less worry Henry Bldg SEATTLE LIGHTING CO., than any other fuel and may be had cheaply. Phone_Main 6767 ~|Warn Her Sex of The Perils i in Man-Made Moral Standard called arly the morning; And Mra. Ts up 0 nylor #nyn and again went forth.” “Don't overlook In a man Mrs, Taylor recites an instance! what you abhor In a woman when her father set a dog upon a| A man who Ii af im stray ent, and “they fought and! moral life, is far more danger fought until the poor thing was ous than the average fast wom jscarcely recognizable an, as he is looking for and | “A feeling of Insane hatred came! seeking fresh victims. Don't lover mo for my father, I t invite or allow your husband to to the barn, and cried, and swore, invite any man to your home |wickedly, cursing father and call:| who is sowing his wiid oats.” Jing him every concet name | t # Several years ago,” says ha: er heard him ui [ . ,| Mrs. Taylor, “1 boarded In a This was the bitter environmer bal hae caste soe) | resort in Spokane. The bullding " at that time was owned by a A Plea for Bables That is why, saya Mrs, Taylor,| minister In Walla Walls, 1 sho le sending outa cry—-a_plen| Mad the extreme pleasure of lomhn ne wrayer to ail wa jet meeting the distinguished gen- lai! the world to kather up, cuddin| teman. | presume, though, as and be lenie Sith Little the property was handied by 'Piachions bal an agent, he would claim to gga gene have had no knowledge for dawned upon irl, that. her| What purpose the building was father and or were not legally! rented “Was also 'n Baker City, married One her own cousins, ‘ Ore., in 1909, during the time a wealthy girl, reproached her with a story of her {il Mr was chief of police. |" She speaks bitterly of that in.| We not only paid $10 per month leident: “For these things follow] %® the city, but a collection |people to the ende of the eanth, was taken up by one of the |grinning, fiendish skeletons of the| ProPerty-owners to be given to past the chief as a present from | At the age of 17, she married.| ‘he girle, A week later, an Since then, she bas married thr other collection was taken up | - for the chief's daughter, who times more, and, {n each case . ; was running for Queen of the stacked the cards against | #0 ” to speak Carnival In conclusion, Mra. Taylor says Finds a Kind Friend Her first husband was un sr eeay, | Han 008 looking fer sympathy, but asking that PHONES RATES ™, 208), nity Bein 9100. Private exchange con necting with ail departments ‘BREAKS A COLD, OPENS NOSTRILS “PAPE'S COLD COMPOUND” COLDS OR IN FEW HOURS. ENDS GEVERE GRIPPE d all nd ga until three doses It promptly opens clogged-up nostrils and air sages in the stops nasty Ke oF noKe reile k feverishness, sore throa Don't stay stuffedup, Q ing and snuffll Ease your throbbing head—nothing else in gives such prompt re ® Cold Compound, store tastes nic nience Accept incon stitute, causes no no sub DANCING HIPPODROME Wifth and University © Union Orchestra. Taught by Competent Tenchers Briquettes $7.50 Ton (Delivered) Dancing Cheaper Than Coal J. W. Bullock. East 87 are, if not more so. Very true ego her, and to get away fror Justice be done those who are - memes is the saying, ‘A man will guard age hee need ed & propos! Hon t9} where society and your man- | Lost articles are usually found & woman against every other Oc Haeae kar aodihe ta the on made laws and customs put by Star want ads in the “Lost and man but imeelf.’” ° sg st ag - - pl, A them.” Found” column. hud gente human being who has ever she ' J “Thess whe frequnt sue me aay consideration and kind-| places are often the most prom- _— " | lnone etatesmen, desters, He wht her what little educa lawyers, mayors, police chiefs ton yenennes, she says. Deat and men high up in social claimed him, and with her sister anding.” she of & dressmaking place tr In her book, Mra. Taylor takes ter Minne But it was impossible her readers back to her childhood Mre. Lydia Taylo {to keep the wolf from the door £23 Third Ave, Seattle, Wash., Oct. 21, 1913, days. It was th she clal th banging of doors, tables and chairs)consclous dition and thea Mrs. Harvey M. Grosvenor, 314 34th Avenne, Seattle, Wash ® seed of destruction was sown overturned, all of this was an al They on a little farm in| The wind had blown the Dear Maéas through the neglect of her parents., most daily occurrence,” she says. | Kansas the little girl had to| 990d fates to one side, and the nilepetacerasch iKuoana ke marine pte sagas pommel [eager eh | victims of vice had two more |DIRECT TO YOUR HOME, PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANOS ott Cursing, swearing, crashing of bending over mother prostrate on Ofttimes I was so tired I could yeni added to their number. THE CLUB PLAN FROM AMERICA’S LEADING FACTORIES. furniture, smashing of dishes, |the floor, choking her into an un-|scarcely get home, only to *| BS Matinee Puig a4 Better tystruments for less money and on easy payments which SPORTED tue: eeahiae, and oon ae any one can reach. The factory piano club plan makes you your own ‘ vaniiad -Gietaian. civliteaton t every middieman, commission agent, teachers and aa 4 and puts all their profits and commissions IN Thareating; oomteescet ner was-| run ‘ STOCKgIN SEATTLE. Some of these Makes have been Jilted, a Garfield, man| There Is one piace in this coun-|mony. D. F. Heagle, Moriarty, N.|dering over the length and 9 eg pesca cell ype aod: dat ee ae d crepe on the ys front|try where the high coat of living | M.—Advertisement in Albu dM of the continent. Her second mar-|?U over a conmey 00. years. Ho other ae attle can door and was arrested. is reduced to something ke 9|N. M., Journa riage was broken up when her hus rants h a magnificent line of pianos @ Without rare cents a day, It is in prison cee band became Involved in sertous| denon, these are the finest high-grade Te ee Woman 120 years old in Dor! «dale | “Wait tilt 1914!” cry the Giants, |trouble, and again she was left to|tmuer” Read the wondered Ine” Diane in this great stock is a |mowo, Russian Poland, saw Na-| The Witeon girls have chrysan-|All right, we'll wait. We'll have |drift for herself O tcaatar Ait Pal n eie a ‘ ‘ Feces Rlageewe lr Sager iar Sigs vg Pete ah ls Guilt Manele tree bn ar a uanely Lite anes Ming Art Pianos, Maker established 1864; Gabler pianos, estab- them Is asked to write a play, an-| *And if Connie Mack’s health re-| She married a saloonman tn Ba-| ined 154, Haines Brothers, famous since 1 Decker, sings lev; pal ep other 1s to get a husband, and|mains good we'll have to walt till|ker City, Oregon, next, and for two| Ellsworth, Maker renowned since 1885; Bennett, since 1889; Cable & Temperance. crusade te on in| Father Woodrow has an Irish abil-, 1996 |years she led an absctutely lonely cage eit 1852; Brewster, 1895; Armstrong, 1896; Nelson, 1885; Germany, and 350,000 persons have lelah given him. Things coming! eee iife. Her husband seldom came! | / me - Sons dest manufacturers in grrcoe America; Gerhara, pesca rice Bs re any "eala® te. the Wilsons’ way AG haut hak the dlty on woo! home. When she applied for di 1 189 Burmeister, 1896; Boardman, 1 ; and the latest, the stead of “prosit.” | ee sis Goak vokucel, dont you! vorce, he answered that he had| doar gy Orchestral, the newest of all, but one of the sweetest toned gar | The law's delays can be traced to us soe ace Pee von. that 1{™@arded her while under the in Leng in the world —that is what everybody says; Reed pianos, 1842; |active lawyers and lazy fudges hae Leen reduced on woolen cloth? |fuence of liquor. The fourth man|/#ob Doll & Sons, 1871. Shin bone was used to mend Perrin i Leen reduced on wc whe’ toitdind Wis A bo ts chen Just think, our entire stock, composed of Leaders, and the ¢lub spine in an operation on a New| A Busy Winter Ahead be Ag oot i c $1,000 from her. He left her the | PTices’ marked down lower than what the middlemen dealers ask for Haven society man ee cette 2020 at dur bei day after the wedding medium, and even cheap, grades. It is the direct factory-to-home club Borsa WANTED—Two horses to winter,, That {s, everybody but the| plan that makes this possible Jersey City rector will open 0{*i8e housekeeper, intention matrh'tailors, 0 MEMBERS ARE JOINING EVERY DAY. For the first time in the school of dancing to take the hug out TOUGH ON THE DOC.) A rural quack doctor was holding forth about his “medicines” to a 1 audience “Yes, gentlemen,” he said, “I ha year complaint prov From of bunny-hug. eee these pills for over 25 and never heard a word of Now, what does that a voice in the crowd came T New wedding ceremony for Chi-| nese cisco. | clent custom bridegroom had othe left hat dead men tell no tales.” has been devised in San Fran It conformed with in that bride and never seen each r before, but had the “obey” out. Produced the evidence—witness ing neck and it |who was shot by prisoner on trial |in Oklahoma was telling his story lon the stand when a violent cough fit dislodged the bullet In his was exhibited to the jurors. Boy mind He ures lett, and resp w | hag man? tor. now President Wilson much advice from his cabinet, when you cabinet, neem to need to take advi than . with a “camera eye and 1" lives In Huntington, W. Va. makes all his letters and fig upside down, writes right to and sings his low notes high| In other | his high notes low. ects he ts normal eee ho says that a rich man’s son| nelf-made | no chance to be a There 1# young Vincent As Lately served on a jury appointed deputy sheriff. Ian’t taking And look over the the members » rather come to some of to proffer it . 8 oe These scandalous campaign con- tribt state who nitions may soon ¢reate such a » of panic that only rich men can finance thelr own cam palgms will dare run for office. rs A not sion, telephone girl's business Is entitled to be called a profes- It is merely a calling, the an-| and | FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN YOU CAN GETA HIGH-GRADE OVERCOAT. \@ RAINCOAT or SUIT HERE FOR ONLY $1500 OR $1 8;00 In fact, you are not doing yourself justice if you fail to see these garments, because we positively know that they cannot be excelled by Se- attle—whether in shop downstairs store, any shown in an upstairs or Twenty-four years of experience in buying and meet ing the of back of garment you buy in this store demands critical men is every We offer for your selection the biggest variety of standard makes and patterns to be found anywhere in the city. J.Redelsheimer & Co. First and Columbia “Strongest Overcoat House in the State.” Money-Saving News history of the organized mber the same planos in I@ts In Editor’s arene : of one thousand. tainly the best opportunity one of America’s best monthly installm HE pianos at A Teamster Prot Editor Star Pleas: ts suggest RE'S SOME SAMPLES |through The Star that coal dealers | $136, $168 and the divide up the supply of coal in-| pianos $268 now, instead of $550. stead of sending thelr teams out| $285, instead of §72 jat 2 a m. to stand in line until/ best player pianos from $1.50 to § which is the time they begin to! prices | weigh. The first teams in line get Members in Club A can pay the first load. “First fn line first|a week, Members D, $1 served We “skinners” are hu-| F $1.50 a week, Members G $1 man, We have to horse from 10 to 14 hours a day,| vantages offered you at this and drive them hard to make them| player piano clubs; BUT SEE profitable to thelr owners. I| rooms and investigate. should think that ought to be|to enroll as a member of one of th jenough, without having them | sent to your home. stand {n Hne on the team track all|clubs and be happy We have | Goddard Official “Goat” Editor Star: 1 do not know that |you or Mr. Goddard should feel | |badly to know that Goddard was the Hesketh “goat.” Isn't {t well known that Goddard {s the coun-| jetimanic “goat,” having acted tn| that capacity upon more than one Joccasion? Every _well-regulated | | st DWT BD FOR YOURSELF, You will quickly decide it is to your advantage piano and player plano trade, America’s leading factories factory-tohome clubs, which give to each individual power as a wholesale house ordering This 1s the greatest money-saving opportunity ever presented to piano and player piano buyers, and cer- any Seattle home has ever had to secure a small ts on a factory wholesale basis. Pianos are now reduced to $55, $87, highest grade domestic pianos, $210, cost and small weekly or Professional Art pianos in these clubs are only and then there is also a great range of America’s per week, all at greatly reduced 50c a week. Members B can now pay Téc Members E can p: 5a week. y $1.50 a week, Members It is impossible, within the drive those | limited scope of a letter, to give you a full idea of the marvelous ad- time in the manufacturers’ plano and come to our sales- e clubs and have one of our pianos Bring a dollar or two and join the factory piano made Eight thousand homes happy in Seattle and the | Northwest with our planos at Cut Prices; let us add your name to the Yours Very Respectfully, NATIONAL PIANO MANUFACTURERS, General Manager. barn yard has a goat, Why should not the barn yard of the Seattle council? A STAR READER i ce t CHURCH o— ° A clergyman was anxtous to intro- duce some hymn books Into the |church, and arranged with his clerk | that the latter was to give out the |notice immediately after the s | mon, The clerk, however, had a notice jof his own to give out with refer jence to the baptism of infants, Ac |cordingly at the close of the sermon he arose and announced that “All those who have children whom they wish to have baptized, please send in their names at once to the clerk.” The clergyr who was stone deaf, assumed that the clerk was| |giving out the hymn book notice, | and immediately rose and said: “And I should say for the benefit | lof those who haven't any, that they |may obtain some from the ushers any day from 8 to 4 o'clock; the jordinary little ones at 25 cent each, | jand sp °6 Tickets on sale daily, October 27. Friday, | REHEARSAL. —— A FINE OPPORTUNITY TO SEE THE Cn FAMOUS BIG RED APPLES HARVESTED ee -6O0 WENATCHEE ACCOUNT First Annual Hesperides North Central Washington Exposition Apple Show October 21 to 25 October 20 to October 24, Seattle and Return 26, Final return Mmit, and Hoo Hoo Day, stand, You know what will happen, s j : don't’ you, {f you don't tell the | Northern ticket office, truth?” i “Yaastr,” was Jackson's reply; “in Columbia and Second; side will | the truth when you are put on = | | our | dat case I win de case expects 7, 11 phones 5609, Elliott Main BUY SALT LAKE ROUTE or | LOS ANGHLHS, Oct. 21.—Rail-| f road men predict that the Union King St. Passenger Station, Pacific R. R, will tap Los Angeles by purchase of the Salt Lake route, lf- ¢\—l Lv. Seattle....... .m. 10:00 p.m. aes —--~o} Ar. Wenatchee... -m, 5:20a,m, Now, Jackson," snid the lawyer |M Ly. Wenatchee... ‘ jto the ‘colored witness whom he|M Ar’ Seattle Mm. 2:28 p,m. was rehearsing, “I want you to un eran SHERI m. 10: :20 p.m. derstand the importance of telling SES Se Secure tickets at Great National Park Route

Other pages from this issue: