The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 21, 1913, Page 1

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)

WHERE LIES THE BLAME: i eee eoaeerne —— - —_—_—_____ sce — — - — — — —— RAIN TONIGHT AND SATURDAY; MODERATE SOUTHEAST WINDS. say HQQUUNUUULEEUUEUUEUUANANENUUUAAaaentauaeeeattt o«0| The SeattleStar [uss a ETS Circulation Every Day | : FMM ui THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS VOLUME 15 NO. 229. SEATTLE, WASH,, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1913. ONE CENT 23 N* AND Nr AND. Be NEXT, A STORY OF PANAMA CANAL, WRITTEN BY VA BEGINNING Monday, Col. Goethals, United States engineer in charge of the building of Col. Goethals writes how Uncle Sam became boss of a great grocery and meat de- the Panama canal, will tell through The Star the tale of how he brought his wonderful _ partment store. job to a triumphal completion. It will be the most omportant newspaper aricle of the year. What about the great landslides? Col. Goethals explains them so that all can under- The story of the greatest work done by man’s hand on this earth’s surface is told by stand them. this modest soldier, this greatest of engineers, in words so simple, direct and clear that Can the Panama canal be blown up? The colonel gives his idea of that, also. any school child can understand it. Finally, he will tell you just how Uncle Sam’s men on the job DID the world’s greatest He tells the story from the beginning up to today, explaining its problems and de- job—just how the plans were successfully carried out. scribing its features not with dry details and tiresome figures, but so plainly that the A STORY IN BRIEF ABOUT WHICH WHOLE a, BE Bsc feader sees the canal in his mind’s eye, just as it stands on the isthmus ready for ships t You have read lots of “stuff” about the canal. For “stuff” and much nonsense have e y P§ to heen written about it. But the story by Col. Goethals gives you the real goods, ALL OF IT, tei through. from first to last. Whole books will be written about this wonderful American enterprise, No article you have ever read has told you so lucidly and interestingly about the great | but NONE will tell more about the Panama canal than Col. Goethals in this article he has locks of the canal and what they will do, as will Col. Goethals in his story. written EXPRESSLY FOR YOU. READ THE FIRST CHAPTER IN THE STAR, MON- Is the lock canal better than a sea level canal? The colonel absolutely settles that point. DAY. 001s CS OE eee (c) Underwood & Underwood. AY BEAT GOMPERS ese: eer] CHIL DREN © TRS | eee MITCHELL IS | ; | Confessions of MICHELL WA) . RUNA a Wife! No. 5 | A.F.L. CHIEF’ Safely Married, They Go on Their Wedding Jour- 6 = ney, and the Bride Finds Her Husband Is) 14.0. wWoskers’ Delegates D f \ ' \ | ——————. Lacking in What He Is Pleased to Call “High- js. ue i ee 1 anes ‘ es | By Fred L. Boalt brow” Stuff; and She Wishes That They}; “; at = 5 are SE ; Some day that five-year-old son of mine will go pia aaa Ata, Pe eR A : SI to hiThen, with hie shecpekin in his hand, be wil His Peop! John W. Mitchell @as been S ; | en, wil is sheepskin in his 5: ill go offered euffielent: tuppert to , ‘ out into the world to sink, or swim—or float. 4 CHAPTER V. es cae te toe . wf. Pray God he will prove a strong swimmer! After we had gotten on the train ‘on our way to Niagara| i hans boperectnde Y ene Z 3 When he leaves high school he will be “the fin- Falls, which I had never seen, and shaken the rice out| ers, according to delegates of ; _ venga fl eer — te “carte —_ they make of our belongings, Dick said the United Mine Workers, who of him at the high school? it he of any use in — “Say, Madge, what do you think of stoppimg-xt South} 4/* ¥raing @ change in the fed- : the world? é i Bed?’ YoueWokaa hough you were ABSOLUTELY] $i7th core ade to - _, Out at Broadway high there are 1,600 boys and FAGGED. We're not going to break the record for fast|him at his headquarters tn the girls who are receiving the finishing touches. Soon Ne je ond hotel Thursday + ‘ ey - traveling. We're just going somewhere to have a good time ee ee j they will be “the finished product.” f and get away from that mob at home.” | Mitchell has thus far deciined to| 4 For the most part I find that they are clean, “But our tickets are through to Buffalo,” I remonstrated. | #99," pener he will allow hia name | 4 g healthy, alert young Americans. But, my, how 5 hag can Us acge Fp said Dick, as Pe ned i rhesl® Doubt, He Says 7 | ; é ‘ | stylish they are! I could not help contrasting them it t or . y tes it w arrangec r here is not t i do | v7 fy * E and I rould not help thinking how RESOURCEFUL, DICK | the result should Mitchell decide | ‘ with the school children of my day, when girls wore: a Y i : ; hep t to run,” said John Walker of the |gingham aprons to protect their dresses and boys WAS. I would never have questioned if my tickets read) titted’ Mine Worke | } . ™ } ed Mine Workers |couldn’t be relied upon to wash themselves behind / to a place, but that I would have to go there without a] Insurgent leaders that} stop. there is a natural demand | 2 ee \the ears. fe Eetenty Dick turned around and looked at me and] part of » majority <d, ec | I have no quarrel with good clothes. « whisperec trol of ha i. > | re ore Te, 4 . c Meant haven, V've got’ you away) from them at last:| fear of losing me ee ? bai But here and there was a girl—a very young | YOU'RE REALLY MINE, Madge, and we'll make this/has kept these |yirl—awith her hair (most of it switch) bound ¥ honeymoon something to remember. I've got that thousand | from uniting With the pulse beats of the jobbers normal and no early rise in temperature predicted, it begins to dq.» bya gaudy ribbon so that it was crushed > oe i ray aa oe save A They Fear Gompers | took as though Mr. C. P. will weather the coming Thanksgiving at the same prices for the piece de re dollars the firm gave me and we're going to have the time) gach delegate 1s more vitally In| ance as prevailed last year. Today turkey is quoted at 35 cents a pound. This price is expected to last, doqwn over temples and ears, and with her hips of our young lives, even if we spend it all. 3 _,, | terested in the questions which in| until Thanksgiving. The price is the same as last Thankagiving. . is bg Right : P: “Bat we ought to use that to FURNISH OUR FLAT,|volve his international, and the — ——— : ney m Ta ae encircled by a band to emphasize their fulness, Dick.” T said. Insurgents say that fear of arous-| ! ms oe sie ie 4 u oF Goat betieve you'll want a flat, Madge, just. at first. |!0s, tte, gemity ‘ctsaccs MME, MELBA AND Myrtle Has a Peg Top Skirt and her legs encased in a skirt so brief and di- You see, I'll be away a lot and you'd be awfully lonely in| in power aphanous that— an apartment by yourself.” Whether the dissatisfied factions | iQ}: Well, 1 ama blunt man, and yo 5 periment ty ourset ce 1'had boarded so tong| tit tt emsiorctertes Soke lit Up to Her Knee; Also Has cei s.1 vit women wile wear those cxawnene and I WANTED A HOME OF MY OWN, but pert vip fr af =o 9 well as lat % omen who wear these exag gera- Dick is right. I might be lonely. Anyway, I'll wait and see ture Mmo. Melba and Kubelik, and a tions of the prevailing hideous mode are inviting ° ° “Mother and father sav they will furnish the apartment| Mitchell's friends today belteved | oon, company of assisting ar Rh t d th Pl war oe By ge: my ee ick tua when we want one” continued Dick, “and while I did|¢ Yould be s candidate. e ae oi wnt be eumatics an e eurisy % orld to gaxe on the ripeness of their charms. Ge. tieta of stellar importance, - —_ sla a e nadine nat Have time enough to look over THAT JUNK carefully map t wrsiotcom sesggonseybecd oes We expect courtesans and actresses of the ee 1 sent us a W ese hte Scag pu fae On TRIVETT FREED jof December 6 and the Ladies Yess Fey) oon it le aa _—@ | | poorer sort to go about thus arrayed, as adver=- have alr e kitchen stove, to ft sh al | > e 01 vices | yi pe . . - a or eee Seene exceee the kitchen | j Musical club, under whose auspices) ii vtie has a peg top skirt J \tisements of their calling. But school girls! home right now —- the organization ts brought, consid-| Bilt us to Po sot i / o “Some of the things were so awful that were given us,”| J. P. Trivett, accused of the |ers :his attraction the most pre-] jade of flimsy crepe de chine; cal And the boys! Their clothes are more . r * murder of Oliver Sanford, was |tentious ever offered throughout J | ‘ I said ‘timidly. . : eful lot of money| 2cquitted by a jury in the supe- the club's twenty years of artist | Pita eae aie ells # |than Pr er. veer ne England. What fuzzy hats! oe Xous Uncle Dick must hav pet at owed lot of money) Flor court “today after twelve i coanats Bassotti dal eu Peay rakish caps! How nattily the narrow shoul- (or can disregarded Tiree anata ee conduetor,| Muay a crooked man votes a| Mer silk hose are very shegr— dere slepe! flow tight’ the Siipeeiiget Sa se gh Se ge age soctegti a t and . tis San.|straigat ticke eer Serenity f \the heels! f thought {t fine’ myself said Dick, complacently, | shot and killed Oliver and Otis San straigat th Myrt a white fox collar has , x | . Z “Uncle gave $200 for it.” fine on ‘August Si, 1912 tellowing | Our advertising phras iije betty OM her velvet coat Na | If the evil ended with outlandish taste in dress, T shuddered, fol, as it was matked with a big 4 quarrel stor ie whiek, ° White ard te hur theses, this valuable space would be wasted. Boys must go monogram. I saw myself eating off those ugly plates eigen kb ia Myrtle has the rheumatiz =f} \ |through the smart alecky period, and it is natural | the remainder of my life. I couldn't return them or tp Bia ae aohandee | reauit, Ayal wells, BAT A chal Lae ¢ ys é a we \for thei to-wantae ape men. break them all at once! . Also pleurisy 4 et | “ one | But the evil does not end there. For the first time it came to me that, perhaps, | EW YORK, Nov, 21.—To be truly fashionable this Winter you must | stood under an awning across the street and watched the childres I knew he did not care much for reading what he he serene tar aston orig oe foveal sutra iy your uaa se sare tours from the garages which infest the neighborhood. called “high-brow stuff,” but I had taken it for LAND MARINES AT VERA CRUZ ’ t Ra Sotto enacted win Groups of girls passed, holding up their skirts to escape the mud. granted that he knew what was right in house-fur- ord, with tassels, it is dubbed the sailor stocking, pos-| A0d,th® commente--yes, and invitatione--that. were shouted : aaa nishings and all the other little details which spell | by the well-dressed, ultra-English young cubs under the awning were ot h " a hy an ARTISTIC TEMPERAMENT. WABHINGTON, Nov. 21.—Responding to Lord Cowdray's appeal yith blounses more films of tiille out low necked almost to- the | * such 98 you would wants daughter of youre to hear, "ap cae i had taste eat 1 don't think| for American protection of the British Pearson Syndicate's Mexican in- waistline, petticoats taboo, the velvet wraps cut out also in the neck am peculiarly sensitive to bad taste an 1K | terests, Admiral Fletcher, commanding the United States naval force and sporting collars of fur only along the back of the shoulders, lovely | I can be hay urrounded by things which SWEAR AT off the Mexican east coast, might land marines, It was admitted here , Woman 1s sure to have a sweet time in a snowstorm |. A friend of mine has a niece of 16 who goes to high school. The FACH OTHER or outrage my sense of their fitness today Doctors are enthused over the winter styles and as for the under.| other evening she remarked at dinner: | I wist ar ur given wu ¢ oney, dear 1] But this would not necessarily be an act of war, it was added, | takers—well, they should fret lh HD as pd rd b ng ge a lave got married. They wa } Precedents were pointed to in which just such a proceeding was not What ought to be a great help, however, is the newest fad for the | Mavent tol heir folks yet, but they told some of us. Everybody's so construed. lf marines were landed perhaps it would be for “po- female to tote a cane, Every smail boy nows the warming possibilities talking about it of a walking stick j These harum-scarum unions are getting common. Out in the Renton « ee eee linner | lice duty,” it was stated lH ri ecently the parents of a 16-year-old who had run off | tice =e | Hill district y g oO un off i$ ‘ and married a school boy a year older, gave a dinner to the high school father ‘i pick 1" her te [ ( friends of the bride and groom! money,’” b] t | The guests came in their grown-up finery. They had a fine time. That's a » isoneyiand NOTHING BI ! § || So, did the giggling bride and the boisterous groom. THE FATHER Ua te a for a while, for if Dick’s mother} AND MOTHER OF THE GIRL, HIDING AS BEST THEY COULD gue raw 4 ya gfe , THEIR ANGUISH, DID THEIR BEST TO “SAVE THEIR FACES.” and father intend nish our apartment it is a certainty How atill it is! How tensely; There will be features which, character parts. by bim to the bush can testify that The whole thing was ghastly. that his + want something to say about how it] fit Hush, something is going to} alone would be worth the price.} And Dr. A, B. Burts, who ordi-|he ts some tuterlocutor ied shall be abe | happer : Das our own plump and cherubte | narily By ltd the humdrum profes: Cabare walters are polite high ' bali ofa hed’ which takes maternity cases and which in the Ria 3 Ge : : nw Presently you will hear a fright-| Dug—the baseball season ended,}sion of an eye, ear, nose and throat] Waymen, so it 1s fitting that A, B.| past year has received a number of school girls who have be I wonder if it is wicked to wish that Dick and I 's pba essian of bangs! will appear in the living, breathing} specialist (advt.), will strut as] McBreen, of the clty treasurer's of-| ere. s \ come ar were not going to live in- the same city with his iv ban: g'--and jokes d) pletures. Dug will be “September | “Forbes Robertson Rooth. Dr,| fice, should be chosen for one of The school authorities cannot justly be blamed for all this “pre- people. ; , 1 Morn.” We would go miles to see| Burns looks like an actor. We re |them—"Chipped Beef.” Among his| cocity,” all this “wisdom,” which is but dangerous half-wisdom, and “all (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) and n, th and other-| Dug in the altogether and shivering| peat, he LOOKS like an actor |brother pirates of the napkin are! this immorality . i spac re hrb acl: wartide -— -— rT in a lake. And Dietrich Hamm will be the!R, Sartori (Mashed Potatoes), who | 1am sure it is not their fault, ae 1] say; what's the And Billy Grant, a dignified | beauteous Indy cashier, Goodnes d to be in the saloon business They are doing all they can for the school boy andthe school gir ¥ COUPON \ ? and decorous plutocrat who, n he employed igh beau-| but Is now a gentleman farnver,| while they are in school. When they leave the soho! prétatase hey PENNANT. NO. 124 “ e Hig Noise at during business hours, sells us ones When ho and Schmidt|and Fred W, Newell (Coffee and] go out of the. jurisdiction of the school authorities. ° t The Elks are| diamond tia and pearl neck were proprietors of the Butler] Sinkers) who amuses himself sell And then what? eee —— Any four coupons clipped from The Star, consecutively num. | They want an organ for is of the beast hotel ing lumber Tomorrow | shall tell what are, in my 6pinion, the contributing bered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitie | They will) ly rich, will be seen in the role And Judge “Rob” Lindsay will be] Our purpose in naming the hams | causes, you to a 65.cent Pennant. Yale and W it if enough people go to the tant manager of the the sole proprietor and inter-]1n the show ig that you may be pre- | believe | have “made a case.” IF SO, IT 1S A TERRIBLE IN- Pennants will be sent by mall If 5 © r onight abaret,” Mike Shaugn- | locutor of the minstrel show. ‘The| pared for the worst before you get| DICTMENT OF FATHERS AND MOTHERS, AND OF SOCIETY IN £ Ave, near Union St ” # nothing stingy about the | did not make him Northwest baseball league, and any| Tonight, Saturday night, and all tell, too, what the schoo! authorities are doing to fight | | | nant is enclosed. Bring or mall te The tle Star, 1307 Seventh " y have a long program. nt’s secret sorrow judge was once president of the] to the theatre. 8 an actor so he could do Irish number of false alarms sent back’ Monday night © the evil, and how you may help if you will. { = iF

Other pages from this issue: