The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 22, 1913, Page 1

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‘ Bob Bridges should and must be re-elected as port The special interest advocates, the Harbor Island fak IT IS A “PUSSY-FOOT” CAMPAIGN NOW. IT | special interest support. The Star has no quarrel with Dut- commissioner ers, the wild-cat frenzied-finance gang, however, have | IS A QUIET, STEALTHY CAMPAIGN, DOWN THE | ton, personally. But his candidacy at this time certainly In an open fight, B iMac dh sid ae , LINE THE WHISPERED COMMAND HAS GONE | bodes little good to this community eS of ight, Bridges would have no difficulty in learned by experience, and are therefore adopting a new rO MUSTER THE SPECIAL INTEREST FORCES. Thre “wan is depending on a light vote and thee downing the enemies of public ownership and control of | course of conduct. They are not making their characteristic SILENTLY AND QUIETLY, AND TO VOTE IN | “silently” mustered united forces to carry the election the port projects. In an open and direct fight, Bridges vicious attack upon Bridges because he championed the FORCE ON DECEMBER 6—AGAINST BRIDGES That's why, Mr. Citizen, it’s up to you to get out and has beaten these foes of the city’s best interests and his “people's interests and stood out against the Ayres bunch Against Bridges—that's the “pussy-foot campaign vote on Saturday, December € enemies _before a of fly-by-night “financiers.” whisper. And that is why J. O. C. Dutton is getting the BRIDGES MUST BE RE-ELECTED i RAIN TONIGHT AND SUNDAY; HIGH SOUTH TO WEST WINDS TTT TT ETM Circulation Every Da UUUUUNUANAUUUUUNNONANAOOOUOUUUUcudeNaaauuuuuauaegdand ST VOLUME 15 aiooo} The SeattleStar juss THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS O. 230, SEA URDAY, NOVEMB Ee TTT LLLLLLLLLLLLL LALA eos 1 Z 9) a | i SUV AUUUNAAHNA4AA4HNOO0UUEOSUUUAGEOUOUUUAONUUEGREOOOUD Us Oe AND THE WO Confessions of a Wife! No. Wherein They Interrupt Their Wedding Journey and Go to a Hotel to Rest, and the Bride Learns Something of the Innate Selfishness of Man, Un- { consciously Displayed by Her Husband. enn ee Beginning Monday the sub: ent chapters of “The Contes sions of a Wife” will appear on page 3 of The Star. In this won. dertully real diary of a real woman she has told of her wedding, of the qualms that preceded the ceremony, and of the iittle die. coveries she made afterward Today they are on the first day of their wedding journey CHAPTER VI. I was so very tired that | think I must have slept a little! I on the tr in, for the last I seemed to think about was MAN PAYS THE PRICE! JUMPS OUT [World’s Biggest Jol |AREYOUAPARENT? THEN WINDOW IN| and Man Who Did Ie| TS UP 10 YOU TO STOP POLICERAID Risks Her Life to Conceal Identity; the Man, of Course, Escapes The woman and the man were equally guilty of over stepping the moral code when they went to Room 4 in the | apartment house at 519 Pine st. Friday night But it is only the woman who is paying any penalty The man escaped There is no need to give the woman's name. She is lying at IMMORALITY IN SCHOOLS ‘For Immorality Does Exist; the Gossip Is NOT All Baseless; and You Have a Responsibility You Have Shirked. By Fred L. Boalt. My wife and | are, | suppose, as humanly prone to bias in our judgments of our own and the neighbors’ children as are most fathers and mothers. Uncle Dick's awful chir mtil’ Dick said: “Here we a the City hospital today, a nerv. Certain of the neighborhood children with whom Sonny plays are, . ove wreck and suffering from’ my wife tells me when | get home at night, no better than they ought to Madge,” and I, not more than half awake, stumbled ont into| a wrenehed beck end orem 7 wires wie 1 Bm the dark I t bruiser. She tried hard ¢ be. Sonny, | am told, is “ied” by others into being “naughty. “A 5 ar & ‘ i tow Dick 5 e a ag keep her identity from the po | hove no doubt that my neighbors look upon their own progeney and got tn himself and then for the first time sin we were lice. In desperation, when cor as small angels and that they regard my hopeful as an unmitigated married he took me in his arms pad oe herself out of nuisance re : , window in the room, by sal I couldn't kiss you before all that he said, “and Only the intervention of an Times without number | have heard juvenile courts mothers de- T tell you this is the WORST DAY I EVER SPENT, DEAR Me HART ‘but thank God it’s over now and we afe away from| the whole crowd. When we get up to the hotel we'll have something to eat. I am so tired of chicken salad and ice cream. Nice sort of thing for real people to eat, aren't they?” My conscience rather hurt mie, for I am particular- ly fond of chicken salad and had ordered it often + when Dick and I had been out together. But even I had been SURFEITED WITH SWEETS AND SALADS in the days before the wedding when we were entertained by his friends and mine. When we arrived at t hotel Dick strode ward to the desk. I wanted to go with him, for I had an unholy Mrs. Richard Waverly” would desire to see how “Mr. ar awning, which broke her fail of 15 feet, prevented what might have been a more seri ous accident The man had omitted, when | he engaged the room, to tel! the landlady, Mrs. Anna Erick. | son, that a woman was with | | him, When this was discover. ed, there was a lively argument between the two women. Mrs. Erickson went out to get a po- liceman, and the other woman hurriedly prepared to ve. The policeman came before she could get away. “If you attempt to arr me,” shrieked the woman, jump out of the window.” The policeman attempted to catch her, and failed | “Aw, let her goto ——" | vin fending their children Susie—or Johnny, as the case may be—has/ always been an obedient child, giving no trouble at all until she—or he—fell under the malign influence of Helen—or Jimmie—next door. This common weakness of parents may seem trivial—but it isn't. Let me direct your attention to a certain grammar school in Seattle —which | shall not name, for a reason that you will understand. The fathers and mothers of this schoo! controlied—or failed to con- trol—their children in very much t me manner as you do yours, and I mine. They trusted them. And trust is a fine thing. The children left for schoo! early, and If they returned home in time for supper the parents were satisfie: After supper the children often had permission to go to the “movi and to stay out until bedtime. And for a long time no harm resulted from this freedom. But one day this year a new girl came to this grammar school. She was 15 and old for her years. Such “wisdom” as was hers: she had gained from a man some years her senior. AND THAT GIRL POISONED THE WHOLE SCHOOL. The truth came out through the confession of a little girl to her mother Every boy and girl in that schoo! ani very father an ail look on the register, but I stayed back next to the clevator| commented the woman's com | i sbde a Slice Paty Babipigieasic id every father and mother and presently we were whisked up to a BEAUTIFUL Panion. “I don't know who she | And the fathers and mothers of 50 of those boys and girls left court circ aictey . . is, anyhow.” wornwood carrying with them the knowledge that their children had forever lost SUITE OF ROOMS The woman jumped. Seneromee their innocence. After the boy had left, Dick held out his arms to me] And in the commotion, the There is no more immorality in that school. and I RUSHED into them. For a moment neither of us| man coolly made his escape. sere a spoke and then Dick tipped my chin up and, with that dear] The police didn’t even learn iatnade Cynthia Grey's office is a clearing house for moral problems. ; -sided smile, said | Probably no one in Seattle knows more about this evil—and will ane Ww, i wns abe he Miva, Bintan’ Waved tell less—than Cynthia Grey elcome to our city S ssrenart epdynig elt In the past year more than half a hundred school girls—the youn: ‘ “Is that the way you wrote it on the register?” I asked M’NULTY Col. George Washington Goethals, Corps of Engineers, United States Army; Chairman and Chief Engineer, Bhave come ¢6 fier asking the one question: * “No, I put it ‘Richard Wave and wife.’ Isthmian Canal Comminsion “WHAT SHALL | DO WITH MY BABY WHEN IT IS BORN?” “Oh, Dick, I don’t like ‘AND WI it you are MY WIFE, aren't you “Y-e-s—but I think it looks so much better on the hotel register to write ‘Mrs. Richard Waverly.’ The MeNulty faction of the ternational Broth > ‘ trical Workers won in the factional || readers The Sta fight before the American Federa OF HO rHE GRI tion of Labor te When | was a boy | was so “bad” that they fired me from school as an example to boys a little ‘ess “bad” than | My “badness” found expression in fighting with my fists, throwing stones, robbing orchards, annoying policemen, . play- ing hookey, sassing teacher, smoking cigarettes and chewing to- ¢ y +0 Resolutions calling on the bacco. "Oh, no, ‘don’ vaid ger stg itne maces ae ee cite But, cussed as J must have been, neither | nor any boy of my “Oh, no, I don’t,” said Dick, with a grin. “I r say|tion for supplying strike breakers The whole story « he 1 ha acquaintance—and | belonged to a “gang"—ever thought of turning ‘and !’ or ffeur.’ do you you|to the Pacific Gas a trie | Po ubtist ec St er ¢ ( prowler and joining in the sex-hunt. 7 cgay gene ata ard Oil cx Uae Geuies ee rt te e CHAP Of the sex mysteries we knew little, guessed less, and cared noth v g I set aside. Gompers and \ other ; aoe d ear, I don't 1 that wa Mir; | camiedel at dhe ceteitne Seow PEOPLI athena eer a yh ten Game rte sending cones Clearly, it is up to us—you and your wife, me and my wife, and all Schoolteact an affillation of the seced Reid d bro up the Murphy electrical workers POTLATCH OFF Seattle will hav oceomiees sec” AB, OF Le WIND) WOMAN OPENS 7 SOGIETY DINERS our neighbors and their wives. We live in a city of migratory dweliers—two-room flats and kitchenettes, furnished. We move frequently. There isn't much room in our homes for children. They go to the street# for their fun We are sophisticated—very It makes us proud to see precocity in our children. When they ape us in dress and manner, we are amused. Children are a bother. Though we don’t admit it, we are indiffer- a J ‘ . ® ent, engrossed in our business and pleasures. We send the children “What do you want to eat? Order anything you like,| Instead a monster water carnival into the street to get them out of the way. We are relieved when they 4 dear,” said Dick as he got out his pencil, and then before) '* Planned in ce t with have been packed off to school » I had looked over the menu he exclaimed: “LET'S HAVE BEEFSTEAK.” shed opening of t attle ¢ The original plan to hold a cele bration tn connection with the vi by the board of trustees of the fleet here next year DOING MIDNIGHT TANGOS IN CAFE saree" YP CONVENTION GAS JETS, SHUTS “ute pac cons’ WITH ELECTION WINDOWS; DIES And we tell ourselves that, though other children may make grieve ous mistakes, our children could never do anything really wrong We tell our children nothing of the sex mysteries so they whisper knewledge gleaned from hidden sources, and—lo! our children are mam and woman-grown, wearing English lounge coats and slit skirts and having the thoughts and manners of courtesans and macquemen. It is all very curious and very terrible. 1" é Mrs And it is not the fault of the schoo! authorities. They have at P k I said I la 1, dear b because t when dvices were receive » Fe strikingly Broadway high—! mention that schoo! because gossip has given it a > ‘ t what I wa Nae ta ondary from Washington that the fleet nial ae Harry C bad name—a girls’ club and a boys’ club. In charge of these clubs are a as Soing i f would hot get up the coast as far en up with ad coast general manager for Sul faculty members—Miss Rowell for the girls and Physical Instructor / To you, little journal, I may as well contess an Seattle und Me-| jivan @& “Billy” Cook for the boys—whose business it is to look after the social it was a TEENY BIT OF A STORY, for I laughed lispute selection ¢ suicide In her life of the children. because I saw the funny side of some one saying, TURN HER BACK ng place and elect | Dunstan apartments, The clubs are divided Inte ‘seaticns, a nenchel ever ach sections 2 Fe ‘ itol Hill, morning by Not much that goes on in school escapes the faculty. © chance to Order anything you like, dearest. Let's have a 2 le that the election] inhaling gas thurart a wrong tendency is overlooked. beefsteak! : ae ae Mra. 1. ie widow of Albert 1 until late Int dats But when the children leave school they are out of the jurisdiction However, beefsteak h fr potatoes, stulled 1 ‘parsons, one of the Haymark dou of the authorities. . agus, a ie d coffee was Dick anarchists banged in| Chicago or J adserte AFTER SCHOOL HOURS THE RESPONSIBILITY IS OURS—AND : a pee, ie and I ate|1887, was turned back on the border | made to ele Mitchell presi. | ¢ WE HAVE SHIRKED IT! RENO . Canadian imm tion au den but it genera bait it (TH ? ' {day night, and returned that some om prow rs . as been rire eee n anc eae schon Mitehe n a E} Mrs, Parsons has been for some | porters will withdraw his name ar | sil time lecturing in the Northwest e Gompers fac a wh not ow eneld § had intended to speak in Van- pose tne election of John White La Be ir v | couver tonight his wlace as second vice presider An hou L { k : Fogle, tt pair tite Dik. shulbel ana ug!"e iat he ate HUERTA A DRUNKARD; DRINKS """°-::. HAPPIES [AN ON EARTH floor, face uptur (Sisal yinuie |S woe one «te Ws CHAMPAGNE FOR BREAKFAST «. ‘.*" f ae e, and he sa t if | can make you glad ar It was evident that 1 CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 22.—One of the’ most remarkable games 4 1 1 , - le weve ! rr ;, i gin . ! contr in football history was played here this afternoon before a crowd of . © ontinu d (By a United Press Staff Correspondent.) were tightly sh (To Be Continued Monday.) Wana ‘ohie see bayer Re ih able a Seen pat ree ) persons, when the annual Harvard-Yale game went to the crimson, i : ison'n indifference toward President Muérta’s ex sank he bee s 15 to 5. Harvard's entire scoring was done by kicks. Yale scored of COUPON | tion of eating fyrr hed the United Pre toda He w nt one th eer , a field goal and two for a safety 4 t The St ; secutively num several occasions wa 1 to have ‘ n stage of ‘ ; when the great Harvard back booted a goal from placement at 35 yards. ur coupons clippe he Star, consect u on severa a F ‘ ( cere eepees sete Star office with 18 cents, will entiti actual Yresponsibilit ts wore said to have oc Gives Up Business - Yale closed up the gap in the same period when-a s@fety was regist- r,. you to a 65-cent Pennant. Yale and Navy Pennants are now, out od at these timen nimportance of a drunk Bot WASHINGTON, No Yates lane : lf Vennants will be sent by mall If 5 cents additional for each Pen: ial abalone ihe ‘inistration has 4 N eas Paine € In the escond quarter Brickley place kicked a goal from the 38-yard | nant ls enclosed. Bring or mali te The Seattle Star, 1307 Seventy || DERG acaatnk Wik (At ha BAuiiMlle dviniel hinvaeiedot jan RA oheens htidineug (5 oy, ded wun tine and a {ittle later Guernsey drop-kicked a goal from Harvard's | + near Union St Pune ear breakfast, topfing off the meal with cognac devote himself to charity on, 48-yard |ine, Score at end of first half. Harvard 6. Vale 5,

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