The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 6, 1913, Page 1

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a The men and interests who have always opposed every move- ment that has had for its aim and object the betterment of the con- ? ditions of the common peopie are going to the polls today to vote AGAINST Bob Bridges---AGAINST the creation of a logged-off land @ district, and AGAINST Miss Mary O’Meara and Mrs. Schroeder for the school board! Therefore it’s up to the man who toils, and the woman who toils, and the housewife, to go to the polls today and vote FOR Bob Bridges, FOR Miss 0’Meara and Mirs. Schroeder, and FOR the logged-off land law. The polls will be open until 8 o’clock tonight. If you don’t kaow the location of your polling place cali the School Board, Main (375; the Port Commission, Main 124, or the Registration Clerk, Main 8500. it’s the most important duty you have today! RAIN TONIGHT AND SUNDAY; HIGH EAST, SHIFTING TO SOUTHEAST WINDS. te | zicoo| The SeattleStar [xcs7) Fe = Circulation Every Day SMM THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS VOLUME 15 ’ SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1913. E CENT JUST A REMINDER TO YOU TO DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPINGERRLY| (|) S ANT A CLAUS GETS INTO HEARTS OF WAITERS DOWN AT ‘THE BREAKERS’ © By Fred L. Boalt EMMI MM MT The Breakers? If you are conventionally nice, you lift your eyebrows—and change the subject If vou are one of the holier-than-thou sort, you condemn it, though you have never been there, and don’t know any- ut it you are one of those ie r u wink n the high « ime you've had at The Breakers, where with a bottle of wine under your f vest, you beat tir w nile . t Very gay is the music at The Breakers, Very tuneful and sprightly are the ladies and gentlemen of the cabaret. i Even the legs of the grand piano seem to tangé WAIT UNTIL THE : YOU CAN BEGIN And the waiters—what brigands are the waiters at The Breakers! Those soft-footed Knights of the Napkin have ~! 4 a way with ther It coaxes the tips from the stingiest pockets. It diminishes the tightest wads LAST MINUTE AND ‘ie NOW AND Food and drink, bright lights and music, laughter, smiling lips and eyes that question and invite—all these may be GET CAUGHT in " . {found at The Breakers Naughty? Oh, my, yes ' * 8 % # early afternoon. There wasn’t much doing at The Breakers A hald-headed waiter strolled from the cafe bar, and Jaid his tray on the counter urbeersgingerr ithalor ss—-AND A CLARET LEMONADE,” he announced th the mirror t the bar, where he had been regarding his reflection with a He worked leisurely. Star r remark the bald-headed waiter, “thi 1ey're going to have a Christmas tree for poor Dreamland,” huh,” said the bald-headed waifer. “I've been reading about it. ‘Little-chimney kids’—that’s what they call said the “service” man, “ don't get that ‘little-chimney’ stuff. What's it mean?” said the waiter. “Let me wise you up, Billy. A ‘little-chimney’ kid is @,kid that’s poor and won't get any | presents from Santa Claus for Christmas unless—” “I'm hep,” said the “service” man. “The same line of bull they used to peddle to us when we were kids—about jSanta Claus coming down the chimney. Well, some chimneys are little, and that’s the truth, * * * Four beers, ;W hat else? Ginger rye and a long glass. * * ® Say, Baldy, you make pretty good money.” lot so worse,” acknowledged the bald-headed waiter, “Why “Got x humch, that’s all— There's a-kid out at my house that wrote a. letter to Santa Claus. _ Arid he’s going to every — thing he asked for!! Who's going to get ‘em for him? ME! I am.” “Is it a long story, Billy?” asked the bald-headed waiter, hooking an elbow over the bar and yawning. | ‘o, it isn't long. * * * There's your rye high. And?” } | AND A CLARET LEMONADE.” | “Right,” said the “service” man “And,” he went on, “I've got an idea, Baldy, I'll have more fun myself, Christmas, watching the kid with his toys if I ca now that there ain't a lot of other kids that ain't got any and wanting ’em.” “Ne doubt about it,” said the bald-headed waiter, soberly | chimney kids. Kick in, Baldy.” ' ‘Like a house afire,” said the bald-headed waiter, and did ie EVENTS 10 IN VAIN T0 SAVE. And, all the other waiters and “service” men “kicked And so did the tuneful and sprightly ladies and gentlemen |of the cabaret. YES, AND EVEN JOE, THE JAP BAR BOY, CAME THROUGH. VARSITY SPORT| M F OM PEN AND YESTE RDAY THE HEAD-WAITER BROUGH T THE MONEY—$17.50—TO THE STAR OFFICE. What could Steve do? Tasty things about, Hart and Bar AN R FINDS ‘SCREAMING CIRL “ 9 To dodge was impossible—bare/ton. In fact, he sald they were Wowace, AND, Dee. ¢ TA fivemile! prosecuting Attorney Murphy | Detective Dan Hart had} neglecting their duties. a haif- hold on Steve In outraged ve Stove cried | #ate tennis tournament h been | Made an unusually stirring appeal clothes—from pantaloons to collar} out for greater re thorough added to the list of sport events of for clemency before Judge Ronald EW EXCUSE FOR | OR E Dbuttons—and had them all tightly| purity, as he pictured his adven the acific Northwest college con: | gatur n behalf of two brothers H TH WINDOW” clutched under his arms. | ture with a girl named Ag at : who pleaded guilty to second de Detective H. M. Barton stood at|the American cafe, and several 4. . ey cat in session Pgh to | gre: clary ROER BOAT: KIDNAPED? the doorway with a little hand-/other advent ake tas Stee eres A tote broth years old, , H — | era and a fiashiight attach-| So, when met his young att to shoulder all the blam oar A uniformed cop was ready |Iady at the Calhoun hotel at session. The cross-country run will | to ve the younger man, who is] | i SACRAMENTO, 6.—“The of the day of his triumph—the day ment A salforinch” the moment |crclock Friday night, Barton and be held under the aurpices of the | oniy According to James B. Howe, gen-| Mystery vells the reported kid-| lamp is stil ee wg my boy’ | wher n he intended sounding the Steve and the young lady got into|Hart determined to show they |Cregon Agricultural college in Cor Neither one of these men,”/oral counsel of the Puget Sound/naping of a woman late Friday | ‘turn | oath eth ee pe ae iwore ceapliatioalfy on the job vallia, next fall, The tennia tourna 1 Murph 3 a criminal. f 5 It was Grove L, Johnson, for two| ization which has unsuccessfully op- their duds, 1 Watek Pair Thredgh Hols mout will be held at Bugane? Or., on | pleaded Murphy, "le 0 criminal. | traction, Light & Power Co. today.|night. She was dragged by twol score years the greatest individual | posed_his advance. - ” . | ves ion hae shown jem to ‘e { rT eo » a vw by o} e 4 " oo, a aiken ene Barton end Hart bad secured the | May Mscanbanon aestocitian seen sac the public corvice arora _ : arr a abe on gene se factor in the republican party in| es Tocselee Party's Finish ere é a in giving it only days in which ° baa bs end of "| California, speaking. He was re) e republican party, which had twiee—six times in all, and Ex [room adjoining that used by | their situation t doaperate. It 1) Comply with the order to gsell| Fauntleroy park car line, residents | ferring to his son, Hiram, the gov-| made his father, was to be smash- | f 0 pion in thi a g conditior n ~ . ware Ae GO Scene |Blarenard shows: With 2 its | HAVE WE HEARD is an appalling condition In Seattle | ieyety ou care, ait-for-a-quarter the police. ‘They wore awaK-| ernor Jed to smithereens at a meeting of Sguinat’ Steninen "Wentworth tool, resembling ahoemaier' FROM YOU YET? ||"the winter ts nard, and there. Howe sare the, law entitles the) she, [fey Seat Mo germane for| “i eeperabi yaternn Laie Se, ees cats a ted the yourg woman, has they thd bored a hole in the con The following contributions to J are all kin who For that reason, no tickets will Beat oa they rushed th her lertin aecem cet ites Pian Pe) ‘ those Blethen photographs [necting door The Star's Christmas tree for | are going e oe ee : bt of the Sacramento hote | y |s very, very bitter looking pretty tame. Hart had his eye glued to the | littlechimney kids at Dream: | secure work » 1s room for Da eee ee ey Bred ope nae 5 alton teks Wianerem, which Wants His Boy Back squint om bat 3 ew ae It happened at about 10 o'clock | hole most of the time. He . and hall have been received to] real charit his time-—the char se ote ee ok thar company; | made an eibnight mearcm, found no|_..72 WORte Bis Coy: We AEA We oo tem wee tae Eee Friday night in a room at a Bianch-|lieved occasionally by Barte date ty which will give employment to! ee oe ae ina not be OF aate ttt ace of the woman He cares not whether he comes as| Mi 4) gt gro ago, held the ard st. lodging house ‘They gained entrance to Wen Brown & Hulen ; $14.00 | | those who want to work and to re iy itt : rmgpndlioar ee q ps ogressive or the member of any pick eg +e nse ee a Stephen Wentworth, investigator, worth’s room by a pas key R. B. Hésketh 2.00 |, main honest ne nto her party. But Yuletide is fast het t'e Nie pad shoul In’t he for a local newspaper who recently amlably employing the phrase J. D. Ritchie pares Judge Ronald gave the younger 7 MAY FREE HER arproad hing and this political war-| Bet lim hie father dug up several tons of alleged vice|the da) i Jack David Nese Jman a suspended sentence. The ANDREW Ss GIFTS rior of other days deplores the pos this" hoary headed naed the faced scandal, was trailed by the “fly got you, Steve.” J. C. Marmaduke .... . older brother was sent to the pent aaa, : f t of a vacant seat at ine | ris feopued oeh Bis te of be cops” from early evening | Steve was released on his per-|] Leary Bidg. Barber Shop. . tentiary for a term of one to 15 i OnE Das. 6 LONDON, Dec. 6—Mrs, Emme-| Christmas dinner table hiner ntinued pans Detectives on the Job oon rae iseieeei nd the eirilh Winilan Gutherlend . 8:00 [|veare. ‘The law does not allow aus-| NEW YORK, Dec. 6—Andrew|iine Pankhurst, who collapsed in| Last night, while the rapllly-| "Wien a person Steve, whose real name, he told put up $50 bail on a charge of In-|] Waiter 8. Fulton coors W pended sentences where persons are | ©# 8 secretary figures that the | jail yesterday, following a our|aging father of the governor was| pea te a sock a the the tolice, 2 David Swing Ricker, decent conduct kV; Holese ae ater aan or has given away $365,-|hungor and thirst strike, was weak-| mourning fate's prerogative, the | Tres and he aves a certain horse | ut of a fortune originally [er today. Her speedy release was| chief executive of the state was In nediately Inquires who had been saying sor The girl's 1 name was not Agnes Empioyes of The Break- | Brig sadhana . ’ - oe be hb Beira: (Te YOU VOTED? 125,000. expected San Francisco, celebrating the eve bis sire was “I'm the boy's father, and I , T know RETURN 10 WORK Mente Faken 109 i ight him everything he knows. I a ? don't regret it one bit. He has J J a penal (nse ‘ ee he turned against me; he sent out the Miller freeman .. - of word that | must be defeated at all icoe IANAPOLIS, Dec. 6.—Thetr|{ Charles Tenna 0 costs in my last fight to retain my NCISCO, Dee. f y SAN FRA 7 f seat in the assembly, but | forgive bi, cotemingher, bad testified \corosment, one-third, of the. 3,000 | Lamme=oeee It Worth, Do You Think, the Life of Her Betrayer?“ "Ttnrtotmas to drvwten span the did not know who fired t ted Wm. Acker and | 8trikiag msters here resumed Ss him back. I want him back shots wt vot ne wou cuéed herself, | Wor ,| COUNCIL EAT a eure a CROWLEY, La., Dec, 6.—‘“Is a woman's honor worth more than ton for Christmas dinner.” ae As 9 body, however, the memt h ’ betrayer's life? Bitter Against Progressives ae al of Coulson was ad ' the murd Bernice, of the employers’ association stood OPEN; GET BUSY , ; | "That's the question the women of Louisiana are crying from the) Not a word did Grove 1. utter journed wi against the strikers. 1 were | housetops. against his boy. He was not so AINST much incensed against those who ote é s | The particular woman in the case fs not a woman at all, just a|friendly, however, to the progres- RULES A weakened Are you a candidate? There's a : J mere slip of a 17-year-old girl, basely betrayed and cruelly cast aside| sive party pauey to be filled to the eosnell wt . by the man—a “cur,” Mias Kate Gordon ident of the Loulsiana Suf-| “It’s good that the republican OAL date for I B ft ‘ Y 2 | But a jury of Louisiana men evidently didn’t think a man old man said. “A greater and 4 VG 2 7 Hee who wrongs an innocent little plantation girl a cur; or, if they nger party than ever will be AN FRANCISCO, Dee. ¢ ent ‘a 4 B “ did think so, THEY MUST HAVE VALUED HIS LIFE MORE rn in the state of California.” er Judge Doo! r A "el HIGHLY THAN THE GIRL’S VIRTUE Hindus in th 1 Ste nty i ” t ‘4 For they found the girl, Dora Murff, 17 years old, guilty of man Mlndtige daporigtion orden more. unorived the fale of #0. vs gin 8 Ae gee titan reason nana tarot mow oes AOODLES FATAL jy because they came in a lonesome penitentiary cell ippines instead of dai 1 mn | next a Mesos ‘lean is ‘MISSING The “man in the case” was Milliard Delhaye, 21, the son of a| E nadia, $200,000 br wr wealthy sugar-cane planter. | noodles proved a. fall : i al of over $1,000,000 for next ‘The killing occurred on a highway near Crowley, in June, Miss | di 1 Japanese wamed K, Naka- SAILORS DROWN is Sepp nll bata BAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 6.—Hi Murff, her 1f-yearold brother and J. 8. Duval, her step-father, were tn|shima, a tatlor, of 117 Ninth av, 8, ) h as appealed*to the police ve | a buegy, returning to the plantation home after a dance in town, Del-|Who died in agony last night after | eper - torway, De 6.—The as) eee Be eet ae. PAlbar y ely find F. W. MeEwen, real haye met them and began talking to Dora eating a bowl of the. Oriental dell- mar. Norway, Dec. 6--The| ity will not nat 4 tate man, last séen last Monday Miss Murff says she demanded that he make good his promise and | Cacy Swedish “eae ; yop at poet hans tpt feared to have met with an give her unborn babe a name! | Coroner J. T. Mason will perform fast might In Pee Oe Y ve nt of violence He refused, she says, and her young brother, Allie, grabbed a shot-/& Post mortem examination to de- 46 9 sailors were drowned HAVE YOU VOTED - 2 |cun from the earriage termine whether or not the food ret CARDINAL DEAD N Delhaye drépped, a ¢ ¢ hole is breast, Dora clambered | contained poison. mn "Nia Tf " a D r ; down from her seat and y rm around his neck, She Kissg@ him | PE NNAR r COU JPOR i ey ec as a eikad as he breathed hia Inst : DIVORCES THE COMMODORE ¥ 7 today of pneu ey 4 | Allie denied hg fired the sf o did dhe step-faher, Dora says sh KA CITY, Dee. 6 Thie Coupon and 15c, whén brought to The Star office, at 1307 : Maith<mekes’ (at pevowitlh pulled the trigner of the weapon when it was ratsed to the Seventh Av., will entitle you to a 65 Pennant, size 15x35. Pen dinal | Gibbo St, Baltimore | | Allie ; a diveree from Commodore George nante will be nt by mail if 5e additional for each Pennant is dean of the college. | : On the strength of her own story she has been convicted of man-|B. Salisbury, U. S. N., retired, o@ inciosed. Hawali Pennants out this week, o—----- a@! Dora Murff, the 17-Year-Old Girl Convicted of Slaying Her Botrayer slaughter and her step-father given a life sentence for murder, grounds of abandonment, sh@ulde Salisbury has been

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