The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 13, 1913, Page 3

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)

p Tt was a deed of stupendous reck By Herbert Quick |, as charges! and guiding him em | What chance had he? The last refine-| feather in a storm. He was harn ment of War, com | essed to his death as surely as the pleting the cycle,| old slave chained to hia oar in a had taken us back | sinking galley—only in thie case, it to mere beast bru:| was the manacies of habit—the hab tality, and each it of prit du corps, monoplane wa would not allow seeking by alhimto withhold hia hand from quad- head-on collision,| ruple murder, that would not let to wreck ftself in| him avold the crash and save his midaty, that It might carry down | life and hie soul. So each drove with {t three men and an aeroplane | straight te annihilation, of the enemy And right there the “glory” of There were no crews in the Ble-| war ended-—if there over wos such riote—only one man rode each, aja thing—and cold butchery, the man of steel steering to certain | fiendish face of war unmasked, the death. fiinty heart of war laid bare—ap. Every machine in the Army of| peared so all the world could see. Invasion was on the wing—and only; The two hosts met like an infi an equal number of men. jnitely extended football rush line, Oucnumbering the biplanes per| mostly in tandem, in which when haps two to one, they made less/two units came together, they cut show, each Bleriot being a single each other asunder and dropped hard bne drawn acrogs the the J ince, and each to a long, narrow recta: neared. They came not only tn two wings converging on the van of the flying column of relief, but they came in two strata—one above and one be low the biplanes. | From four ways—above, below,| the right, the left, they converged on the doomed relief aeroplanes, themseles equally doomed. IT WAS WAR MAGNIFIED, INTEN- | ing the Blerlots to escapesthey SIFIED, AND RAISED TO SOME) seemed to take their death as they UNIMAGINED POWER. might draw thelr wages. DIRECTORY Our Time to the Disposal of USED AUTOMOBILES If Your Car Is for Sale, or if You Wish to Buy a Car, See Us. AUTOMOBILE PURCHASE @ SALES AGENCY 411 JOSHUA GREEN BLDG. PHONE ELLIOTT 4483 ram ingne ss ment The Blertots mostly Wrights between their planes, and) went through both men and ma chines—or at least so it seemed to me. The two vans met five hundred feet cr so from the earth The lines fused and, neutralizing each others’ forces, fell. There was no of physical We are W.H. Barnes & Son Mor Tris. | Gearanteed Continuous Service. Covers Every Truck Sold. Garage and Salesroom 610 Seneca St. Phone Main 6504. CARTERCAR Imperial Five different models, priced trom 6) WASHINGTON _CAR- TERCAR CO. 1515 BROADWAY PHONE EAST 467. Imperial Automobile disiey Messrs. Waller & v ratton Distributors ‘913 East Pike 4. Phone Mast 4104 $00, £ o Bb Beattie Pacific Car Co. Robert Atkinson, Mgr. 903 East Pike St. Phone East 1413 Hudson -Paig : | FEDERAL TRUCKS Waterhouse Trading Co. Auto Department Touring Cars and Motor Trucks Phone F. 331 1614 Dreedwey. Don't Take any Chancee—Mave Your Madiator Charged with “Dalits Anti-Preese” Guaranteed * your motor from freezing in the coldest weather—wil! not the radiator. One Pilling will Inet all winter DALITZ MFG, @ SALES CO. Bighth and Union. Main 1492 Red Crown Gasoline 160 Gallon. VERYTHING FOR THM AUTO MAN AND HI8 CAR” THE WASHINGTON AUTO SUPPLY COMPANY Phone Bast #47 18-820 East Pike at “A. Le HALL | Motorcycles, Bicycles, Repairing, Gunsmith, Locks and Keys, Sporting Goods. Everything in Accessories, Phone Elliott 1311, 1021 First Avenue. | ~ BALLOU & WRIGHT Automobile Supplies, G. & J. Tires and Tub@e—n Safe Buy. 617 Kast Pike, eo Hs : MOTOROY: _Northweat |_ Distr — i MINNEAPOLIS AGENCY, 1023 PIKE ST. | Can make immediate deliverion on 5 and 10 At the now prices of $240.00 and $275.00. Come ia and get a demon ont and tamteat stock matoreycie in triad B. P. Binir, Mer horse power two-speed machines| ration on| joattio. wt repair shop in town | Harry Cogburn, Repairman. | aa-—-recklessness worked out ~ Fence agg Ry gy co ya iss eked up, blue-printed and slide Nee ce and Cireat Britain.) ruled—but recklessness, all the HE host of Rte-| same. | riots was making As I looked, the thing that wrung a frontal attack|my heart was the awful unfairness on the Wrights | of tt not a8 oarmy| What chance Agaiuet army, but each clutching hi through a hell of space to the noth: | dismember: | | struck tho effort on thé part of the men driv) And death! the end was univ The two clouds coal as by some baleful attraction—and dropped a ghastly hail of dead and humming engin crushed fabrice of the machin: men the | Where moment ago had be: | cloud was now clear sky, where |roar was now asiienc For th |human machines we Hlent as | the ones of wood and me What had been but now the good-| of men was only a mains and horrid | There were no groans, no crie reef 00. to | God, no pleading for water, no am- | bulaxces, nor hospitals, nor nu irsec, +nor need of them, none of the sweet THE STAR-SATURDAY, the Uselessness of It “What chance had those boy: and guiding himself to eternity? offices of mercy, no mercy, no pain, war, no humanity, no place for hu. none of the human mitigations of _manity the Cliffs,” ‘s a Barbara Tennant | Shearer picture. It is in this | ture that Lindsey Hall, | for Will Shearer, jumps 30 lover a 238-foot cliff, onto a small | ledge. | last time tonight. | Im nicepiianl tes: Cuivre |ture, “The Unsigned,” 26 men linjured in the mob scenes. In jnection with this picture, a tl | powder. So much expense had jentalled in buflding the factory costuming and training the extra men, that six motion picture jeras played on the scene to stall any aceident tn the ph gn << “Alexia's Strategy,” tomorrow for a three days’ ing. esty of a fellow clerk. His f he wins a big reward | oe Night “Over the Cliffs,” | Belair feature; Upside Down” and Romance,” comedies. ‘Nutty Hi “Alexia’s Strategy,” two-part ture; “A Lesson tn Jealousy,” edy; “Making Eight-Ton Ro; ‘al of the Malay | “Fashions of the Canton educational | Night “The Frame Up.” cho drama; “T Keystone comed mond,” Reliance Shall Not Ring hauser drama. * two-reel Horse Th “A Rough drama Tonight,” | “At Midnight, |*An Accidental Clew,” Maj drama “Her Husband and | Wife,” Apollo comedy; “Her I to Happiness,” “The Last Daya of the Coast,” two reels; “An in Hopit,” Princess comedy; Smart Girl of the West,” Ame drama; “For Lizzie's Sake,” ody ‘Time Is Money,” two-part ma; “Animated Weekly,” wc news; “By Fate's Decre drama. sa Alhambra Until Sunday Nig The Cry of the Blood,” Lubin drama; At the Olympian Tonight “Hansel and Gretel,” three-part production fairy tale; one comedy At the Olympian Sunday It ts a Western drama. ||| “The Dread Inheritance” runs the story prop factory waa blown up by | means of eight large cans of black) y helps him to solve the affalr State States Princess drama. three-ree! “A Study in Botany,” Will) pie doubling | better feet} fea- were con- hree- | deen | and cam: | fore otow: | two-part} we were going to have so much |drama, with Mary Fuller in the| trouble leading role, comes to the Clemmer | W¢ show. | SE It is a story of a young bank | C clerk who was plunged into a finan-| HERE cial difficulty through the dishon Class A Sunday Until Tuesday three-reel “He Likes Things as a | would tell us who sent what.” fen- com pes,” Melbourne Sunday Until Tuesday bron-| hief, Dia “Curfew Tan- Grand Sunday Until Tuesday Night American drama jestic | M Righ Circuit Sunday Until Tuesday Barbary | Adventure “The rear com Colonial Until Saturday Night dra orid’s Rex | ht Vitagraph comedy-drama; “The Lit j| tle Hero,” § « drama. | ee | ° If RESIDENCE THEATRES | | Sad “A Proposal From the Spanish | m Don,” a “Mary” story drama; “The Higher La Lubin | drama; “Breeding Trout by the| Million,” Pathe educational ‘Quaint Old Honfleur,” Path travel; “When Classes Are No’ Classes,” Vitagraph comedy. oe The Roe Co THE WEDDIN CHAPTER XXIV. Oh, dear! I would giv if I had not given in to mother and had a church wedding a three-reel | and « reception at her house. My ture at the Class A 8un-| being without immediate relatives and having no settled home would have a quiet wedding in much ate. And ny as an aftermath, Dick's) ister ing to be of use to mo! took all the cards off my silver and vent the big pieces to the safety deposit. Many of these cards | “With all good wishes,” and I don't) know whether the giver made me| & prosent of a silver pickle fork or) Sheffield meat platter. I don't know what I am going to do when I write my letters of thanks. began them last night, and Dick 4 “a rumpus right,” because Mollie did not have sense enough to put on the cards a description of the gift. | Moilie cried and sald, “I just wish | you had never got married,” and) Dick's mother said, “If I had known | with this NEVER TO HAVING AND w HAVE , THE RE-| PRESENTS TED PION I know I looked rather blank, but Dick came to the rescue by saying I like that! It was you, mother dear, who tn sisted upon making those arrange: | ments. Madge did not want any hullabaloo at all, and it was asinine | in Mollie to take those cards off the presents without looking to see if they had anything on them that “Mother” got up and went out of| the room, looking very much hurt I was for going after her, but Dick | said | “No; 1f you do, she will talk a| Let's get at the work of writ ling the n wary gratitude as} quickly as can.” Great Scott, Madge, do youl mean to tell me you Hke this?” he| asked, as he held at arms’ length an | jexquisitely colored etching. Yes, dear,” I answered jlot “That | beantiful old English print is one of the gifts for which I am most than«ful.” | Well, I'm glad you Ike it It's| not what I would choose.” | After looking over Dick's moth-| ers nouse, I am not surprised at his lack of taste. Everything looks | hough It cost mone » but every | Weak, Inactive Kidneys Cause | Much Trouble | For oy RHE nfessions of a Wife |teaspoons,” said Dick And they sent us five dozen salad forks,” I explained. uy AONE pu appeR : DECEMBER 13, 1913. The Final, World-Terrifying Battle of Death in the Air, Which Brought Civilization Face to Face With All. each clutching his steering wheel drifts of anow in al forest lay the debris which De Maine p as the PRESENTS thing LOOKS AS INARTISTIC AS © is cluttered up with bri gilt chairs and ugly ofl paint 1 don’t know | what | will do when I come to fur- nish my house. | will never be hap py if I have to use the things which I know DICK’S MOTHER IN- TENDS TO BUY FOR ME “It am glad that some of our friends did not mark the silver they sent us," Tsaid. “ take back four dozen of these forks and buy soup and tea spoons.” ‘Funny how no one sent us any know everybody ate chicken at all our parties, Perhaps gave them the Idea.” “I never want any more chicken sala} as long as I live,” sald Dick. Thon and there | registered a vow to make variety the spice of my table when | went to keeping house. managed to write about 75 * of thanks last night, and | I can finish the remainder think myself, Iam going to take back three of | my cnt glass bowls, four of my cut glass water carafes, four coftee per- colators, and sundry other things which I find came from a large department store and exchango| them for a mg Dick says nome one WILL SURE| |BE ANGRY AHOUT IT, but wal eed rugs more than four coffee percolitors just at present. “Wil you thank them for the rug or the cut glass?” asked Dick, with his ‘easing smile “For the cut glass, stupid,” |swered, as I proceeded to jap hts hair I know Dick and I are going to be real chummy after we get well ac quainted (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) I an- mble | WILL GIVE READINGS Mr. and Mra, Wilson Fritch will be heard In a number of readings at the session of the Bunday olub, for men only, at the Y. M. GC, A.| Sunday afternoon. Mrs, Fritch | will read Tolstol's essay “What| Men Live By.” } An Australian has obtained a United States patent for a process for transplanting living hatr on bald bends —em | Backache, rheumatism and all kidney and bladder disorders | are caused from weak, inactive kidneys, which fail to filter out Korgeous| the poisons, and keep the blood pure. The only way to pos- | of the old | itively and permanently cure such troublé is to remove the cause. The reason why Foley Kidney Pfils are the best | ingredients that nature needs im, action, Jong oe drugs, edicine for kidney and bladder troubles is because they ara Edison | | made wholly of those healing, stre! ingeneneng and restorative to build up and renew these tant and vital organs. See that you get Foley Kidney Pills for your kidney and bladder troubles. ive good results, and contain no harmful y Bartell Drug Stores, They are tonic in * called on men and women to carry ;altars of those Chapter 6 “l won’tiever have t And they say—and ou dealt e git 1 killed od. |startiig up ont over any more es until meant ity r again, there took place an occasion. x plosion, which tossed th things that ad nee m And from thence red flames sprang up as if earth were angr at th unimaginable insult to her good dust—and the er of iniquity rose bluely to the nostril ot Je hovah. much, Perhaps a thousand word ere I filed, endi th a ca to arms 1 fio ending with a cal to om TT agt Chance to See 5c MONSTROUS THING THAT WAR . HAD SBCOMEL ] cellag on th That Great Hit men of peace to go die on the teps of their capitols in protest. | WARREN KERRIGAN IN called on women to tear down the chancellories and destroy the war e offices that did these things. I told them that as long as such e rea nh erl ance things could be it was a shameful thing to t a child or becom 4 : ae wife, or live peacefully as a moth I adjured them to stamp out war. I ALSO thelr own war to the very altars of Three Screeching Comedies the Moloch that 1 epted these sac riff and to overthrow the priest “How Freckles Won His Bride”—*Peari’s Hero” hood of carnage with the gover “Baldy Is a Wise Old Bird” ments that lived by It I shouted with all my voice that Don’t Miss This Show—It’s Great the p re nould not longer @ themselves to be tied tc New Show Sunday savage beasts by pride A Wonderful Three-Ree! Eclair Feature OVER THE CLIFFS for purposes of mutual laceration but that {n this crowning horror of history was the demonstration for which the heart of the world had waited, of the necessity of universal peace—of universal revolt; that earna If it went might reach to the very heart nd family who caused It t oxen of th 5c The Salvation Army that the lories 1 war department might themoelves taste, at the hands of an enraged people, of the deaths 3 they prepared for these young souls. I sent this out and then the world faded from my consciousness. When I came to my senses, Travis was caring for me, a Red Cross nurse assisting “What are they doing?” I cried, Christmas Dinners and Christmas Tree 4 Contributions of Cash, Produce and Clothing URGENTLY NEEDED! Address: LIEUT. COL. C. W. SCOTT Elliott 3665. 322 Globe Bldg. Phone: LET THE LAND TALK FOR ITSELF QUINCY VALLEY — At noon Friday I had registered for the trip to see my QUINCY VALLEY FARM LANDS—more people than 1 could handle on next Sunday at Quincy—the supply of automobiles at that point being limited. As a result, I will have to ask some of those that register after this hour—to go over with my representatives some day next week, pre- sumably Tuesday and Thursday, announcements of which will be made later. My campaign on QUINCY VALLEY FARM LANDS has made Gir in real estate circles in Seattle—and I predict the next six onths to one year will see an upward movement in values and with pro rata profit on present purchases—that will astound all. My method and policy is a revolution in the sale of farm lands. My representatives will show you the land and sell it to you afterward—any- thing else is PUTTING THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE. My silent salesman is the land. SEE ME FIRST—THEN GO Seeing is believing—come in today. Aside from what I have to show you—THE GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY has requested the Commercial Club of Quincy to place an exhibit from QUINCY VALLEY FARMS in one of the GREAT NORTHERN WINDOWS at Second avenue and Columbia. The immigration department of the GREAT NORTHERN at the King Street Station, Mr. Bass in charge, now has ready a report with literature on QUINCY VAL- LEY, which you may be sure will be full, free and filled with in- formation. BUY IN THE PATH OF PROGRESS Have the foresight of John Jacob Astor, Already we have sold about three sections in 40-acre parcels, | ask only that you go with me. See the land first—then buy. In this | AM A PIO. NEER in this section, an example that others must follow. With fast and safe transpon tation you can look at a farm almost as quickly as you can look at a lot in Seattle. You can leave at 10 p. my see ‘the land the next morning—leave thete at 1:15 p.m, and, returning by daylight, see the Columbia river, the Wenatchee Valley and the Cascades—combining pleasure and business. Meet myself and representatives Friday, Saturday and Mon- day at my office so I may be able to split up parties to meet trans- portation problems from Quincy to the farms in the Valley. If you are out of town write at once. DO IT—TODAY. Yours for profit, A. McKay Jordan 114 James St. Phone, Elllott 5434 SEATTLE, U.S.A

Other pages from this issue: