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‘ SEATTLE-MADE ~ GOODS ON SHOW of the Ratary cupies two floors of nual ¢ xhIbIt © geen BY W. H. ALBURN club, which o “hind av.,| PARIS, Tenn., Deo, 19.—~"Wood the large building at 4514 Third 8V.) Low Wrison” was a little Tennessee attraction | waif that found two mothers. One sow of Seattle. of them loved him so much that ahe iets. handled ) ; interesting The * ts proving at si to hundreds. et nade goods and proc ‘ ty ore, with agenetes in Seattle |All for herself, and the other has | % will continue Ul Saturday night} been broken hearted ever since. | Scores of we t add to Maybe the atery won't Interest you | tly the varied |*-unless you happen to be interest | be cea at goods ¢ lay. Henry ed in babies. H. Manny, H. F. McRae and One night people at the corner of Stephen A. Hull are the commit Ruff and Brewer sts. were awak {bits, ‘The }ened by an Infant's wails, They in tee in charge of the © ox foods are not for sale vestigated and found a beautiful yee alba S-week-old boy, tidily dreased, neat ly tucked {n a basket, on a doorstep. Thore was nothing to show whose {baby It When the kindly neighbor women had warmed a bottle of milk and fed it they had a problem on thelr hands, There was no foundling asy lum fn Parts, Tenn, Next day they ——— BAILEY TOGGERY SHOP Across from White and Henry Building. Sunday Afternoon “Pop” Concerts Metropolitan Theatre ——Commencing——. NEXT SUNDAY, DEC. 21, 2:30 P. M. The Seattle Orchestra 40 Musicians HENRY ALLEN, Conductor Interpreting the Music of Victor Herbert 42 OTHER Mop. ERN COMPOSERS. Popular Prices Good Seats at 25 and 50 Cents Box Office Sale Opens TODAY! NOW IN) ‘REDUCED HOLIDAY FARES trrtct From SEATTLE to all points in Washington, Oregon and Idaho. ONE FARE AND ONE-THIRD FOR THE ROUND TRIP 'O.-W. R. & N. Tickets on sale until December 24, inclusive. limit January 5, 1914. Make a Christmas visit this year. Join your and relatives in that long-deferred reunion. FOUR HIGH-CLASS TRAINS DAILY from Seattle to points South and East. You will enjoy the advantages of all the comforts and conveniences that the most modern train service affords. We will be glad to give you full particulars regarding fares and sched- ules. Final return friends J. H. O'NEILL, District Passenger Agent. 716 Second Ave, Tel. Main 932. 1| cirts For | || EVERYBODY | | | Especially Selected for Christmas Buying Imported Clocks ........$1.00 and up Desk Sets ............$1.00 and up Shaving Sets . 30c and up Chocolate and Berry Sets $1.25 and up Toilet Sets ............$1.25 and up JEWEL CASES DECORATED LAMPS FRAMED AND SHEET PICTURES CUT GLASS SILVER DEPOSIT SETS Pyrographic Outfits INDIAN OUTFITS TOTEM POLES DECORATED CHINA ARTIST MATERIALS Prices Guaranteed. Every Article in the Store a Tempting Present. Wood for Pyrographic Burning, V4, Price to Close. 7 Globe Wall Paper Company 907 Second Ave. i ee ° | Was broken hearted, till she got him) !dectded to turn the child over to Sheriff R. H, Compton. “Hello, Snookume!” sald sheriff. “What ts your name The baby kept on smiling sald the sheriff, who inch democrat, “I guess | eall you Woodrow Wil the | Two days later Mrs. John Crouch THE STAR—FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, ,1913, row?” asked Mra, Grouch Jtically, but at lant yselded To RARE HAUL I reckon we could,” sald John.| The baby was placed on the Paris| WE ARE SELLIN Mra, Crouch, at her first glimpse | dooratep. nt of Httle Woodrow Wilson, caught And people wondered at the Unusual Number of Guspects Taken him to her breast with a cry of bride's wistfulness when the honey {ate Oustedy' dnd One Gurgiar e e up mother love moon was hardly over. " js ive him to us!" aafd John,| Woodrow Wilson throve. He got in Actually Caught In Act. ( 18 mas Ss eagerly a tooth, and was the joy of the : : They signed adoption papers on| Crouch household REGULAR NIGHT'S BUSINESS the spot, naming the baby Woodrow Mr. and Mra. Crouch were very REPORTED BY VICTIMS A 1 P; ° d happy t 2 Price and Less | But aerows the Kentucky Hne the !real mother sorrowed until she fell Make this your Gilt Store. We must close il Her husband feared she would | holid re Jdle, But one thing, it seemed, would out all holiday lin nce. wave her, She must have her baby Klaricing the Morey-Seollard-Gitlan back Hlonery store, TI iret av A lawyer was sent to investi. | Joseph Walling, Identified “Woodrow Wilson” Crouch-Arnold was clearing away the supper things in the Crouch home at 8p: between the sand hills and the Big Sandy river. John Crouc perous merchant and toba er, was reading. “It says in the paper,” he remark ed, “that Sheriff Comptop, over Inj Paris, has a foundling on his hands. and don't know what to do with ft.” The eyes of husband and wife met. They were childless. And in the wife's eyes there was the yearn ing he had seen there often when she was thinking of the children who had never come. _“Couldn't_we go to town tomor-| Wilson Crouch, and took him back with them Meanwhile there w in the home of Mr. and Mra, Landrum at Wingo, Ky. When they were married nobody knew adness that the bride was in the shadow of a crisis They went away to Benton county, Tenn., and there, August 13, their baby wae born. They could not endure the con- feanion of a shame so tardily rectl fied. So Arnold suggested that they leave the infant somewhere for a while and claim it later. The bride-mother protested fran. RAILROADS DEFY UNCLE SAM LAW WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 1 —Rail ! ‘roads of the United States are vio-| lating the law to the extent of just 261,332 casea under a single act ot} congress in a single yoar. That is what the Interstate Com-| merce Commission makes public tn its report. This shows that so in- efficiently are the rallroads of the United States run that 261,322 men were forced to render from 16 to 65 hours of continuous service, In vi vation of law, and as a result of 261.342 preventable delays fn the transportation servi Carriers Fight Law. The Hours of Service Act was passed by congress and signed by the president March 4, 1907. Since then, the carriers have, by court ac- tion, been questioning the right of the Interstate Commerce Commis sion to compel them to report their own violations of the act | And while the act wae tied | up In the courts the rallroade refused to disclose for the ben- efit of the co ission how many men they worked over- time in violation of the law. A your after its passage the com- mission ordered the roads to report) under ft. The Baltimore and Ohio! and other roads attempted to se- cure an injunction against the com mission The rallroads lost the case. It carried to the in 1911, shustalne nality of the act, and| is to obey the com ns order. As a result, the commission has obtained and now makes public some remarkable facts. Incidentally, it has turned into the U, & Treasury the sum of $156,000 In fines as a result of actions again r mith violated tl OLE IS OPTIMISTIC : Ole Hanson, candt date for United States senator turned today from a week's trip tn Eastern Washington. progressive re “| was surprised at the growth of progressive strength In We natchee and Spokane and surround ing sections,” he sald. “The re publican party is disorganized, the leaders fighting among themselves, and there e but few of them left The news tinually ferring to them as dead, and the people in general laugh at the idea of their rehabilitation. ‘Senator Wesley I. Jones can never be reelected to the senate. ‘his is conceded by nearly all well |The ted men on the Bast Side Senator Turner will probably enter { » for U. 8, senator on the > ticket against 0 difte Georg It m have @ nce which one ara to il er app ugh strength to be e xt I or will aeive 1 “nn be the| expect | pro} date that, east of the Cascades, our par will poll as many votes as the crats aad republicans to I feel very with the outlook ough organization which I will form, feel sure I will be nominated and elected much encouraged and with the the GIVE ORATORIO Tuesday evening the Plymouth church will give its first annual} production of Handel's great mas | lterplece of the Christmas season the Oratorio of “The Messiah ‘This work will be given by the full choir of the ehurch, 70 voices, the direction of Mather, organist and cholrmaster. Soloists for the are Mise Eva M. Lacy, soprano; Mr Romeyt Jansen, alto; Mr. Henry Price, tenor, and Mr. Frederick | Graham, bass. | The concert begins promptly at 8 o'clock and {8 free to the | under Judeon | occasion public G. W. Guinn, of 211 ave, was badly cut anc about the hands, when he thrown from his runaway team on Western ave, near Pike st, Thurs day. He was treated at the city hospital Nob ey 1 bru It's curious that hope generally | while \requires a magnifying glass we can always see disappointment with the naked eye You never realize that a young| girl has t ™ A woman until) she begins to worry about her com | plexton One reason why talk is 20 cheap fa that eo muec h of it te lutely M con Telegraph The great beauty about not hav- ing any money is that you don't! have to bother about saving any of it worthless. | when even the TOY TO BE TRIED TACOMA, Dec, 19.—Two Port }iand men—Harry Toy, a Ch c and Henrt Dachet—are in dictment by the federal g y here on charges of white slaver Hail in each caso was placed at Toy 1s accused of having trans ported Goldta gGoodel ar-old laughter of Rev. T. C. Goodel, from Portland to Seattle for immora purposes, Dachet, the coast as “Big charged wit y white slave nie Pouhert, a immigrant, » 1 FOUND GUILTY to the United COQUILLE, Ore. Dee, 19. verdict of guilty 1s returned the case ex-recorder of EF § » nged with the theft of $3,000 of the city’s funds. It we worry over the low of this money to the little town that catised the suicide of Mayor Jor dan several months ago. HOLDS UP POSTOFFICE LOS ANGELES, Cal., Dec, 19 Search was being made today for a lone bandit who held up Postmt tre Metcalf at the La Canada postoffice last night and escaped in an automobile with $200 he t 0k | from the safe and the eash + |ter of her goneral store, where th office is maintained. How can a mere man be perfect | sun has spots on it? Supreme [How Baby Waif Srought Gladness to a Lonely Woman’ | fae ‘Heart and Only Grief and Bitterness to That of Another He went to see t , and told them of the mother sorrowing her life away. But they thought a mother who had abandoned her baby could not be sincere, and they | refused to part with Woodrow. Mrs. Arnold became worse, She wept constantly for her child. And finally the lawyer advised her and her husband to bring # corpus proceedings court crowded with little Mrs. Arnold when she saw them. But ton the stand and confessed room was Crouch appeared. drow in her arme Mrs W | totte she we her sin “It broke my heart when they took him away from me,” she sobbed. “I thought it would only be for a little while.” Even the men in the court room wept But Judge Jones decided that the Arnolds had sacrificed their right to the child, and Woodrow be longed to Mrs, Crouch k in thelr Springville home ‘rouches loved the little boy |more than ever, But they were not |so happy. Always, day and night they saw the pale young wife con fessing her shame on the witness jstand, and heard her saying “It broke my heart when they took him away from me.” Just the other evening, after a long sik «, Mra. Crouch said I've thinkin John, maybe wo have no right | I've been the thinking about {same thing,” said John. Their eyes met and it was settled. Together they wrote a letter to Mra, Arnold “COME AND SEE YOUR BABY,” iit read | She came ns fant as trains could bring her. And, as woman to wom- an, she pleaded for her littlegson, Mra. ( * heart was won, “Yes,” she sobbed, “I guess you brought him Into the world. brought him tnto the world. Take him along!” DIRECT PRIMARY TALK HAS TAKEN EM BY SURPRISE By Gilson Gardner WASHINGTON, ec, 19.—The | President's recomméndation in his} annual message that congress pro- vide a federal t for choice of presidential ates by direct primaries, doin with the old convention system, has created a very mixed political situation everybody ‘This move took rise, ‘The which by unexpected sugKests a feature ts that ‘al act for state leg platform on this The Baltimore » following to say “The movement towards more popular government should be promoted through legisiation IN EACH STATE which will permit the expres: sion of the pre electors for natio at presidential primaries.” ntil this declaration by jent nobody had any dea that} the crews ould n tial primaries. think about The matter would be left to the : st in many states {t would 25c $1.00 4 be newlected, with the consequency | Port, Sherry, Angelica fo° $1.50 that there would be the same old|{__ ————— ig ; aries ait convent cele ah Muscat, Tokay 75c 4 in the past PERLEY TO TALK) talk Perley will at the| heon of the Comme ial wrow on the subject The Relations Between the Pub- Me and the Rallr 8 He fs con nected with the executive offices of the O. W. R. & N. Co. | KILLED BY AUTO. | PORTLAND, Dee 19. As the! result of injuries sustained wh run over by an automobile Geo.| A. Price, 68, of Eugene, father of! Police Detective John Price, is! dead toda svo UaISINIWGY aM | "Wo‘d & 09 "Wo ‘y @ Sfepung “Wd 8 03 "WV 8 BuNOH 291440 | ‘AW UNOS GOS) | 98 Old pue “AY Yaunoy “40D $391440 IiIN3G SS3INivd NYzLSva YIOM INO doIUVINNT aM State iv ANSHUIG JHE st SINCE Champagne Joy ‘UONVUWEXD da4j Jad pur] e 3 ‘ . nun ue ur amor -aquuos|f Spanish Sparkling vos A194 a4v suas pur ssoud|ll Wines Burgundies INQ ‘sno jou pur uoq anos] Joy $1 NAA Ald IM ddIApE ay}] Our Leaders in Fine Whiskies PUB asva AHOA Jnoqe YN oT ROSE BOUQUET—Rye or Bourbon, per full quart .......... $1.00 cai aM “oBuuoged nok WoRyILLE—Rye or Bourbon, per full quart ........eceeeees $1.25 JUBM AM PUL S@dTAdaS INO paat nos atte senaanal HYDE'S “SPECIAL” WHISKEY—Per quart bottle ......... $1.50 t AIOLL | (The oldest and finest produced?) SIHL GVaN OL AaAdvd bas gal ge® HHL LAXANI nos ata\ “RODERICK DHU"—Fine old Scotch, per bottle ........4+5 $1.50 _IAMM a We'd Rather Give Our Stock Away Than Have It STOLEN © CHILLY NIGHT STIRS POLICE headquarters as an /2-Price-1/2 Leather Goods, Toilet Sets, Hand Bags, Brass Goods, Desk Accessories Fancy Inkstands Loose-Leaf Books, 1914 Diaries, Address Books, Leather Wallets, etc. A FEW ITEMS FOLLOW 25c Postal Albums ... 50c Postal Albums 75c Postal Albums | $1.00 Postal Albums 75c Poker Chips : | $3.50 Poker Chip Racks.. $9.50 Drawing Instruments 50c Gold Edge Playing Cards $2.00 Leather Hand Bags $6.00 Leather Hand Bags | nL gett hed at headquarters on Hednes and was be fon aroused the maptetons Mar of the ata of and Patroiman gett by his actions tn fi Ho wae arrested and later » Hergeant Hed, tlonery store weit was pated nd und Walling ettts an Investigatt tran Then he Christmas 0 nm were stolen trom 25¢ Christmas Greetings. engraved and | embossed, choice 5e 5c Christmas Seals. per package 3¢ Sterling Silver Photo Frames, values up to $3.00. at . 4A8¢ $7.00 Parisian Ivory Toilet Sets $2.89 | $5.00 Leather Traveling Sets... $1.89 $4.00 Traveling Sets . BBE $2.25 Leather Collar Bags...,....89¢ | Morey-Scollard-Gillam Co. COMMERCIAL STATIONERS 718 FIRST AVE., NEAR COLUMBIA ST. | | “BROKEN LIVES” .” Dr. FEAR FOR KARLUK Only one the Navard, among ‘00 or more caught 7 re on “Broken Li Leonard, of the Fir whaler, aboard the vessel when {t was set | odtst ‘church, last night at the mid- rift among the ice-floes. | week evangelistic services com- in the “outside flow” in the te The last seen of the vessel, {t| pared to broken reeds the lives of Jbound Aretic, ever escaped to) was at @ point about 36 miles off} men who are steeped in sin. 4 afety ore. Its smoke was seen by Just as the shepherd's flute, is It is this fact which leads Capt.|Charlle, an Eskimo boy, on bis/ which is broken, cannot play again, ne, master of the power | Way from Herschel Island to Polnt) he said, so is the life of a man who | Louts L Jechooner Polar Bear, and the act-| Barrow. has gone down into the depths of lentists and big game hunters who| .At that time, August 10, it had | sorrow ,ccompanied him to Point Berrow,| been out of view of those on shore) jf 4 man would accomplish his aust gt said the Vilfhamer | for 11 days jentire worth in life h Steffanson’s whaling steamer, Kar-| | The Karluk had provisions for | up sinning in early luck, is by this time beyond safety|tWo years, and 1. the vessel, by | minister. with no hope for Capt. Robert) *ny chance, drifts to shore at some) Rartlett and the others abourd,| point in the Far North, it may be| , bis party returned to Se-| heard from {n June when the sum- vere haart e mer sun unlocks the icobergs. Steffanson himself; Bert MeCon- nell, his secretary; Dr. A. E. Jen- ness, and George Wiikins, of the | original party, are safe at Point Darrow. Rartlett, who commanded Com modore Peary’s ship in his dash to ) believe that Explore FOR HIS RELEASE SPOKANE, Dee. 1 19.—Five thow sand signatures, including those of \influential business and professional ; |men of Washington and Idaho, have been secured to petitions axking for |the release of Barney O'Neill, the lTdaho banker, sentenced to the pen- \% Price Clearance Complete stock of up-to-date also Dresses and Pall Mt range from up to leardiess at PRIC the Pole; Dr. Allister Forbes A Mackay, ship's surgeon; Henry FROLICH SKIRT PARLORS | itentiary for violation of the state Rearchart; George Mollich; James 2020 Arcade Block. banking laws and it was believed Murray; Bjarne Neamen, and W that the number would reach 10,000 4 jLaird McKinley, scientists, were ‘Take Fievator and fave by January 1. ‘ HEADQUARTERS FOR Christmas Winesand Liquors O: 'R splendid assortment of Holiday Wines will solve your gift question. “Fyde's” Wines and Liquors for your home are best. } Madeira, GALLON Wines and| Liquors French Wines German Wines FYE LIQUOR CO. 208-210 Pike St., Bet. Second and Third Aves. Golden (Our* Own Importation.) All Standard Brands Imported and Domestic Whiskies and Brandies ENGLISH, FRENCH, GERMAN, NORWEGIAN, | SWEDISH, DANISH* LIQUEURS. q : } DELIV Phone Your Order ELLIOTT a y