The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 12, 1914, Page 1

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“This,” sald the chemist's assistant “80 you don't call on Miss Bute any more. Quarreied?” “Well, | told her | preferred to have her kiss me before and not after she kissed the pet d 4 “And what did she sa “She said | evidently forgot that the dog might have his preferences “la a moat wonderful halr re) A man purchased some red flannel shirts, guaranteed not to shrink Storer. It's our own preparation,” | He reminded the salesman forcitly of the guarantee some weeks later. | ly went sprawling on the pavement “Well, give me a bottle,” said the bald-headed man, “But, | say, come | Mave you had any difficulty with them?" the latter asked } One of our wing by jokingly remarked to think of it, why don’t you use it? You're pretty bald yourself.” “Have | the customer. “Why, the other morning, when || “Ah, my dear man, fools stand In slippery places.” “L can't use it, You see, I'm the ‘Before-Using’ assistant, The ‘Aft: | was dressing wife said to me: ‘John, where did you get that pink And the old fell Yes, so | see @r-Using’ assistant is out at lunch, You should see him."—N ror ‘al necklace Top-Noteh. ” The Seattle Star An old farmer who wae walking dow Second av., one day, sudden well-known preachers pa my w replied But I'm blessed if | co too MORE THAN AST EDITION 45,000 PAID COPIES DAILY FOLLOWING KERMIT'S mar The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News OE TIN SEARS an Team ‘Sowen, hieteal he ally fair tonight and Saturday; gen might have done Argentina tango VOLUME 16 NO. 94. SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1914 ONE ON MAINS AND tle westerly winds SOAK BANKERS AND HELP CITY! $75,000 in 5 Per Cent Bonds Offered to Public | JUNE 20! Remember the date—Saturday, June 20. It’s going to be the “People of Seattle’s Investment day.” | That’s the day you in the shops and factories and mills, the laborer, the clerk, the stenographer, the toiler, will have a chance to |invest in the Port of Seattle bonds. | The bankers and brokers have gobbled up all these bond issues in the pa: They’re good investments—not a chance to lose jon them. They bear 5 per cent interest and are secured by $263,000,000 worth of property owned by the port. * i The big fellows always got the benefit of these bond investments before, because they were always put out in large blocks— thousands of dollars at a time, The small investor didn’t have a chance. | It’s going to be different on Saturday, June 20. Everyone who wants to invest $100 or more, can bid on those bonds, \| | There will be 750 bonds in all—each for the face value of $100 and bearing 5 per cent interest. Some of the bonds will be ree | |deemed by the port in one year, others in two years, others in ten years, and so on. The last will be retired in 21 years. . | You can bid on whatever term of bond you want. j Let’s clean them all up on Saturday, June 20. Let’s take that whole Let’s get in and subscribe for the bonds in one day. POLICEMAN WHO GUARDS FIVE | jissue of $75,000 ourselves. ' $12,000 SCHOOLHOUSE FAR FROM CIVILIZATION — AND ONE OF THE SEVEN PUPILS WHO ATTEND IT | Subscription blanks can be ob- [tained on that day, either at The Star office or at the port commis- sion office, Central building. : Th onda, Hike all others, will | be sold to the highest bidders. That's the law | SOMETIMES BUY | FOR LESS THAN P AR | k w, bankers have lens th had Sometim ompetition an 0 the fa a mon | | j they MILLIONS IN VAULTS OF BANKS IS NEVER WORRIED BY HIS JOB SPECKERT IS GIVEN 30-DAY eesee } pay more than Some a4 } times, for exan would bid a [a8 low ». $92 for $100 bonds, They would thus not only get the inter. f est on the bonds but also the $8 i difference bet m the amount/ k they bid and the amount for which or $100 In the dream pictures of the realty artists, the place was colorfully aa A. J. Speckert, spiritualist min-| where the formal order of the court | ed,” tted Speckert to Paul. post a $300 bond, following his no- j the bond called | was read to him by Deputy Sheriff ‘ | PORT AUDITOR WILL ister and lawyer, was sentenced to- Say ~ i uy ih al | GIVE INFORMATION | day 30" days in the county Jail ““gpeckert recently sued Paul for | 4 Twe ae - one schools} At other times, bond bayers had by Judge Frater for contempt of | $10,000 damages to his reputation ~ presto ewido wire. ad #ev-/ to pay sbove the face value of the jcourt in his fatlure to pay $50 all- as a result of the alimony litigae J Fre — oni A, attend, and one bond, $101, or or $105, for | mony, recently ordered, to his wife, tion, declaring that Paul “wal \° : boys wi om = vels several $100 bonds Speckert. blown into the legal profession by 1 ite to get to school. | That meant, of course, that they kert is not behind the some accidental cyclone.” e: Sa ve Saar ———-~—~—=—=ewwiens would profit less than the interest “Ll bet you've learned more law ‘ He declares he never will be. about alimony than you ever | Rl FR Usually re such as He was given until! Tuesday to dreamed of before this case starbe a a thie WM. LO named Factori, up to you to bid for He across Lake Washington, where the forest primeval stil! the supreme court “Not on your life,” retorted Paul” reigned in all majesty, there was to be a stupendous and expeditious up) the Courtroom Crowded I couldn't learn any sort of law al. information on that “I have no feeling at all a from you. I believe I've shown ¥Ol Factories were to rise on hill and lowland at Factoria. point, inquire o 8. Lincoln Judge Frater,” said Sp . ng or two, at that.” Smokestacks were to replace the treetops; ships would come and port tral building. | are just as friendly as ever, } I don't know. You've been | G0; where only the old Indian trails ran, there the rails of modern prog Telepho |there are two law points to be set-| trying to get me in. jail for threw ress were to be planted; macadamized roads and paved streets would Here's a suggestion from the |tled before this matter {s straight-| years and I'm not there yetl"= abound and a city of thousands would smile across to Seattle. f port commissione a mighty good | ened up. That's all it really | laughed S kert Imagination ran rampant as the author of the Factoria prospectus one, The Star believes. | amounts to. I'll reverse him in the 1 was really ordered to pay ale’ painted the glowing picture, and one real estate firm got ready to cash — | WHY NOT INVEST $100 IN) |supreme court. I'll bet every cent) mony to my two daughters. It is @ in big. | Thousands of Depositors Jam|ONE OF THESE BONDS FOR I've got on that.” juestion whether a father can & Residents of Newport, adjoining Factoria, with the characteristic! g, Wh ONE OF YOUR CHILDREN? Judge Frater’s courtroom was ie to pay money to his childrens rural bluntness, have dubbed the place “Faketoria. treets en Big Institu- As he grows up, so the interest crowded with attorneys after they become of age a 3 j o will grow Twits Wife's Attorne Speckert. “I also contend thatumam ee ie | ety gy Poigg de arse | ae’ sas Neh rs 'f you get a 20-year bond, the Attorney ank A. Paul. who rt loses the power to punish fama toria. They don’t any more. The} ” te not we rth $100 an acré Investment of $100 will double in| | eae tee Bokciet te falters te ha fercy lands at Newport, 9 thei tall you now eainat the SHUTS TWO OTHERS 2 years, and your youngster will | sige cg td te dee For quite = distance, : 4 oer Doe have $200. as he went to the sheriff's office majority i sroaches the dock, you can see idea. They could se n necessity | i h ifft's fic dip the direction of Pactoria a broad for a new building and more taxes,|State Auditor In Charge of|, 17 1° years 't will amount to | ——e building, standing in solitary gran- Nor could they see any necessity) Nearly Five Millions In | “Let's buy our bond» ourselves.” | | E T SAYINGS GF CHILDREN: i deur, towering above everything for making children tramp for Fock inde deri | wees coor sight For, outside the|miles to get to school Deposits. Pipe Reel rg arb tapping a pon | ~ Sheubbvery, there te nothing else to Fut the achool board, which 11 iid sutaide capital and the bondbuyers | WRITE. THE STAR ABOUT YOURS © ye ; An CHICAGO, June 12.—The LaSalle 1 New York } Miles From Newport ed by E. W. Lord and Howard Lee,! gseoet Trust and ee jh “ay acl 4 erence - 5 ontee schoolhouse. held the high hand in the little} Street Trust and Savings bank, gen- P seg oe Editor The Star: Ralph Claussen, 4, had been used to hear- No roads lead to it or away from of politic erally known as Wm. Lorimer’s| Oo the ban) nd brokers ing his grandpa say grace before ater meal. Boom: night hig ¥ ilies je cottage: Road Farmers” Win Elect bank, one of Chicago's lar state |" cafe om egg ne iy | randpa was not at home, and the family started to eat without = Swesemes toy ‘cen teat te Tete toad tone, ani white Cov cl sot ry it ys 2} ah jets om vcd of Bt Rar Cay opel ST useal grace, but was interrupted by the little fellow, who he arby, nat 1 natitutions, close s doors here a bond issue several times Pe i iles | ha ractica 0 TO ld a forgotten something.” He bowed his head and the sony sign of iife for miles )has b me port dunts has beer (today and placed its affairs in the | now offered to the Seattle public Lf mete thtNeeig Forpoten eee rue and Gale 4 * Newport, with {ts 17 or 18 fam-|furnishing Lee with four horses, | har pananige exer ee ee enna ceiee Gee | Patrolman J. F, Heath | Christ's sake—go to work,” meaning, “For Christ's sake—Amen, a Hes. three miles away “as the some helpers now and then, and a I ner Harkin was re. Now you can eat.” MISS TOUSLEY, Seattle. : Se ee . liberal salary : Baal 8 A arom yp eho hy Here !s one Seattle officer who; learned that ‘a king's ransom is| bess the county road runs, horse-| So when the election to issue the pom ‘or the closing of the) WHY NOT SEATTLE? |has had a mighty big responsibility kept in the three banks on his So many cunning remarks of youngsters are be! received by | Pn ‘ion and stopping abruptly |bonds for the w schoolhouse | >@ has a pald-up ¢ap on his shoulders for the last three corner The Star that it is no small task to pick out the very day, # $ half mile from the schoolhouse, |came around, the “road ital of $1,000 , | months: Gets a Day Shift The cute remark made by YOUR youngster t the place of | “Panne 7 vay 3s the schoolboard mer Immediately after the bank's While other folks have been He has just been put on the day| honor tomorrow. So send it in and let us all Te you q ON ae povee Puce led, won out, and the real tarm-| doors were clc 00 excited de-! 9 |asleep, he has stood guard every shift. A new man, A. C. Johnson, | ——————— Heh sabre one eee ‘ < lost. Road workers, practical! {tor st. and| |night over the richest section of |has been igned to the money @ It's a pretentious schoolhouse. It | ers al te thas be a _ tely $12,000. It has |transfents, and the occupants of a|clamored for a he downtown busines jon; at] r th gets a beat on if i me cringe eran se above which|certain roadhouse, outvoted the Kicks Window on Crowd | Second av 1 Cherry st Third av | NFANT KILLED; R ’ AR fn : a on acious stories Four | farmers. A man a ed on the {2th There are three big banks within| Now that Heath is working days, | NED Ithy Seattl " larg wetassroome were planned There is a blind ad running | floor of t 1 which the | stone's throw of one another in| his year-old hopeful insists on BODY BUR Healthy Seattle infants wii Only ous haa been fitted up. The| in the newspapers, offering a bank is 1 deliberately that locality. mamma bringing him downtown J up their tootsies at the fourth ate w ae floor is still to be improved.| house and four acres for $1,200 [kicked out a large pane of ss. | The pile of cash they keep|every afternoon to s laddy } pRINEVILI Or, June 12.—,nual baby show at Leschi park Ppat there is no hurry about that.| at Newport. The glass fell on the crowd at the bal around handy for, businem trans) | “It beats all how much a young-|cyarged with having siain his in-|July 4 3 ‘ae ven pup he “That's the old schoolhouse,” | front door and dozen or more actions throughout the city would|ster that age wi earn,” sald ‘ d burning the body, D. in . ‘ eee aoe wes e ee | eermer Haverseny tayen cans catahe iain PORTLAND, June 12—A | oice our old friend Croesus sit up| Heath, dismissing the subject of | (nt child and burning the body, Twenty-one prizes will be awaaam attend this school. There never e ip says. were cut and In carrier pigeon, which was tak- Hy ogal ; |K. Sheldon, sawmill employe, is un-| |, Ne ‘binst entities Seana were more than 15 kids in the New And he’s getting indignant State Auditor Brady ordered the! en aloft by the “Balloon Mil- |*"4 blink his eyes $5,000,000 and the chances a man| acy arrest ed to the best entries at the show. 7% port ristrict to go to school at one about it. So are the other bank closed lion Population Club,” arrived Keep Millions in Vaults 8 in the dark time when evil Neighbors attended the mother| Registration of children under 3% mal farmers. They want to aban- miner Harkin at the same! here thie afternoon with a They are the Dexter Horton Na-| doers are at and babe at the time of birth, and years will open at Pate Only one teacher was ever needed.| don the new schoolhouse and 1 the Illinois State tank | messege, saying that the craft tional bank; the Union Savings & left. A few hours later some Fe-|ton's Lenhole ; ; Sends Child to Seattle return to the old one ant the Rroadwa State bank had been struck by lightning | Trust Co. and the Scandinavian M 9 | turned and were told by the father sat we nS BN Besides, as in the case of Farmer) There lenty room enough tn | small¢ neerns affiliated with the! and that Capt. Berry, the pilot, | American bank ‘ Whadda You ean: the child had died and he had bur 4 Havercamp, he chooses rather to) the old one,” they say, “for several | LaSalle Street ban) was seriously injured In the vaults of the three is ap “JACK OF ALL TRADES" fed it PAY UP GR JAIL! : send his little daughter to the sw childre Lorimer Is President ‘The message added that the | proximately 0,000 in notes and h vaatinstion sh ses Leschi school in Seattle than to} > they ¢ ‘d to; “I was di dd to examine the! balloon was lost in the woods, | Currency oi woos aves believed to be th rred bones of 4 the roadless school Factoria pay the bonds on the ne chool | ban and found th condition| and asked that aid be rushed, | The officer is Patrolman J. F. | wer tter than his tba ances, | the child in a stove Harry Boswell, who killed Mise “It's quicker,” he says, “and|and still be better off by abandon: |such that I thought it would not Th ave no loca. | Heath, who Hves with his wife and} was the first jack serv! Bill, January 15, when hea sine’ dou fortable and convenfent|ing {t than by also paying for its |be safe for them to open this morn-| tion.” von | little baby boy out at 2624 Western | frooer Guespa— of all trades, and | HOLD WORKERS’ CONFERENCE ; a esccp 0 tient kc. ‘ r the little girl extra upkeep pg.” Harkin said av | Two 14 he proved to be A workers’ conference is being a : ° Farmer Havercamp neverthe- Besides, the } wouldn't have| ' Former Senator Lorimer is presl. Heath has had no trouble with | ||¢7x€ master of none./held today by the religious work)given until Tuesday to pay his tine ® less must pay $160 a year for (that long tramp to make Jent of the LaSalle st. institution CABINET QUITS men who seek money in the night | F* | \evtey Roger, who lived| department of the Y. W A. in| of $1,000 and ec r go to jail um the bonded Indebtedness incur Can't Check School Board Hark al deposits of the if time since he got the job down in| | paw in London in Eliz-|the Bible rooms of the building. | til the penalty is pai¢ red through building the pre- But how are they going to check | three banks tc 1 $4,648,000. PARIS, June 12.—Premler Ribot | Seattle's money row és | = tt vy 4 ays,|— —<—$—<————— nena ne e ae peeing a "’ tentious schoolhouse and for its the school board? and his newly formed cabinet re-|_ Probably any would-be bad men| (244-4 opened b shop and keep. There's a sign It was former Count hool Su i os who happened to give banks a advertised to al 5 oor anh atking bids | perintendent furrow ho London's $192,300,000 in debt signed today, __ | the “once over” got a the town that he was ready to sell on the job of painting the proved what the board wanted as | ~ sae 4k Salaam: |same time, at Heath's cordials, teach riding, trim ladte schoolhouse. to building the new schoolhouse Never-Gave Him Worry nails, improve people's morals, | “More taxes,” sighs Farmer What does the present ¢ t | rake 1 look at it yourself, It{teach the “shott sell tripe and! "4 I Havercamp. mperintendent thir it? Fur doesn't Jook like the face of a man|@0 & great many other things—all | 9a ® thermore, can the rintendent Who. would grow chummy with |for a’ small fee. His patrons soon y t Those Newport farmers will tell | stop the board If he ed to? lane found ut that he could do, nothing va b " ard 4 ” oll So London dubbed him “jack ” pe i you that it was the school board But the job never worried Heath. | ¥¢ : had SO ria eta : Bs ch made the first investment in “Didn't. the responsibility of the /Of all trades and master of 1 WASHINGTON, June 1 ‘ons the measure __ repealing } or ag MONEY NEEDED) tir met on your nerves?” {and people of bis kind have been| gress’ final step in repealing the | bill exempting American | vessel en the “boom” wan started, Jasked the reporter. called that ever since exemption clause of the Panama /from paying tolls through the Patt When the uted to ebandon tbe| NORTH YAKIMA, June 12 nie resng OY haatryrharet ra, abe canal tolls act was taken in the /ama canal, passed the senate last a the board re 4 a he center of|F. Benson, receiver of the Hanford WASHINGTON, June 12.—-Representative Neely of West Virginia Ah, gwan mc ¢ seeped rate avers Ya ra bh 4 old schoolhouse in the center oft” vation Co., hax applied to the| today Introduced a resolution formally calling for the Impeachment of! He's u modest sort of a chap RESOLUTE eS eet eg eels ceed the | ittle doubt js entertained tai meveor: oe ye ae Res ; federal court here for re funds | U. 8. District Judge Alston Dayton and asking for an\ Investigation of | whon talilng ft gc oe Reon NAVESINK HIGHLAND, N. J nate’s amended repeal bill Prestdent Wilson will sign the Dill erritory ~ ever came 0 down there O- SINK VHLAN , | sena amen 1 b : saree D jdy as possible, the board|to conduct the company. He says| his conduct on the bench pre have nerve enough to take|June 12,—The Resolute again de-| The measure was sent to thejas amended by the ho a etntlt the purchase of the new|the actual expenses are $2,000 a Neely charged 26 acts of alleged mlsconduat PR Me MRI cd Soe ee yenitin Recethle afters| Ateaitent, tor his: approval Bolh Senators Jones afta ected 2 so ut defic 4 p- ja ce | ¢ ‘5 ‘ ee raing' » . crhoothouse lot. at Fuctoria for| month and there will be a deficit He also requested the appointment of a su Heath looked surprised when he |noon By a vote of 50 to 5,|dextee voted against the measures] of $1,200 by the end of June, ciary committee to investigate his charges. $2,600, | tice that he will carry the case to His Children of Age %

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