The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 22, 1914, Page 2

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Pe SE moral Wolf © inister, was oy by a crowd of angry women, | made the target for a volley of rot- | “When Ksghthond Was in Hower” imae Pimmatiness, fst, Sun, and | wsat B* headquarters, Bosto' BOSSY SNIFFS AT | RAILROAD TRACK: GOOD NIGHT, COW! A gentile, lowing cow started to cross the Seattle-Tacoma in- terurban tracks just ahead of fan Interurban train at Edge- ‘wood Sunday. Motorman Tas sell jammed on the emergency brakes, The train Jumped the track, went bumpety-bump over the ties for a ways and stopped. Incidentally, the cow was killed. But a sister cow Wandered up to investigate. | She sniffed the corpse. Also epped on the third rail, Smoke, sparks, burned halr, Miss Lucy R. Case, a ruling of Corporation Counsel Bradford, it is not too late to sign the “Seven Sisters” initiative bills this week. Swat ring rule in the legislature by signing them. Sign the petitions at the Labor Temple, Sixth and University, or at progressive Petitions ¢ Telephone East 6531. nm block, Second av. and Columbia. 1518 16th av. N. an be obtained from DUNKARDS FLOCK TO ARMORY, BUT NOT FOR WAR-MERELY 10 EAT IN FRAT HOUSE, BUT DON'T THERE: LIVE PLAY BANJO; GEE, THIS CAMPUS HAS CHANGED SOME! The University of Washington! In campus has been contradicting It-| armory, battle self for several daye—ever since/ dawn to darkness. the Church of Brethren conference | fought by 2 , goes on from It ts being 5 men and women, and "nother dead bossy! Nobody | dared touch the carcasses um | til the wrecking train was | called and the track cleared finally. | IM WILL NOW DO THE JAIL JIGGLE | PORTLAND, June Charged | With seriously injuring Hugh Fer | §Guson while discharging a revolver juto the crowd at the Eagles’ picnic at Bonneville Sunday, Jim Petrone & grocery clerk, nder arrest today. The shooting followed Petrone's @jection from the dance floor for ragsing. RUFF ON SMITH CANYONVILLE, Or, June Because he is said to have made Slanderous remarks regarding the of one of the women of reck, W. G. Smith, former publicly horsewhip- eggs by the men, and run out of wn Saturday. : AMUSEMENTS METROPOLITAN & “THE COOL PLAY HOUSE MISS FLORENCE MALON And the Metropolitan Plays: an This te Ste to 1 Wed | PANTAGES. Hendricks, Betie Isle Co, in “THE SCHOOLMASTER” and | | Stop Suffering! Chiropractic Will Cure You gvery kind of human aiiment and |/ or|| be! No matter w your trouble ts, i, do not of ehiropractio— | ae drazicss, knifeless, common sence Successful method of healing. Uf you are affiicted with nervous dis r ‘examination or diagnoate. Are very reasonable. Office hours, 10 is. m. to 5 p.m. and 7 to ® p.m. Tele- iphone Main 2758. Lady attendant A. M. Johnson, Licensed Chiropracti $12-$13 American Bank Building, cor-| fer Second av and Madison et. MEAT PRICES TOMORROW, TUESDAY, AT FRYE & CO.’S MARKETS AS FOLLOWS: Choice Steer Shoulder Steak ........ Choice Rib and Loin Mutton Chops . 14c 15¢ Anchor Brand Bacon, per Ib. . %. Purple Stamp It signifies purity and quatity Shops open until 6:20 p, m, [the country and I assumed that I Should always live at home. || Johnston, by Deputy began. ite cause is the struggle to provide The campus would have you be-/ 4,000 or 6,000 meals a day to the thing |e as 4 | Dunkard 9 the camp it can't) A b aht gas ranges, be vacation time. There are the| two 421nch brotlers, two 200-gallon Groupe of men and women loitering | steamers, and seven 10-gallon cof. on yon broad steps of Meany hall.” | fee urns iv the heavy artillery em You look and find that the/ployed tn the battle campus is talking through ite b A whiteclad cook, with a long, y aren't slitskirt, sweatered| mournful countenance, — stolcally ede—those women, And the / shovels fried halibut off the aren't adorned with prairte-like expanse of a range-top nen pipes, and trim English suits into @ pan as large as & wash tub. upper classmen wouldn't let even Po a senior wear the long, flowing The Brethren take to fish like beards that nehrly every man on|a duck to water,” grins W. B. the auditorium steps wears. The! Krirchoff, the chef of this immense plain black coats of these men and | cafe It's probably the first time the severe little bonnets of the; most of them ver tasted fresh women are another campus contra-| fish. We're using 760 pounds of dietion halibut for dinner today “Well, anyway, they're holding They will drink 200 gallons of an assembly inside—hear the) coffee at one meal, besides 100 of singing?” tea. Hut they ike plain hot water You listen for the college band | best—they drink 300 gallons of it and the stirring strains of “Wash-| at one sitting. ington Boola,” but in its stead ‘Six quarters of beef disappear there comes floating across the | every time we call them to dinner. green to you the measures of “The Yesterday at noon we served Bye and Bye 1,100. From the time the first a? 0 diner entered until the tables were You look for gray-clad ca- [set for supper was 1% hours. Pret- dets, with guns over their (ty good, eh?’ This from Bert Ed- shoulders, or khaki-clad dington, assistant to M. Ford, the Varsity National Guardsmen, head waiter strutting around oustide the A squad of 82 university boys, big university armory. In recruited from the frat houses and stead you find milk wagons, | dormitory, are the walters bri wagons, meat wagons, grocery wagons, and squads of Not as swell as the Washington, j maybe, but we serve the meals on deliverymen. time—blamed good ones, too—and You listen for the rattle of (a lot more of them than the Wash musketry within, and in ite ington,” says Eddington } eee stead you hear the sharp rat. tle of dishes being washed. There in the armory, symbol of war, the Dunkards, exponents of peace, have caimly located their dining room! it’s the most violent contradiction of all, Two walters, hair close crop- ped and an unmistakable rah rah attitude about thi castle walk from t! dignified midst of the dining Brethren into the bediam of the kitchen. They load up and one-step back. | | Miss Annie Kenny I was so fa i jconvinced of the Justice of thelr 15) crusade that I offered myself as a *| member of the next deputation to the prime minister. was anticipated that there might be a street disturbance. | I had disguised myself by doing my hair in an early-Victorian way so that the police, if on the look- lout for me, should not be tempted NOT to arrest me, for people whose By Lady Constance Lytton (Alias “Jane Warton.”) My father had been dead years and I was 39 when I became aware of the woman's movement, came into touch with that section of it known as the militant suffra- gets. I lived with my mother in Without doubt I was one of that numerous gang of upper-class, seg unpropert » Unendowed, unedu | cated, without equipment or train. | ‘°™*r. ing for public service. | Hemmed in by Police I had neither training nor inclina-| We suffragets had scarcely, tion for independent life, but after | stepped into the atreet before we I met Mrs. Pethick Lawrence and found ourselves in a triangle-shaped | 2 WOMEN JAILED AS AUTO THIEVES A Ford anto, stolen by two men; and their wives, and used for a pleasure trip all over the northern sound country, caused the arrest Saturday night of Stacey Frank Van Epps and Mrs. Van Epps, and George W. Johnston and Mrs, Sheriff Rob- erts, on the Nooksack river, where they were encamped, 15 miles from | There the machine broke down and) Sumas. They were lodged in the) was abandoned. The custom of-| county jail here on an open charge.|ficials found it FERNANDO WILL|WILL AID CREW garage of Norman Davis, a Renton contractor, June 7. The party of sightseers first in tended touring Eastern Washing-, ton, they told the sheriff, but} changed thetr minds and saw the, sights instead at Snoqualmie Falls, | Bellingham, Blaine and Sumas a shed just outside the} A flunkey paused and knocks | the ashes from hie pipe. One of the girls washing dishes deftly throws her gum out of the window. Did the campus ever know auch a conglomerate tion of types? NEVER . Back at the auditorium. If you're an “old grad” you listen for uch song as this from within In heaven above, where The faculty won't be there; But down below, where all The faculty will be t Bat, instead, you hear “Help somebody today Somebody along life's way. Lat sorrow be ended, the friendl befriended, Oh, help somebody tc Not the wildly-wavt nll is love iw woe, er, but @ plainly dressed man, in black, quietly conducting with a baton and hymn book, on the ros trum, eee You visit the frateraity and |} Sorority houses and meet another jcontradiction, For college stu dents and Dunkards are residing | together there; the Dunkards, with their love of simplicity; the stu dents, with their love of dress; the | Brethren, with thelr abhorrence of jall musical instruments; the col jlege men and women, with their |planos and mandolins. guitars and ery frat house you in find some lurid sign, hung over bedroom door, announcing that “War is Hell!” In thie, at least, the Dunkards and the fraternity men will agree. 'OH, YOU ART! | A Yartety of interesting features jwill be enjoyed on art and liter ature night at the Press club next Thursday, June 25. The Butler ho tel orchestra will furnish music STAR—MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1914 PAGE 2. i Clothin annual clothing sale. won't match in value what we will give Here, in the Upstairs Store, we sell and Raincoats for | We don’t mark ’em up and then mark’em We simply tell We don’t misrepresent. Owing to our low upstairs rent down. you this: small overhead expense, we save you ten dollars on any garment you buy. Go and see then look at the best $25.00 suits you can find. ( the pattern in your eye. You'll find the suits here the year around. beautiful —fabrics—fully back, $25.00, honest-to-goodness $15.00. values FAHEY-BROCKMAN Upstairs Clothes Shop | Take the An | cade ator and save $10. | , ARCADE WROTE VOTES FOR WOMEN” dvanced. A policeman turned me round and, holding my arme behind me, drove me ahead of him for several yards at a great pace. | sald in o You ask women to behave tn a womanly way; do you think this is treating them in a manly way?” It is no part of our policy to get the police into trouble A great number of POLICE CON- STABL) IN THE SUFFRAGE QUESTION THAN MOST POLITICIANS They have been obliged to at- tend our meetings. Next day, of course, we were HI TELLS ’EM TO CAN THAT NOISE “T'll never ask the people of Se- attlie to vote for me again, “T'll never be a candidate for governor or any other office, I wish to dis- The machine was stolen from the| courage any illusions you may have! 8 LLO, June Gen, Villajeral garrison entirely surrounded in that respect by saying now that! ag 8 gy fares cog Villa, messages received here cas today he rebel attac 4 ‘ | rm done. : yon the city did not begin Sunday sald, was preparing to storm La That's what Mayor Hi Gill told|as expected. The roads were so|Bufa hill and Guadalupe mountain, the Swedish club picnickers at For-|bad that their full strength was un- fortresses defending the city on the tuna park yesterday, after he had Otto R. Ahi blad, the club's president, as a pos sible gubernatorial candidate. A feature of the day was the singing of the Svea male choir, been introduced TO END STRIKE VANCOUVER, B. C., June 22.— Because the United Mine Workers ARE BETTER V =RSED | HELP MEDIATE NOME, June 22.—Capt. Robert! Bartlett, skipper of Stefansson's ex-! WASHINGTON, June 22.—Fer-|ploration ship Karluk, tcebound nando Caldro, representing Gen Carranza, will arrive here Tuesday, it was announced today, to discuss} It 19 sald} the Mexican situation. north of Herald island, has arrived |#te said to be more than $500,000 |here and will proceed North on the|!m &@frears in strike benefits for | U. 8. revenue cutter Bear to rescue |the men who have been conducting the 18 white men and four eski-|® strike here for the past 13 |mos of the Karluk’s crew, who re-|™months, the strike may be called he is authorized to pledge the rebels mained with the ship when Bartlett | to any reasonable plan. and an Eskimo made thelr way over the ice to the Siberian coast. CINCH FOR HIM 22 BELLINGHAM, June ~Accl.| dentally locked in the steel vault of | RESTORE LAND PORTLAND, June 22.—That the Oregon & California railroad ille- gally disposed of land and that the land, 6,000 acres, shall revert to|the Northwestern National bank the government, js the gist of a de-|Gaturday, while working in the| cision handed down Saturday by|ventt cK MeMillan, vice prosh Judge Wolverton in the federal) gent of the bank, effected his es-| court. cape by the use of a small screw) ~ ee r driver, while a force of expert lock- smiths were trying to enter the} FOR OLD TIMERS [viii trom tie outsiae’ Phystotans | with pulmotors and the coroner had gathered in the bank expecting to find MeMillan dying or dead IS THIS SANE? BREMERTON, June Brem- erton's Fourth of July celebration this year will start on the night of | the ard, with a street carnival and war of confetti, Fraternal parades BREMERTON, June 22, — Ar- rangements have been completed by Capt. DeWitt Blamer, command- ant of the navy yard, and the Brem- erton Commercial Club, for hold- ing a three days’ Chautauqua here, commencing July 14, The “old-tim- ers” will hold a home-coming con- vention during the Chautauqua. 22 40 INITIATED Nile temple of the Order of the Mystic Shrine initiated a class of 40 novices at a ceremony held Sat- urday night in the Armory, with baseball, sports and fireworks will! make up the program for the Fourth. Own your own home. | It's | off within the next few days, ac- cording to strikers, following a mass meeting here last night. REAL WILD WEST WALLA WALLA, June 22.—Spe- cial attention is being paid the pio- neers in the plans for the Frontier day celebration which will be held here in September, and the plo- neers will be honored tn a number of ways. In addition to the big parade, there will be a real buffalo chase, stage holdup, Indian massa cre, and other frontier features. SEE WHO'S HERE G. Roy Erford, secretary of the Harmon club in 1912 and advocate of the “handpicking” method of se- lecting delegates to conventions, will bo in charge of the headquar- ters in the American Bank build ing of George Turner, democratic candidate for U. 8. senator WAR ON BLIGHT NORTH YAKIMA, June 22,— Frult growers in this district have easy. Read the offerings in STAR WANT ADS — then choose. 1,000 members in attendance. Visi- tors from Northwest temples en- Joyed the initiatory program. PA ali A tin subscribed $1,800 to a fund which will be used to fight the fire blight in orchards, Myjan almost miraculous faculty for hot absorbing moisture. disturbing the public peace. sentence was one month in Hollo- way prison. Then came the moment for prison On our arrival fn Holloway we| Clothes. The shirt, yellow and were told to undress. stained in many places, was freely marked with the broad arrow. It 1 was handed a cotton chemise, |. as patched #0 coarsely that one amy Foeg nen poral aces could easily trace their jotnings to be weighed and then shown to from sensation while wearing it. |the bath of evil fame. Cell Stufty | A large but well worn scrubbing} Presently there was a rattling of brush was the only washing appli. | keys, and the door of my cell burst ance, The soap had a amell of disin-| fectant—disagreeable reminder of | thrust in tins of food its anti-vermin properties. The slice of cold pressed meat, Tho towel, ludicrously small for| lying on the bottom of a dirty look- the purpose of drying a body so'ing tin, and the cocoa, in a can of open. No face w seen, but a hand VILLA MAY START SOMETHING TODAY jable to Teach the scene of hostill-/north and southeast. It was said! ties In time. that he intends to lead the Today, however, they had the fed-| attack on La Bufa in person 1 HUMORING HER AT THE THEATRES Metropolitan — “When Knight- hood was in Flower.” $25 Suits, Overcoats Faultlessly tailored, guaranteed—money- It } Sales Is About Due The newspapers will shortly begin to print “Sensational Sacrifice,” ‘Terrific | ductions,” ‘‘Drastic Price Concessions” and the other hackneyed dope of the semi- And when all these ter- rific reductions have been made, this clothing you. , our 1 all; Jarry same for BUILDING avenue of police narrowing as we)brought into court on a charge of|large as mine, disclosed with use)the — metal, were positively | repellant. I soon learned that if the plate and spoon were greased with food it w very difficult to get them clean again, as they can be washed in only cold water, I |therefore helped myself with my fingers. The air in the cells was stuffy. left my cell only when I w allowed to draw water, and the air in the corridor then seemed fresh as mountain air by comparison. Intercourse by means of speech being forbidden, the language of the eyes becomes perfected Inquiry, interest, loyalty, encour- agement, sympathy of the best—all these emotions are expressed in prisoners*'eyes in a way that out- bids the meaning of words. But how shall I tell of the Sun- day service? There were no hymns, hardly any passages from the Bible were read, the prayers se lected were of a dolorous order. The chaplain, in his address, spoke to us of temptation. He in- stanced how wrong it would be if, when we were hungry, we yielded to the temptation of stealing. An old woman stood up. She was tall and gaunt, her face amed with life, her hands gnarled and worn with work Whatever her “crimes,” she evi dently had tolled incessantly, “Oh, sir!” she said, in a pl ing voice, “don't be so hard on us Tears reamed down her fur- rowed face. It was obvious that no prisoner would, in my state of health, have been assigned to the hospital had they not known my station in life. (This was before I had assumed d- Moore—Dark, Seattie—"“Joan of Aro,” in mo- tion pictures. STUCK WILL TELL Archdeacon Stuck of Alaska, fa- mous for being the first white man to scale Mt. McKinley, and noted 48 a conqueror of other tall peaks, will tell how he did it at the Y. M C. A. auditorium tomorrow night. It will be under the auspices of the Mountaineers. | | ‘SLAIN BY LIONS Pes cial “Wait, and I'll ask my wife if | n go downtown with you,” "Is {t customary for you to ask your wife?” | “Not at all—but today I hap- pen to know she wants me to go downtown.” CHICAGO, June 22.—Halt a doz I en lions, used in a theatrical act | and belonging to Mme. Adage Cas tillo, to whom he was engaged to be married, pounced upon Emerson D, Deitrich, manager of the produce: | tion in a car here yesterday, killed | Gee and partly devoured him, “Trilby,” | the oldest of the troupe of Hons, | MEN HERE made an effort to protect Deitrich, | R. R. but was pushed aside by the other | The men who helped build the} beasts and stood at one side, : | watehing the attack, One of the | Milwaukee railroad into Seattle are brutes escaped and terrorized the!" ® reunion in the city this week, neighborhood before ft was cap. With headquarters at the New Rich- haved: mond hotel, Montana and Idaho! Biermann wees ‘ members arrived here today, and TRANSFER COL. an informal session of the Milwau kee-Puget Sound Pioneers’ club was held. The visitors will remain three days. WASHINGTON, June 22.-—Lieut. Col, John Hayden, commanding at The total eclipse of the sun in) Fort Casey, has been transferred | August will be used as an occasion | to Fort Worden, where he will com-|for studying the propagation of mand the artillery district of Puget|electric waves in connection with sound Wireless telegraphy, the common name of “Jane War- ton.”) My continued appeals to the authorities to treat me as they did my fellow suffragets proved un- | availing, Actual $25 Suits, Overcoats and Raincoats Re- Arcade eleva- tor, first stop, saves $10.00, IN BLOOD LETTERS OVER HER HEART TITLED MILITANT TELLSHOW SHE PRICKED WORDS WITH NEEDLE So I decided to write “Votes for | Women” on my body, Scratching it |{nto my skin with a needle, BE- GINNING OVER THE HEART AND ENDING IT ON MY FACE a 1 Cuts Deep y skin proved much tougher than I had expected. The small sewing needle was inadequate. I cleaned a hairpin and set to work im real earnest. I succeeded in producing a very fine V just over |my heart, and, in my zeal, I made _ ihe deeper impression | tended. | The Vv evenly than I im was printed. very of lint and many which, to my delight, gave the scratch a quite imposing lok, AS |IF HALF MY CHEST HAD BEEN | HACKED OPEN That “scratch” jmy release, brought about coheteapandneninioesiishincininslscbiad aia |Foley Cathartic Tablets Sure ly Are a Wonder (They contain Blue Flag) For stubborn constipation, and for troubles with your stomach liver and bowels, you will find Foley Cathartic Tablets a regulst wonder. Old timers, who have used all the cathartics on the market, say that none of the olf line can compare with Foley Ci thartic. Tablets, for thoroughly | cleansing action, for lasting effect 7 and satisfactory, painless results’ They keep your system in perfect” working order, No biliousness, 80 distress after eating, no greasy, | Sassy taste. A stout person who uses them constantly will feel thinned out and more comfortable as a result of their use. 25¢ per bottle, For sale by Bartell Drug | Stores. OUR POLICY We employ only latest and ting cases which a few years ag sidered incurable. Open Evenings. that strain your eyes. Lenses weaken the eyes. If any approved scientific methods and are fit- 1116 FIRST AVE., Near Seneca "T WEAR LASSES strong injure and doubt exists in your mind about YOUR GLASSES being right, let us ex- amine ° your eyes and advise you. most jo were con- and solemnly applied a large piece” plasterings, — \ Examination Free.

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