The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 9, 1914, Page 1

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- near Van Asselt station. for her. C. A. Shocking! actress learned. SHE WILL TELL ALL ABOUT HER EXPERIENCES IN THE STAR TOMORROW. The Star fixed up a The Star induced a pretty actress of the D scheme players to try them out, and they fell most merrily Disguised as a demure agent for The Saturday Evening Post, she visited the offices of many staid, respectable bachelors. Yes, the gay, old boys DO flirt, the rascals! One of the men she saw works at the Y. M. But Seattle bachelors are gentlemanly in their methods of flirtation, the and willingly with the again some day? tickets and one thing ' Talk About Fat Men! This Youngster veges More Than Pa and Ma LAST EVITION “It was lots of fun,” Some of the bachelors promised to subscribe. They were sorry to have her leave. ‘SEATTLE BACHELORS GAY OLD RASCALS O SEATTLE bachelors flirt? They do. she laughed. pretty agent. Bachelors who remember talking with a pretty, little girl in a chic suit and hat yesterday afternoon and this morning, are herewith notified to try to remember what they told her. CONVERSATIONS ARE TO APPEAR IN THE STAR TOMORROW. Here is one part of her story: “In one office 1 met a lovely, gray-haired old fellow. me he couldn't take the magazine, as every week any number of women were after him with But he didn’t want me to hurry away.” | YOU'LL SEE HIS NAME IN TOMORROW'S STAR. ||| and another. “Seattle bachelors are an awful nice bunch of men.” But all talked glibly Couldn’t she call Some made excuses. THEIR He told He was awfully nice to me. The Seattle Star | The tid a in Seattle That Dares to Print the tows VOLUME 16. N 5. SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, “JULY « 9, TRAINS AND st 1914, ONE CENT fiw TWO HELD AS SUSPECTS IN MURDER CASE Two suspects are held at £ police Charles Paul and M. C. Fowler, headquarters, following discovery loggers. A _ revolver was this morning of the body of a man,/ found on Paul. They were picked believed to be A. E. Oard, along the | up in the vicinity early this morn- Columbia & Puget Sound tracks, | {ng before the body was found, and held as suspicious ci eters. The crew of a passing train In the dead ma pockets were found the body. A bullet from aj| found several envelopes, one ad- 32-caliber dressed to A. E. Oard, and bearing revolver had Reemyp death. There was a bullet hole in| the return address, “Tremont hotel, the man's bead. A 32-caliber re| Red Bluff, Cal.” Another card bore volver lay beside the body. The/the address of a hotel on Pike st. man’s left hand was powder-| No raluables or money were marked, but the wound was on the | found on the body. The case was 7 side of the head. at first thought to be one of sul- The “two men’ arrested arecide. ESCAPES LIFE {women protest on MEN'S TIGHT PANTS INSANITY ACT Gieaed aes Mayor Albee on the wearing of X-ray skirts in public, Mr. M. Bowman, a well-known land wom- an, called the attention of Jacob Konnturt successfully | take invanity by his silence during|| {re mayer to what she his trial for murder, and escape life dress of mere men, tight imprisonment at the hands of the trousers, one, toe’ the i Gounty officials believe he did, pore gn ring! sdnodbe g and bn ie pm nig est actor] folks in. matters sartorial. ever in ‘They are worrying Levi about) what Is to be done with bi: Taken to the county Me inal Jest night by a deputy, Konnturt) broke his stolid silence of fovr | weels and roundly cursed atten: ants when they tried forcibly +a feed him. He raved and cursed, of- ficials say. He had been on a fast since Sunday. TR.NOT ANXIOUS TO BE GOVERNOR OYSTER BAY, N. Y., July 9— | After returning from a crowded |day of conferences with the pro- | gressive leaders at national head- paar in New York, ngs WIFE DIVORCES N, e ind objects of | | that a ‘would run for governor. cieeean have dase ins ae as| In a letter to the colonel today, Louisa L. Lepper and Louls Lep-| Senator Poindexter strongly urges per are concerned, according to the him not to run for the governor. Wife's divorce complaint filed on/|ship, “for, said Sen. Poindexter, charges of cruelty and nonsupport. | “it would be like sending Gen. Lepper was formerly physical| Grant in the civil war to direct a culture director of the public| skirmish.” schools. ‘COUNTY DEMS TO MEET SATURDAY | King county democrats will meet in convention Saturday at 11 a, m. EVEN BRAINS NEED THE EATS Dr. Frederick Jackson Turner of Harvard, who has been giving high- brow lectures on history at the = versity the past two weeks, was the guest at a dinner last night at the at the Armory. All democrats are Washington, got up by Prof. Ed-\urged by State Chairman Todd to M 4 Prof. O. H. Rich-| be present. ron. Oe The state convention is to be A lot of intellects were there. held in Seattle a week later. at Iihmk about it Lewes Just Que Mavs QRiNTQV I see where another doctor thinks he’s found how to pre- arrange baby’s sex, but I hope and believe he hasn't. Any kind of baby is a whole lot better than no baby;| but the best baby of all is the baby who comes into this world a complete surprise—the baby you lie awake planning not knowing whether it’s a girl or a boy, but dead over, certain, in either event, that it will be the cutest, prettiest infant that ever was Why, a doctor who really knew how sex could be de termined, and TOLD, would be the exterminator of the race You don't believe it? Then, sometime, casually, ask} mother how many girl babies she would have had, had she been able to fix the sex! No woman who has passed through the ordeal of mother- hood wants daughters foredoomed to the same stress. Even femininism hasn't yet evened this elemental account. There are some things concerning which ’twould be folly | ot Quinn to be wise. * What causes sex is one., TUBERCULAR TESTS NEVER “MADE ON MILK Health Commissioner McBride | Declares Seattle Consumers Are Unprotected. |FRAMES ORDINANCE |Provides Temporary Safeguard | Pending Consideration of Municipal Dairy. Health Commissioner McBride| | declared today to The Star it ts | Just a guess as to how much of Se- jattle’s milk fs tubercular, | There are no tubercular tests |made! They test the milk for per- centage of butter fat and a lot of other things, but not for tuberculo- sis. The government pasteurization |test provides that the milk be kept at 140 degrees for 20 minutes, |Datrymen don't do this. A dead tubercular germ is as harmless asa —— And Sere pasteurization wit) pilipihat kere. Dr. Mefiride anys that the only way |to insure efficient pasteurizing is for the city to do it, through a pro- |posed municipal dairy. |. He is going into the municipal ldatry scheme thoroughly. But |meantime he proposes to draft an — to afford temporary re lief. This ordinance will regulate the jsale of not only milk, but cream, | buttermilk and ice cream Dr. McBride hopes to have the ordinance in shape {n a few days. He anticipates trouble with the municipal dairy plan. If the city) took over the handling of all the milk, it would be with the funda mental idea of pasteurizing It. Not Good for Babies? | But eminent medical authorities of. Europe, says the health commis sioner, declare pasteurized milk is} not best for babies H Dr, McBride will investigate their | findings. Also he wil! look Into the saving to be effected in distribu tion. Either the tubercular germa in| Seattle's milk must be killed or the| * |supply of tubercular milk must be} stopped, says the doctor, | It te preferable to kill the germs jand continue using tubercular milk, as the other system might bring Jabout a disastrous milk shortage. PETE CAN’T GO TO DENTIST Judge Joseph M. Glasgow, at- torney for Peter Miller, falled today in his effort to get a per- mit from Sheriff Cudih to take his client to a dentist If Peter gets his teeth It will be In jail. DOC GETS BACK Dr. J. Tate Mason, King county | coroner, {# back from the East with | the information that he intenda in-| |stalling a photographic system of| |identifying unknown dead here. | j | xed jumps James Tullak, 66, who lives near! He has had a call in to Olympta| Taylor's mill, was in The Star of- since early morning for the publie| fice today to say he would go to |service commission. But its mem-| Jail before he would pay the extra DANNY’S A BEAR! «: amy, CROWDS WILL DANCE TANGO ON PAVEMENT Tilikums Announce Plans for Mardi Gras on Closing Night of Potlatch. BANDS EVERY BLOCK Street Will Be Roped Off; Twenty Feet of Dancing for a Penny. of tangoing for a Twenty penny, That's the price the Tillkums are folng to charge Saturday night of next week, when the big Potlatch comes to a close, after four days of bilarity. On the last night the city will wit down neas its first real Mard! Gras cele- bration. . Second av., from Madison to Pike at. will be completely roped off and policed, so vehicles or street LOOK OUT FOR JACK SPRATT Jack Spratt is town this afternoon. He'll be down town every after- noon for a while. 5 { UH Look out for Jack | care cannot Goratt.. We gives: ews? eter Bemis Brook Apart ) good money. Vithin this territory bands will be stationed at every block. 4 specified squares, talcum will be powdered on the pavement, and reels of tango, hesitation, maxixe or other late ateps will be tripped at will. Dancing In masquerade costume will be permitted. Grotesque beasts, holding fair beanties In their arma, will circle past, stately Henry VIII. dancing | with Joan of Arc, and tribes of In- dians, horribly painted, will cireu- late in mad pursult of festive Pot- latch bugs tooting ear-splitting | horns. Nope, Jack Spratt isn’t crazy. The Star will send him down Second av. looking for a woman with a copy of today’s Star in her hand. The first one he spies, he'll step up politely and hand the woman a silver dollar, Simple, isn’t it? So if you are down town this afternoon, and your Star is in plain sight, Jack Spratt may spy you and you'll get a dollar. Will Erect Bleachers Mardi Gras plane were announc- jed today by Howard Joslyn, city electrician, Tyee Klone, and one of Rca f jg | Tilikums’ best hustlers Look out for Jac! Third av. between Pike and Mad- Spratt! ison, on the west side, will be ob- Look OUT FOR HIM/|structed so no vehicles can pass TODAY! er od ann i +n LOOK OUT FOR HIM sachers w! he constructer ‘or TOMORROW, TOO! the sight-seers who don't care to venture into the festive crowd RAINIER VALLEY FOLK ALL HET UP’ Corporation Counsel James E.; Everyone along the zone {nclud- Bradford has the fidgets today, By-|©4 in the rate increase on the S. R. rh 3 & 8. line, as far out as Taylor's ery time the telephone rings, he) i, ts up in arma today. y bers are out of the capitol and may not be back untf! late afternoon, If the commission doesn’t enter an order postponing the taking ef- fect of the increased rates of the | Seattle, Renton & Southern, either today or tomorrow, the rates will automatically become effective to- nickel the company proposes to| assess in the city limits. F. H. Holl, Dunlap station, is an- | other one who won't submit to the new arrangement. If the new schedule gets by the commission, residents along the line promise a fight like the one in| ” hee e BORN — February | 13, 1909. ] WEIGHT THEN— 12 pounds. WEIGHT aggre | 214 pounds. HEIGHT—50 In. | | FATHER WEIGHS | | 165 pounds. { | MOTHER WEIGHS | | 160 pounds. eo en MOUNT AIRY, Ga. Georgia is STILL on your map! Of all fatties EVER, “Big Joe” Cody takes the cake! Suppose 625-pound Charles Jackson of Massa- chusetts DOES win the grand gold medal away from Georgia’s fat-man claimant, W. T. Brinson. just give us TIME down ere! We didn’t have sufficient’ warning about this fat-man contest. We couldn't raise a human nioun- tain over night, you know! But Georgia's on the job, and jubilating, for we've got a corker COMING! We're raising Joey Cody just as morrow night 1911, before the rates were low-| The elty objected Ike sixty alered, when they boarded cars, prot- week ago. If the commission acts| fered the conductor a nickel, and! in time it will have to hurry defie fast as ever we can, and in a few years we'll have a half-ton fellow on the scales to smash all others Meaning Sergt. Danny Quinn, Boss of Seattle’s Traffic Cops--- He of the Ramrod Back, Which They Gave Him in U. 3. Army |years old | February, 1909, on his father's farm, | whose champion |doubtless destined to become, ¢ Joey's mother’s father is Joey's father’s grandfather, Problem of the neighborhood: Untan- gle that, and show its connection with Joey’s | avoirdupois, ! Sa weighs 214 pounds, He is healthy and strong, and ab ways happy. He's an expert and enthustastie horseman. But He's Growing Fast James Adolph Cody (his real name) of Habersham county, is 5 He only weighs 214 pounds at) present, ‘tis true. But he’s GROWING! He has gained 84 pounds in the last two years. James Adolph Cody was born in ly intelligent for hi In a few months going to enter professional life, He will follow the fairs this f under his father's ee ‘DIDN'T SAVE HI “Did you hit him?” asked Actii | City Attorney E. B. Bodwell y day afternoon of Max Ci charged with striking John when the latter attempted to him from a religious meeting at Volunteer park Tuesday evening, “No, God hit him, using my fist- to do it with, replied Max. "sald Judge Gordon, a EVERETT, July 9.—When his mother found Otto Trygsted, 20, un- a few miles north of Mount Airy, On his entrance into this world, fat man he is “Big Joe" brought no startling amount of avoirdupois. Gains 32 Pounds in Year He weighed 12% pounds—which is NORMAL for Georgia babies, please remember. But he started right In to grow, up, down, back-and-forth, and sideways. He gained 32 pounds the first year, 45 the next, 40 the third d at 4 yea of age he weig! 20 pounds MORE than his father! conscious from gas in the Now, at the age of 5, “Big Joe”| of the'r home, sh is 4 feet inches in height, id pulmctor. © number of his etar is 23. He has 1° men in his squad. | Does the double hoodoo worry | him? It does not! | Nothing worrtes Sergt, Danny | Quinn, the “prrride of the for-r-r-ce” and commandant of Se attle’s traffic policemen | For seven years the city has |been proud of Danny, five of them as head of the traffic cops. His |Beaa Brumme! bearing and polish. Jed manners, as well as general effi jelency as an officer, bid fair to make him popular as long as he stays on the job. | “Alwaye keep your | Sergt. Danny's rule. "Don't get ex- jelted In a jam. You're a goner if! you do.” Seattle couldn't get along with- He is a sort of an Inst! tution, The sight-seeing car spleler points him out with pride to the city's visitors. ! It’s a pleasure to see Danny in action, He's never better than when showing a raw recruit the tricks of gulding a multitude of ve- hicles past a crowded corner with out a mishap. He Has Always Time He would make a moving picture show all in himself It's “honk, honk” here, “hold on” there, a shrill whistle, a wave of the hend, buzz, buzz, clang, clang, all day long. A merry, merry life is Danny's, vond ay, and Pike st., which “hardest corner in town,” his ability as traffic man is often put to a test as he steps in to action to relleve the regular man. Being a sergeant, Danny, ot | course, doesn't have to work much | nowadays unless he wants to, He) shows the other fellow how, | \ He can wee 10 different direc-| Wy a) & “ALWAYS KEEP YOUR HEAD ™ tions and help a timid old lady} you ure! across the street at the same time., The women and the m@ Politeness is second nature with) the beby in the ea him, And he is never too busy to, fully, assist the ladies, | Sergt. Quinn is not “st Two spectators watched him yes-| He does not affect th terday afternoon | carriage of his. ~ Ah, fine! Here came umsteen au- He ought to walk tha i tomobiles, four street cars and 16/he served in the regular army teams. They went into a jam, A} the war with Spain, mother with a baby in a go-cart,| navy after that, >. followed by a group of nervous} One more little point about women, trying to cross, | Quin: i i si io always wears a dress sul _cebaliehi ng pon Se | when he goes to a dance—and looks “Brerrr!” went Danny's whistle. | good in it A car slipped slowly out of the a ADA confusion. The driver was rebuk ed because he failed to see a sig nal. “Honk, honk?” queries another anxious autoist Mest of the drivers know Quinn, y on him to help them out, aves an imperious hand for- ward and another car is away, “Just a minute, ladies. Ah, there JOHANNISTHAL, Germany, July |9.—Aviator Linnekogel made & monoplane ascent here today to an altitude of 21,000 feet, 1,000 feet — higher than the previous recor, 2 _ DED ee rN Mere

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