The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 5, 1915, Page 1

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Tomorrow The Star will publish the first article by Roger Babson, the eminent writer on business and financial topics, now on a tour of South America for The Star and its sister papers to report on business opportunities there for this country. Babsdn writes first from Havana, Cuba, and tells you all about that wonderful city. There is something about his trip, and about the information he’s going to give us, on page 2 of today’s paper. JITNEY JINGLES JANGLE JOYOUSLY! JOIN JOLLY JINGLERS! © snd no franct : atreet « elx th its car trap-hanging anging bluft ay he honk of and rattle of FAIR FARE ve They sult Seattle best treet oa Miapverategahy > wade. Seatite it wall and tog.-right and. ptt wp Will ties 6 noonda - 7 e rae eys could not live r ane e @ The nickel you pa ane f a fight Yes, the ght ; 4 . jaunting car take—a res AN ADVOCATE The jitney machine I'l! ride the fitney, if you please. | We'll put the tramway out of sight | All hat e Sitne i q On which the street cara a she @ SAAN A AST! e ° @ in Fenttle oceries—and more sa « bs . oi? HOW'S THIS? TL Des leave street. cart belind ag sts *coo0.BVe, CHAS.! GOODBYE," |@ ’ aware Good-bye, street cars, jitney'a com: | ¢ @ And help the poor man make a a ED! ” COME TO STAY PRETTY GOOD pi e The jitney cars, 1 think, are the viet KER.CHOO! ° o¢ Hush, little Ford ) the wa { © liere’s to the jitneys; they're here| The fitney car am come to sta Don't you @ ars out o ity one make o old tramwa gruff, T ea jitne me boy The tne ra, they are the tuft to a And make us dodge the \velong ba bea ne ’ » little man! "Twill take you as tar They n ine ‘The streets are free, the fare we'll day * nok MAY Cabinet Considers Effect on This Country of Ger- many’s Extension of aad Into Neutral Waters. WASHINGTON, Feb. 5.—If Germany intends her proclaimed “war tone” else the United States will not recognize it. This was broadly intimated by officials today after the meeting of the cabi at which the German order was discussed in detail. The notice received by this government so far, however, Is regarded ane? as a warning that such a danger zone will exist, such as have he fore been issued by England and Germany concerning mined are in neutral nations of the world. The attitude of the United States in jaa connection is regarded here as important. A naval writer io Novig Daily Chronicle says today: “The attempt of the Germans to ignore the American flag on GERMANY GIVES NOTICE OF AN ATTACK ON FOE’S TRANSPORTS passengers and crew would be an atrocity that would almost Inevitably mean war.” Kt ts the consensns of opinion that the American state department ! Germas decree. Ta get the chance. Don’t miss it. teiligent, broad-minded men like Prof. Angell, dean of the University of Chicago, refuse to accept the presidency of the University of Washing- ton. You'll see a grown-up man who eye sentative Hartley and his like in the legislature, begging, sonetieetings| will present a protest against the; The Seattle Star The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News around England as a blockade, she must make it “airtight,” or| — Sourdoaghs, Can You Help Woman Victim of North?” a close look at Representative Hartley of Everett if you ever sot regarded by You'll see why big, brainy, capable, in-|@s sufficient to ‘win thelr approval VOLUME 16. Eliminates Some | Sections Ob-| noxious to Cities But Still Is Ant-Muny Measure OLYMPIA, ‘eb No. 46, framed by the 8. E. Co, and sponsored by Senator Taylor of King, is doomed for the scrapheap In its stead, the corporate Interests the city officials for the meas tion representatives but the corpora believe they is mentally narrow between the| "OW can put it over Ostensibly the substitute bill was 5.—Senate mitt! SEATTLE, WASH., SOCIALISM, SAYS. PRES, LANDES OLYMPIA, Feb. 5.—Replying to President Lardes’ request aon that doctrine How about Glenn Hoover?” President Landes was asked Hoover is a ieading socialist in Seattle, anc was candidate for congress last fall, At the Universit of Wash- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1915 ONE CENT Joe Driscoll ON THAINS AND yEW STAN PROTEST SEA ORDER IGHT EDITION WEATHER FORECAST—Rain TIDES AT SEATTLE ig low aa tt. ™ ihe fe 38 poms 52 ft ao tt The Spelt of the Yukon’ ‘ I wanted the gold, and I sought it; I scrabbled and mucked like a slave Came out with a fortune last fall, transports bearing troops and muni-| “Peaceful shipping is earnestly | tieally an anti-municipal-ownersh|y in the house, Thursday after tions to France, was issued today. cautioned against approaching the | bill and so valiantly partisan to | noon, | srg i MC declared thas weccsle will Leinerthern. and western coasts of | corporation control of puble utilt “Ie it i Yet somehow, life’s not what I thought it, attacked “with all the =m: of France, as it is tened with | ties that {t aroused almost uniform “that the unive: | And somehow, the gold isn’t all. less beckons, There are lives that are erring and aim- And deaths that just hang by a hair; There are hardships that nobody reckons; ! he did not actually declare that a protest would be Bill No. 46, allows cities to have j volunteered the “gue: it would be. He said the situation corporations from decisions of the a Sng hy Ra A TE Sere wernt om "5 GOMES ALONE TO THE STAR FOR A PHOTO OU WHO GOT THE : States. Joes not require cities to pay for 5 Me e e The order is generally characterized as a “paper block | [ 0 SUGAR bay when reget | takes over f although administration officials are said to believe that } — property of a private ¢ a } indeavoring to enforce it, Germany might wreak havoc on | Taker Senate: Bit it. Oks } American vessels in isolated instances. | COAT G pees Senate SS ie SoS Bs awe «6 private corporation before engag . ENGLISH PAPER CAL LS ORDER in public utility business, but j ar had to pay the franchise of the HOSTILE ACT AGAINST THE U. S.|Howard Taylor's Bill to Rob) company ‘te wei Cities of Home Rule Too The substitute bill was intro. duced yesterday and will be consid LONDON, Feb. 5.—The proc, the strength of a paper block- Strong to Get By ered jointly with Senate Bill 46 lamatioo of Germany's pro ade will bea vs signed against BRING I 3 a posal to extend the war zone to| the United Stat he sinking TITUTE | allied waters, was addressed to all| of an American liner with N UBS ‘U, STAMPS OUT a BERLIN, Feb. 5.—Germany an- ping large numbers of troops andjopposed to municipal home rule) - 7 : perused ‘iday that she la pelsing | quantities of war material to|have decided upon a substitute} for # $300,000 app-apriation for Was it famine or scurvy? I fought it; Parke woe at Engi ? it. | Irafted by G a Lelidings at the University of , to strike another blow at England's France,” says the annouce: easure,trafted by George A. Lee, ; ; : contro! of the seas. A new afficial|“We shall proceed against these |former chairman of the public Washington, Represeotative F I emp my youth into a grave. warning to neutral! countries, deciar- transports with al! the means of | se rvice commission. jartiey o verett took up the | ay ing the inlpation to attack British warfare at our disposal. | Senate Bill No. 46 w dras-| hue and cry against socialiem | wanted the gold, and I got it; wart: at our di: a.” serious, danger of being confounded opposition from every city in the “England Is on the eve of ship-\with ships for warlike purposes.” | state meekly replied Presi- ed | Eliminates Several ate ge dent Landes. “The unive T ’ 1 id hh h | In an attempt to stave off igno-| ig an agent for stamping out he . | minious defeat, the substitute bill) socialism.” ba res a land where the mountains are was decided upon. High school students. said nameless, eliminates bodily several sec Landes, often’ come with social- i : NAR B |tions of Senate Bil No. 46 and| Landes, ofter come with social And the rivers all run, God knows § — modifies Ld measure in several! but before graduation they where; other resp “ ” , | Three concessions, however, are Brenton’ Ger views ong 3 , ti _|drafted by Lee in behalf of the rowayed man. ereadiningss men prefer to advise wth mon wine have /maller wlity companies fo, the) ehery Mare oy and atv a en ne ee ' state, who claimed to have been jebate and oratory and athlet- PP 4 at least 4 thimbleful of brains on how a big state Institution should be [Sliced in previous" alacuesoas | fee" Prof. Landes replied that : still; ‘ Lee's substitute eliminates sec Hoover was a socialist before . Imagine a man like Angell kowtowing and fawning before Repre-|,, 120s, substitute | slimine Sento _he entered the university —— There’s a land—oh, it beckons and pleading for a building appropriation that should have been given : University at least two years ago. And then watch Hartley shander ’ | This fs the boy who bas a rob-| And I want to go back—and I will. Why do you teach socialism at the universit heey: aechhaes’ 6040 40°96: cyaerd * 4 Can you imagine Prof. Angell replying in the spirit of ne lhanging over him and who was al B LAY HIS ARMY —FROM ROBERT SERVICE'S POEMS. Landes answer: ging ov him and ’ a e “Please, sir, don’t be angry. We discourage socialism. We don't | teach it at the university.” q What a spectacie! socialism. y, the University of Washington students study! | It may even widen your eyes to learn that they study the doctrines of Confucius. Also the doctrines of protective tariff, and free trade, and a lot of other things. They study these things because they constitute a part of human TRUNK; NOW MR. MAY IS suey SACRAMENTO, Feb. breach of promise suit for ae 000 against B. F. May, retired Virginia planter, 65, has been for a week-end trip to San Francisco, according Miss Foreman | Foreman and paid for by May | to | | lowed to go alone at midnight tn a high-powered automobile from the county jail to the home of Sheriff Bob Hodge. ian is honest, |lice persecution Fred Boalt’s story about this un istig] trust and its faithful perform lance interested readers to such an who says and a victim of po the young | ClarAnce ts good to his army Last night “Cap” ClarAnce and the army feasted lavishly at the Washington hotel And it was! ClarAnce’s treat TO A BANQUET By Fred L. Boalt HIS story is written in the hope that sourdoughs will read it and that their hearts will be touched. It is the story of a woman who is a sourdough knowledge. * The et eg at the Ar extent that there was a demand) Did they eat hardtack? Gractous }and who went to Alaska—‘‘once too often. 4 Education is meant to broaden the mind, not to narrow it. The uni- filed here by Delphine ore- gonaut hotel in San Francisco. for a picture of the young man no! Soldiers don't eat hardtack versity teaches, it doesn’t advocate, these various political doctrines. | man, 23, daughter of H. W. May says that he told Miss Fore-| The Star asked Hodge if it might | not those in ClarAnce’s army. Clar-| Ot all Ww: ho go to the North in quest of gold, how if Glenn Hoover, university graduate, is a soci. then John C.| Foreman, of Medford, Ore. }man he would marry her if she| send a staff photographer up to the Ance would never allow that many find it?) And how many keep it? Not many, Higgins is a standpatter. If Tom Murphine is a i ve, then How- The salient but startling evi- could get a certificate of health tol jaf), provided Driscoll was willing it was a nice party, ClarAnce | [t's a man’s game : am ard Cosgrove gives three rousing cheers every time Taft's name is men tioned. dence in the case is said to be an expensive trunk purchased not a she failed she Is he says show whic to do. consumptive, | sar-rrry,” “Tl send him down Per-r-r-r-feetly unne: | burred Hodge said nice things about his officers and the officers a and men nen Laura Hill, this sourdough’s name IS, Laura Hill A FEW LESS HARTLEYS IN THE LEGISLATURE, AND THE in this city and stamped in |He also claims he agreed to di-|there said nice things about ClarAnce. |js getting old—she is nearing 60 dithe is eink UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON WILL HAVE ITS CHANCE AS A_ large black letters, “Mre, B. F. vide his income with her, but that) And he dtd, Driscoll came in, in-| And then they gave ClorAnce a etre res: ae “hp nearing 60—and she is sick and REAL EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION, IT 1S NOW THE VICTIM OF Day.” the present attempt is to sec ure} trodu ed himself, and here is the|loving cup ““/ destitute. Her right side is paralyzed. hat nn a hae 2 back ssillealdeiei This We egideted “My Clee IO eee ee ie tetany erie} (8) BB Perhaps you met her in the North—you, one of ‘ | SELECTING PANSY {® ANSY FOR! | me GIVE You some - HANG SOME more Is— |the few sourdoughs who found the gold and kept it— and perhaps, if you have forgotten her name, or never knew it, you would 1 remember if 1 could visualize her as she looked when she-mushed the ( thilcogt pass. the hidden gold. sounds her ears knew were city | [must SAY, You Useo ) | WELL, IF You KNow ) | WISH You WouLD DRIVE | | PARDOHY ME MISTAN DuFE|—-TO HOLD DE HAMMER But | cannot visualize Laura ) husband, she kept @ boarding RARE Ji eM N SO MUCK ABouUT A FEW NAILS ALONG te BuT THE BASIEST WAY WIV BoTH HANDS Hill, old, destitute and paralyzed, | house in New York. Her feet Lge gary RUNNING A House LET| ) pere ai . | To DRIVE A NAIL WIV ed Loskdons f as you may have known her when | knew only the asphalt; they had rier { 4 OM WHICH | CAN + lout HteTIN? Yok -— she and you vied together to find | never followed the trail. The only oA MAID — [ [THING TO do 5 =} FINGER, | woman. She took her chances with the rest and asked no favérs in camp or on trail because she was a was not big or strong. But for 17 years she mushed and prospected, camped in the open, forded swol len streams, suffered cold and hunger, and thirst, and lonelin buoyed up, as you were buoyed up, by the farther on—always farther on— the gold was waiting to be found, The pity of it is that she was not young when she first sought the North, city dweller, Following the death of her Even for a weman she | taunting hope that | And she had been a | sounds. , The only life she knew | Was the city life of ordered strife and turmoil, Her daughter died, | hated New York. Then she She wanted to (Continued o on on Page 8.) PACKER TILDEN DIES CHICAGO, Feb. 5.—Edward Til | den, millionaire packer and banker, is dead today at his home here. He was president of the National Pack. ing Co, Read the Miscellaneous col- umn in Star Want Ads,

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