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GERMANY WILL BE HELD TC STRICT ACCOUNTABILITY FOR THE SINKING OF SEATTLE GRAIN SHIP IN SOUTH ATLANTIC nnn nn neers ARR The Price of The Star Is Now, as It Always Was, ONE CENT T resign from the new port commission. and then you will be forgotten. A man w general to talk about quitting.” Bridges, who was present, did not reply. VOLUME 18 3 “This is not your fight,” HE Kind Words club meets daily at luncheon in the Railway Exchange building. said Kelley. SEATTLE, WASH., “It is the people’s fight. have gone down in the people's fight, but another will be raised to take his place. The Seattle Star The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News THURSDAY, It is your duty to stick to your guns. MARCH 11, 1915 ONE CEN On FHA SHWS STANDS, Be Iss AND IGHT EDITION TDK AT BEAVER High low a.m, ULAT, Biae mi, 122 1, 04 Yesterday Hugo Kelley, editor of the Renton Herald, took Bob Bridges publicly to task for Bridges’ declaration that he would If you quit, the newspapers will give you headlines on that day, Now, when the enemy has apparently obtained reinforcements, is no time for a good BOALT WRITES AN AD! CAN WE INTEREST YOU? Read the Story of Little Julia From Kodiak--How Good Doctors May Make Her Crooked Body Straight; and the Story of How YOU Can Help to Straighten Other Little Bodies By Fred L. Boalt [teachers of the Indian schoo! at Sort of keep an eye on the] Kodiak. An answer was prepaid will you? She's going t A radiogram sped 2,000 miles over The good teachers at the Indian fea and mountain. It school didn't offer to pay the Ortho oes Will you take Jul pedic hospital for trying to cure Steward Makes Little The answer was: The radiogram was away Kodiak, It the Orthopedic Julia The peopie at the hospital didn’t dicker and quibble. They sent off the answer, “Yes!” and a man gath Patient Comfortable The steward said he would did, too s directed to hospital, Seattle He Julia is an Byear-old half-breeo— ered little Julia in his arma and once, he stuck his head In the state Alieut and Russian. She has tuber carried her aboard the steamer room where Julia lay. Sometimes culosis of the hip. Admiral Evans, and said to a stew. he stayed up nights to make Ju The radiogram w. sent by theiard comfortable oe eee POP’S DREAM He tempted her ap T SAY POP,. WHERES THE ATER MELON] | family t HE STAR is going to help op” and the rest of the o realize this year the dream of the ideal backyard garden. Starting tomorrow, this paper will print a series of articles that explain, minu technical language, every. difficulty facing a beginner at gardenin ances are food is going to be high and also scarce this year, while we are keeping half “e world from starving. The home garden is the solution Any man, putting in an hour or two after work each day in the backyard, can make that yh plot save him many dollars this summer. TIT FOR TAT VETO JITNEY THAW'S LAST IN AD FIGHT BILL TODAY CHANCE GONE March 1 Positive A warrant was Issued Thursday OLYMPIA, NEW YORK, March 11.—After fn Judge Gordon's court for the ar ; : : rest of C. Harrison Green, business information was recetyed toda . ina ir the .court manager of a Seattle morning pa- The Star correspondent here that ete regard ao making per on a charge of fake Gov. Lister will veto the bus practically certein, the ing. bill requiring bonds of $2,500 from Parone a ype pe nic nd The charge is ma b ( a 1 20) a th a Francis Rowe, advertising and sa ha een alting Harry Thaw and f others expert, as a result of adve the disposition of Senate Bill 356, charge th conspiracy. carried in the morning paper whi placing jitney buses under the pub Judge Page ruled that Thaw can fn that paper agrees to sell sets of lic we e commission, before not show during the pres tria books, which it claims to be “we ing on itne bond bill that he ia $12 a set,” for a coupon and $ pri ne and to give free “a $1.50 European leader map” with each se bring sure to Rowe was rece ested on a Gov, Lister wants 8 to s of ising sworn ed, but If the house W on employe the morn n wi < paver POPPA ARORA ARADO PRADA IPD APPA PD AP PP PAPPD PP PPPPPPEAPRPP | WELL, WELL, WELL, | ld HERE isN'T | MY OLD CORNET.~} Twenty times a day, if, retite with trays of specially.pre sared food—broth, and soft boiled gG%, and milk She was a good patient. Partly stolcal. Another reason she lidn't give the steward much rouble was that she was just about half dead 80, 0’ nights, and smoothed her pillow. and asked her if she was “all right," she would look up at her big, solemn brown eyes, and answer with the smallest of nods and the faintest of smiles Even when the ship plunged and rolled, she did not complain, or shed tears Pretty good for an B-year-old kid that had never been away from home before, and was sick, and wanted her mother, eh? A little half-breed kid, who couldn't talk English, and who was going 2,000 miles to get a tubercular hip mended? Julia Rides in Real Auto Ambulance 1 am informed that when the Admiral Evans entered her slip in Seattie and tied up to the dock, at 11 o'clock at night, there were sev eral hospital trustees, and a couple of doctors, and an automobile am bulance to welcome Julla, who was WILSON ORDERS INQUIRY | WASHINGTON, March ets President Wilson today ordered | a searching inquiry into all the | facts connected with the sink | ing of the Seattle grain-laden | ship, Wm. P. Frye, in the South Atlantic ocean by the German | Pring Elite | converted cruizer Friederich. Will Ask Reparation If this thet the the prelimt- the Fr | during the [sition is th n ft whi aid ‘If commanders of German warships destroy an American vessel it would be difficult to v the act in any other light than an indefensible vio lation of neutrality, which it would be very hard to recon 1 cile 1F SUCH A DEPLOR ABLE SITUATION ARISES THE UNITED STATES WILL BE CONSTRAINED TO HOLD THE IMPERIAL GOVERN MENT TO STRICT ACCOUNT. ABILITY.” Exceeded Capt. Thier 1 the authority gras His Authority ted to hin onal law, it was gen Frye, « noth auch law out the manifest, carried and that under ild not be stances it ¢ [ OW HELEN, See wHaT | | ) FOUND — | THOUGHT THIS THING HAB BEEN “THROWN our LONG AGo | | by then dead. If Julia had been in good health the would undoubtedly have verhaps, because she's half Indian flattered and amazed a little m ore than half! Julia—busy, important doctors who in their private practices, make piles of money, but who don't charge the kids at the Orthopedic anything been An automo bile ambulance is a marvelous con. The first and only time | saw trivance to one who is used to dog Julia, she was lying very still in sleds. her cot. There is a heavy weight They took Julla to the hospital, fastened to one of her ankles. That when the steward visited her and they put her in a cot so white fo one leg won't grow shorter 80 Soft, and so sweetly clean that than the other while the hip is Julia, if she had been in good mending @ been astounded. Her big, brown eves—brave, pa him out of health, would h. Doctors — came and ar tient eyes they examined were watch MOURNS FOR HER SOLDIER HUSBAND WHILE PUBLIC APPLAUDS HER SONGS Doesn’t Tell Wife About It Attorney Says Wife, Living Under Same Roof, Was Kept in Complete Ignorance of Suit. W le the divorce mill was grind-|with her fant da € d ing out an annulment of her mar-| as left there in and : . fa of Mother, and Mrs ed to nder the same roof with| "08 % “d i ‘ her husband, ignorant of what was) [™\ (0 ; “pitte Ls ‘ a s 8 old her the case 1 was remarkable situa-| S478. he told her th tion 4 1 a by Attorney John) OS™ ssec Arthur, in Judge Humphries’ court INVESTIGATING SHOOTING aside the divorce decree, rel) is i tigating the th of granted December 6 last, and to re-| Lester Hi y night en proceedings. near Rer ree n his ling to M Donlan, the| body. Mrs nar ber {le she was in Ireland on a visit! he was mu 1 GUESS IF THEY’ RE MARRIED | WELL-IT shout | \ HAVE BEEN | ng the schoo the ward Now She Has Fi Chance to Get Well It’s a regular school, with a reg ular public school teacher, the chief difference between this and other public schools being that the school children at the Orthopedic don't go to the blackboard. You see, they can't Some of the school children were in wheel chairs. And some were on crutches, And some sat up in bed, And some were strap: ped In bed so securely they couldn't move They told me at the hospital that Julia has a chance—a fighting chance. It may be so, for they do wonderful things at the Orthopedic They make bent backs and crook ed legs straight. They repair club feet that kids can wear regular shoes and run and jump and play They patch up in all sorts of ways little bodies that, through accident, or disease, or inherited taint, have got out of whack Nov All Up to Yo 1 am trying to emulate the exam. ple of the “ad” writer who so cun ningly engages the interest of the reader that he reads the advertise- ment through to the end and does not discover until he reaches the jast paragraph that what he is reading is an advertisement. Julia is my excuse, the “peg” on which | hang my advertisement. The story of Julia is true. It is at the other end of; than 50 other stories, any one of which | might have told Mending bodies is expensive business. The Orthopedic has 50 beds. And its money is about one its resources about exhaust- ed. You see, times have been none too good, and the worried business man, thinking of retrenchment, cuts his rities In two. And sickness does not wait for “good times.” A bed at 250 a year | feel sure there is a man in this town who remembers a little boy, now long dead, who might be man- grown today and a source of com- fort and ide to his father if there had been an Orthopedic hos pital to send him to | SUGGEST THAT A BED AT THE ORTHOPEDIC, NAMED AFT- ER THAT DEAD LITTLE BOY, WOULD BE A FINER MONUMENT THAN ANY OF MARBLE, OR GRANITE, OR BRONZE | suggest that, despite “hard times,” there are societies in this town, and churches, and orders, which could afford a bed at the Ore AND | SUGGEST, FINALLY, THAT THERE ARE CHILOR iF the Orthopedic costs WITH STRAIGHT, AGILE BODI WHO WOULD BE GLAD, THEY SAW THE NEED, TO GIVE THEIR DIMES, NICKELS AND PENNIES TO THE ORTHO. PEDIC The Star will be glad to receive contributions for the hospital in any amount, from a cent to a check for a thousand. If, after reading this, you don’t | n, | will know that, ads,” | am a disma kick er of no truer, though, or more pitiful,’ PEOPLE'S LAWSARE CRIPPLED OLYMPIA, March 11.—Unless the people invoke the referendum within the next 90 days, it is all off with the people’s privilege ever in the future to employ the initiative, referendum or recall. The people’s free direct primaries are also jeopard- ized, all as the result of legislative action Wednesday evening. In rapid succession, house and senate passed over the governor's vetoes Senat+ Bills 120, 178 and 229. The first compels signers of recall petitions to go to the registration offices, and prohibits circulation of petitions. The second makes the same rule apply to initiative and referendum petitions, and substantially means that signers of petitions will be required to wait hours in line in registration offices. Chance for Referendum politicians got the floor fo en ‘We will meet you again at the polls on this, Landon shouted The people have voted for the initiative, referen dum and recall by overwhelm ing majorities, and THEN ARE NOT GOING TO LET YOU, A HANDFUL OF POLITICIANS, CHEAT THEM OUT OF THEIR RIGHTS.” Senator n reply 1 We met you: at the 1 ust N got the verd iblicans won FIRE DAMAGES STORE ROOM Thursd Loss, $ | Madiso ERROR FOUND IN INITIATIVE BILL OLYMPIA, With the discovery that the March 11.— title of S. B ment to the referendum 178, the amend- initiative and laws, apparent through clerical error, re fers to Article 11 of the state constitution, instead of Ar ticle 2, many lawyers in the house and senate are of the opinion the measure is now wholly invalid Attorney General Tanner says the bill is now in a ques tionable state, but he does not positively declare it is invalidated. The mistake was not no. ticed until this morning, when the measure was about to be engrossed for record official MACHINE WALKS ON TOM MURPHINE OLYMPIA, March 11.—"See here, Murphine, you've had one amendment adopted today,” Speaker Conner told the King county man yesterday when he offered amendment to the Groff act, whict provided ates previous to election That will be enough for for today you PORTLAND,