The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 7, 1915, Page 5

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HEAR STORY? WEI qhey're here the Eagles! Twelve hundred members of the! smallpox—catching order, jumping here from ¢e annual national eonvention in on their way to de the guests until Tuesday of the local lodge, which No, 1. Trips thru the country in automo- Me caravans spins ‘round the banquet Monday night at's the way they'll be enter Bighteen years ago nobody had ever heard of the Eagles. Today are among the leading lodges the country You know, of qoarse, that the order was born in : How did they do it? Listen Arthur G. Williams’ brows were) tait, He stopped tn front of the old People’s theatre, at Second ave.| gai Washington st, and blew a dood of cigar smoke savagely up then Thea John Considine came along ye brother, Tom Considine game Mose Goldsmith and Laavitt. Now, these theatrical managers! jad been for several years passing gach other on the street without gpaking. They had a general! tt was Sunday morning—Febru- ary 6, 1898—and the sun was shin-| fag and everybody felt good tn his i Williams, who was then manag- Turkish dancer named .” grinned at Tom Const a was always an optimistic Frisco, | Harry) 0c FOUNDED AS A JOKE BY SIX SEATTLE MEN; EVER WELL HERE TIS Feu ani and smiles with him were like He grinned Aw, what's the use of trying to be a grouch all your life,” he growled at John, elbowing him in the riba John grinned. | Apprently the stuff was all off. Mose and Harry looked sidewise at each other, and Harry sald “Have & clgar, Mose.” Mose had, and the whole crowd thawed out It was discovered that Harry had several pockets filled with cigars. He had thrown a royal flush on a) slot machine down the street, or something, and they rifled his ap | parel of 25 Havanas. | John Cort sauntered down the avenue. He, too, wore a frigid ex pression. He looked as if a ‘west would have cracked his face. They had been at swords’ patata | over some long forgotten dispute that Involved the Musictans’ union. | “What's the matter with you fel lows?" asked Cort, “I thought we| were mad.” Forget it cigar, John.” And he jabbed one of Harry's Aquillas between John's teeth Everybody laughed, including John | Well, we ought to hold a meet ing,” suggested Cort. eee There was some eclat to that | meeting | If you'd been down at the Mo ran ship yards you would have seen six apparently sane men be- having like a pack of “bugs.” Quite a crowd gathered to hear John Cort’s jokes and songs and to see Mose do the buck-and-wing said Mose. “Have a TF [with Arthur Williams ®y EDWIN | That lasts D. s, 112 First Ave. Union Bice. Just In accord with his work. is work fails, he fails, if his & success, he succeeds. day patients come to my that I did work for twelve, and fourteen years ago, and mili still grinds on. These « moments for me to examine IME 004 find the teeth that 1 . bridge I mad he | The meeting was held on an up- turned coal barge. o8e “We ought to call ourselves an order,” said John Considine. “The Order of agreed somebody “Sure,” aquiecsed John “and have a motto. I suggest our motto be ‘Skinnum.’" “And & pass word,” other. “‘Yea, yea. & pass word?” | “ee Cort, how's that for old People’s theatre. | Attorney Melville G. Winstock, business, was initiated The meeting had been called by John Cort, for a specific purpose. members, bearing the summons: “Dear Brother: Whereas it has come to my notice that Brother A. G. W. has been horsewhipped and thrown out of his joint by a Turkish dancer named Omene, a meet- ing of the brotherhood is called for next Sunday after. moon at 2 o'clock at the Peo- ple’s ti tre, to ascertain why. (Signed) “JOHN CORT, | “Chairman,” T put tn, come to Seat- siness for a f me for not . but usually cir work over t 1 had not the The reason that t was because they deceived betrayed the people. Their den- ea ieee did not last, and neither foes Wonk FAULTY SOME- TIME: their patients t time to laugh. Some quack Denties who Is out to the money may say that “it is le to get atactory done at my offic t this is silly and dishonest and shows ince of the poor quack who fuch a low estimate of the intel- of the people. There never B perfect plece of Dental work. here is nothing perfect in ept, of course, th and his ‘perfection lies in th operates on your pocket- times the imperfections of Work do not ‘nd discovered for time, if the Dentint 1s honest he wii his work good, because that is & guarantee ‘x for, But if a ean do perfect work he does to guarantes it. The ri ; | Whether the brotherhood learned! | why or no, is not written in his-| The Italian dirigit 4itory. Anyway, they adjourned to/ attempting to approach meet again the following Sabbath Chester Edwards, now a city de- tective at Spokane, was ordered to (find a suitable place for future | meetings. He got quarters in Red- | men’s hall. | They Initiated James G. Town- | send, stage manager for Alex Pan tages, and decided to give the order an official name. to the Others wanted it called the “Wolves.” hall, saw a stuffed American eagle, and exclaimed, “Let's call our. selves the Eagles. | There was a debate, then a bal lot, hopelessly. “I'll decide the lseue,” Cort, flehing a half dollar from his pocket. “Heads It’s Wolves, talle it’s jes.” Good Tees"! The next Sunday they met at the! “Order of} But John Cort, looking down the! Aug. 7 and the meeting was split! _The ix_men_who founded the first Eagles’ CARRANZA TO GO HALF WAY BY Cc. P. STEWART } Gen. | treat with Ge | it was WASHINGTON, Carranza announced Aug. 7.— le willing to in. Villa for peace. at the state department today that Sec notified of t willingness ry Lansing had be he “firet chiet © open negotia- | tlone with Villa thru Judge |. A. Douglas, his Washington repre Crranza's | pan-American ¢ lregarded as at Gen. Scott wa Mexican borde | cotved It is sion is to whom he bility of ne Cerranta’s | line with the ff }for restoring |agreed upon and the South can envoys. The suce belleve: will 0 | consequently now depends | Villa | Without wait confer ating with ¢ offer ntative. Lansing said he had proposition not before the ‘onferees, but it was xnifieant that Maj a ordered to the r after it was re 4 that with suggest the Scott's Villa, dvisa ranza to treat is rat step of the 5 in Mexico ary Lansing and Central Ameri mis to of this first move upon ing for the indorse » | ment of the pan-American envoys, declared 8n-| the admiuiatration fa actively en ‘gaged in efforts to restore order in | Mexico. The immediate work ts purely pacificatory, it Is felt the con-} fereesn will not object | The been the main Views as to the and churches, | ment opposed h al president he cause they bel brought down fire from anti-a. announced tured |ly Pola. | The loss of The coin wae flipped. It hung In the alr a moment, and It Ie said that In that brief second of suspense they saw down a long vista of years a great body of men comprising a nation-wide organization of fraternaliom. Work is satisfactory is be- anything is wrong I make I have earned the right to my Dental work ts & ye my practi steadily tor fitteen years, of the thousands of pa’ are referred r by thos juse their work lasts. A GREAT MISTAKE i@ make one great mistake tn that after They heve their 2 fixed up that they will bh them cared for re one should ry six months have their t be i attention before the den or tooth gets beyond repair. id get the habit of going Dentist every six mont! 70 less and ls far more sat- to the Dentist PErraL ene yaar DOES NOT fe said that the Le yet et the Den ‘gd sing ‘twice as many matches Aha) Would if the matches were with the grain. If no Dentist inteed ie work And a Dental ed, then the trust Dentints Gil make twice as much work by tg At #0 that it would all have bay. lone over again, for a second WT TAKES TIME TO TELL ° time to tell whether Daneel is good or not. = after it it in 0. is done you yet in twel ize that it q not make lant- 4 tal work; Dental wind and Sir cannot be relied upon ONAL PETTY JEALOUSY = rivate Dentists knock and he advanced and m Dentista who advertt fr who are m nruptcy, ‘to ‘slander knock other ists of prominence #0 a8 to get Public's attention directed to but they usually, like their tal work, do not last because of 1 ideas, They are dead ebrows and dormant be- heart WIN J. BROWN, D. D, 8. Bix | D "| clowns, too, Anyhow, it fell to the floor, spun a moment, then settied with the American eagle upper- most. “We're the Eagiee—the Fra- ternal Order of Eagiee—gentie- men,” said John Cort. GOOD ANIMAL ACTS IN CIRCUS Hey, Skin-n- Ain't yer ma goin’ ta letcha go to the circus? No? Aw, ewan and ask her if she can't remember how she allus wanted to gosto circuses when she was a kid, ard if that don’t work, tell Ker the sad story about the little boy who asked his mean ma once if he couldn't go, and she told him he couldn't, and the next day he took sick and died and every thing. Betchg went to the parade this morning, anyhow, didn’t cha? And this is for mean mag and an: The Al G. Barnes wild antmal show is one well worth seeing yourselves. Acts that will make your eyes bulge out a foo! lions, _ tigers, bears, elephants, horses and pigs, all trained to do the most remark able stunts—some animals you probably never have seen before, and Jots of fun—that's what Al G. Barnes has brought to th@ lot back of the New Waashing- ton hotel. There was 4 performance at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon and an other will be given at & o'clock Saturday night. Take Skinnay aud g TURIN, Aug. have stormed the summit of Monte dominating the San Michels, trian stronghold this important fan attacks are renewed with such flerceness as to promise the early capture of Go ritz. NEW CENTURY LODGE INSTALLS OFFICERS Following a banquet at Scottish Rite temple, Friday night, Century lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, was born, and the following officers were insalled Ivan Leo Bla ter; Arthur warden; junior warden; ton, senior deacon; Asahel 8. Fr Richard 8. Nic conference who is now in the moving picture) jtary Lansing and the Central and | South American end fn a quarrel yesterday, but It is known !t failed to lead to the ex-| He had sent out postcards to all! pected final agreement. Religion {s understood was disposed to accept Carran js strongly anti-clerical DIRIGIBLE IS WINGED The The airship was only damaged and was PARIS, -A special) agency dispatch here today He- lared it was reported in Rome that an Austrian submarine sank the Italian submarine Neeride in the Adriatic recently. T. Stewart between Secre. envoys did not to have One faction * division of the state while another ele. im or any provision might choose, be feved his polley to ue, 7, (Via Berlin.) e Citta di Jest. Pola, was today by « 1 ircraft guns, it was crew Was cal siight iato towed a dirigible and i's lerew to the Austrians was report-| ed yesterday from Rome, jannouncement merely said the air- ship fell in the Adriatic while re- turning from Pols. —The Italians Aus-| of Gorttz, With) advantage the Ital-| said to have been ir, worshipful mas- Bradley, senior G, Thompson, Herbert ©. Kimp- pk, Walter H. Valen: tho the] STAR—SATURDAY, AUG lodge in & ding mothers tell small white chil | dren that the bogey man in the dark closet will get them if they aren't good. The story that Jimmy How's mother told Jimmy How's son Ie the story of Fuca’s Pillar. o- | them the « jhe w BOOK ON WAR | they they tled short } one WHITE FOLKS, DID YOU. EVER HEAR HOW FUCA’S PILLAR GOT ITS NAME? ‘Once, jand when he found them he broke “One | Fuca’ couldn't get down—higher than the trees on the shore.” the world. What did he do then?’ asked the| “To follow the footsteps of boy. Christ every church should be He shouted, and his father/@duipped to care for the physical leame, and his mother came, and [all the people of the trib arrows over the rock, with string has ever been able 7, 1915 PAGE. 5. from _ John _Considin WANT CLINICS ATTACK WOMAN; IN CHURCHES GET LIFE TERMS left to right they are: Thoma , Birthplace of Aerie No. 1 Considine, John Cort, Arthur G. Williams, rerey Leavitt and Mose | Goldamith. | work. ing and dragged into @ lonely can-| Phones—M. 2174; M. 7100, Local 33” i were captured mers ABERDEEN, VOTING - ABERLI Aug. A special > election is being held here today to decide if the city shall be bonded * for $500,000 to build a new water 5 system. FRASER - PATERSON CO0.’S - New Optical Dept.—On the Baicony «=@ “Popular Prices” for high-clas: Best service in Seattle at lowest rates. We can duplicate any broken lenses. A call will please and convince you. a posse of far- « W. EDMUNDS, Oph. D. IN CHARGE NEWPORT, Ore, Aug. 7.—Es PORTLAND, Ore, Aug. 7.-—-The| tablishing a record for speedy jus- This the fre of © series oe stories which h bears his name and which delegates to the convention of tne *» in Oregon, the two men who written by Fred I. Boalt ‘hat | connects the Pacific ocean with os attacked Mra. R. R. Lakin, 20, near Puget sound, with the state of | American Osteopathic association attac 41 Tt A " P' d, . . “hit woe ate Thursda « de Jashington on one side of it and/a@re leaving for the San Francisco Secicane a riage de pt oolagte island of Vancouver on the| exposition, Seattle, Tacoma and) jent in the state prison other th homes today, following one) The men gave their names as * Beattie im, CT ¢ Mae or 0 1 J pi e o » Okla and nk Jones, By Fred L. Boalt Atlanticr ‘way back in 1592, But|the organization has held. The/ujM. Bnd Frank Jones slended NEAH BAY, Aug. 6—I! got | that, 1 say, is a white man's story,|/ast session was held late yester| 211+. when arraigned before Cir. the story of Fuca’s Piilar from nglteg thee day leult Judge Hamilton | | cithe tied eh dimen: Mews ‘The small Indian boy who dis-| liplooked as if Denver would be) day "rhe pian of the Mexi- mother. obeyed his parents lived his life, Choken as the meeting place for| Mrs. Lakin was compelled to dis- Jimmy How, a How Indian, | for all I or anybody knows, long,|the 1916 meeting of the assoclw) vont trom the horse she was rid had just finished spanking one long before Juan de Fuca poked the|tion until the Kansas City delega-| of hie smal! sons, and he had nos® of his ship into the strait. For|tion told the assembled doctors von made a good job of it uncounted generations fish-eating|that the hotel keepers of Kansas) °r pours tater the two flends Then the ancient grand- | Indian children have been told the| City had agreed to furnish rooms| ok mother told the small boy what | #tory cooled by feed alr for clinics and! happens to naughty children | Jimmy How's son bit his ip with| Committees meetings who disobey their parents, just | «rief, penitence and fright, but he} Upon their hewn r statement as white mothers and grand | did not cry. Indian boys don't lthat $8,000 had been raised for er fr grandmother, |tertainment and that the city © Was a naughty who| thorities off free use of th 4 gulls’ eggs among the rocks,|{mmense auditorium for the m |ings, it was voted to make Kansas City the chotce said his . His mother told him to leave «6&8 alone, but he kept right on.| The convention went on record) day he climbed up on|a® favoring national prohibition, 6 Pillar and broke all the|belleving that the liquor traffic is | responsible for much of the vice It {s not the story of how that| ess he found there.” tall pinnacle of rock just off the| “He couldn't,” said the boy. “It’s| Misery and crime in this country,| |point of Cape Fiattery became) too high. I tried once.” jand backed it up by having the | known as Fuca’s Pillar, That is a| “Walt!” the old woman eald. “He| cocktails removed from the ban whie man's story of Apostolos|climbed up on Fuca's Pillar and|quet table before the members sat ano, the Greek navigator, who, | broke all the exge there. And what} 4own to their annual b nose, ga service of the government of do you think happened then? Dr. Ira M. Drew of F 1 i eee, known as Juan del What?" asked the boy advocated Introducing clinic ser 4 discovered the strait) “When he started to climb down,| Vice in all churches cooking. | he’ Goutéa | He said Saint Francis said aang Why?" asked the boy. God abhore waste.’ If that is no PRINCE WRITES | “Because ft had grown high while| He must abhor the magnificent His jeore tham almost anything else tn) as on {t—so high and steep he| edifices men rear in name welfare of ita people.” WHO'LL BUY ONION? WALLA WALLA, Aug. 7.-—With the market glutted and little out side demand, the Commercial Club economy. Water Heaters Are Sold And tried to climb up to him, but couldn't. They tried to shoot to the arrows, From but they fell to this no to climb | Fuca’s Pillar.” a» [today inaugurated a “buy a sack Stuart Bldg. What happened to the boy?” | campaign in an effort to ald grow He died!” said Jimmy How's |ers who have thousands of sacks mother. oft ontons left on their hands. | } Prince Oscar, | peror Willlam, who has published a| fifth son of Em- book describing a battle In the Champagne region. The profits will go to war widows, INJURES HORSE; OFFICER FIRED Police Chief Lang Friday dis id from service Mounted oman C. J. Byers. was charged with negligence and carelessness In handling city property. eral days ago Byere tied his horse to a fence post, at Alki beach. A ditch of mud and quick. sand wae nearby. The horse got Into it. They pried him out with a board in which was a nail. The horse wae stabbed by the nail, and died from lock- Jaw. Byers has been in the ser. vice nine years, He will fight his dismissal, carrying the matter to the civil service commission. New York shippers have bought junior deason; tine, senior steward; John A. Evans, junior steward; John A Homer, secretary; Jacob Starin, treasurer; William E. Adams, chap- lain; Robert McCormack, marshal; hols, tyler. the German ship Steinbek, interned in Eagle harbor here since war was declared in Europe, for $70,000, She will fly the Stars and Stripes, 500 Booklet Free Monday 2ND WEEK STARTS MONDAY £000 attended last night Cause and Cure of That Tired Feeling and the Blues. Tonight 8:00 o'@lock Concert 7:50, Were Talking Machine Company FLYNN HEALTH | CHAUTAUQUA Lenora, Between Second and Third Aves. One block north Moore theatre. Admission 250, or thin ad will admit TWO free, Heating Water With Gas a Great Economy in Household Expense N HEATING water for every domestic pur- gives the same economy, con- venience and satisfaction that it gives in Its continued and increasing use by thousands of Seattle families is proof of this statement. In the heating of water with gas, there is no waste of fuel, and this fact, combined with the low price at which gas is sold here, is productive not only of satisfaction to the user, but also of actual and $1.00 Each Month. SEATTLE LIGHTING COMPANY on Terms of $1.00 Down Phone Main 6767 THE SEATTLE STAR GROWING RAPIDLY IN CIRCULATION eS ae VOLUME OF ADVERTISING PRESTIGE and INFLUENCE It Is the Livest Paper in One of the Livest Cities in the United States Mr. Merchant—there will never be a better time to become a Star ad- Star advertising space is increasing in value more rapidly than any other safe, conserva- vertiser than right now—if you are not one already. tive investmert:you can make.

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