The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 9, 1915, Page 2

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—— REAL ESTATE LOANS At Lowest Rates ~To the man who does not have a_ regular monthly jncome we will make a “straight” loan —We also loan, giving of making a small pay ment each month, with the additional privi lege of paying ANY AMOUNT AT ANY TIME on the principal of the loan ~Your Fire Insurance Papers and Abstract are held in our vaults where you may procure them at moment's notice LIBERAL PREPAY- MENT PRIVILEGES No Bonus No Commission | Prompt Service Hi make a privilege a Established 26 Years [i Assets $4,900,000 Washington {} Savings and || 810 SECOND AVENUE | Emma Goldman, the anarchist, is! coming! She is out on $500 bail at Portland, following her arrest for distributing Mterature on birth) control. She will be here some time tote| week and will deliver a series of lectures at I. W. W. hall, 208 Sec- “Friedrich Nietzsche—the Intellec- tual Storm Center of Europe.” Wednesday, August 18, § p. m., “Jealousy—Its Cause and Possible Cure.” Thursday, August 19, 8 p. m. “Why Socialism Failed to Stop the War.” Friday, August 20, § p. m., “The Birth Control (Why and How Smal! Families Are Desirable).” Saturday, August 21,8 p.m. “The ee. age a ‘discussion of} Sunday, aacas 22,3 p. m., Philesophy of Anarchism.” Sunday, August 22, 8 p. m., “Va | riety or Monogamy—Which?" 1 Because P. David Brattstrom failed to answer to an order of Judge Frater citing him to show cause why he should not pay $150) back alimony to his wife, Karria. Judge Frater Monday issued a bench warrant for his arrest and ordered him committed to jail until he paid up. “The “This state Is no ai who desert their wiver Frater Monday, writ of habeas corpus sought by Ignatz Weiss, or Wise. Gov. Lister honored Gov. Whit- man’s requisition for extradition last Friday. Weiss immediately ap- plied for a writ, contending his lum for men} said Judge! name is Wise and he’s not the man, wanted. The steamer Spokane left Sunday night with 150 passengers and 900 tons of freight for Alaska. Col. P H. Callahan, supreme councillor. Knights of Columbus, and other su preme officers who have been at tending the annuai convention here, were among the passengers | Hardware Co., COMMITTEE DISCUSSES BILLBOARDS Councilman Hanna's ordinance taxing and regulating billboards met” with strenuous opposition Monday when it came before a Jolut meeting of the public safety and the franchise committees The lobby was crowded with Fos ter & Kleisor men and others op posed to the Hanna bill Councilman Hanna sald he didn't think it fatr that an organization doing a gross business of $168,000 annually should pay only $1,1 taxes. He contended thia waa not a just revenue, and that the pany's assessed valuation fair one. com is not a Fred Foster, member of the firm, | dectared the bill would company out of business He says the company last year had a net payroll of $76,000, and paid to owners of vacant lots for billboard rental 000, besides $28,000 for materials. put the We pay no commissions, no kerage,” he said. We have de oped a number of famous artists in the sign painting bust 3 tle. Carl F. Gould, representing the Fine Arts association, argued against the billboards. Speakers for them included Na than Eckstein, of the Schwabacher Prof. Agnew, of the representing the Ad university, jelub, and Joseph Blethen After an hour's discussion the PAGE 2, 1915. STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 9, “Over the Hi WONDERFUL INSTITUT TAINS FOR AGED, NATIONAL TYF oO Million dollar home for printers! lls to the’ — Not the Poor House, But Million- Dollar Printers’ Home ION MAINTAINED AMID COLORADO'S MOUN- SICK OR DISABLED MEMBERS OF INTER- -OGRAPHICAL UNION; MEMBERS PAY SHARE F MAI 2NA ? MONTHLY Huge Inetitution maintained at Colorado Springs, Col, by the International Typographical union for benefit of its aged, sick or disabled members LO8 ANGEL . Aug. 9-—The International Typographical union, |meeting adjourned to Wednesday morning, with no final action taken. Leo. H. Baekeland, one of the foremost chemists in this country, | who probably will be chosen next ‘president of the organtzation, will speak when the American Chemical society meets here August 31 to/ September 3. | Alleging $5,000 ts still due her on} a contract by which Charlies Osner took over the Washington Staatz- |Zeltung, Mra. Caroline Schaefer, wife of Jacob Schaefer, has spent the superior court to appoint a re ceiver for the German Newspaper | association Plage Wagon Drivers’ union, xa | held a picnic at Atlanta park Sunda fording considerable fun. Auto driven by Wi Will Blair, prest- dent of the Keating Fuel Co., over- turned four miles out of the city on the North Trunk road. Four pas sengers—Mrs, Blair, Mr. and Mrs. 8. T. Wright, of Olalla, and him- self—uninjured LOOK AT THIS FIGURE TE: SECONDS AND THEN SEE HOW CLOSELY YOU CAN S8KETCII ITS FORM FROM MEMORY. THIS 18 HOW AN , ACUTE ALCOHOLIC DREW IT:” jal oe THIS 18 HOW A VICTIM OF eee ie it atk? DEMENTIA PRAECOX GRAFTED |ON FEEBLE DREW IT: MINDEDNESS HERE 18 HOW A VICTIM OF HYSTERIA DREW IT: a" ay | | e HERE 18 HOW A cad | HABITUE DREW IT:" . ‘BACIFIC OUTFITTING CO COR. THIRD & UNIVERSITY ry os rns | WEEK YOUR CREDIT IS 0.K. (Union I Dye Works (Inc.) EVERYTHING IN CLEANING AND DYEING Plant and Office 101H AVE. AND B. UNION de | | LOOK av THIS FIGURE TEN SECONDS AND THEN SEE HOW CLOSELY YOU CAN SKETCH ITS FORM FROM MEMOR THIS 18 HOW AN ACL COHOLIC DREW IT THIS 18 DEMENTIA ED ON | DREW ‘yr: HERE IS HOW A VICTIM OF | HYSTERIA DREW IT: HERE I8 HOW A DRUG HAB- ITUB DREW IT: HERE I8 HOW GRADE MORON, c * DREW IT E18 HOW “A LOW-GRADE i’ DREW IT 8 HOW 4 DEME A PRA PHRENIA DREW 1. HOW AN MENTIA IT PRAECOX GRAFT- FEEBLE-MINDEDNESS a * PLUS HIGH EPI ‘TIM OF OX HERE. iT EXAMPLE OF PARALYTICA DE. DREW HOW A PERSON OF AVERAGE INTELLIGENCE DREW IT: Here's the Test and It Works Out How | DOLLAR & program of field sports| tion, laundry, greenhouses, lawns. , women, girls and boys af-| superintendent's cottage and barn AL, | HOW A VICTIM OF| which holds its 61st session in this eity August 9 to 14, has had un stinted praise and commendation from men in all walks of life for its high ideals and beneficent ac tivities. It has been classed as union- ism with a mission for the wel- fare of its members; trades ualoniam with human Interest in its aged, sick and Infirm. Foremost in the heart of the union printer is HIS MILLION HOME IN COLORADO SPRINGS, COL. tion of ita kind im the world Every month he pays his rata for the maintenance of bis home and the comforts of its resi-| the only Institu:| | who are no longer able to continue clive work, In the last seven years the money ‘in the pension fund totaled $1,949, has been handled for the mortuary benefit fund. In its campaign for clean work- shops and wholesome and sanitacy | 100 Thomas Wardall | Can Remember: At ( ‘ i ston canal was first ) started 5 ) @ When Bryan first ran for } i ? } president | ¢ When May i} @ When Buffalo was the |) Far West ig When people rox } bicycles { I @ When the Lake Wash ’ n or Gill comb ed his hair in the middle ) rome wity and holler, He se pretty | on the doline* a 820 coin We wanted but | couldn't make it omy yme. Coufity Speed Officer Pierce county seriously when auto skids while speeding motorcyclist Edward McDonnell, resident of state since Devoe of injured chasing| 71, 18 ploneer,| 72, die at Potato association may come to this state. 450.68; the amount paid to peu-|conditions for the worker, the I. T.;@ sioners in that time was $1,271,434.|U. has brought the death rate) STELLA SORGHUM SAYS: In the last three years $1,06 down to 11.7 per 1,000. AN ALL-NIGHT FEED ON BILL FOR EAGLES EMPRESS HAS LAUGHS ON BILL Ever honeymoon any? Anyhow, “A Honeymoon in the | Cocktails” will keep you from going |to sleep when you visit the Empress Seate | theatre. Estelle Wordette, the He knows that there's no “over, Aa alknight banquet for which Beripe * ta beign’ comedienne, the hills to the poorhouse” for him|1,200 plates have been Iaid will be|*4 with the ald of a man, produces should disability, sickness or old age swing the red lant Twenty-five years ago an uncon ditional gift of $10,000 to the union from George W. Childs and A. J Drexel formed the nest egg of the home ‘lhe main building was compl od In 1892 and was later followed by a hospital annex, library addi n. ‘Then a tuberculosis pavilion was added to the sanitarium. | The home is on an BOacre tract which was dongted by fey of $1,000,000. The |. T. U. has spent $1,250,000 in building and maintaining the home. The I. T. U per week to those members who have reached IF YOU CAN'T COPY THIS DESIGN FROM MEMORY YOUR BRAIN IS DEFECTIVE HERE Is HOW GRADE MORON, LEPSY,” DREW IT: ery HERE 18 HOW “A LOW “A MIGIt PLUS _ EPI. “GRADE MORON” DREW IT; ar ie HERE 18 HOW A VICTIM OF DEMENTIA PRAECOX HEBE- PHRENIA DREW IT: iS nal 0¢ HOW AN EXAMPLE oF DEMENTIA PARALYTICA DREW IT: HOW A PERSON OF AVER AGE INTELLIGENCE DREW IT If you can't look at some simple | diagram or design and then copy tt from memory you are not normal, | there is something wrong with your mental apparatus | And it Is defects of the brain that cause drunkenness nnd not the other way about This 1s the discovery of the psy- cophatic laboratory of the Chicago municipal court, where hundreds of experiments have brought to Nght the fact that chronic alcoholism is secondary to some underlying men- tal or in some cases physical defect The laboratory has examined hundreds of chronic alcoholics and |has not found one where there # not at least signs of inherited mental weakne epilepsy, manic dep insanity or feeble‘mind |edness, dementia praecox or frat indications of insanity The laboratory physicians used a visual memory test. In the accom- panying illustration the inability of the various classes of defectives properly to draw a simple form from memory is shown, ressive Hie 4 a pays a pension of $5) F the age of 60 and) a skit that ts a scream. The Bix tumblers. |given in honor of the hundreds of visiting Ea, Abdullahs. Simonds American are excellent ps at the Eagles hall, Seventh and Pine, Monday night,|"2¢ Platt have ® good singing and beginning at $:30. The banquet ix|J08hing turn pes Howard Sisters a culmination of three days of tour-|2°° Pleasing singers and noat |dancers, and Pero and Wilson, man in over boulev x! yrivate en s . bg over boulevards and private ef-/44 woman, have a clover barrel tertainment. John H, Shively will be toast-|/2™Ping stunt, | | master. Among local men who Will! i ojg speak are Mayor H. C. Gill, member vin of Aerie No. 1; Col. H. H. Thomp-|q.syonouee, Barnum at the Lok son, John W. Considine, P. G. W. P.|tenee no time to be mystified. His The visitors who are on the pro-lact ts one laugh after another. The fram are Col. W. W. Grayson of| six Hawaiians, male singers, give a Savannah, Ga.; Conrad Mann, Mil-| good program of South Sea music; waukeo, P. G. W. P.; Thomas J.| Jog Roberts, the Seattle banjo art- | Cogan, Cinctnnat!, P. G. W. P.; W./ tet, is better than ever; the Fishers, J. Brennen, Pittaburgh, P.G. W. P.: tn animal impersonations, are good Frank EF. Herring, South Bend, Ind..|A Keystone comedy is the moving P. G. W. P.; Frederick Hughes, | picture. grand treasurer, Yonkers, N. “4 | ‘1. B. D. Weed, Helena, Mont., } homtsh,” state president. The Seattle band of 52 pieces Sail provide th the nue Cs STAR FOLK HAVE. ‘BIG TIME SUNDAY: It was SOME p pleale. Aching bone and muscle Monday testify to the thoro enjoyment of The Star bunch who picknicked at |Chauncey Wright's summer bome jat Miller's beach Sunday. About 100 were present. The party of editors, reporters, printers, pressmen, advertising and circulation men, and their wives and sweethearts left The Star of- fiee at 10 a m. in autos—and a couple of auto trucks. The trucks were laden with jeverything from soup to nuts and lice cream and watermelon, and at the beach, the clam diggers got busy and topped off a day's round of feasts and sporta with some of the sound's choicest shell-fiah. | “Horseshoe” throwing vied with | baseball for the favorite sport fea- ture. The ladies’ races proved quite exciting, and an improvised plat- form was mustered for dancers and rope skippers. Also for a boxing match or two and a bit of wrest- ling, Chauncey Wright's graphophone furnished the music. MYSTERIOUS FIRE IN SCRIPP’S HOME BY WOMAN COP SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 9.—Ar- thur Hawthorne flirted with a cash. fer on the Zone, at the fair, and was | yanked to jail by Miss Blanche Pay- |son, a woman policeman of Ama tonic proportions. INVENTOR OF THE WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.— Geo. Williamson, the man who mixed the first gin rickey, is dead here today. The drink was named after Col. Joe Rickey of Missouri, who had the inspiration. DR. L. R. CLARK We have had to add another oper- ator to our wtaff And you can bet your last dollar that he is a graduate and registered nh, and one of the And he will ba from the state denta ® t on the wall in front ag his SAN DIEGO, Aug. 9.—Four fires, Sdentad chaise Where bon con wee tt believed incendiary, have Cemaged|too, Just the same as every other the home of Miss Ellen and Miss|°Perator in this office It certainly pays to treat the people right—-and give the very best dentar service that can be obtained. Our business is growing faster than any other dental office In the Northwest and, of course, there can be just one Virginia Scripps at La Episcopal church of St. James-by- the-Sea, a cottage studio owned by Miss Scripps and another house The buildings were widely saparted Jolla, the reason for this: Wa please and sat- and caught fire at about the samo| iy, “ur patients, ana wren they time, back to us, and they recommend thelr friends to us. Our satisfied pa- tlents are our best. advertisement We have never yet found it necos sary to pull a lot of stunts and do {a lot of “knocking” petitors to advertise ¢ UMA HOLDS 2 JOBS: on our eom racives, We TOKIO, Aug. °. Count Shigeobu | 5 and On at lone rer Okuma will act, temporarily at| ter we do that be least, both as premier and minis-|cause nvinced long ago | lter of foreign affairs in the new| that they are the only kind of men that have the knowledge and skill cabinet which he has formed at the|necessary to turn out the kind of reguest of the emperor. work that we can afford to guaran- tee And we do stand behind every bit of work turned out of this office with an ironclad guarantes, signed not only by the operator who did the work, but also by L. R. Clark, D, D. 8., owner and manager of this office, NEGRO IDENTIFIED Miss Mary Hallington identified Samuel Owens Sunday as the negro who robbed her and E. A hing about your work prove | Bills and Misa Ethel Peterson in |SPyteing about » wenkator hoe |Frink park, Friday @ight, dle will/only by your guarantee, but by our | determination to ru fre our (isfy you, » FR 8:20 to painless be charged with robbery RANGER iS KILLED VANCOUVER, B. C©., Aug. 9.— Forest fires here claim another vic tlm today. Walter Richards, fire warden, was suffocated while fight- ing a fire at Stave lake, 10 to methods Bach demonstrate Regal Dental Offices Dr, L, R. Clark, Mgr. 1405 THIRD AVE, N, W. Cor, Third and Union, GIN RICKEY IS DEAD! of Many people who are the banged up in auto smashes | motoriously careless. Many a guy has sowed his wild oats crop in a beer garden. . 2. Fire In Balfour-Guthrie ware- house Saturday night caused $100,- 000 lows at Ritzville, Wash. Election riots cause three deaths jin Kentucky. j | pall Delt te ae hot ae the debate between nitty nupday and Dr. Aked, Billy wine in aw Argument results in three Japa-| nese laborers killing Jimmie Kijo-| bara, Jap labor contractor, at Bel- lingham. Knights of Pythias, between and 800, go to Mount Rainier tn string of 50 autos. Mre. A. C. Wilson aceldentally shot by husband, a logger at South Bend. Two-year-old eon of Mr. and Mre. Harvey Bryant, Medical Lake, drowned, tho mother makes heroic effort to save him. Pavioff volcano in Alaska report ed in eruption again. Jimmy Crehan te the latest to sprim that old wheese about the Germans dotng | ® “Restian” business nowadays. Chas. F. Niles, aviator, formerly| under Gen. Carranzs injured in] fight at exposition, San Francisco. Congressman Taggart of Kansas, City will introduce bill next session to establish U. 8. munitions plant. Tacoma. | Next convention of West Coast!‘ | 209 City club by A CIRCUIT TOUR OF THE East and West At Small Expenditure 200 miles of Cofumt River It Lake City Presenti via enery, Yellow t, Omal Kansas City, all points Ea cially to the California Expesitiail In Either Direction Via the utiona ark, Dens St. Li uis and STOPOVEM ALLOWED AT HOT LAKE HOTT E67, MOST CURAT! SPRING iN THE WORLO “Union Pacific .» System “Standard Route of the West” Automatic Electric Block Safety Signa and finest equipment protect you all the way, round trip tickets on sale daily. You should neglected vacation trip at once. Liberal visa Ga rs in efther direction. Call at O-W. R.& N O. 8. L. and CITY TICKET OFFICE 716 Gecond Ave Main 932 H,. L. HUDSON GOD A LOCAL ISSUE? RELIGION IS NOT A REQUISITE FOR GOOD CITIZENSHIP---HERBERT QUICK citizenship. By Herbert Quick ,“Wwhere ‘cod ts Tike the! sal Not very long ago Mr. Joseph Ep- local issue, belief in the nation! stein of Baltimore surprised an god is a part of accepted citixe audience addressed by him at the ship. including religion) Where reticin © is @ matter with among the requisites for good cit! which the state has no business to renship. concern itself, as is Bredicn ‘fa the A man cannot be a good citizen,| United States, a may bea said this good citizen, unless he/ good citizen ~ithoat sty has a religion. to his religion, ora ss irvetigie: No particular religion is neces-| > perhaps, if I may be allowed sary, said Mr, Epstein, but some/to lay down my own wn head religion a religion. the relations between Well, then, will any religion do?| citizenship, a man is The old Aztecs sacrificed thou-| bad citizen, according to sands of people on their teocallis, to which he applies to our cutting out the beating hearts and | tions those principles tt right | placing them still throbbing on the |wrong which are recognized ia laltars of their gods. highest regions of the thought These men were sincere believ- all religions. ers in this bloody faith; but were’ On these uplands of religiom |they good citizens? thought, the impulse of all Let us take cases nearer home. | is towards justice. Was the Catholic duke of Alva, who; The Bible tells us that on executed thousands of Dutch, re-| we see God as thru a glass, BE A present of 23 days of free street ights made to Olympia by Olympia Light & Power Co, Samuel Gompers and Gifford Pin- chot address mass meeting in Phil- adelphia to protest against convic- tion of John R. Lawson, Colorado strike leader. Former Police Judge Thomas Mat- tison of Tacoma dies at age of 70.) Seattie Lodge No. 7, Degree of) Honor, will hold regular busTness| meeting tonight at 7:45 at Ever. green hall, Baillargeon Bidg. Friends invited after business meet- ing for good of the order, aay Me | ere women wearing ought to take Piller and Don Annual convention of American Association of Home Economics to be held here August 19-21 tnclusive. Hebrew Free Loan association to hold pienic and dance on Sound Sunday, Several hundred families expected to go. Star Machinery Co. ave. S., celebrating sary H “Roos,” first Russian newspaper, ever printed in Northwest, issued} Saturday tn Seattle. Andrew Bak- hareff is editor. “Moving pletures may become a sub- stitute for travel,” says newspaper head- Hine, Our own Congressman Humphrey jong ago improved even on that, He Voted himsclf $1,200 “traveling expenses” without moving an inch out of his char. F. G. Lawson, Ferguson hote’ speiler on Seeing-Seattle auto, |knocked off running board when his| machine passed a standing auto at |Third and Madison st. Saturday, and severely injured Dorothy Neylan, 5, knocked down by auto driven by W. B, Kelly, at Fifth ave, N. and Thomas st. Sat-/ urday night, when she ran in front! of machine. She was severely in jured Fire of unknown origin In home of c, L, Webster, 704 Edgar st., Sun- day night, caused damage estimaicd at $200, You can't Judge by appearance, The Dachshund has mighty short lege, but his pants | Alno € 1731 First! 15th aaniver:| > for high fiers, bat | they're Engles, the same Kirk Bothell of Kirkland missing} from home for week | Mrs. G. E. Doyle, Sterling hotel,| |drank nearly a pint of denatured alcohol Saturday night in rooms of! Quartermaster Sergeant Wings of} Fort Lawton. She is in city hos- pital. Motive is unknown, J, E, Chilberg returned to Seattle Sunday after visit to Alaska and British Columbia inspecting mines. Ellle Bergman, 2, 416 25th ave. N., cut and bruised in collision be-| tween her father’s auto and ma- chine driven by J. Giese, 1421 Seventh ave,, at Elghth and Pike st Sunday alght OWEN APPOINTED WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.—It was announced at the White House to- day that J. W. Owen of Everett had been appointed receiver of public moneys at Seattle, |vent religionist to be the worst of leitizens, and for the skeptic, like} Benjamin Franklin, to be a good) citizen NEW PANTAGES garded as heretic: good citizen? but the religion of Higher Cithe- Was the Protestant Maurice of| ship, no matter in what ‘tmage it » au, Who executed thousands of ‘sees Him, recognizes that —_—* ] other Dutch because they held what{a symbol of the Common he called heretical views on infant} He who believes in the baptism, a good citizen? extension of democracy—in i Bes the other hand, was David | edge, in Avance =| in ; 4 ume, whose character was trre-jand in industry—has the trem ron ry or Thomas Paine, who | ligion of the Good mat helped so much to found the gov- ernment of the United States, or even Robert G. Ingersoll, who did much to humanize the ethics of even the Christian churches—were these men bad citizens? Few people will say that the re- ligious men above mentioned were good citizens, or that those called irreligious were bad citizens. On the other hand, Jesus was called irreligious by those who cru- ecified him and was put to death as a bad citizen. It is possible for the most fer- \ter what else he may belleve @ | disbelieve. One of Russia's greatest writers, | Dostoevsky, said that in order for a man to be saved, it was necessary |for him to believe in the Russlan | od. | Religion to him was a matter of AMUSEMENTS MAUDE LEONE & CO, In “Inside Stuff” “THE BIRTHDAY PARTY” Other Big Acts 10¢ and 20c LOIS Theatre 28,000 GO TO ALE The street car company must ‘went Mats, 2 to 5—Nights, 7 to 10 [have lost a lot of money Approximately 28,000 persons BARNUM, THE HYPNOTIST ||P e thing | beach, The ot J and company says it loses OD a Other Big 10 days at Alki, About 2,300 folks | Acts © pea in the Sound 50c Booklet F ree Tonight Not the One We Gave the First Night Care of the Face, Hair and Eyes 8:00 P., M.—Concert 7:30—Ellers Talking Machine Company FLYN N HEALT® CHAUTAUQU Lenora, Bet. 2nd and 3rd Aves One Block North of Moore Theatre Admission 250, or This Ad Will Admit Two Free All Will Be autiful After Tonight

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