The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 17, 1915, Page 11

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< : 1 | H ‘4 Washington Full 1 8c ase was hustled back to the hos|q fing thing for somebody to do a DeWitt, of Jena, La. | T SATURDAY SPECIALS: |t0 Sehulz's, broken arm, et D Sanch ces A5.c eter LEGLESS AND ARMLESS SEATTLE MEN LIVE] TOGETHER AND SHARE SCANTY EARNINGS No, thie Ie not a scene in a Euro- pean war hospital. These are mem-| dere of Sedttie’s most exciusive club! club. Left to right: 4. ind W. F. Con- ir clubhouse. WANTED FOR MURDER IN1879, HE GIVES UP, SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Dec. 17—Lo- pal officials today received the fol-| jowing telegram from Sherift T. J.| “An aged man walked into my of. fice this morning, giving the name ff Benjamin Miller He says anted for the murder o’ Kirtin, at Riverton, in 1879." Kirlin was a saloon keeper. Mil- ler shot him, it is charged, during & quarrel. An dfficer wil! be sent for Miller, who is sald to be near- ty 80, PHONE MAIN 9400 FOR STAR WANT ADS. | | | J. L. Schulz broke his arm. knees thru two stock cars of wild) Schulz used to run the old Skoo-| horses while the show was on the} kum Eatin’ House at Fort Wrangel road. He considered this risky em- during the Kiondike rush in ‘97 ployment, and quit the show her and ‘98. Lane has the only “steady” job/ That was before he had the acct-jof which the club can boast now, dent. The peculiar part of it is that Every Thursday he goes out to Schulz had hiked over some of the Rev. Dr. Sidney Strong's home and biggest glaciers and ice floes in the cuts the lawn and washes the wie North, only to come to Seattle and | dows. “That gives us 75 cents a week break his arm by slipping on a patch of ice no bigger than a foot steady income,” said Lane. “I buy) square. coffee, sugar and a quarter's worth ‘ou can find Schulz out at—but by beans with tt every week.” | eee s oo ————-—-@| Conway ts only 24. One leg 1s/ | | |missing. It was amputated to save! THE BEACON HOUSE |the rest of him. He had tuberculo-| i] (Co-operative) sis of the bone. Inmates Injured In Industry He's a barber by trade, but he'd We do all kinds of work, such have to have a new leg before he ] ae odd jobs, house cleaning, | could work at it. | | mowing lawns, rough painting, | | 2 8 | | ete. | | When a reporter called on the 519 Rainier Boulevard club Tuesday afternoon Biume and | Phone Beacon 1389 | |Abrabam Anderson had gone down town looking for a job. . - ~— —~ @| “Anderson * 902 t Markets Ordinarily “The Beacon House”! ayout an hour,” said one of his fel jis called the Cripples’ club. Schulz low cluubmen. {s president, which brings us back; They nee & job—bad—all of He took his fractured member to|*""j;', pital, | Imost uselees to hunt,” sald buls's arm, but Lane "l'4 do anything, and so hu rm, but.) would the rest of the boys, but Ranch Eggs........ secording to sons it didn’t take,” we've tried everywhere, and there ts ‘Wild Rose Meanwhile. Schulz fell down |betne, ore” “oF men that are alto ecein Butter... Cc in, and, of course, right on the| cee ppeeety ‘© arm | Christmas is coming. It would be and another doctor performed | tittle somet }a second operation. He told Schulz| ‘They need a lot of clothes he thought part of the bone was! Ajj they had to eat Tuesday was hing for these “boys.” (Cream Cheese ...... Sugar Cured Oc resting on @ nerve, and needed 4, bit of fish and some flour TPOMIES 0 ccccccccece er plate put in to rem he) And they are all eager to work auble. If you'll call the: number, Beacon Anchor Brand 9c! Schuls got no better A third doc-li389, with an offer of a job, or jor tackled the case. clothes, or food, or money, they'll Bacon ...-....+----++ | When Schulz awoke on the oper-|ho glad to accommodate you. Jating table an hour later he asked |“ hhoice Shoulder 17 Oc [he ture Mist was the matter wits [ue erbtenreey sree as toe ork Roast.......... his leg. ” Seb a |" “Oh, nothing,” replied the nurse. | hoice Spare |“They had to have a piece of bone $5 Choice Spar Qe Pir ieee tore] SELL GIRLS FOR Dpedsnsd esescccceg micwen | eee i i Phirteen and a half months after) NEW YORK, Dec. 17—Traill ‘h Loi shirteen ane ! ‘ ? , Dec, 17—Tralling Choice Loin 5c [inst te sot out of te Honea, tii an alleged “white nave gang, the having one good leg and one arm.| police bought two girla for $5 That's his stor: jeach and arrested two of the vice Choice Shoulder | ° traf rs Pork Steak......... 1 ] Cc At the Cripples’ club there are| ‘The girls, Rose Goldman, 19, and five others. | Mary Fuer were offered to re were more, but one man,| William J ght, a detective %-| working on vice cases, by two men, Bice. Veal 15 | tee sarren, learned wireless t ‘Chops. eee jraphy at the Y. M. C, A. while @| enwright reported. He arrested |member of the club, and is now in|the men, who gave their names as (Choice Club |the employ of a steamship line} Max Yager, 19, and Jacob Fuchs, Sausage. ee C J operating out of San Francisco thru] s the canal. The police also held the girls, tigation Choice Steer | "He got a Job first on the steamer| pending an Shoulder Steak. . about the time that Frank Ragen,| tomer member or rhe cub. took SOME APPETITE, EH?! * another member 0 Choice Pork 5 a pesttion as cashier of a Montana Liver. fy C bank EASTON, Pa Dec, 17—Thel Ragen has or ( F E , co tr has some « eaters, but it} 5 cans Wild had lost his right arn oar Gh tase Ge tnd ccc abo bial Rose Milk iy 25c, * sre fortunate |best the gastronomic. feat of Jo- Both these men are t the A® THN FOLLOWING MARKETS, | however, when compared with Guat | *@ph Perrino of this place, to win and Abraham Anderson, who are|® bet. Perrino suc d in stor- OLYMPIO MARKET, not related to each other. Both are|!"& away 200 raw oysters in his| 118 Pike Street, minus both legs. |wtomach at one sitting, and left Gust lost His when a slide of rock| With the remark that he might |have eaten more if he had not been invited to a turkey dinner AMERICAN MARKET, 606 Third Avenue. |pinned him down while he wa working for the North Coast rail *ctraham fort his tees white vork-| BURNED TOM AND ALL $4.00 and $5.00 Ladies’ Shoes, in the largest variety cloth or kid tops, patent leather, vici kid or gunmetal; Cuban or | $1.50 Childs fn FRM i > c MEN’S FURNISHING GOODS 15¢ Black and’Tan Sotks.........7¢ $1.50 and $2.00 Drees Silk Shirts. . .95c Stockings Cotton Ribbed Underwear ALL MY CLOTHING, INCI,UDING BLUE SERGES, ONE-FOURTH OFF J. B. ROBINSON | 1424 THIRD A OPEN SATURDAY NIGHT TILL 11 O’CLOCK REE Ee ' Ike’ down town fn/! | STAR—FRIDAY, DEC 17, 1915. PAGE 11. TILL CHRISTMAS patent leather, the newest Misses’ Shoes $2.25 and $250 Misses’ Shoes, patent or gummetal ......... -$1.65 $2.76 und $3.00 Misses’ Shoes, in all MYleS . cccwocce ccs cescveresce $105 2 cee cowetiove eves 9245 35 (Carranza Conferring With U. §. Officers IF ONE DEFINITION OF SOLDIER | IS BARRED, WHY NOT KAISER’S? jtract from a speech made by Kaiser} stained with BY GILSON GARDNER citizens, on his friends, on his WASHINGTON, Dee How neighbors, on his relatives, he |far can a government department| obeys without hesitation. If he fo in censoring printed matter com is ordered to fire down a crowd- mitted to the mails? ed street when the poor are To f!lusirate Will the postmas- clamoring for bread, he obeys, ter generai bar the following ex | and sees the gray hairs of ag | d and the Ife Wilhelm in Germany, in 1891, to a] tide gushing from the breasts new batch of recruits of women, feeling neither re SIX MORE SHOPPING DAYS The Greatest Bargain Event of the Season for the Next Six Days. Hundreds of Articles Suitable for Christmas Presents at Cut Prices. Thousands of Pairs of Shoes at a Sacrifice charge $3.00; my prices. De BETWEEN THE POSTOFFICE AND PIKE ST.—Neer Pike. ~ } The growth of censorship in the | postoffice department {fs an increas jing menace, and it is one which jcongress will soon have to deal jwith drastically. | Leaders of the various peace so- 4 |cieties are indignant over what they call this usurpation of power jon the part of the department, It is possible that that portion of the katser’s speech, {in which he said, |“It may happen that I shail order {you to shoot your own relatives, |your brothers, or even your parents which God forbid—and then you bound in duty implieitly to y my orders,” may be printed and circulated as a test case, as it parallels closely the Jack London jarticle which the postmaster gen- “Recruits! Before the altar morse nor sympathy. If he is and the servant of God you ordered off as one of a firing have given me the oath of alle squad to execute a hero or a giance. You are too young to benefactor, he fires without you have care must ng as a switchman tn Colorado. “ar sae | Then there's J. T. Lane, W. F.| APPLETO “\ D 1 De-} SEATTLE MARRY |Conway, Alex Blume and James|siring to see a tomeat burn, a} on ree Boyden i-yearold boy living on the out RD MARKET Boyden is blind and deaf skirts set fire to the animal, the| lard Avenue. Lane's hips were broken by alaftermath being the destruction of falling log eight years ago in Min-|a carpenter shop, The blazing fur sHoPS OPEN UNTIL 10 P, M, nesota, He got a job feeding|of the feline communicated to qe | forse for A) Gi. Barnes, the cirous| shavings in the building, and the be man, but in carrying out his duties |structure was converted into ashes 'cn the in! as |. had to crawl on his hands andi within « few minutes, history of Mexico, of Mexico, surrounded by a number of h all orders and directions. You | breast. A good er is a have sworn fidelity to me, you bind, heart! $s, mur ™ are the children of my guard derous machir He Is not Sy you are my soldiers, you have man. He is not even a brute, N surrendered yourselves to me for brutes only Kill tn self-de- AY body and soul, Only one enemy fense. All that {9 buman in N can exist for youmy enem him, all that is divine tn him, N With tho present socialist ma all that constitutes the man, N ehinations, it may happen that has been sworn away when he N I shall order you to shoot your took the enlistment roll, His N own relatives, your brothers, or mind, conscience, aye, his very N even your parents—which God soul, are tn keeping of his N forbld—and then you are bound officer. No man can fall lower N in duty implicity to obey my than a soldier—it is a depth N orders! beneath which we cannot go.” | & If the postm r general permits} But Postmaster Burleson does| the above to go 1 the mails, why |not object to the above, When the} § hould he object to the lttle article, latter appeared, printed in red ink| pnoreed § > ha ne n written b on ; . ar ain ot. po t ca f Siren. GEN. CHAS. MONRO Youn. ian, the lowest aim |partment issued an order barring He is in your life is to be a good so uch post cards from the mais, No] chief This photograph, marking a page in the epoch of the checkered| ier. The good soldier never |attempt has yet been made to say|the decision of the f, meeting In conference wrong. He never thinks; never is ordered to fire on his feljgw- ‘step. e ° eral has barred know the full meaning of what hesitation, tho he knows the | BRITISH CHIEF id, Dut your first | bullet will pierce the noblest ms he to obey implicitly | heart that ever beat in human | IN DARDANELLES LLL EEE EEE oe hangs RNR OOANAAANANY British commander-in- allied council shows Venustiano Carranza, the recognized president] tries to distinguish right from /|that a newspaper carrying this text) of war to prosecute with vigor the should be barred from the matls.} campaign ‘ernational bridge near Brownsville, Texas, where he met the! reasons; he only obeys. If he {But this would be the next logical) Gallipoli, { Texas In conference, Monro's duties have assumed a new importance,

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