The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 27, 1917, Page 1

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bas x FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICER VOLUME 19 UNITED PRESS ASSOCIATIONS Echo Zahl mahi Vi y. Boy! If You Dance. Press Your Best Sunday Pants. and Go Friday to Dreamland to Send Smokes fo France The SeattleStar . The Greatest Daily Circulation of Any Paper in the Pacific Northwest SEATTLE, WASI tL, Girl Reporter of Star Sees the Male Follies of 1917: t to Seattle Barber Shops and Tells Secrets of How Mere Men Luxuriate in “Dolling Up” By Echo June Zahl | For yesterday I “sat in” at the | ALL SAME THEDA BARA Then as the white-coated moan | places where hubby does HIS | What was true in one place | stepped on the spring, allowing | IRLS, gather around! doling up. wan equally true in another. In | the chair to swing back a la pomember the grow! hub I made a barbershop tour. I | only one instance did a man cry | divan, my heart was torn with os oe _ nt a half hour each in the | for speed | jealousy for this untoward luxury, | . reen building barber shop, the | They rushed in thru the door, What mere woman can in nigh And the aneer prong YOu | White building barber shop, and | as usual—but, once inside, leis | dulge in such a Theda Bara pPowdered your nose on the run? | tne New York building barber | urely removed coat, collar and | sprawl, while her hair is being } | Well, I've got the dope on | shop, watching the Male Follies | tie, and slipped comfortably into | sham 4 oor her face mas Bubb: | of 1917 the chair of their favorite barber, | saged? "Former Ambassador to Germany | { | } Snapped at Hotel Washington Ls — a _] Ask Police for | _ Deserted Waif Visit Headquarters Seeking’ to Adopt Baby Left Wed- nesday Night on Jeffer-) THURSDAY, SEPT, 19 O, Agnes! “Not too clone, remember.” This from the figure in the ehatr SEES VIOLET RAY IN ACTION A steaming cloth cut off fur |@ ther utterances, His whole fig ure bespoke the ease, the relaxa jon of perfect forgetful Ly Even the tip of the nose t protruded from the hot towel was at rest Then the towel was removed, the lather administered and the |tazor put into play 1 The shave over, the man nonchalantly signaled for the | necond act, and the barber, quick to catch the cue, edged t to a wmall cabinet, from the | confines of which he drew a small box, To the box a cord \ one end of which into an electri wan attached, he plugged 17, ARREST SPIES WHO'LL BE OUR NEXT MAYOR? Pp The flie have OLITIC been IANS thick lately around Star office j as ] arou m wanting to know what this paper intends to in the myoralty next spring to be barr cam several Seattle ters 1 upon to ct a mayor It's too far in the fu ture for anyone to stions, The n the situ the eye ames of ayor, that | chet, the other into a small noti they are | aw affair nd all, the same old son St. Doorstep. (pean {all the same cl | barbe of perennia : , | "Violet ray,” was the answer. | r - office Seattle On the.blotter at police headquarters, written | Gein cict weuing eee dine all. helt Mong lists of disorderly conduct cases, “drunks’’ and ¢ patient in the reclining es are always before f violators of the law, appears the entry, “John over with public, And they're $ ” litici < t Jr., black hair, age 4 months. ticiar r And on the fourth floor, in the city hospital, there gpa at ha @s diminutive, dark-haired, perfectly formed boy, light went sliding V HY cannot _ this ffio other thought in-the world except the very hu- bane. Boa ganna town have for a the goodly wor wer nm want of breakfast that he knows is being pre- While the massaging process mayor a man who is not — outs progressed at the th and a nterested in politics ‘or him ide. ad. I a John Doe, jr.” was found Wed * d hero was at the foot Why cannot the voters nesday night on the doorstep of an pe poh on na A wall & hogy put into office some 1a artme a 23 J 80) ¥ " RAN OF 64 Miss. Leni Thompson "ead ve if clean, aggressive young bi who live in an adjoin fellow, who will devote nent. The child was " 7 his energies exclusively it! U § J wronged Whe Monket on ty way to work to managing the city’s «hd Thats wactad ier iee iaontie seanoeo Lavy 1s cucny | sflsire, instead of back- he as no clue to its identity 4 i play- But even tho moth for men, I noticed, never 5 | ing and filling, and y FRENCH POILUS known to her alone, aban f a barber shor without giv. | ing for votes, as any poli- | baby, there are other themselves «over in | tician mayor is bound to women in Seattle who are arving pious mf rs of the place. > a BY C. Cc. LYON i i dc WITH N TROOPS (for the possession of a little child ‘ pel Ml SGN, of ‘ 2 q on eae 21 TROOPS | and police hendquarters received aititshig, Wat sevkee Gey soul Why not toss the poli IN FRANCE, py ise The | Many anxious, inquiries Thursday ents i ticians into the most remarkable |>Y prospective adopters eo joshed t it. Men JUST, ONCE? ; Mr C. M. Powe ; ; > WHAT oldier in the en } up” right out in public, and AND SEE a, North 42nd st. came ire French army ~~ ie takes {it as a matter of | HAPPENS? 4 had read in the mor 1 Le Mes- i ; 3) course : Dousias st. Los know he will have *,” Former U. 8. Ambassador to Germany James W. Gerard (at right) A 1 , e bea ad Reduction in Price ry moc) Cal |said Mrs. Powell, holding the child | posed for The Star photographer T day in front of the Washington! sort of has the edge on the r li P li i eee: ee any (tight. “The paper said they were|hotel. With him is Hazen J. Titus, of the . ilroad,| of us, at that Gasoline Predictec If there be any | brown—but they're going to be the who went to Spokane as an emissary of th of Com Ry United Press Lensed Wire POWSTGS and) dst of blue.” merce to meet Gerard, = one med os RABBI DEAD AT $19) WASHINGTON, Sept, 26—A gen slackers in Amer- | blu al reduction in the prices of gaso- lea, let them know The little boy opened them up aw yok sprsnen yey gay ya +_| wide, as tho nderstood NEW YORK ng! line and fuel ofl ts oc Le Mes ager eee te tt er ie iis cauanes and|tion by the government, It 1s ur {ec lag | my doorste ton Mra, Pows grandchildren nett| decided whether to work under pow. asha t in he od contro! Wolinski is dea ontained in t re Early in Sep-|“l have b wanting a bab fe gee 3 coh id a or to make se ET tember, 1914, an 80 long. “ 66 ts with producers LYON [oid man walked| Mr. Powell was as excited in his . But He Prefers “Ducks” to “Diplomacy”’ (;.0% von. He with producers, down the gang-|man-way as his wife a ae 4 6 —~ rrive “Wha unt we do to get It?” he NEWS ITEM FROM H — - a. 4 leny one élee take it, will you? who has been spending a week on His hair, once black, would | ™ or so on the Daly ranch near me I Y St soon be white. Shagoy eye. | “There must first be a search| oF $0 on the Daly rane! fete mes ot a tino atring of the tinest/s Have You Done Your Share brows shaded eyes that always | Tae for | the | parents,’ sald Miss) Seattle. Jim found many of [trout I ever saw. You should have ‘“ T 39 womls, ¢ nurse § ; i Swinkled. A _ reddish - brown Powell is a bricklayer, working| his old friends here and en- {seen an extra big one. It was for the Man Out here? beard made him look older than | Po “ prey 00 joyed himself shaking hands |eame fighter, and I had a great he really was. His carriage | %!,liremerton | renewing acquaintances. | timo Ia t. It was about eco eee coccece iitar: They both were loath to lay the| and re Q ye War had been declared in France |baby back in the little crib, and,| Come again, Jim ag ed CO aR ag er HERE'S A MAN OUT THERE, fefor down this paper. ‘only a few weeks before, and the | they turned out the door they | Greasing the. measare with tis | who fights for you and the) tea on, fill it out, and authorities were suspicious of en-| srasped h other's hands as a] This same Jim Gerard arrived in iar s Hitaerean stvia® Shas things that you hold true; |gend it with ail you can tering strangers little whimper reached them and is with us oth Mt th and inter {there's a cause out there you're spare, to Le Mesnager had hardly reached ; 4 vhs ieee P backing up with all that's best in) Our Boys tn Franc Tobacco the dock before he was in the cus-| Alex Pantages to ¢ sgn rename committee awaits with-|¥oU Fund,” care attle tody of the police, who demanded | . “eee kaowa here: a6. ; aid the wecretar | Now, here's a need of the MAN| The management of this fund ia b s | Entertain Newsies] abie James W. Gerard, former am- | OU. salt (in meer said wr, [OUT THERE —a can eas-|which has the hearty approval of fm here to enlist in the | Five hundred Star newsboys |Dassador from (he \inited Sitios 1) ong {ly fill—come cram his pouch with| the secretaries of war and navy army,” he said, in perfect are going to have a big time |Cermany. He Is ie man Nit Oog| “Hunting and fishing are the|the smokes he loves—kick in with | buys the tobacco at cost, so that French. The gendarme laugh. Friday night. coe cae erwumnednose fp the ranks | 70st resting things in the|a dollar bill! Sern ate Ce pe Sorioively. a They'll _be guests of Alexan- [1 . ie MOST HIGH in Germany, | World for a vacation trip,” he w mw it's mot the crash of the| (oye eon or topaceo neers: “What, an old man like you en-| der Pantages, at his vaudeville on I feel bully, even if 1 ¢ y gun nor the etrain on the) cone yore te Fist in the army? Impossible!” | theatre, Third ave. and Uni- He was met at the have to make side trips to Butte,| an” who server: it's lacking & going ‘or this tobacco, Le Mesnager took from his pock-| versity st tion last night by a } Helena and other places to talk to| smoke when it's smoking time, that Show the country that the citi ‘et a little case that contained the| Eddie Milne, manager of |Commerce committee influentia the eftizens frantion a cctéler’s nerves! zens of Seattle never fail to re. “Piighent medal a French soldier can| Pantages theatre, will reserve citizens, and a guard of naval “ny the way, apeaking of hunt-|{azzlee & ROMUMEN BALLON | | spond to an appeal of this sort rece adets from | ashington nave a telescope the German no there is uch we | “Fill ont the coupon now, and send for France in 1870, nand ‘the ae In charge of Circulation Man- |over to him and and play dj) enemy. Want to nee it " muss, sn a it td ee iyo The King County ployes’ as: me - this,” he said simply. “I've! ager Howard Parish, the | during the parade up econd ave Gerard fastened the telescope to au let's do It, t x sociation Voted | Wedne way night come back to fight again newsies will assemble at The |to the New Washington id rifle, and pointed the | 0" h to ald the “Our s in France To. It was no time for quibbling. The Star office at 8:30 and march Bright and early a Star reporter it of a window, showing | “a bacco Fund” tn every possible way Germans were hammering their! t. Pantages in a body. called on Mr. Gerard in bis suite) now the instrument vastly in-| Our fighting boys In France wiil|and turned the matter over to a way toward Paris, and every avail-| “The boys certainly have Vashington to discuss (he creased the sighting power for the/pe counting on the generous men|committee headed by C. C. Cal able Frenchman was being rushed) goog time when Eddie Milne tional situation : marksman. A traffic cop on the] and women of Se 4 them |houn, with Instructions that he s to arms. i takes care of them,” says Par- 1,” said the diplomat, “I had street below saw the diplomat with|the makin’s, Let's see to it that|that everybody in the county-eity ’ The gendarme sald: “It you're) gh “and they sure like vaude. |the finest kind of a time, TouRHINE the wicked-looking gun at the win-|pone of Uncle Sam's boys lack |building be given an opportunity to , } ined to enlist, there's & re) Ville." {t over on the ranch in Montana. dow and nearly threw a fit before| plenty to puff on help the fund Mia © eruiting station down the street.” | - Talks About Ducks he found out what it as all about she a a nin ” The recruiting officer hesitated CAN'T QUOTA hunting? Well a: “,~ man ears old and a private LL “Do you like duck hunting ' TO TRE EpITo! , ee | OWING DESERTIONS |* 0° ror." We sent ou pug — iin sain LegMesnager’s Franco-Prussian fter canvas-backs every day we ON U. S. BARRACKS) Boys tm Brance Tobacco Fund’ for American fighting mee , 4 ig mn by. Tha BUTTE, Sept. 27.—Desertions| weren't fishing » me duck hunt-{ Se ae Medal again got him by. That) a. made tt Impossible for a com-|ing 1s the most interesting recres-| AMERICAN ARMY HEADQUAR jerstand that each doline buys four packages, each with» 4 ight he wes on a troop train for |ing 1s the m ; , TARY ae eee tah conts, and that in each of my packages’ will be placed ¢ ii front. plete third quota of 217 men tol¢jon, I like to call ‘em down out) TRHRS IN FRANCE, Sept. 27. ~| | Teeny Addressed to me, on which my unknown friend, the soldier, i eee was three years 290 for the cantonment at Camplot the air. That's the way I kept|American army engineers, sleep-| | Wil agree te send me w message of thanks : day Le Mesnager, nearing next week, the exemption| going in Germany. I had privil ing in their barracks, have been un Today Le + admit It is now too late to te preserve, an hi ne I A IN OU i te cep oebnndeeseeseetonces q : his 68th birthday, is a French Amt on a private preserve, atts: (da “ 4 a infantry lieutenant, and s another call, members of the/perlin, and believe J got more Not an American was hurt, de-| t is covered with meda id ducks there than I @id even in|spite a fusillade of machi rant Sie received his first. wound—a ityfour hundred men have ntana \fire from the air, which riddled the He rt) thru the arm, seven days |been examined by the board, Hun-| “Then the trout fishing! Would |barracks roof and walls vised he arrived at the front. It put| dreds have falled to appear, or have| you believe it, 1 pulled some fine,| The Sammies took refuge in dug werted after being called to mo Ci bilize, (Continued on page 10) | a long beauties out of an irrigation outs ‘been a plot to blow up munition plants and destroy LAST EDITION might and Friday, utherly winds rain; ® PRIC Net Closes Upon Many Germans; Plots Are Bared Maps and Blueprints Found in Possession of 91 Enemy — Aliens Caught in Federal | Raid. By Cnitea NEW YORK, Sept. hrean Leased Wire Direct to The St 37.—-What is believed to have |machinery which is being manufactured for war put} poses, was blocked here today when the police com- pleted a wholesale round-up of German aliens. | Ninety-one were arrested, mostly skilled me chanics employed in plants working on government contracts. “Invaluable material to the navy sepa was |found in their possession,” said Thos. J. Tunney, chief of the bomb squad. “Blue prints, charts, maps and other documents, and a collection of revolvers were confiscated.” It was announced that many of! those arrest were working to- cted an organi were interned today BULGARIA READY FOR PEACE, SA MINISTER TOU. 8. By United Press Leased Wire WASHINGTON, Sept. 27—Buk garia is not interested in Kaiser” Wiihelm’s dream of a Mittel Euro pa empire. In an interview with the United Press today, Stephan Phanaretoff, Bulgarian minister to the United States, said his country had attain- ed the sole ends for which it em tered the war, and is ready to quit, providing she can keep the terri- Ellis island. The men taken into custody have shadowed by detectives for 1 months at the request of y department 1 were interned today Ellis Island. HAIG PRISONERS TELL OF UNREST IN KAISER ARMY BY WILLIAM PHILIP simus ted Press Staff Correspondent | tory “which, by language, national WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES {ty and historic right, belongs to IN THE FIELD, Sept British | her” troops held fast to thelr victories | Bulgaria, he said, would have today, after a night of incessant preferred to have fought on the sid® eating back of German counter attacks of the allies, but Germany made @ more acceptable business propos tion. jle of the Yore sector was ablaze with artillery, trench mortar and grenade explosions. suring back of the were glad to emerge from ghting wave. jan and Baden troops who part of the British advance front lared they No Love for Turkey risoners | one object in view—regaining Do- bruja and parts of Serbia which were unjustly taken from her dur ing the Balkan war and in the treaty of 1878,” said Phanaretoff, frankly. | “She had no love for the central | powers—in fact, a few years before |had been at war with Turkey. As the price of entering the war, she {nes the six-mile e sick of wa complained the losses of were higher than Prussians, whose bat vey troops of the sa dopphivcabtlege regen asked restoration of former terri- leon peac ames soon, the German 1 <r?” which, by President Wilson's. high command will have difficulty |OW® Statement of national bounds in keeping all its troops in gas Bas rightfully belongs to Samy fighting This latter statement of aIN0 CHANGE YET discontent in the German ranks ts belied, however, by the stubborn rman defense which the nahn has developed IN SHIP STRIKE | MAKE NO MOVE TO | riecause ot the tatture of Chatee man Everett Macey, of Lt labor | ABOLISH TEXT BOOK 2 coccoar's/ at S'. boa ond Wedeeday ‘a abolish ane strike situation definite Thursday, jerman propagandist — text-boo! me én rm Vateraha” which da on 4 “|the executive committee of the Metal Trades Council at a meeting this morning took no action to de lay the strike of 12,000 workers which is set for Saturday morning, high school book list in use in Se attle. No mention of the book was made at the meeting of the board Wednesday | Macey wired here that the board Nothing has been done about! woud be in Seattle next week and the matter as yet,” said Superin-| your visit other Coast cities also, tendent Cooper, Thursday. “How-| "Sti Se ited, asking Macey. te ever, I Intend to look Into It before] goecity Just what the board, wonld the book is given out to the stu-} 4, and how it would consider the dente. Seattle situation, He asked Macey Salary increases were granted to!) reniy before noon, Washingtom 19 industrial teachers pner-| time Thursday day's meeting of the board Macey did not reply and the com- |m made no move to check the WON’T USE KAISER’S |: It was unanimously declared by BOOKS IN SPOKANE the committeemen that nothing jean stop the walkout now By_Upited Prees lensed Wire | ‘The board ts expected to leave SPOKANE t, 27,.—“Im Vater-| Washington either next Tucsday or land " the German text-book which) Wednesday, and wil arrive in Se calls the crown prince @ good fek/attle approximately «a week after low and otherwise Wuds kaiser-|/ the scheduled strike is under Wie. has been abolished from the! Shipyard owners here rocelyed schools telegrams from the shipping board School authorities — announced | Wednesday night, announcing the Wednesday that the book had been} poard’s offer to pay one-haifthe in« text-book Hst of and its use would removed from tt the high sc be discontinued creases asked by the men in plants where not more than 10 pes cent profit is made on government or a ools has established <nsneecenntiinaenentl ery, where citizen: may a pig each by buying a Watermelons, muskmelons tnd pig and then providing food for it. cucumbers are of Asiatic origin, “Bulgaria entered the war with 7 q

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