The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 11, 1909, Page 4

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_ THE SEA 1307-1309 Seventh Ave. EVIRY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. > ‘as eccond clase matter - A at the Postoffies at Seattia Washington, WOMAN SUFFRAGE THE STAR—THURS§DAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1909, TTLE STAR AHA, YE PUZZLER! CAN YOU READ THIS? Here ie a picture, in three parte The titles of those three parts, read in their order, make a phrase which might have been taken from an advertisement or eome sign. i ee Now; WHAT doos the picture say? i f the s ate t the ar ure is le beyond any t p ! Nl that] DOGS Wik OE KEPT the suffragi a isking is that the | f « Me Whew Lcnel them an opp ty to vote on the 1 ef ' | lie w t elve and not w at | mes et fmen sh not be al . h| stoc r a at } 1 w r t { A original rea 1 n, beca Apa f hes bee ; ably weaken y 8 ne} Those who send in the TO THE PUZZLE EDITOR OF THE DAILY STAR en ke a bt ft e tl y es | anew 6p om of Feb 1 NAME | : wo " y . AW he we Me My Answer to Above Picture .......65 scceeeees taminat y t © preset f ae ai tal : isa wilthe add he! This is the puszle | told you about Im yesterday's Star. What do you think of it? | believe that a | it will get you all agoing and then some, | think it is a regular peach. And the funny thing about it « : «| le that the anewer is a dandy, | laughed over it when I figured it out until the managing editor, city gth t : ad wa *| editor, telegraph editor and the reporters who were in the office at the time thought | had gone crazy. ' € a ab t | And talk about funny thinge-—-did you read that equib in the Josh Wise column in Wednesday's ” ar etter herse with] Star with a caption on it “At the Front Door—3 A, M.?" No, the josh in that column is not. an anewer i ’ " Luything but] to thle puzzie but later that little josh is going to place some figure in the puzsle column. , ‘ | PUZZLE EDITOR trivia In a ably a e of w the darning of Willie's stock-| re ; leave k usiness. Se eS —erners 1 Less s a creature of ent and] OUR SCORE AND SEVEN YEARS AGO our fathers br: fortion lacks to mark a t may be this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and lo the true, but her t he may ental, is} proposition that all man are created equal. ein pt ahs Foe fort st part swa 1 his elect ices by motives far] on eon pe ange ag apart Apegwer less worthy than those of pure sent t ind so decicaled, can endure. We are mot on datflofield Whether the women of Washington ever vote is a ; of that wer. We have fet ey ei orig field as a “ ketiss tk A beh bs aanth takianten: NE i final ~atinn ee for those who here gave t ir lives Nat thal nation these, it is merely a matter of principle, and what they consider} MEKLUVES | je altogether fing end proper that we should do this. to be their abstract right. They are enti estion bef at least, to bring the « re the people of the state for a nesitate to the legislature should not ant them this privi OPEN THE GATEWAY At the mee to be held in Chic ng of the Interstate Commerce Commission, ago February 18th, Ww BOT orld will aly 1 c er little note, nor thoy did here. Jt is fer us the liv: Which they who fought here have t 1S RATHER FOR US to be here dedicated to the LARGER SENSE, we caro! dedicate—we cannot corsectale—we ny hallow—this ground. The brave mer, } and dead, a e, have consect ye ptm roa Make re what remember what we say here, but it can never f rather, to be dedicated here to the fer so nobly advanced, york faek rematre ' :' | . | What Has Already Aerived. — | Piret M ' "y wi A Mt Aa vet | 14] ' ' the A | * f T ’ * tw * s 80 ' why I ! * K o | ie | "Boor it worth } oqnented ra reewipt for it ‘ ald } <4 6 Hew ae wher > os > 1 ' old question of cor before us—that from these honored dead we take devotion to Si ds Scheie BFS Wak nas nig porate profit versus public convenience will be threshed out that cause for which thay gave the last full measure of devotion—that wa =f *t! ' * eentipmge phe fn detail, particularly interesting to Seattle and other P: t| here Nghly resclve that these dead 6! not Nawe died in. vainethat this under Vinitor—And does the Sdund cities. It is a much discussed question of the opening | God, shall have a new birthof freedom—and thet government OF THE BY hleaye oO f led Port! | THE PEOPLE, FOR THE fouy--& of the so-called Portland gate-way | £, PEOPLE, shall not perish from the earth. touy 4 P | Mr. Hall and the presidents of his various railway lines} ) t , | } YW * Ww Des tes obbecs a tg Seah Delivered on the Geltyeburg Pa“halllefield Mev. 19,1863. 1 ag kept in effect a scheme whereby y « rted | traffic from Missouri points to the Sound over SS ae WwW ~~ lines, to the traveling incon nce of the pul m \ r : \ &,) % d ‘ MS r ~~” Tee ‘ My. Harriman can well take care of his own troubles, but the public is in urgent need of such assistance as the Interstate Commerce Commission may find it in its power to give. A passenger coming to the A.-Y.-P. exposition from the} southwest or the south, if he Union Pacific | or O. R. & N., must stop at Por k hig baggage ee theyre s Phereas, if he comes by ar he may buy paprreen Ht Be comen by any ithe ; (BY H. 4. HUDSON.) acroms the tank on a level with wers a man with rege | ticket straight through to Seattle mce his trunks are! the city was passing throuxh @ Ceara nee pa woe pe sie € baggage r, give the ' further thought until | terrttte de ountable period, | Peratety: drove my head am ioense for your at mapa seg SEE*EC ar, give ad |r ior — . or . arms axainst the fron ceiling. My a he arrives here The papers bs with reports lungs were filling with water. My If he te going to be as! aaa " ‘ os ot shocking crime. Insanity was ngth began to fail How [ © on that | might ea! all the ‘prospective exposition visitors were aware of ® t | : Heal shi F orale inhi pes ‘ re = om the increase, and sutcide was ad to live and breathe the air ainable te for « mar bd saband Haltimere this condition, it would not be so bad, but thousands of them!| becoming so frequent that a com. jones more. | thought of home end Vo, ‘Find'm "eaener th” tne | te will start. for the northwest over the Harriman lines to meet | ™#ttee had been appointed to act friends. If coveted life and ite lost a toe Hyp whee i : | 1 was selaed with a feeling of opportunttic How unselfish 1 jew York | m7" | | with annoying inconveniences in Portland, That anyone who | morbid curiosity, when I read af would be if | could live—only live he Mrs. Parveny—On, yee—we can} one s experience, with its consequent chances | th Proposed plans of the commit-| that would be enough. 1 would be Those Affinition. trace our ancestry back to—to has gone through this experience, bnsequent Chances | tao. The men chosen were of high| willing to undergo any hariship—| “You sae.” said the Pied dacentbin toronto ee for loss and delay of baggage, will arrive in Seattle ima proper|charactor, and. thele’ purpose was | aay mistortune-t¢ 1 could only. pro-| quienes, oF ehamie ing for centuries. —T-on= » of mind to enjoy the exposition, is too much to expect | laudable; but could these men in- long my existence Nt i j ee 8 frame of mind eee . P duce would besuicides to come t Then a feeling of comfort came| Prym. 4 tryst the cpnvereatt | Many hands make Nght work.—| from human nature. These disgusted visitors will return to|them for consolation and advice? aver me, and {found myself drifting | Brocsed without drifting into ni eee | their homes with unkind words about Seattle and the expo-| Yet. | was attracted myself, and —peacefully drifting—I knew not andon Opinion | When a fellow and « girl are pho | ’ ; a fe . why not others? [I wondered what where, for consciousness was leay-| A man can read a pans face, | tographed together it is reason avle | sition, all of which will militate against the success which we te would be used to per-|ing mo and | was drowning and if ebe te wrinkled he can ad they are quite taken all hope and expect. It d therefore seem to be a wise fore mis to seek, rather When I awoke I waa tn the hands | between the lines. ‘ as Then the ther of attendants, who wore briskly} ae veer thonght for the officials of the exposition, and the business rubbing me. They gave me a dry rally, to bring such influence to bi men of Seattle ar upon | Mg. Hill efthe Great Northern and Mr. Elliott of the Northern 1 hdraw any Pacifie as will induce them to w ntemplated op position which they might present at the hearing © discovered at Olympia that Palmer is a co tion man and yet carping persons doubt the collective intelligence of the legislature: It looks ax if, when war comes with Japan, California will t to fight it alone unless Tex Rickard ean have the scrap pulled off in Nevada Lemp, in his own modest way, prot to achiev same sults for St. Louis that the works of Mr. Pabst did for waukee. Theosophists may take this consolation out of Judge Hantord’s deeivion—that, $50,000 looks like 30 cents minus In vana. Teacher has already made up her mind just which one of her dar a “com valentine ling boys is goimg to send t Press dispatches announcing t hat Orleans carefully refrain from stating how many Taft will eat alligator at New That anbway franchise bill was neatly and alias, and all rigged up, mask, bludgeon atrue fora @ ragged garb, and ck me good stor that here Thad dug st material asuming a hag wutt of clothes, and | was again wah- ered into the presence of the secre ltary. He seemed pleased as ho [noted my happy expression. | could nat conceal the fact that | was glad alive, and told him so. | was! |no louger acting a part. The matter [had been too serious for that I |now made a clean brenat of the af | to be fair, stating that | had never intend. | ed to commit culeide, but had fust come in to see how unfortunates to be cured of thelr unnatural | j we destre to destroy themselves and | for the further purpose of getting matertal for a good stor | arn The secretary was glad te that the cure had worked as we as it had, and sald that the treat ment was a little severe, but that he had been waiting for a healthy specimen to operate upon, #0 that he could write up an yunt of the affair himeelf for publication, as he was convineed that {t would have a good moral effect upen the com |munity, He further explained that he never intended to adopt the treatment given me, but had used it merely ag.an expertment was a chance up some [i r published Jay the individual from w Sone SOMETHING OF A GOURMAND | What is the matter muckraking in various disguises Secure Boo-hoot Johnnie found a fat, fuxey cattorpiiiar, an’ de |I had been arrested in order to| #ome nee! pig ate it all himaelf! learn of prison life I had fetgned | ——ew ~ — insanity In order to live as one de-| when the writing man sets out to} ie Sod Cee i nted. Now | was to premoditate | toll his tal " : suicide, and invoke the sympathy of | Some a the Baw feet a wee thowe who would persuade m@) when he means the college boys | against the act. The Invitation ex whe go to Yale ou . tended by the couml An ger ay, oh, Ie ave been Irie eral in its scope, so I dded to} :seeetee ne well in respond with due haste. | donned pan | and Stood the Test is the universal opinion of all who have tried the THE FROG AND THE Ox ord took I was noon tahered into | ; Once a Wttle frog sat by a big Soaien 7 amylase Bir nronest LM boong aii Thi frog by the side of a pool Oh | "T have come,” watt I, “to enlist| } ps father,” said he, “I have just seen | your atd The seeretary eyed me} | the biggest animal in the world; tt Jelowely and smilingly told me to be] HC gala se anei | was as big as a mountain, and it sented , Dressed an elec: hips of the old block and it had tr button, saying that my case the multi-mil had horns on its head, hoofs divided in two “Pooh, child,” said the old frog. “that was only Farmer White's ox. He in not #o very big. I could easily make mywelf as big as he. and he blew and swelled himself out. “Wan he na big ae that?” he asked the little frog. “Oh, much bigger frog. ‘The old frog Wlew and blew and blew again, and swelled himself out more than ever “Was he bigger than that? waid ‘Much Uittle frog “4 can make myself as big. the old frog. And once more he blew, and blew and blew, and swelled himself out--and he burst Self-concelt leads to self destruc said the little he much bigger,” said the| sald Sult Ca raveling Bags MEEK TRUNK @ BAG Co, 919 First Ave. th ar How to Tell Stories to Chil- dren ' would receive immediate attention | I expected that he was summoning who would bring me antlsutetde Mteratur an a som was basement non asistant ed later that the notice day the captured criminal witt ot be “brought to bay given to an attendant in th And we'll call Ci fee for with me main fixed in my neltd power in your argument destruction I might as well leave you. “But I have one more recourse, a different At first the secretary began to rea-| along usual persuasion, but I saw that if 1 was} to obtain a good story | must re de T replied the secretary We'l i eliminate not “wuapect song -birda refer to read opera dames | purpose refreshing names nes of| dealers a box of rmination at here is T at last r ter thing to keep the itd vetiner Some people spend ao muct handing oul @ that they ne time to acco yt yhen a wom on them se | time have »| boxes. Then, before I had time to catch my breath or | subject joave i make reply, [ suddenly shot through | #,(ggnition to title ene. Wiets declie 4 a trap door in the floor, 1 must| As long as a man ta willing to wn ation have dropped 10 feet, when I struok | pay. the ht he can alwaye tind | us upmive will tell you who learned, was the #wimming tank in| Now | Imperial the basement. J was soon strug | eling to rise, but found that my ap- vulgar. ward progress had been cut off. A) gh, , heavy iron plate bad been shunted #on he never vave his bills. Piobbe Blooblood says trade ts | I suppose that's the po: Oclele me CICOAS We want you to know our other sweets, and as a | means of introducing them we offer through our Pure Sugar Sticks All you have to do isto SAVE THE BON-BON SPOONS that are packed in all Societe Chocolats Three spoons for a box of sweets for the not keep Societe Chocolats call does: Candy Co. Sole Manufacturers, Seattle, U. S. A, wel fiah | } ec ! | ; q 4 ie i ” Amy and Philip the children of Mr. F wore above want, Ar th r of Philip, but 4, Philip was the At Otherw ol i On « balmy 1 Mr. Barlow gay ‘ ch to purchane ' A thought nek A tead a t of squandert . wt oa r bontow t f , eo oF it F 0, tt Pt ing b ' one 1 . ‘ cad t met thelr ¢ j J ' Here ; n » y ‘ Y t ' I r ; t i I 1 1 THE ADVENTURE OF AMY AND PHILIP. i for a nice, fresh-laid muffin. Waiting until the sem had completely ceased his song. they nea j sir,” quoted Philip, “wouldat fol] famine with a mouth : ful of muffin? At this word the sallor burst into a t . Sir,” said Philip dnd Amy, exchanging « rofound pity ' are the pangs of hunger so grievous as to make N-o moaned the mariner, “but do you remember Iittle | Georgy In truth, quite well, sir,” said He was our curly headed litue playmate who was lost in forest while chasing bul | terfiies And do you remember that on upon a time he purloined © muffin from bis graudm owing basket? Ah, yes, my good man,” sald Amy in a kindly tone of voles, “but we never speak now Weil,” sobbed the sat 1 am that curty-headed little boy. I but » touch a muffin.” sailor hobbled dows am poor Georgy. Bear with me, young miss and young master, since that evil day I hav Turning away to hide his tears, the poor street singing as though his heart wou COMFORT FEATURE OF WINTER th === HATS The small round hats of fur, soft y felt and beaver are the) comfortable ones for the very cold weather, and like many secon@ ] thonghts are better than the hats of t arly winter. They are trimmed with large flowers, quilis and pompons of ribbon or feathers, —_ === = = = re oy usual proportions of a French | well mixed add three-fourths of dressing are one tablespoon of vine-| cup of currants dusted with foun gar to three of of) and seasoning of | Bake in a loaf rved hot the salt and pepper to taste | oat is delicious for luncheon CELERY SANDWICHES If a cake is coarse grained it wasil Two cups hopped celery, two) not beaten long enough or the oven! tabi sons cho dw was too slow If a cake containgy two tablespoons of ¢ 8, too mueh flour it w e up F quarter of a dressing of mayonnaise weer ap ead b ly with a crack in the mic slices of thin buttered | FIG PUFFS. | One and a half cups of flout, Add a few ta ons of water two teaspoons baking powdery instead of milk to thin the eggs in one-half teaspoon of salt and onezl an omelet, Milk toughens an omelet. | tablespoonful of batter, one and quarter cups of milk, 4 wae oe CURRANT hiy LOAF beaten, two-thirds cup One tablespoon of butter ne h 1 and dredged witht cup of one ea and little ake In moderate oven. @ over one-half cup of milk, one and lone-haif cups of flov or ten Tough ducks or fowls should b@y |speon of baking powder When steamed for an hour then roasted, The Bradbury System Label ; In your New Spring Suit is a Guarantee of Style Fit Quality Bradbury System Clothes are the best Men’s Clothes Made Yet. 7 Prices Right—Our Little-at-a-Time Plan y privileges you to open an account and pay at your convenience—makes clothes-buying easy. Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. 1332-34 Second Av. 209 Union St. “Seattle's Reliable Credit House"

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