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HAT BOY GLAVIS KEPT HIS HEAD, AND HAS “THE GANG” BADLY RATTLED eee eee ee eee $ ay ¥ CH. mre Feb. that boy Glav Seanared the Kank Glavis hae come grospexamined, ©" when “that \ it at the end table, facing six statesmen t facta, but te Glavis contr: designed to |r fram the We youne dignity of the se SOSCHOSOHOSEH SOS OS OOO HOSE SES ESESeSesosesesesesooes when he had reason was in bad Marble dark, rich woods, ele rniture and the gloom of a need committee room in ndid palace called the sen building, were all calow mprese a mere fleld agent land offfee, discharged at at he had better go slow came, a clean cut, up a. openfaced #on of the 26 in yeara, but old enough » cablnet officer whom he bluffing, He looks like xluct of the football felde and ‘ of & “corn belt” state peciall he ® ‘ w POUND; THATS THE “MARKET PRICE OF CIVILIZATION art Seeatial wea lives out the he can pro than it cc Maintain hice ow each ad! fp additional nations the birth of eact the country wo Sif the new creat world no poo My if the new words, should a A ch Steam Engine Changed All facts held good from the times vuetil our own times. ange ame when the steam ame ) brought with It laborious hand Per capita pro wealth ag it com aned i and bounded of steam and electrict musele had transform Wealth, Instead of mt difficult thing in id to produce, became one easiest. Given a chance to with machinery, any people ke more food, more cloth houses than they needed an Mability had indeed be a national human asset potential value of the » last year, measured standard, was Approximate children were born ” id e billion 2,400,006 DA, GOVERNMENT PUTS _ TRUSTS’ CRIMES INTO COLD PRINT Pree) - 8—The os SP tee ita Muekevate King means of which every offensty« ts ia the can give an t of labor Taber will then and the B representa choose # judae qhairman of the ‘This board of a court anes of tbe ony ry gp the government ¢ finished it the ministes States are they are t they can r on and commit the same offense again. One of the King measure ie that a different kind of penalty is the result of ad verse Investigation. That ts pub Hetty All corporations dislike having thetr unlawful acts published in detail, This publicity ts sup posed by the framer of the bill to carry enough penalty. But if it is all over found to be not enough, the act im-| poses a fine of $1,000 a day for eve: fay's continuation of the combine | after 10 daya have expired follow: tng the publication of the inquiry board's report Strikes have been greatly reduced Canada by the law framed by Minister es act. The same fair way of iting the difference between om. ployer and employe was adopted in this law, which ts considered a model be trust act in {te preamble is called “an act to provide for the investigation of combines, monopo- Nes, trusts and mergers whieh daly enhonce prices or restrict compet! tion to the detriment of consumers. The text of the act containg a def nition of “combine” so far reaching that it ts dififeult to see bow any form of trust can escape It =e IMMIGRATION, SWEDEN LAROUSE THE NATIONAL SPIRIT i Feo. 5 S—Alarmed by the increasing emigration States and today South Amertean countries announced that in the near future plays will be staged throughout the coun ggg feeling ae king os pot Of tts best young men. The plan has been given ted out, is draining the country The recent strikes to the increased departures for other lands. these plays inay rekindle many dying ‘They will be staged first at Gottenburg, mi the Arptic exp I with there past year. and Agree to employ Of Georgetown Pepular sexsion nert fo Come to Beattie for mp the local wider nes for the anne cation Mile ety will prota A hundred and R voters have Petition, whict than required it E FOLK )GIVE BENEFIT Carer, the good Sfranged for a bene tre, Februar Good Cheer so Just organized folk furnist to invalids He branch need i) Miss Carter | me some bet. Good mt 7 Bre being intere Se onl Beate m. o hed boxe A James wi Bight, and th Mr toclety has 7h0 tickers for sale, thes. tthe box office tor Mra. ©. B. Stim first box et TAE ry t He, “twas the braw Paouiy ft Bobby Burns wall od ee hae for the bie anniversary bie fir aa HAM the Scots i th A 84 fra the danc ¥ ry Rohert«: lo the Z Beggs and Angus fi euver, a’ th noo i Were vera fine adda f0F Bering hii aie med twenty >, inne yg wi 4 um of WBAEFRIOGd that BYallable in the DUrpore, emigrants orm bart INS CONCERT , plorer, has been engaged by the ey lecturing on national subjects ore All registration were broken when the headquarters closed at midnight Inst previous recorgs for heavy night checkec When the books were up it was found that there 4 1 signateres on them. tm single ward in the city failed show an increase over its regi» tration for 1908 Yesterday 6 hanes were added to the registration books, aking it the heaviest single day of ever conducted in Se 908 the registration at was 33,797 votes. The stration by wards ts as follows 1910. 2,603 2,670 270 2,806 #68 091 363 863 526 2,166 2,209 830 503 902 281 Three Chinese Held As Opium Smugglers! ee Chi yank verte by Pa with at of opium. allors were Ay charged Poolman 15 cans steamer at 6 yesterda ting to sell ut 9740 men gave 1 Wong thetr Leong names and as Toy ian arrested Yip Suey first unopened cans of upon him. He soured the by ruse, engaging @ dicker with the pair for of the drug SEATTLE MEN ON WRECKED STEAMER € nen known to be of the crew of the steamer bound for this port and which was wrecked last ght near Jidda, on the Red Sea of the disaster was received morning by the Merchants’ Kx ange, but no details have been op The | Amer merits of the| King called the industrial | THE STAR—TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1910, POPOSeSoSedosesedoosroeges SeSeSesesosoere whiskers ax he drawled “loaded,” jconfuaing questions; Olmstead, of Pennsylvania, who hopes to earn the support of the reactionaries for Cannon's job, and who te an able SOOO OOOOH O SESE SESE SESE eEOEe university, although had a college courge He breathes deeply and lke @ frontiersman, and bia speech fe the slow and careful, but easy colloquial speech of the big, broad | and adroit lawyer; Flint, of Cali Woat Hie steady eyes are deep fornia, smiling good nature and vet and his broad square face has/ watting to slip up on the witness the lines of & man and the jaw of al with a knockout question ander fahter leover of bie pleasant, confidential The opposition facing bim were a bullying Knute Nelson, blunt and| Got Third Degree. rough but abrewd, obstinate foe of| What Glavis got before the joint conservation; Elihu Root, cold,| committee of congress was th wUAYS, soft voiced, dangerous; third degree, They didn't knock Sutherland, of Utah, hiding a slow! him down with blackjacks, It is emtle of cunning behind hin black| true, or beat him with their fete Glavie never | lloe today, however, agr that | phyatoul violence ta not necessary The basis of the third degree is a rain of questions from a number of men; questions that seem trrele vant, trivial questions, mixed with questions dealgned to trip the vic tim to his downfall. Thone chiefs of poll {there is but on the third dogr truth. Glavis has the Washington } Glavis has b slowly, that against in the agree, defense and that told the erdict numht out truth,” t# the fact A Purse-ery Rhyme for Common People Being @ Merrie Jingle on the High Cost of Living OA“ SR , 'TS A SHAME THe A pANM YOU TREAT your Bi6 BROoTMre, tt Z WENT TO BED WITH HIS SHOE BOOTS ON. ‘THE REASON HE WORE HIS BOOTS TO BED WAS BECAUSE HE DEARLY LOVED ‘TO KICK THE STUFFIN’ i OuT OF HIS POOR LITTLE BROTHER: siasbniadlieelliiidiace dicen chindeidiateeaaae tee INSIDE STORY OF TAFT TRIP REVEALS ____WILY HAND OF CANNON, New light, significant and inter jesting, is thrown on the recent round the country trip of President | Tat, by an article in the current jnomber of the magasine Human j Late | ‘The article is written by Alfred Henry Lewis, and deseribes a cer jtain midnight meeting at Beverly }in which the President's defense of Aldrich and Tawney, bis side | stepping of La Follette and bie at tempt to placate Senator Cummins. |who had six years yet serve. were arranged Detaile of the president's policy on the trip, Lewis credits to Speak ler Cannon, one of the midnight guests. “Baguciously led by this past master of humanity,” siys Lewis, “thie man who for 40 years had handled men of every sort, big men, email men, horse men, dog men, pig mes, sheep men, lion| —J men, wolf men, and had never | scored 6 failure, the president was duly Jed to adopt the Cannon ree soning.” | rm ieee of a OAXACA, Mea.—Troops were dis. |, WASHINGTON A description of the viatt follows: | natchad today to Petan, a town near | suclatant “Mr. Taft, in his rocking chalr Of| the boundary between the states of | OP in. 6 double width and strength, was Oaxaca and V Crva 4 | Somanittos, seated upon bis Beverly poreh. His/eirction riot that had its beginning | party campat manner was one of anxious walt In a duel between Buplicio Martines ing, and since no sun meant no qeen See Seventy per camera, the usual smile bad faded |°0%* ™ j re ee COCHISE, Aria—A_— prebietor “Oft shore ® yac! ht—chattel of a village was uncovered fourteen miles trust magnate-—was headed for the |from here, according to word tro land. It had spent the afternoon | the desert today The discovery war over beyond the rim of the world,| made by Frank Erwin, engage out of reach of o al eyes. Now, | @laging an ierigatie: on enn. under cloud of night, It was steam oe Bayt Ry oh twenty fe ing in with al) the skuiking seorecy | pio ice oft a smuggler | “The trust yacht ran in shore as} close as good seamanship would warrant, and then landed four gen tlemen by means of its small boat The tour were not without notort ety, however far they might fall} short of fame. They were Speaker Cannon, Mr. McKinley of Tilinots Mr. Hemenway of lodiana and Mr Sibley of Pennsylvania. The quar tet, being landed, went cat-foot to} Mr. Taft's | To Visit Mr. | ‘Oh, it was all right! The furtive four were ther® by Invitation of Mr, Taft. Only, in his letter to Mr Cannon arranging the visit Mr Taft had said that, unless ft could be man wed ‘without getting Into | the papers,’ it wae a pleasure he preferred to forego: “What Mr. Cannon and his three companions wished to talk about was Mr. Taft's approaching trip There bad been @ house rebellion in the special session. There would be yebeliion in the regular session to coeur in December. Mr, Root and Mr. Knox had told Mr. Taft that he muet stand by Mr. Cannon, and do ali a president might to beat down that rebellion. He must ear 4 system of house slavery which eubsisted under the pr nt rules. “The mutiny had been of serious dimensions, The rules were saved| COLUMBUS, only by copperhead democrate | has heen gehen whom the trusts had picked up. The |" for the tm fires were still alive and sproading|*° fn the West and South. very sign | favored the fear that the rebellion: | ints would come to the sion even stronger than they were before of the Philippines. Charles B. El Hot, of Minnesota, was nominated & sormber of the leiand commis “Why?” He Asks. Hort Uap secretary of commerce and pal If thetr conference bad been in} the open, | myself should think the lows about it, If it were private bus Iness now, If it were panking or highway robbery, or pocket plek ing or stock watering, the propriety | of & woo! foot silence would be ap parent and well grounded But the getting together of Mr Taft, Mr. Cannon and those others Was upon public affairs. Has any of those five Beverly statesmen ever kept bis left hand from koowtng what his right hand was about when the enterprise that engeaed it promised his own popu lar advantage? “What, then, was the call for all | this Beverly darkne nd Beverly stealth? Was Mr. Taft ashamed of bis visitors? Were the risitors hauwated by the feeling that the visit implied een race” RTH YAKIMA ~The city ie were closed yesterday on ac af the prevalence of diph woh cou! therta. NEW YORK. —Twonty-six paper Hmanufacturing firme plead guilty of WASHINGTON.—Senator Bott of Kaneas, hae Introduced a drastic bill, absolutely prohibiting the man ufacture and sale of liquor in the Hawattan tsiands, except for medtet na! purposes to TULSA, Okl—Ciyde Mattox, a no outiaw, was captured today, but oalr by tw reat him covered YORK.Gov. Hughes iterated today his abso de [mination net to accept the renor nation for governor. te Wade gener accept th pub 1 to take tn ODL H has re rroanahtr next fal LA PAZ, Bolivia. —Wiiltam nings Bryan and family arris yesterday. A reception their honor today at etub. Jur d here was held tr the La Paz MowThe A. B. Cocktt npany, one of the larg cerns in the an JOPLIN nelting oe iting nkrupt 8 try, ie SEASON OF FAST BEGINS WEDNESDAY Lent begins tome 'forty days the per temptation in the w Jobuerved by the of sorrow OGDEN Utah —Bight persons seriously injured when a alad motor car collided with « pes train in the yards today jt eorlousiy hurt are C W. Fransico; Mary Wale Angeles; John Meyer Mra. Jeppren Jones and W. H Harry Aldred penger The w Skane worth Finn Brooke and Balt Lake; J. A Ransom, of Ogden of Blackfoot, Utah. ON, Conta Rica volcano Poas in in terrific erupt today. Streame of lave a jow ine through the fertile valleys near the foot of the mountain, and several villages are reported destroyed. A} mont every village between the vol 4 fan Jove, the capital, i# de Loe rrow, and fo od of Christ derness will be church world as a and fasting. Th pays its homage ites so fun The n sensor society world and tn all large tions are generally suspend The plous will go to chureh, the |thrifty housewife will do her spring sewing, and the aty belle will |take a forty days’ rest from fash jon's demands. From tts strict observance Hpiacopal and the Catholic ehuret commemoration of Christ's temptation is becoming general in al! Ghristian churches. Backeloth and{ pbhes, fasting and consecra | tion, Will mark the season of sorrow Juntil Waster celebrates the burst ing of the tomb and the resurrection (Mittat POR? Li too Taft. #0 nerted Moroc¢ While at ce the payment of taxes to the sultan, Maulal Hafid, an | aleade, and his military escort were acred at Tiznit today. A few of the soldiers of the #loaide rt escaped and brought news of in ciplent revolt to the aultan. TANGIER jtempting to enf by the OAKLAND, Cal.—With a ous wound in his abdomen, J. Han. | liew in the receiving hospital. | pagter comes early this year cloned and ran againet It, | the churches, flowers, palms and driven into his abdo- |the donning of spring apparel typify \the lberation of the earth from the bondage of winter, the resurrection lof Ohriet and the belief in the im |mortality of the soul All of the Bplacopal and Catholic churehes, with many of other de |nominations, will begin a series of |apecial meetings next Wednesday continuing until Master 1 anger of the gate wan A picket men. rs) sand at Portland huten Irrigation & Newton W. Gil was nominated by vice governor | WASHINGTON bert, of Indiana egular vem | the prewident today a PESOS eSeSeSeSesosesosegesd name | that President Taft had only a part | SAYS WRITER: Peoesedesooe | PPOOOO CSE SeSeSoerereoees [The most successful chiefa of po- Jof the facts and papers before him| whtn he whitewashed Ballinger Glavin has missing data, some of the | which had disappeared About Ballinger Ballinger hae been brought book on the Cunningham claime Glavis brought out the Wil ease, wherein Ballinger's perf jance war that Arged Againat Cunninghar cases clalme Glavia, on on paper t the thone alinilar him in think fraudulent,” atid fatand, of the Wils hext morning's paper decision of a judge that they are GILL’S PARTNER GETS FLOATER canon b a ° produced some of this on rin } are the The} carried the | = Se f FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Vurnitore Sore Closes Dally Dry Goods ato One-Piece House Dresses Attractively Priced econd Floor | rs The Negligec devoted to Women’s tion ‘| Apparel offer values Dre daintily-patterned The , brow interesting in pretty, practical and serviceable House se 4 for women, made up in variou | material colorings include na n, Copen hagen, tan and red e> Or e Copenhagen-blue OUT OF JAIL (Conciuded.y | well-known character south of Yeu ler way wi ma had been known to have fed up the registration headquarters a large number of " ileg Hy regletered during the as i Jackson st dakitis gave hin aw 76) King ot to at Marion n when they dows t Dete ve lowed the registr Joon at Weller rounded t |was urg jhand « pur jtective Marion placed Will Shields under arrest Frye Rushes to Ald. taken te Willlags furnt m of $2,000 ip until Gill's law part to bis aid. Frye ¢ arand jury with who testified Bhieldn lived at 511% at. A plea was made Shields had simply made a mistake in his address when tering Shields was released, but will arrested upon & warrant when he appears at the polls this | Eakins also will be arre CIVIL SERVICE ORGAN. FEARS _ two me uarters to a Sixth av Willie of hoboe Both | county bonds tn wan locked the shed nen jail the » © Itnewmen tha FOR SEATTLE The efforts of some of the candi dates who are seeking office in present local municipal election t disrupt the | which has been in vogue her jthe past few years, ix severely crit jelaed by the Civil Service News, weekly publication issued in Chi jeago. The weekly ts devoted t the problems of civil service al over this country In the iseue of February News the p of Seattle are warned of what, will bappen if cer civil service }tain men shduld by any chance be| successful fo the election, |maries for which occur today says, in part ‘As in all communities, so In S Jattle. There were those who hank er for a return to the system. Two men in official itione 1 Seattle, Hiram C. president of elty il one of the candidates for and Harry W. Carroll, candidate lfor re-election to the office of comp | troller, poentbly tk [thwart th law. Both lof these gentlemen were outspoken in thelr opposition to the estab |ishment of ctv!l service in Seattle | They have continued their oppos } tion, and at every opportunity jof these men have sought to vio "Tinte the and spirit the civil service law | “If the people of Seattle, and employes, cherish service ayetem, they heir hardest to de yor and Carroll for Seattle 4, good-by civil serv the prt 1 posi an an beir ctvt 1d t Gill for Where Courtesy Is Due ung woman who b standing in the alsie of a jmoved forward a few | gentleman saw her arose anc gave er hi at Without thank ing him she sat down and remark Jed to the woman sitting by her |never saw such lack of courtesy in Here I have been stand |my life ing for miles and no man had the Che steps to offer me a seat! ed Y 1 courtesy to th courtesy woman not have husband th r the nk my |The Beautiful Hair Of English Women K, abundant and gloss Engliad men are due to hair tonice and pooing. Ther there tha mn the h say Welling “lakes leaves the hair dull is a general belle @ water pu it te; tt the life ont” an brittle and col better ich tr an at lish women with halr and wholesome ave told me the dry shampooing sa week, They m of therox with fc root and xprinkle of this mixture on h the powder thor the hair. ‘They the danger af catch ing cold and the discomfort tha accompanies washing, rinsing an¢ drying the hatr This treatment keeps the hat Heht, fluffy and lustrous, and ie the only thing I know that will actually produce the growth of hatr \ color, clean plenty tribute three four ounces of orr! tablespoonful head; then bru oughly through thus also avol¢ it to thy Shields morning. |i the system of the | old spotls both citizens work and a a the ar belt atching 4 Some of | the Spring Dress Silks The in the in evidence in serges, diagonals Prominent are and new color Jackson that Firet Floor " wide Tussorah Shantung— ura orcelain-bl own in nat , dark nat Price $1.00 Motora Pongee—A y in natura v inches pigeon Price $1.50 heavy tussah ; } de s lizard-green ray 1 sper and casserole vara Heavy, Rough-silk Wide-wale Serge—This fabric is 3514 inches w be pas Je and may f the fe roses “yard had in llowing colors 1-rose artiche Copenh t ager Frederick & Nelson incorporeted 4) 1 Ferottare Dry Goods FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Furnitare sad Store Closes Daily a! Dry Geo t Basement Sal esroom. | in| mayor, Vomen's Dresses in black and white stripe, having waist made in leeves, high neck and turn-over e-gore skirt with inverted plait in back; also similar style, of light-blue and white checked th Dutch neck. Price $1.00. with One-piece House Dresses of good quality blue- striped percale and black-and-white plaid print with tucks across front and back, eeves with cuffs; skirt is gored to fit s inverted plait in bac, Price $1.50. Basement Salesroom House te Calico check and gray and irt-waist style with lor and fis Dresses in n ilar material W d-white men high colla oothly nd s and Children’s All-Over Gingham Aprons, 50c \N-Over Gingham If they are| 1 Children’s with Aprons, sizes 2 to 8 years, belt, long sleeves and pocket; 1 aterial is nd white or pink and w check ‘ tan and ) , belt, cuffs and pocket turn-over lar ite or are fin Basement Salesroom NewEmbroidery Flouncings ‘Edees and Insertions In for | | ‘I(Frederick & Nelson 1 INCORPORATED i x CLOTHES WASHED WITH Soaplake Soap HAVE NO SOAP ODOR OR SOUR SMELL CLEAN AND PURE ALL DEALERS—Sc t 1