The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 7, 1910, Page 4

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Wanted—An Opinion re “I do not expres on upon the controversy.” The controversy is the most momentous which has arisen in America since the close of the civil war. The sentence quoted was the ¢ lusion of President Taft's speech before the conservati at St. Paul. The issue is state versus federal cont natural resources, State control is favored by all th reys of the power companies, national control baz Ae Upon the final outcome, to be determined by the ad Pie ministration, by congre { perhaps by the courts, depenc i the welfare and happiness of a very large part of the ; of the United courteous, dignified, the leader nd upon such a controversy the president He was fair of the questi does not express an opinion cores in his presentation of all sides n, but he. of the nation, ended by leading nowhere. The doctrine mi The of state's rights was trampled under the feet { of a million 1 men half a century a Now it raises its ‘4 head and etches its withered hand to grasp the remaining ut natural resources belonging to the people and to turn them over to private monopoly non the subject. Perhaps the president has no opir ijt he does see the deep significance of the issue, Perhaps he (8 is honestly in doubt as to how the question, is to be solved. In ii either case he lost an opportunity in his speech at St, Paul to i impress the nation with his statesmanlike grasp of the probl 1 of our time, and align himeslf squarely with the forces that are bi] fighting for fairer conditions of life it Week by week we are swept nearer by organized govern : ment and organized business to the crisis which has been gathering for years a The St. Paul congress seethed with it. The president : speaks, but he “h »pinion to express.” = = Short letters from Star readers will be printed in this column when they are of sufficient general interest. You may write about anything or anybody so long as personal malice is not your motive. Editor Star—tI notice by a Seattle newspaper that one editor does not think the opposition to Judge Burke comes from the tax a payers in the republican party. Now I am a republican, my father e. voted that ticket, and my grand(athers on both sides were whigs. Lam also a small taxpayer; pay all | am able to pay, and more. Now if the editor means that all small taxpayers are for Pgindexter and the big ones for Burke, he may be right. If so, why? Simply be- cause Judge Burke represents the money powers. If that ts all he represents then the small taxpayers have the more reason to sup- port Poindexter. In the Editor’s Mail] A Woman Will Bear Pain Like ‘a Soldier, When a ' Man Would Kick Like a Steer Le ot |waid a candidate for office It's | |putrid, If I had it to do over 1} BY MARION LOWE, slams the door and goes off to hin| wouldn't be in It “Ohh, ob-b-h-bh-bht tb Wikia Was abd be bode age jclub, A man will not put up with) “Two men asked me to Come) aol so she kin use both hands ter) Startling fact 1 from ox. jie oat ta bin room ana: eroaned | pain or bother | down to see them, sald their clothes pack th’ baby.” amination papers of paptiy; Poor thing. A cold Is @ terrible Women show more courage about| weren't good enough to come to my Women's suffrag atate of | thing, when & men Gant the operating table. { don't now re-| headquarters. ‘Come abead,’ I told Pulchritudinous Platitude uffering to whic re bora, call a aingle inet flat f e when a wour | the _ ‘old clothes go as well am sith] nted und Oo | hate here. Ever see @ man like that? ;* At the city hospital,” sald Dr, F. refused jan an operation, but 1 hay n a good place 8. Hourns, chief medical inspector, They came, but the » for) statistician, “depends upon immi Gender shows wh a man i | "there is a woman who waa shot} jmany men doit, Ifa nan thinks | them was the health office. They| gration, emigration, birth rate and | mascul feminine ¢ uter, | through the stomach and a man whol it @ the thing to do, she makes up| said they'd get me six vote ch | death rate,”—Newns ttem A deacon is the kind of g was operated upon for possible ap her mind more quickly than @ man,| for $5 apt That's what you're) Christian pendicitis, Both are serious cases and makes lens fuss about It up against in politics,” Since 1792 the government has| Loulx XVI. was gel 4 during | ‘There isn't a moan out of the wom In private practice I have noticed! And ‘twas for this our forefathers | coined 5,841,863,030 coins, worth | the French revolutior lan and the man nearly breaks up the difference more than in the how | fought and died? $4,028,372,396.33. pital, w re ow have a large pro-| {the whole ward with his groans ] It in! portion of emerg |. “It is @ peculiar thing how men oles | Two wandering Thesplans ap and women behave in sickness,” the in the ordinary sickness that the! ouched « small town in the Mid-| with that astronomer | doctor went on, “A man won't stand man shows what @ great big baby) ai, west. One of them remained; “What's the matter?” chronte pain, If he has toothache, he can be. It takes the whole fam-| at the town pump, while the other| “He nisiated all the time in talk-| ni he'll storm around, and in a short ily to wait on him |wtarted up to the lone hotel to dis-|ing about the stars, while my inter. booby” by not Jorder swears he'll have the blank A woman will do the work for! cover the current rates for theatri-|@st centered tn the chorus Japan annexed Hibten out, ead Gaus &. ee the hounebold under more pain than| oy riot Emperor Withe about tae DA. F. 8, BOURNS, City’s Chief Medical Inspector. a man bas when he thinks he ts) sick thing Ever see a man Iike that? | “Well,” said the former as the| Funny) other straggied back with a de |Jected air, “did they say they had| |any special terms for actors? You, terms of thirty and sixty | will endure pain for days and say | nothing about it | ain le a Habit, } “I don't know whether It is due to a psychological difference are used to bearing annoyance and| whether it ts acquired. 1 rather| saying nothing. If things go wrong think endurance of pain with wom | with a man, he slaps on his hat , tlos save the progressives, and the) {ll bet a dendhead ticket against a é TO FIT THE CRIME way the jatter party ts growing|@oughnut you entered the town | | makes ‘om think they've been a lit-| #tatlon house instead of the hotel enough to go to bed on is a habit, All their lives they a | Down in Southern California, the | Southern Pacific windjammers have | days t ‘ got Ed Scripps read out of all par-| | “Great Caesar! Let's beat it. | | | | Ue bit “off fn thelr reading. New York City has 4,766,183 poy o y hi 766,783 pop nlation, but just think of little old London snooping along with 7,429 740 A new vaccine treatment has been discovered in France, said to cure typhoid, Two-Minute Vaudeville BY FRED SCHAEFFER. ee Thud--Say Slap I got a confession to make Oh, are you the crook who's been swiping the morning's milk off my front porch? 0 you. Thud—No; thie ts something awful serious. I don't know bow you'll take it, But I have to square myself Slap—-Well, go ahead. But be careful; I'm mighty quick tem pered Thud—I know you are. But, on the level, this was a mistake, an innocent mistake, It concerns your family, and that makes it all the worse. J wish I'd died before ft happened Slap-—Tell me what it was. i'm getting nervous, What was it? Thud—Well, the other eventug-—-Tucsday—it was good and dark already—I came to your houne “A man's notion of lightenin’ a) and Clark exposition | woma: “Population, | tor “ll never go to a show again The government coined 60,068 “divine right of king < » x ee 4 THE STAR--WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1910. STAR DUST Josh Wise Says: | dollars commemorating the Lew burden ter carry th’ par-| Eliot left « dren to mourn his ¢ sald Census Direc Hint Durand and Dr eblet | . Another Classification, STRIVING TO PLEASE Nice children’s hair with. Frowsy Woman «adler shampoo soap, iaay. Handy to shampoo your Don't want any. My children never get sham Peddler tooth combs? Something else I could sell you, then, lady? Any fine Victrola XII Mahogany, $125 Victrola —the instrument that has created sucha sensation in the musical world. It has a tone-quality such as is 3 Possessed b; no other instrument. It brings to you the ice music of every kind, richer, sweeter, and more — than it was ever heard before. ome in any time and hear th: ic fostruments eaten Vietrois XI $125, Viens “* ’ and $25 Or c $100. ee roth Be eg styles of the Victor, $10 to Brings a ONE DOLLAR viet vow ee Victrola XVI Mahos Quarte “ircassian Dist ributers Hiking Preific Const _ Yate Pacific Const Dealers te Mach 1406 Second A ¥. Nineteen Stor Near Union St, Seattle inet ae Pacific Const, How much taxes does a man have to pay or dodge before ho | Slap—And I wasn't at home! is worthy to be taken pote of? 3. R. WAGONER Thud—No; you weren't at home, dut I thought you were. So I aciemmdinaath TEE Ss t Sniiaenls butted right in without ringing Siap—Ah, hawaa! Proceed. ] THE COMMON MAN. Thud—Expecting to find you there alone. Well—I encountered E Seer eae a dark figure in the gloom, and not knowing it was your wife, I | J iu j jap-—Hound! nd she = hile the highest bow themselves to fate. Thud—She sald: “At last my prayers are anawered! He docs @ endless throng of common men remains. } not smell of whisky tonight! ‘Pine: Inivenitgeee;: princes ‘are stricken down, ‘Thin was in 1900, when women ruled the. rece BE haba! Good joke on my wife Hobahaha And, at the last, their star of glory wanes; The low browed individual in the dock had been arraigned as 5 Upon their brow Death sets his icy crown. wife beater. o_o Yet, through it all, the commor man remains. “Lsentence him to geta divorce,” thundered the judgeess,in her i stern treble, “and then marry Reno Kate, the champion heavy- The cycles speed; kings are enthroned in strength; weight pugiistesa of the world.” j And yet, however grand may be thelr reigns, ——- - so iA They, too, are called away from life at length, j kd And yet, through all, the common man remains. } ; rhe mon of power, whens worts was wire vows || PRIVATE LOCKED ROOMS : Of men and nations, some great end to gain, 4 Wilt feel in time the King of Terror’s darts i rain ome fs, paeagehalaigony Eggers trunks, ete. a 7 rased iy IMO, k And yet the common mea they blessed remain ites eee ae oF ry, ay ly, F, As in our reasoning we stop and pause, ——_——— anne 6 rR 8 As we these mighty figures view and scan, pre saat = sf a tale bat out I iS forect eaeak A a We ask why it is so? It is because * S ate to brag, can’ jer sauerkraut my mu 4 Oa Shall Deki lie! ace ¢+ Tiga EG Buy or Sell Real Estate. Business Chances. See! tor used to make” ~THOMAS FP. PORTER | Classified Page. “Dot ine nodéings, Osgar; my mutter’s dill pickles remain alvays a — —- _ - -— ~ green in my memory.” ignuly ocratched or Sotied in Manding | : We hold this sale in order to close out about twenty-five Sample Beds that have be- ® @ come slightly scratched or soiled; they are mostly of the finer grades, but we offer |} some of the cheaper numbers, too; most of them are marked as low as HALF PRICE. | You will also find many good bargains in handsome Brass Beds. | 9 {| NOW $6.00— i ag ti a as tare ca By A. G. E. MORGAN see by the picture as that it is well ; brace. with filling I, | Ten Million Men Have Died Trying to Make Black Failure Into rods, the posts areQd / . a i : 5 heavy and sub White Success by Drinking Liquor —So Will YOU! In THREE stantial, angle iron | 7 : lr 5 sides. finished ia ) DAYS, Without Hypodermic Injections or Any Disagreeable Feat- e enamel. | + : s in Weis nptoe | ures, the Gatlin Treatment Cures the Liquor Habit—and Sobriety NOW $7.75— | Leads to HEALTH and*WEALTH This is a regular } | $15.50 Bed ; a very | 6 O FREE himself from appetite suc sy aven’ 3 : | LE petite such as you haven't had ; NOW $5.50—This is a 1 ar — sr Fae | the chain of remorse | for years and with an ambition that $11.00 Bed; it is always a good cohtintious. posts | of failure, a moderate | will not allow you to be idle until i selling pattern, strongly braeed with | the filling rods are drinker drank more} you have reached success. heavier than deeply —and ‘found —, 1 re double filling rods, joined with or usual; angle iron | that he had foted SA aihet ” He Just THREE DAYS of your namental chills, angle fes, | Sides, finished in | si i . E : ; time. No hypodermic injections, no 1enta angle iron sides, | /o0™ eget tried to accomphsh the impossible poisonous drugs, no substitutive finished in blue, white and gold | bronze. went pages + cys adi stimulants, no possibility of failure ie iiperormcensenanseg “ie " _ - } ‘ ” as" | to cure. ° | ness and make strength. eee 3 | High Grade Brass and Bronze Beds hag es liriaee Siking— | ies, fier en oe ae 4 | moderate, steady, periodic any | Condition, if you can, and come to { : o kind of alcoholig liquor, brings the the Gatlin Institute at once. A legal Fine Brass Beds |Vernis Martin Bronze || same result of alcoholic poisoning. | contract will be executed to cure |i} alta tae , ‘ : : . | his poison is cumulative, causing | YoU_of the liquor habit in THREE | / $ 83 a ie , = $30.00 et ‘4 Bronze Red $15.75 | 1 peculiar kind of nervousness ex- | DAYS. If you are not cured, and & $ 75.00 B Sed $50.00 | $30.00 Br coal Bed San OD | tending to every vital organ of the satisfied with the cure, on leaving $100.00 B ted $87.00 | $32.50 Bronze Bed $16.25 || body, and to the brain, which knows | the institute, ask for the fee you $ 65.00 B sed 8 | $21.50 Bronze Bed $10.75 |) no other sedative than more alco-| Paid, and it will be immediately re Ba 4 Bed $76.75 | $19.00 Bronze Bed $ 9.50 |) hol. This is why the drinker con-| turned. The institute is a perfectly $ 78.00 Reuss od e as 09 $1 50 Bronze Red $ 7.75 |) tinues to drink-—why he can’t stop. | 4ppointed sanitarium, dices : | ron $ 8.50 | Come to the Gatlin Institute to- The Gatlin Home treatment for SZ sy | day! Take the Gatlin treatment for| those who cannot cony ently All the Credit . . i. , of conveniently After | You Want fs sanrsXte The THREE DAYS. At the end of the | come to the institute. ( ie | i y aw ton ff January j /aue comPLeTe Howard | third day, go home with a sy stem Call or write for books of particu- We Will Be / nome MPAN Cierdiat freed of every trace of alcoholic poi- | lars, copies of contracts to cure and | IW 0 | son and craving liquor no more than | other information. I i nate Located at £ A Heat . 4 n iation. Institute located “ THE Grot oe : eater de craved the first drink you ever | at 434 Queen Anne Ave., Seattle, a seattle sronen ae Gives More — ; go home at the end of the third | Wash. Local and long-distance tel and ano Par Cane Heat With || day with strong, steady nerves,| ephone, Queen Anne 2249, Ind. Fifth Second Ave., at Union Bt without a tremor in them; with an | 7193, Less Fuel Sturdy Apparel | prices For the Growing Youngsters School clothes will require special attention from now on The first essentials to be considered are serv ice qualities, in which our boys’ and young men’s apparel is amply sup- plied. He will demand that they fit and have style, These, too, are strong points. Another the moderate is Open an Account With Us We advise you to buy this way, for you are assured of satisfaction—more so than by any other means. You will find our in accordance with quality always, absolutely no higher than elsewhere. : prices

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