The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 24, 1910, Page 4

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: aneraa earner BE aS MOTE ATT I AOR ) i by TIT aga Pub eye > THE STA shing Cheerless Thanksgiving Today Where Justice Dropped Her Scales| ( 8th of Tune, 1910, the Goddess of Justice that crowns the facade of the It w ust after court had been adjourned for the day. Some striking minet w ic conspiracy, or ric or what not. People were coming down f t room 1 the scales fell. They fell sheer down to the pavement, with € tter I »s it was rust. Perhaps the action of the wind did it. Nobody really believe there wa hing supernatural about the falling of the scales of ju Neverthele the incident, happening as it did, took on the aspect of some thing ight with sinister significance To the superstitious is seemed a solemn People said that the very Goddess of Justice herself was outraged past all by the things that were done in her name in Westmoreland county, hout some reason that folks said this. If the goddess had been ood goddess, with a heart in her mailed breast and a brain be eyes, she would most likely have done much as did the senseless goddess. She would probably have dashed her scales to the earth in token of giving up the whole business as a bad job. 4 For certain it is that strange things are done in the name of justice in West moreland county, ne men have been murdered there. her name drunken deputies riding at night have tired on women and ¢ il dren in their tents In her name women and children have been ridden down by state troopers In her name men have been denied the right to carry the American flag on the id in her name the Irwin field striker is required to get an official permit to attend a funeral yway, whatever the reason was, the scales fell. And today the goddess stands th her empty hand uplifted as if in mute protest against a condition under which a few mine owners and a railroad can shape the policy of a county and make serfs of thousands of pec in that county. For the combined coal compa nies and the Pennsylvania railroad OWN Westmoreland county They own the} courts of the county. The courts may not realize this, but be sure the coal] barons and Pennsylvania rail | And because Westmoreland county is thus owned thousands of people of the Irwin field must spend this Thanksgiving day, not only without Thank giving | cheer, but without even the common comforts of life ; The poor wretches who are tenting on the Westmoreland hills today can well conceive g rd reasons why the ( ess of Justice dropped her scales. ~ TODAY IN HisT “And for These Blessings—” pie November 24 in the Tennessee sacred must not be criticised ¢ the bulwarks of our » sheet anchors of o they do Is to be accepted id magnates do. be pontoon bridge at Brown's Ferry, it split Gen, Sher man’s army ip Joe Hooker, ainingly by all ent people 1 impeccable is anything wrong in anything t do ent about it, know that the good, wise courts will one day correct themselves. who had been Judge John McCall of the United States court at Jackson, Tenn., statt remove ¢ Standard O11 Co. from a danger of fines amounting the ne to $29, by as decision a day or so ago. out mountain to make a r es and discriminations |® fight, and draw ot on EACH SHIPMENT, | tention while Sherr | ready for the real ba that In such matters as re in railway rates the Standard ts guilty but only on EACH SETTLEMENT with railroads. This will greatly encourage the government pre rs; as it | !n for a real instead of a fake fight will simplify their work tmmen and it will be a at relief to na Ferry bri Standard Of! and the trusts. yielded to the sudden fre The rebaters will now let thelr accounts run unsettled forever, | Out mountain, the avoiding any final settlement, just as many country merchants do, | Ae,” would & and thus escape all guilt | ory at all, in | | | They may thus escape all competition, also, as the shipper with | Of the most pict & rebate can kill the one without The government will be easy tn it trust will commit the crime of making bates, they are no lon mes at all! O wise and upright judge! A Daniel come to judgment! A Daniel! knowing that no wise nts, and as to re Judge McCall {s irremovable; and serves for life. | Fuss Over a Mutton Chop. Long life to Judge McCall and all just judges! | They were talking about eating They are the sheet anchor of our well-being sparingly of turkey at the Thanks they must not be criticised. giving feast, and the discussion Smile, damn you, smile! passed to I d the prohibition Don't knock! against the use « That re is me said Dr Simon Flex he famous expert | on child's diseases, and }) Rockefe institute || who was wont to ot meat at all a prounsly after t t, Hop uldn't resis ncheon of chops. And as he munched his _} chops, a violent storm came ud = \denly; a blue light filled the room Come! Let us take our prated prayers, review them and examine; Are they because our feast is full while others share a famine Are they because we ride the road which oth k and shov Are they because our walls are wide while others crowd a hc Are they because our limbs are swathed, while some are rawe weather? Or are they only for the gifts we all may share t th Thanks are not thanks which only make another's want our measure, Or only be another's pain to gauge a selfish pleas Thanks not thanks whose words are stones to pelt a lesser brother, | Or that we make our blessedness the burden and then a terrific clap of thunder shook the building. Hopkins, pale and shaky, laid Thanks are not thanks for tender palms that othe down his knife and f What a Thanks are but thanks for such good gifts as all ha , er, | fuss.’ he muttered, ‘over a mutton Give us to know the larger Day which 4 Thanksgiving, Save for the Universal Feast which spreads for all the livin Room for the Dessert Give to pray the larger prayer where quicker It looked as if little Willfred at Give us to scorn the captured spoil which asks wh wt r, | bat there would be no Give us to toil toward that gain which all ma a gether urkey for lunch on the Frida —— mm STAR DUST you better stop The old Mayflower Puritans had) 1645, Wednesday, 6 long faces, because they thoug 16 Wednesda 6 the devil would get them if they nesday, June 2 Thur smiled |day, December 18 Their descendants have round ess 1 In 1623 a day of fasting and ’ no The Puritans liked pumpkin ple.| prayer during a drought. in the lan chie demu Soars Now an't get full benefit out | wageac . EE ioe foes, 00h fom wat of a quarter segment of with-lto a Thanksg « celebration by I'm 'membering ld Wilfred out stretch his mouth. Thi8|the coming of rair " took a piece of “¢ stretching gradually broadened out — a < » fark,” aj the face until t head became} a eiest Thar lai round , + sli 1 The round f waa evolved by amation was celebrated in tural ect but it w the York, In a r na put i as th pie that was selected. Also pump-|" - a e D in kin pie the missing link | , , - | ‘“ : r 1 NORMAN Thanksg g, Uncle Rastus? “Pet PD aoe ‘ : Tis an 8 hit’s jes’ ‘cordin’ to ‘ rN age Rv ) € an ha H de tur Ef he’s quiet an’ don » sea in a ship that turns roost too htgh, I'll spen’ de day! qyoy - naan 1 hat marvelous at home but noisy and I 7 ¥ t Bel Mik r an makes any dey's no tel ih h al ; in’ whar I'll foteh up in fed the : bita | or v , € € . at a ind of f 1 », and|vented by a w Ye ian, and your 7 giving ner ; Look him up in Webster r°26,| now for the t time We go to the old homestead for! Vavyvinium Macrocarpon 1s the|ioe s towed to sea by @ Thanksgiving because we know! polite name of the bum ae td he point is reached grandma will give us something | be 0d umping Is to be don to be thankful for. 7 Loc = Into ® stroular chamber | ; : about 10 feet deep and wide and Thar in a ee ould be thankful for|opens the valves, letting in sea aad en, e Wertedie os Ay8 | small rc i the landlady.| water to one side of the bottom blag és cae dinning ve to be ald the board-|‘The welght of the water capsizes kh ye on the tiny turkey the seow. As it turns over and] Mtlated THE STAR—THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1910, R EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE @ 22S 30005° Adeline Dunlap, Girl Reporter, Becomes a Star in Tragedy, Which Gives Her Joyous Thanksgiving ..,,"095" s¢nyz"c0r9', Home Compas * sory with g ding,” olf many happy ending.” What tn ing is very much like a THE ordinary user of tob ke Ita 1CCE cr of salf knowing when day. And it's no secret that he 5 about 48 o ot tre is plenty down in front of the theatre entrances ght, Miss Dunlap had hankered for the 6 o + spotlight « he wore pinafor or whatever it is that Denver] youngsters wear She took her first leap in George Ade's merry play and without think | Garden didn’t NO, dear “Constant Reader ™Arry that rkish pasha, She's either doing some tall fibbing or hej « or he's some tall running. doing ing of anything but every third TEN THOUSAND good uns built a @ ‘ond 380 mile fourth rung om the ladder, he's! stretching clear across the state, in one hour. Gee, what sociale pretty near the top now © 0 °o Miss Dunlap personally won't ad mit this, She is really wholesome ly modest | Hut she ts so good that she will e . ¢ 0 never have to go back to girl re-| ATSURA, Jap premier, avka $200,000,000 for more battle porting. She also has ‘that mueh| ships, and all the poor common Japanese folk» have to do fe te to be thankful for today | raise the money. FAYE’S com et ia monkeying t see it or ame. it, we don't scare worth a cent, tt bot a8 we ¢an't a LONDON IS Cutting Prices Deeper Than Ever Silk Petticoats Worth $5.00 $2.98 Black and Colored Silk Petti- coats; three good models. All the SHE WAS A GIRL REPORTER ONCE. } | part so Intensely exacting! | + & role \ Worth $1. 3. Young Woman Less Than 30 abe dee —— Saar ate al $1.50 to $3.00 Finds Her Pace in Great tmmortatize. | Play—-She Will Eat Her| Jacquelin, that's Madame X, ts Turkey Today With a Real bP ps Bp ay nt apare ag = p C Spirit of Being Thankful to *? @ game. And s i iderately dies in the last the Kind Fates. act adies down In front rfec good cam and the men for a high-ball or The best House Dress you ever saw for the money. A special lot of twenty dozen Gingham, Percale and Flannelette One-Piece House Dresses, well made and perfect fit- ting. Other stores get $2.00 and BY JOHN COPLEY bric handk Adeline Dunlap, who i» the star elther hurry otf “Madame at the M the e next car he according to In atre this week la celebrating « on and condition of « vitude Thankegiving very much the ame Bat. Adeline Dunlap, the lady who today as she has other Thanks has created this misery by her £ ngs for the past six or seven genul ac ability jen't the | yoarn ennt bit de Only she is more thankful In the big dressing room that hes ‘ lain colors and changeable effects wat year she waa ® headline atthe mirror with 17 incandescent $3.00 for dresses not as good. All i t mm tho ¢ m clreuit ishts over it-—the star room—I sizes from 34 to 46. as well as black. All sizes, © even found something tn found hb al arly alive and ville to be thankful f erful afte ng gampingly not ar before that she was thank- (five minutes before . virl » George Ade’s “College | town, Widow.” Sh? was « girl reporter on one of Bat she je a a how the dally newsepapers in Denver Ah, so much more to be thankful) Ordinarily that would be quite nt, in my mind, to condemn and, but Mis Dunlap was nd of a girl reporter that is knows when to quit Tailored Waists 98Cc High - Grade Tailored Waists, made of pure Irish linen, madras, gingham, embroidered lawn and other materials. White and all cok and figures. And «tar of Madame x ma that has been rarely oqual in intense power, and the pame! one e Long Black Coats $4.98 Full-Length Black Kersey Coats, nicely finished with silk military raisin and an oyster, all in one bite. | would ask, when a perfectly evident I'm saving my neck dewmert.” | noodle soup was Or, “Is this suppose t jad?” Or, The National Bird. Do you call t My turkey, ‘tis Pik he young wife was determined to make her husband properly — — a~ thankful before he became a hope | ane m4 ri Sweet “feet Saks of cranberry Of thee I sing I love thy neck and wings, Legs, back and other things Hail to our king! braid, All sizes up to 46, These are worth $10.00 each. ors; also stripes, chec All sizes from 34 to 44. LONDON GETS OUT In Three Short Weeks—21 Days One store quits business entirely and the following lines will be closed out: Rugs, Carpets, Stoves, Dishes, Warm Underwear and Stock soup tureen was nkégiving dinner, | Ke tag on it rything was rkey These Identified the Turkey Senator Tillman was talking yg he ey Pt al ais ‘Givag aus ty toes cle ings, Dress Goods, Silks and Notions, Trunks and Suit Cases, Curtains. At a dinner in the country,” he | pie . R sald, the turke was very large Hubby never afterward asked his large enough, tn fact, to feed easily| clever wife any | t que — ~la— A ear ore al We caceas mame ee eee Men’s Goods, Wo- the table. | Foot Rule for Dyspepsia ? the farmer host car huge bird, 60 eyes watched ed the Dr. Pepsin met a former chroni¢ men’s Suits, Skirts and Coats, Shoes, Tin, Toys, Etc., Etc. patient on Thanksgiving afternoc ell, well id Dr. Pepsin, how does It happen you don't send ome any me I thought you puld need m put 1:30 p. m. to ay, anyway. Are you poisoning elf with patent medicine, or yu Joined the food faddists? ther,” said the lover of the t#, formerly chronic patient ile worked on turkey and cranberries today as well as “co Crockery—Carpets Curtains—Blankets hungrily, But the bright look of hunger in those 60 eyes was suc ceeded by a dull look of horror mmy, the farmer's young piped loud and sbril ma, that’s th old sore Today’s Styles Today New Arrivals in Strictly Tailored Suits Made Him Properly Thankful A newly married man who was accustomed tc unch with much . . . rliblet men than be, bad formed rout hoot yoserday Ie thie 1 With Plain Skirts, Values Up to $45 cal ung wife's cooking table ¥v « - Ages * me ‘ : $27.50 30 Days nected, » that they may be thrown tle WW WO {}}| RK 4 ae Rest Gold Crowns a4 Friday and Saturday we t extremely welk bs | JU : 1 who visit Now York Hest Bridgework, per tooth, . $4 favored special in strictly ta 1 ts. Material is8 7 : ‘ t Fitts pode . aaa, et fine finished worsted, Skinn { ; Mite ' hi « a I h av and Hest Silv k ng 506 1 cha ni around In bMS) 36th st., will gota peck at Parisian |f Full Plates $5 and $8 inches lon ni-fit skirts the of Pr chamber Ike a squirrel in a wheel, | { sd of Amerionn pustness archi- | Best Piat $8 effects. ( navy, black y or black with finding himself at last standing up-|tecture. ‘The architecture will be ge ine hat tie ee shad ie A fort New York ried baad gale wee . , rena MS, use nothing but the best nadow stripes. A fo I y our Ne 14 geaine S| Bee ideas recently’ } oes material that's made buyer enables us to offer s values, but there and chain wit som 1 by the A joan Institute Painless extraction free, are only 50 suits in tl " you must come took 20 or the f hitectu The front will be All work guaranteed 12 years early if 1 takes only nutes, of italian arble pnd the pilasters . ee be tasHionan ait Striking values at $27.50 the famous Paquin establishment » tho new sleeping |in the Rue de la Palx, P: been put on the The e floor will b ‘are 21 feet Ohio Dentists Our Liarel Credit Plan Haven & Hartfor@|high, with a batcony along the |ff 307/4 Pike St., over Ow! Drug Co between New York and Bostod.| back, In the rear of the bullding ” ieueeenas thie 6 . Is always at your service w thus making Each car is divided into se¥ep | be an Italian garden, modeled is : the buying and paying easy for y apartments, upartment dom | after that of another famous shop ; tains two chairs and a table be jin Paria. CARP PPP Jes a brass t 4. Opening off one | | MBXAMBTHYLENETRTRA aide, fe. jtmaller room, contalning | ier ricag call atte Viretous. be, ot" | one of cha many. vaiuabie: ts Eastern Outfitting Co, Inc. city aa Gk bat tee i ee ree 1332-34 Second Av., Near Union St “Seattle’s Reliable Credit House” Tonio in acthm, quick In results Drug Stores SSS Some of the apartments are |

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