The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 30, 1910, Page 4

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THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1910. Published Co. Press. Publishing United The Star Member of Daily by History and Prophecy In 1802 Grover Cleveland was borne to the White House on a tidal wave of good will, but he had no remedy for the ¢ vils of his time. He signed an unpopular tariff bill, divided his party, and prepared the way for a revolutionary presidential struggle in 1896. That is history. : In 1908 William Howard Taft was also swept into the White House on a wave of good will, but, like Cleveland, he had no remedy for the evils of his time, He, too, signed an unpopular tariff bill, and divided his party into warring fac- tions. That is history repeated, When his administration faced its second congress—a con gtess carried in by an angry wave of protest against the re he had a great opportunity actionary spirit of thoserin power He might have redeemed the failure of his first two years, and made himself in fact the leader and the hope of the nation But he had neither the courage nor the vision, He accom- plished no great reform, but merely widened the breach be tween those who wanted to stand still and those who wanted to go on. So he prepared the way for another revolutionary presidential struggle, one of the greatest the country has ever seen, in 1912 That is prophecy. Pension Mothers? Why Not? Dr. Anna I. von Sholly of New York City, a member of the Babies’ hospital staff, says “The state should support mothers for two years after the birth ef each child.’ Of course Dr. Sholly is advocating more pa’ the dear conservatives shudder—but that’s about to do—SHUDDER Why not pension mothers become mothers; and there are decidedly more poor rich mothers? Dad, the common worker, is the busiest man on this earth about at which can find nalism, all they especially the wives of poor men who mothers than the time he finds out there is going to be another mouth to feed and saves to pay the doctor and the trained nurse, and to re of mother while she is sick ough so that there is ean't save on the s y well taken care of, one And it is a certainty that be much left after the new one appear If mother and baby are not at least f or both will die—and good citizens a So why not jon the wife of Becomes a mothe Why not make {t possible to give the youngster a proper start fm life, as well as to preserve mother’s health, for SHE ts the REAL bone and sinew of the land ‘Tis not Mrs. Clarenc country great; but it Is man each time that she Ineblood, who makes the ith, who produces the babies 1 stout girls, and Who MUST work of the future ts to be done. work, for this ie a workaday world, Mrs. who grow into brawny-armed men a BE PRODUCED if th And there will always Having the Blues Having the blues is when you can’t see the brightest sunshine, When a baby’s prattle annoys you. When pretty women look ugly When fine looking men appear as dudes When the wisdom of Solomon fails to interest When real jokes don’t make you smile A severe cold surely, surely develops {nto pneumonia ff you have the disease called the blues. It affects mentally and physically. The man with the blues goes early to bed—or gets drunk; then the blues are bluer "Tis not a pleasant subject, this of ae, but {t's one well Worth thinking about; for realizing t » blue devils have fm their tentacles, you may (if you have nerve) use your long knife or your big gun on them. Then you'll be fiercely, or better, sensibly, happy OBSERVATIONS MEXICO’S army numbers 37000 for Vates there is an officer men, and every ten prt DIAZ, president of Mexico, gets $50,000 a year, and just now he's earning every cent of it. NATIONAL debt of Mexico Is $2$0,000,000, half of it payable fn silver. WINNER of the Santa Moniea anto race was sed = and kissed by two women at once, according to news pictures Beemed to like it, too. But, really, it must be awful embarrassing, Bot to say distressing. HAMMERSTEIN wants Tetrazzint anyone but him. Hog! enjoined from singing for CHAMPION JACK JOHNSON Is « tion and loss of memory. Mental ov us, if persisted in. wn with nervous prostra- work will get the best of VARIETY even in butchers. One on First av, when told by us that meat prices had come down, said, “You're a liar!” Another one, on Second ay, said, “Ha, ha, ha!” Both were correct.” — a ee cen One Story; And Another There is some “class” to being ;does not come from the injured limb able to pay @ $1,200 breakfast check | alone, an if it were two bits, the way Clar- | “I have four married sisters and ence Mackay, president of the Pos |one married brother in the city, but tal Telegraph company, did recently | they've got their own families and in San Francisco, after entertaining | their own troubles. What will the 8 few friends—that that is only one |old people do?” story ‘That is the question which keeps Emile Parrat, who has been house-| the big biue eyes open all night and keeper and money earner for his|beats in Emiles brain until dawn two old parents, is now lying help-}comes, It is a question which must less in a San Francisco emergency | be answered, whether the five other e Insurgents Bust up Boss’ Machine and Drive | Stand Patters up Salt Creek---Hot News Item But What Do All These Words Mean, and Why?—Star His- torian Gets Busy and Tells His Readers, Why do they call them insur 7 ——- I STAND PAT} the origin of some of those. The Star historian has hunted "i as that stand patter and tn surgents both grew up around the) houndartes, THE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE # IN LITTLE Ol NEW YORK, Nov before Magistrate O'Connor joring, afraid | lsh peddier, who had been arr for some trivial violation of the traf.| Contempt of court for refusing to} the magistrate like By Mail, out of elty—1 year, $3; 6 months, $1.60; 1 month, 26e. Entered at ; Wash, * AS KeCOnd clase matter, feattle, ) NEW YORK unsympathetic faces, then up at the He a ie again | HER MODESTY, | “Do you read Browning? the young man Not in the original,” modest girl asked replied the 2 BY NORMAN, 40 MODERN VERGION, “l von. tell,” Why! he repeated in the why!” exclaimed the as-|!4¥ee of scribblers all re mind us | ke ‘or! habby aly - a | Zesex Market Court abby, *HIV-| tonished O'Connor, “What is the|,, That perhaps we'll be the crea, He was a poor Jow anlan of Gat If perchance Are you aware leave behind us nat I ean send you to prison for| moving pleture plays, “I knew you would be here 4 Hints ‘for gents? And stand patters? *) fic rules. He had never been ar-|sive your name?” He fixed the Un! eyoning,” wald Little broth thts Rvery little while politica coins rested before, and he clasped and | bappy peddier with a stern glance Intuition?” asked 4 ar, some new words that everybody | unclasped bis trembling hands as| The latter only spread out his hands| ters fellow big aly accepts without (hinking what they | fi] [he looked ap at the fuc | ®ppealingly : | “No, observation mean, There are a lot of them, | What {s your nan asked| "I von't tell,” he reiterated as| come ‘on the You alw | though it waa all that he could say evenings Sis refuses onions at dinner.” " An interpreter came to hin rescue von't tell,” was the answer. | - nt, that was what it sounded|"Your honor,” he said, “this man| Mexico produces @ better” unconfirmed ate }has been doing the best he could. |‘ rumors” than “any personality of Mark Hanna, Some Magistrate O'Connor fiushed.| He cannot speak English, but he| other country on earth, of the Ohio people who objected How dare you make such an an-|knew you were asking his name,| “ r, | ordered only two to Hanna's rule called themsely " he manded as he glowered| and he haa been telling it His} and you've brought me four” oe insurgents, as the word was fre at the prisoner name {x 1. Wontell. His full name! “Yes, sah, but I reckon you'll fisg tn everybody's mind then, by He'll not tell hie namo,” said|{# Isaac Wontell, and he lives on| three of ‘em ain't no good.” used a lot in the war with § the copper. “He mado the same| Christie st. His Heense i made out ee and just before, ywer at the station.” jto I Meron ant that is why he |i Sofie fearful leaders came to Your name, sor, your name!"| gave his name that way Hanna to urge him to work for a| demanded O'Connor, “Telj your| l#aac paid a small fine, and went Diamonds onCredi modification of the tariff, *They| name at once!” | out looking almost as bewildered as You eet the geote on the ae showed that the public was getting The Jew understood little Eng-| ever. ag Ore excited about it and that the party ww! Hah, but sufficient to know what BWELRY 9, was in danger uae ting politically, It was} was being asked of him. He looked| Danes at Dresmiand tonight we eee Hanna simply laughed. | firwt applied In asi to thone mem-| around at a cirele of puzzled and! - . We'll nd pat,” he sald |bers of the republican party in New a This phrase Rtand pat" in one Sprnar }York state who adhered to Conk wee “ ee — _ which older inhabitants will re St ERROR RRS Sha ling and Platt, Those who favored member as being used in a card/to polities was first used in 1845/ the administration of Garfield were e eo game called “poker,” which has|and borrowed in this country from| known as half-breeda,” been played occasionally in Seattle/the duke of Wellington, who ap-| In 1876 the term “dark horse” was|f and other citte | plied it to English polities first applied to Rutherford B.1ff - The word r” origt The word “fic ©” as applied to| Hayes, just before the republican nated in the early part 1e nin®/the illegal voter, is also of English | national convention teenth century. Etbri Gerry, | origin. | Some one, somewhere, many vice president of the United States,| The “boas” was derived | years ago sent a defeated candidate jelected im 1812, caused first | from the rly New Ameterdam|up @ pleasant imaginary stream |i es e * | division of sta into congressional| Dutch settlers, Baas in Duteh|called Sak river, but the author | eee cnet nceerenme ines, ce oa) maa Scere re Beginning to Arrive in order that his party} as applied to pollites was first used The term “Jingo” was first appli At succeed |by Henry J. Raymond in the New| politically to Mlatne during hin ca | Today the word gerryman ‘e| York Times in 1856, app to| palgn for the presidency, owing to |i | , to arrangements of bounda|Isaiah Rynders, who was at the his extreme Americanism and ries of election districts so con-|head of the eDmocratic marching | patriotiem, } trived as to secure an unfair ad- | clubs Jinge the name of a Chinese vantage to the dominant part Immediately following the Civil ress, a veritable amazon who The word “machine” as Hed} war numerous political phrases in the year 204 A.D. His ne mem ere ~—elsuch as “bulidoring,” and “bar'l of ry records that Empress Jingo lmoney” were first used. ked @ great deal but accomplished is one of the | little STAR DUST | Maud. ! “THEN IT HAPPENED” | (Our | The term “stalwa) Daily Discontinued Story.) | “They Never Will Be Missed.” tant | ed an) law consider Cleveiand Plain Dealer joke She cannot while the time | funny any more, | By fjeling on the ap an it used to be in ancient Egypt | But when it comes to raking bay. | | Hee haw! Then Maudio's In It A man's @ man—till he sells bis} | ote or pre unfaithful to his wife. | Alaska hed an earthquake, but it - | preeptibly loosen the grip of | Gusxenheim | Fifteen million dollars of frac | tional United States paper money tn | | denominations from 2 to 60 cents te | The intres the bottom of was now at In the opal half light \ ee te : é he discerned the much-cor.| Pretenders to thrones are about a8} sai outstanding against the United jeted treasure . The ar plentiful in Europe as democrat) states treasury. Most of it ts held, |Im | made it look like o gas range, mee ever DEN, 2, preWnnany Se believed, as curiositios hat is what it was—a treasure might do som to curb th pacer rooms |practice of pretending more thai | The diver at once had risions ot} MBBS hours a day The Prussian government plans to establish itinerating housekeep ing schools. Instructors will go about the country teaching domes tle selence to the daughters of work- *lingmen and farmers. CIRCUS MEN AFTER AEROPLANE THRILLS NEW YQRK, Nov. 30 Eee The circus men are already ets reaming of aviation Avi sloop the-aloon, the dipthedip, the] freaming of aviation shows giving bump-the- bump8 | regular ctreuita over the country. all the old-| ‘They will have their press agents time efrous thril jand advance bill posters. When the fers — stand &) jumps are short the aviators will what he would do with the money | To a man on the ocean, standin: been cntents of the chest Waal ats feet above the level of the wate | : 48 lent 1 @ pity he étén’t have gj te soeerens horizon is 2 4-5 mil vision of the 400-pound octopus that} jcame stealing up behind him just ment? (THE END.) IMPERFECT NOSES {BR Are built te ifap and a ia straight Jy) ese)” ened by our acientific methods, fair show ofiny from one town to another to restoring paling into fm-| stimulate curioait curiosity. Men in the the pertect harmony to the face significance § be) ittle Den lle monoplanes will | moles, smallpox pit tings and superfluous hair are |B ebsolutely removed. fore @ Dew #@D-| be the clow sation maker. | will imitate Augustus Post's aerial Circus men are) broncho-busting stunts. Farman bi- | making elabor-| planes will be the elephants of the ate preparations | circus, and the Blertot qoacpinnea} to grab it off}the thoroughbreds. the aeroplane, The barker will] stand before the big main entrance | for an aviation exhibition along the in the future and dilate upon the | lines of “Fighting the Flames.” rq wonders of “Aerio, the flying man,|canvas town can be built at captured in the wilds of Belmont | # of the troupe, others |] Comsuttation Is Free and Confidential New York Facial Co. 340, 342, 343 Arcade Bidg. jend of the aerodrome to be bom-| hospital with a broken leg. He|relatives are in the city or not park. He goes throw | > © KOM ough the alr six | barded ° 0 acknowledges that two bits has| “My father ts 75 years old,” ox- times double, with a he artarineing night fog ty Bhi pe id tial ‘class” in his eyes, and has looked | plained the boy. , » M could as big as $1,200. tle farm, and now he ts too old to “1m worrted,” is all that Emile|40 anything. He has to stay in bed would say at first. With boyish all of the time. My mother, she's shyness it was difficult for him to|!" bed. too. She's got a crippled tell of the hardships at home. foot. She's pretty good about help “I don’t know what my mother or |i9¢ me, hut she has to sit down to my father will do for food, now that| Work. How can she take care of I am sick. I know my mother is|™y father? crying. She must have cried all At first the young fellow demand night. She always does if I have |¢4 of the doctor that he be “fixed to be away. Poor old folks!” up” so that he could go home. Now, The pain which distorts his face| finding that he cannot work, the h. He feels that he is the loser In the To say that you can do some thing wonderful, but you fight for existence, and is groping “make | m for the reason Bondin at at the Four 4 where we live, is out House,” he satd It's almost too far for anybody but me to go. I'd hate to have strangers step im there because I atn't such ain't I guese men have Just a glimmer of so clean got to good,” or people fia smile lightened his f > smi) igh ed his face. I d& will not believe you. painting jobs to make a ttle We say we can cure Tubercu- fimoney, I like to paint. I'm crazy those four words be bard for statement losis. Read carefully. It you to about house painting, see the si Baek to It's ¢ of a building may believe that but we are curing Tuberculosl ie parent "oe mind patients every month, and we I wish I cot ggg tan prove It 33 old people for a minute. They must n't that plain? We know [he hungry, siek and lenouee ne what we are ta king about, and th must.” git a all we ask is that you call or And now tt r ni io iat atory about 1e write, Do not de Every day || Mackay breakfast W bat! j ten counts, If we are curing other some of them the mout de: ate cases, why cannot we do much for you? | have lost interest? yer: I) Wonders of the northland brought to civilization for the first time by Dobbs and his moving pleture cam Tuberclecide Company | era, Mi hours of the most in tensely interesting moving picture 308-9 Crary Building exhibition ever seen in Beatle You Fifth and Union, can't afford to miss ft. Grand opera house, Monday night, Decem |ber 5. hop, skip and jump. The only one|roman candles with good spectac of his kind in captivity. Getchur/ular effect, while an {mitation |i # here, only 50 cents, half alaeropiane or airship might perish |f By the Regal Dentists nee igh Soa lim the red fire of the doomed city. |f TOOTH CARPENTERS How many of you who may read this have at some time or another been the victim penter’? TODAY’S STYLES TODAY The Critical Young Man Will find his idea of good clothes real ized when he see: ty! of a “tooth car- ae our assortment of There are some lucky » who : sae get Into the good hands of dentists, ish togs. We take particular pleasure in }who along with goodness, gentie-| Waiting on him, because he is usually }ness and sympathy, a: susessed| hard to suit, and his smile of satisfaction, Jof skill of a high degree : when he slips into these clothe | But the percentage 1s i sane < enu- mall . |Most of these “tooth carpenters” | "° jbegin to hunt around to see how B E P. many teeth they can saw off uy on Lasy ayments make room for a “bridge,” and , | Renerally they find plenty, What You can make your payments the way | ma’ ter it the teeth are sound,| you get paid. “Why should you pay cash AW hey go—~each tooth worth i ' thousands of dollars, an@ once when you don’t get any better, apparel? | Kor * forever, You have no-| Credit will help you buy the apparel you b ny H ame but yourself if you) desire; you will not have to take some- don't east let us make a free ne ause the : al oth pe ge alll gtr ibe thing because the cash price is all you can afford to pay. You are living within your income, and doing it right, when you buy on credit, ion to spend a penny teeth savers, and set a on nature's teeth thigh vatne | When they are missing, we put oth rs in thets plac ° that are as a \ near natural as it is possible to 4 \| ake, ba. written gasrantes with all Eastern Outfitting Co., Ine. | work. 1332-34 Second Av., Near Union St. REGAL DENTAL OFFICES, “‘Seattle’s Reliable Credit House” | N. W. Cor. 3rd Av. and Union @t. | Aorta {ho suet hom butt: | A _____ i . || ————————————— shoot | | Maud cannot sing, recite or 4 A persistent rumor says that Paint china, write a balled, Senator Hughes of Colorado ta|f Hut she can beat the chefs of about to retire. |i | France . While J. Pierp. | | At making lettuce salad hasn't been feel | | Det Free Pre ing well lately i Corned beet) Hl She cannot charm by power of lung. hash te maid to be She wasn't born to dazsle going out of But she an take the mother tongue fashion. And wear it to a fraeele The mother-in- | 1 i | A Coney island show is dickering | i one | | | Largest Assortment on the Never before have we been able to present such an array of magnificent Player-Pianos as is now arriving for the holiday trade, and nowhere on the entire Pacific Coast can there be found a more representative display than at the Pioneer Piano House. We represent exclusively throughout Western America a long list of the world’s foremost Player-Pianos, among them the Hallet € Davis, Kimball, Lawson, Whitney, Marshall & Wendell, Columbus Boudoir, Eilers Bungalow, Eilers de Luxe, Pian Auto, Electrelle, Lee ter, Decker Mignon Player, Welte Mignon, Autopiano and the marvel Krell Auto-Grand, all player pianos of the very highest type and rang> ing in price from $486 to $2,000 Any one of which may be purchased on our easy-payment plan, if de sired, Clearance Sale Continues >e There still remain between 25 and 30 instruments to be closed out at clearance prices. Included among them are several Baby-Grands, im choice mahogany finish, reduced from $900 and $950 to $685 and $725, respectively; also a number of splendid Uprights at $215, $350, ete. All Pianola Pianos Must Go The remainder of the last carload of Pianolas and Pianola-Pianos must be closed out forthwith; $550, $650 and $750 styles are now marked $325, $375 and $425 for quick selling. Pay part cash and balance in 24 monthly installments now. \ quick decision means a big saving to you Successor to D. & JOHNSTON CO, Eilers Music Building THIRD AND UNIVERSITY Stores Everywhere FV TEREEE ae - Bet) eae f oe SE RE Qa 7 gee gee 7_

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