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lember of United Press. ly by The Star Publishi tered wt Heattio, Waser it follower of M Mra, Eddy triu d over death away Se Any person who gives to the world end over| th. Whate obje a an the par lar or lar claims r an truth that Mrs May turned the thoughts and lives of and ple toward the ine sunshine, taught thousands to turn f tho gloom of past re, and look upon ( as 8 od, all ot ful, all live, To do i is surely to triumph ov death, yen before the immaterial terial body goes to the tomb And there are many: pe « today who have triumphed ith also. We have in mind, to illustrate, one dear, sweet-faced, sunn: D¥aced woman of 76 yeare of age. She has raised, or helped to rai Dam family of children and grandchildren, She lived a long tite of Jove and comradeship with the husband she loved, but one day she had to close his eyes, fold hia hands over his tlonless heart, Place a last kiss on the dear ehead, where the gray hairs were Miready thickening, and forever hide his beloved form with earth and sod S Ghe ts alone—so far as others can see. But sho has faith—faith the God who could m f this life, all the Wor of this planet anets, Was good enough, potent enough, t which He gave to all that live—death Now she waits, with heart unafraid, with eyes eager to behold Bhe lifting of that thin vel! of mist which hangs between Now and Forever. Just one step—and husband, father, mo ence cooed and smiled for a minute, friends, eternal rest, peace, ake all the w mean some good in warran nese ex ption of such power is ry words “HAD THE VIEW OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE BXPRE } THE CONSTITUTIONAL POWER OF THE COURTS BEEN } ED, THE BLOOL T AND COSTLIEST WAR OF MODERN IES WOULD HAVE BEEN AVERTED. | | s8ED RE He charges that the Ci war was directly due to the decis! the supreme court on the Missour! compromise and the Dred Sco’ ‘The court had its way for an hour, but the people reve with shot and shell How will it be in the future, eur courts nullify one by one the enactments ive sentiments of these timese W tlemen of the Big Interests, if| x d by the pro The court of LAST resort does » United States—at ev at Washington, It sits humble fireside {nm the land d THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY Im addressing the insurance men at Chicago, Paul Morton paid an Mmepiring tribute to the Central West. He said “This Mississippi valle comme )@pancially and prospective o@f history, and yet it is on Production and wealth ar to have more t greater influenc fF area on the f industrially famed valleys its infancy, so far ty, more ha: than any oth world All of which is poten great region has some/ ms to solve before the ¥ can be realized. Its cholc have less farmers than they had 10 years ago. Life is wéer for the dwelle its usely crowded citie THEM THAT SEE IT FIRST EB H. Harriman got his start in ral! sading by purchasing a lit But he knew {t was strategic, and that the Peon east take it off his hands at a profit. They did “They had to have it," he said. “They saw it as soon as I showed 1 to them. But I SAW IT FIRST.” | And there is a whole philos ess In that ik. The man who sees it fir ts rich, That he does if the thing he sees is 2 business ¢ ity If what he sees first is some new way of benefiting mankind, per at the expense of business, he’s not a genius, but a crank. He ft get rich, but gets ridiculed. And maybe, when he is real he gets a beautiful monument. Ivania system A woman newly rich was invit the course of fowl and i to an aristocratic dinner party. | salad, she noticed with dismay aj i furry caterpillar on her topmost leaf of lettuc Glancing up, be met her aristocratic hostess’ eye. Her glance implored the Gest to save the dinner from catastrophe ‘The guest gave her hostess a reassuring smile. Then she & lettuce leaf around the caterpillar and calmly swallowed | ‘The look of awe and gratitude that her hostess gave her was @esurance that her footing in society was at last firmly established 2 “Do you think,” she said to her daughter, afterward, “that I'd| 3 ® chance of establishing the family socially for a little thing! 4 & caterpillar?”—Cosmopolitan OBSERVATIONS TALLY one for Ohio democrats! Turned down Standard Oi] and Pomerene, progressive, for United States senator. Si ae OUR national wealth is $125,000,000,000, the average per capita $1,859, according to Wall St. Journal. Sounds fine, but means little. ae ee MRS. STORY and Mrs. Scott will again enter the ring for that D. A. KR. presidency. Both are the white man’s hope, and the moving Pleture fellows should do their prettiest. bie ee PROF. JAMES’ “spirit” reports that when it first arrived “ovor there,” it seemed to be enveloped in a mist. Gee! He couldn't have Mistaken coal smoke for mist, could he? Wee ee CHICAGO,S postmaster has to turn away crowds who want to Geposit savings in a postal bank. They'll be turned away until Taft Miscovers whether sound banks are wanted at Pinholke, Ill, ee So HEAR the corporation organs bark at Hiram Johnson for de- elaring for recall of the judiciary! Go for ‘em, uncle! Never mind the aps of the puppies who eat out of the hands of the S. P. boss * a aa CAMILLE FLAMMARION says that within 1,000 years all states men will be chosen for their lung power, and monkeys will do all of fan's housework. “O, death! where is thy sting? O, grave! is thy victory?” where ae. @ AMBASSADOR HILL notifies society that only three or four United States ladies can be presented at the Berlin court this winter, It's a downright shame, and we ought to have another ambassador at Berlin, so there! * Giatt gier SINCE visiting California, Elbert Hubbard has written a lovely article on “Moods,” in which he says: “The average man has to have something biting him most of the tim He learned that in Californi We knew they'd take kindly to Bertie’s rich, passionate ° , Toycroft blood. ° ° DR. GARRE of Basle has got up a new sclence—the reading of character by the way folks wear their shoes. It’s easy. For instance. shoes with soles worn evenly indicate sweet disposition in a woman and shoes without soles economy in a man. Look at her goles before you propose, young man! o ° o DAVILLA, who Is trying to hold on as president of Honduras, Wants to pawn Honduras to J. P. Morgan & Co. for $100,000,000, We begin to be intersted in Mr, Bonilla’s little rebellion, for J. Pierp. may False the money out of ws in some of his many cute ways, . LOOKS as ff these London anarchists had prepared come for kings, czars and such. a ee ee Buy or Sell Real Estate. Business Chances. Sea Classified Page. r, @ baby that |° gh or | revall in the| €row line in northern New York. Nobody could see why be wanted | THE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE © °°" © THE STAR--FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 1911. out of city, 30 cents per month up Nothing Grand Opera-y About Her--She Talks on STAR DUST (MR. SKYGACK, FROM MARS Like Anybody Else, Is Report on Miss Kopetzky =." Pa = There ts krand op Kope who has the Are you afLernoc nor. The interviewer disclaimed the I bet you're one of those oat writ sho ex t tke any usually bright w a lot about news: Af 1 of mine says} asks r ters a hat a cub reporter # & human Interest} our sta Octopes the hot | Don't “ly functi On do not d More of Dear osteome through announce | Taft is Why de cheers? teW’ this when he for pre strayed jollying &@ native Kinkaid train pu’ to-be did Kinkald North Who go | (which | note of $1,000,00 | pr French dangero United know franchis Ogden ¢ Acting | through infamou merely boss, he {special nots, LU rotten state, Lorimer through honors, and the W President Taft in not without a/ sense of humor. I have heard him known politician of that state, The Mr. Taft waddled out upon the rear platform. Ahead of him was Kin kaid. The coming of the president est him with the shout, “Cheer, damn you, cheer!” President Taft for another term Retrenchment and jnot been press-s |ly this week) ought to take offictal idential veto applied to the Roger Sullivan comes very close jto being the rottenest and most foundation of his fortune—he is now 4 millior Today Roger for Billy Lorimer as senator as any was the fi the interviewer yesterday on at the Washington question she WAS IN FORLORN PORTION OF HOUSE ~~~ Saw SNEAK-MANNERED BARTH-QUADRUPED ENTER CIR- t's the mostus pleasin’, ‘ papble yn frosts CULAR ENCLOSURE CONTAINING FAR-SMELL FOOD One of pleasantest ways to! AFTER EATING FOOD, QUADRUPED STARTED TO LEAVE, i y would be to read) LO ABUT UPON SECOND THOUGHT, REMAINED «EVIDENTLY i ett of resignation DETERMINED TO LINGER NEAR TO FOOD SUPPLY wm. SHOWS MARKED ASONING ABILITY. are .three John Daltons| "=== hem is THE “Jack Dal are thinking of. One was f divinity, another @ doc of philosophy, another a physt trate the ing power Jove! Anh! she is already triumphing over death! > y ~ ing ri a dg just Joined her here after a bust-| Tetra i t SUPREME COURT THE CIVIL WAR went on, “hasn't voloe, and {wn't Tt ts not the plain people alone who dispute the right of the courts | that all the nullify laws enacted by the repres: es of the people, and thus | w ny transfer the powers of gover » fifteen millions of voters | out wid expre five men appointed by the pres: to compose a majority While I am the court of last resort. It is people alone who cry out/to them,” sb t this monstrus doctrix | “Not in talon her Here is former Chief Justice Doster ¢ court of Kan-| husband, catching And addressing the Oklahoma Bar asso at “the as-/|t tte singer smiled fully In the Editor’s Maid] 0 ey fae ge ee Short letters from Star readers will be printed in this column [| when they are of sufficient general Interest. You may write about f° . + pede Bh t anything or anybody so long as personal matice is not your al irs. Kopeteky, “but in motive. 1 Editor Star: I wish there were the will of the majority of the supreme court or the will of the/ many m ity of all the people in America? ore papers like The Star in te, for it would k es or Oo shot from a you ¢ laugh fo tb CORRECTING it true, count, that in Europe madam, like th: ze cont dress, et Intimate Writings to! “Dad” From Washington, | Washington, D. C. Jan. 8, 1911. | Dad: Every morning the| 4 Washington Post cc with a first page art ing that William Howard a candidate for re-election yesn't somebody start the story on himself, It was p tiret got Into the running sident business, and had| into Iowa on @ tallend| expedition. With him was| » of Iowa by the name of a long, rangy nd well Hed in at a little town, and d not arouse enthusiasm, so reached for the man near. Carolina has declared for t the postoffice? economy Yorton has ating so diligent Mr. 6 cretary the fact that approximately 0 might be saved by a spollation claims us political boss in the States, 1 speak whereof I His political origin and the aire—was a rotten gas e, later financed as the jas company, which he and Mayor John P. Hopkins put the Chicago city council by ly rotten methods. llivan {8 not the democratic political » 1s part of the bipartisan privilege machine of Ill fe {8 a% much responsible republican boss of that Without Sullivan's help, could not have pulled his purchased senatorial |T have here « picture of myself and | gation in the national cc |out during that period to the rat! pile an en-| thusiast at Los Angeles, Cal, towed a ger locomotive weighing | i a track for several ach drivers’ union of Pas J, refuse to work on Bun day, which will probably mean that | there will be no more Sunday fu nerals in that town pale ANTOINETTE KOPETZKY AND “BOOZER.” “THEN IT HAPPENED” | t Nu r te 7 00: nd r) horoughbres ca ag pe | t on. ee oster, 3 onl is a real red (Our Dally Dlecontinued Story.) | Then she talked of the ‘little|oughbred Boston terrier ite the woves* is | things | “And why ‘Boozer’? inqutr pastime on ¢ “And you are fond of animals?” | interviewer. = and lakes t rier anked | “Oh, you see, one day Boozer ed by steamboats or called. A one ngite {ace is jon which | © Aisasso-| * = a the pertl NEW YORK, Jan. 13.—Miss Milli. cent Almy of Law ce, L. 1, young me daughter of a weal “Fond? Very fond. 1 love them. | discovered a glass of ‘beer, and be fore long he drank it all up, and fell righ went to has been Sin that day he treated to a re }is very exile Speaking of that, do you ap a rivate I di f why a wo. dnt om if she wants public I abhor ft. It isn't nice nor womanly,” She seemed quite tn carnest Then she talked audiences from to London all, but Beattle audien bounced off, } nt flat instead the pred Don’t yo corn-coby hand thy imp furs, alighted from at Fifth ay. and 4 ¢ did she k ft) havin changes the posters aut each time Its carrier take A. M. MECKLEM, Olympia A MISTAKE. how crown princ y sent to Pu Yi, helr to} the { we throne, a toy r as she woul nd turned to see ain track. ‘The roy ave ah fe nat had struck her | nese FOungster sent back As she ed along the aver ndow-cleaner rolled t war” 8 ted elepha walki to the buildings, tc 4. Both were . ok hop Nagle bystan j - bed on & nd-etory sill a 4 s|One could easily become drowned,| clean the windows of a dressmak BAND CONCERT FREE. a r even we x est “woos ry I am reminded of a very deplor sid have rs band at the Bon y night, able incident in which a small/it was, he but} youth named Obadia Ogle h | one. reaned {ts| figured. Young Oglesmith essayed jon during the |to “ride the waves. total estimated | We now see him in the wake of agle’s foot fll Had Visit Prof. Stevens’ new Academy at anon of 1910, utput being more than 60,000,000 |the steamship without a break in his fa Fourth ay. and Pine st tenn Too bad that he fs in a fiat-bot-| surely have been killed Teaching every day + |tomed johnboat and no is| Almy was t BANO CONCERT FREE. near that can be descried with the 4 struck b t and evening. Both ners band at the Bon jhuman oye. jtween th She plunged phones. Saturday night baal | THE END. | forward c with a start McCormack Bros. BIG TACOMA FIRE Nearly $250,000 worth of merchandise destroyed in a few hours, hence the ladies do not dress at formal ey do here at formal functior Roger Sullivan sent a mutual | friend to Woodrow Wilson with a message to the effect that Wood row Wilson must not oppose for mer Senator Jim Smith of Ne Jersey in his efforts to return t the senate; otherwise Mr. Wilson need not hope for the Ilinols dele vention of 1912. To Mr. Wilson's everlasting credit be it recorded that he told Roger Sullivan to go plumb to any | place he might like to go to. The Biggest Clothing Values Offered in Seattle Our $50,000 stock of Men’s Clothing, Hats, Shoes and Men’s Furnishings SLAUGHTERED AS WE NEED THE CASH bers of the house are Bryan demo 812-14 Fir: t A 0 it C 1 Bl k crats, and will take thelr cue from s venue, ose CO, man 0c. him and Champ Clark. Woodrow Wilson is being watched with more than a little interest, Sincerely, RATH Senator Beveridge 1s loading up on the Lorimer case, There are a lot of senators who are loading up. The Lorimer case promises to be the most spectacular topic of de- bate at this session, The question rly put by this caso is this: Can a man whose election to the} senate is tainted by bribery and corruption hold his seat in that body? The government has an action for $170,000,000 against the rail roads of the United States for money Improperly collected by the railroads for carrying the mails. About four years ago, you will fe call, Victor Murdock, congressmari from Kansas, made a fight against what was called the “false divisor” used In calculating the weight of the railway mall. As a result of his fight, Postmaster General Corte! you issued a special order requir ing that in future the mails should be weighed seven days, and that the total should be divided by seven, instead of six, in computing the average daily haul. At the | time this order was made the dif-| ference between the results worked | out by the two divisors was $5,000,-| 000 annually, The practice of using six instead of seven as the] divisor had been carried on for years; hence approximately $170,-| 000,000 excess charges were paid} ways. I find, in talking to n majority of the democrats in the house of rep resentatives, that they are not pre ed as yet to Indorse the Judson “ land t™ big year acre cut had Ww ine! cot two pigs I notd two mor our! tec]