The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 19, 1911, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Bree, geste. Peaks edliaendeentine= pant = PNP ec abla os ayo 4 out of city, 30 cent Pretty Tough, Isn’t It? Fay Bainter Just STAR DUST Mimmy the slouch Hates to Use Slang, But the Audiences Like Ht} orgie cna terse, crawling down the street » forgive a toad in one pocket n a : We forget to forget rusty nails in the « Star Man Talke to 19- Year-Old : | Fee rte pont lose} Actress at the Seattle, Who WHY doesn't Germany challenge | ho th fuller of prez Tells Her Views of Life— Lieutenant Commander Sims to a than industry. He may Would Rather Go to College | game of pinochle? develop in a grea’ T s | natureliet i great Than Be a Second Maude NEFORE Taft passes on the Sims humic the reehesa | “ame | affair he ought to be allowed to| who continually whi ra ae ample the liquid refreshments we Seat You, they're just as human aa the provided at that Guildhall feed. i claime that whistling [reat of us--these actor folk, “Thee helps him think. He may jhave the same fanciful notions and | SEVEN United States # ome day compose musle./dosires. At least that was The| saber Med te the $e Jimmie the grimacer | Star man's conclusion after 15 min- | They wore Elkins of West Virginia, Rare with pretty Baie Wer Bota Daniela of Virginia, Dolliver ot MFimmie the Volublo} pe cence, neatre lat night lowa, McEnery of Louisiana, Brow ; mie the voluble|” may ie just 19. vile ; ; | tease may put his habit . and betng 19, has ard of Florida, Clay of Georgia and | as of life. Hughes of Colorado. one thing,” she said, “I don't to good use, deb THE PEOPLE'S the United States senat lay parts where you have We Blush Stern Father—Here you, Waldo, chen hee grown Ube feo lot Of slang, tke in “The| ‘Hosiery buyers are looking over| what do you mean by smoking corn- hen he's s ae oe Dollar Mark,’ last week.” the field,” says a ket story. silk cigarettes? al stot an pe ters (Incidentally, whenever Fay has m His Young Son—I cannot tell a 3 » clothes are */to use some of these same slang THERE are 1,045,869 Modern| tie, dad, I do It because ma beats me y orn, who falls out of trees and breaks his bones, is perhaps determined | expressions in her parts, the aud Woodmen tn the country, 1,441.40 to pear eork tips jo become a trapeze performer lence always chuckles and applauds Odd Fellows and 1,389,317 Free | cone . se = Jimmie the solemn, who sits silent in a corner, and who, some] pyidently. this inn't the hetght of Masons. Sex i” Roonle claim, has no sense, insists that he ts preparing to be the| ner ambition, however.) . sah : Man Who Seldom Talks ‘i What is your ambition?” the tn CLEVELAND preacher won't let bd 7 Jimmie the vagrant may become a celebrated cxplo terviewer asked Brand Whitlock, friend of the poor, | In t |e ofr & ali j Jimmie with the long hair may become a poet He expected her to say she want i i eral pollute bis pulpit wie bis “Mberal ideas, and has barred him out of) his chureh. If anybody gets to} heaven, we'll back Brand Whitlock againat all comers, THERE is a movement on foot in| Jimmie the dirty-faced may become a doctor Jimmie who makes your heart stop beating by “catching on” freight ins may be (unconsciously) studying the science of railroading. He oF y become a Harriman or a Jim Hill “Se Don't take Jimmie too lightly; or his habits too sertously Fidget Baw Npewanere gy Sgesnay +l One of him is bound to be president 40 years hence, whether it] world’s greate De the red-head, the slouch, the vagrant, the solemn or the dirty-face Wel ed to be another Barrymore or Mre. “ako, She surprised him. More than anything else,” she said, “I want to go through one Bhort letters from Star readers will be printed in this column when they are of sufficient general interest. You may write about anything er anybody so long as personal malice is not your motive. : i on seated be Missouri to buy Mark Twain's boy 7 It becomes more|your paperfor over a year Jimmie’s all right fore one # p, doen't hood home at Hannibal for histort Pw rnc 1 thiok, as year on year|gratulate you on your © Ia : coon sed she asked cal purposes, subtract from those which are to|my opinion you were in contempt T went to a girls’ seminary tn mons be, that what the world needs most |of traction companies and dollars A SUIT OF CLOTHES Caltersia,” eho weat.on. But} ALL the world’s a stage"—and|{g' MEN—strong, fearless, but|rather than court | that’s as far I got. You see, I most of us are “supers” and scene| above all honest men. Drifting| It's the men who own th | 3 ave a mother to support. Some shifters down the stream with ample com-|that get the work done as t = times I wish T was rich #o I could Btanding |!t. So long as the pec | 4 speaker told the National Wool Growers’ assoc “The suit & o fet pany is easy, very easy. Standing t va Se coat me $60, and it contains just $8 worth of material, Ali} °°, (he things T want to IN China the dead are buried |for the right at any cost to self is | assist the corporations to ; | ‘want in this tariff business is a square deal You know,” she went on, wrink-| about @ foot below the surface of! not so easy, ennobles life and halts | place in office their too! | The difference between the price the producer gets for the raw} / ue brows, “sometimes I don't the earth and a mound ts raised|the march of those who would| will the people have to abid : : eaterinl and the price the consumer pays for the flaished product {s,) ("in the world is m just right. | over th ave, Tombstones are| destroy. I do fot know the detatls | thelr work | Uhen, $52 on a $60 suit mi yo the Sry tee — r of lots | hot used lof your work or other reason for| Yours for the good yc x Z Mt folks who have just everything | — > hi honesty of CHARLES somebody overpaid for his part of the process of getting the |() O°. | q AINT BR your course than your honesty ol lish reas tha beck of ine sheep. to the back of the fortunate citizen rao, gto: Spann na fern Sagat far a dials binds all GOV. FOSS of Massachusetts de-| purpose,.but I know the need we " | {who wears real wool in these days? here asm I, with tho chit aie tn mr| ila Wheeler Wit 1 admire her| Gases for direct nominations, inl have for euch mon. Editor Star—Please extend my | That is the sort of question that will be put up to the effictency | \7°° 8 hi ef alm In my | Elta eoler cox. I admire her) when I was four—and just kept tative and referendum, the recall,| “It matters not how deep @n-|subsoription to The Star. I am Experts of the future. ife beyond my reach, just because | because she is so human and vivid | going, I guess jand says the people and not thet trenched the wrong. proud to be a subscriber of s 7 I haven't got the money.” |in picturing the Iittle things in life.| “How did you get your education, | bosses must control. This is tl®| How hard the battle goes, the| Paver that has got backbone Then she led . y | ad ¢ people ol he | . : ‘ 3 4 Then she smiled Last Christmas I recelved a whole | then first the people of the Bay|day how long; enough to make a stand on be 3 And do you read books?" asked |lot of books from friends and ad-| “Oh, I studied during the day|state have been able to speak above| Faint not, fight on. ‘Tomorrow| > peonie ong as yc EMINENT COUNSEL the Star man mirers, I don't know when fli get/and worked at the theatre during|a whisper in many long years comes the song.” | ee PD Se aduiene gates soe Ob, I love to read when I get the| the time to read them all. I've al-/the evening. Guess I worked too| Be stron, wat tad ios Guia He : me. ‘I just wish I didn’t have any-| ways wanted a of the Rubs a BOs Sy Saeee ree copy bard and that's what made me so A J. GODDARD. scription list They have discovered the guilty man—the Inventor of the trust “ye mde ly ny ny: eee wood viet. . Just think, 1 aot two for| thin.” she laughed “Dick won Dick | —_- ABNER T. WRIGHT. Yhe author of the “holding company,” the rascal who shows the mult! e aa to want to be prolific retmas Somebody certainty| If energy, work and persistence FIRST Prize wno FAitor Star—I bave been reading Randle, Wa’ Millioned lawbreakers how to do it and keep out of jail. im my vending. 1 like eorteie enes,| reed my thoughts count for anything we may yet see IN SPELLING } ‘ ‘ Mba a as at caaienah enanast.” “4 ike Shakespeare and Kipling. Oh, How did you happen to go on the | Fay Painter tn the big leagues. So ite = aes" 3 I just } Kipliz stage?" fi 3 . . € the legal profession whic! de she has a corking good b ‘ou know,” explained No. 1. a Riiies techs inet tow jie gag yr ved — veactable eek ieee My favorite w uthoress is! “I don’t just know, I started average. And if she d Say, weats all thie about,” de > Ro the business. {It bids high for the sharpest brains in the country —— = peved some of us will be r ‘ manded the man. and gets them. | believe that “this world wasn't built Why, aren't you White of the : just right,” was the Star man’s last | guess | Shey What to do about It? Only “eminent counsel” could Invent a way , let's hire him to get up a scheme to abolish himself! 4 THE TRACKLESS TROLLEY um cireuit?’ demanded the breath Orp! three in one of | 1 should but |“T'm the engineer at the Knicker. It’s the same old case of mistaken identities. It happened a cou ceks age he Luneta caf a tisee kas ek Macon ae bocker hotel.” There was a chorus of gasps, apologies, then a rustle of skirts and the story is ended. * said the man. | “1 WISH every woman who pre. |sides over a home, be her husband gyn ganar |workingman or millionaire, would he story has just lea Istudy food and ite ation, DICTIONARY Three pretty soubrettes from a . mS says Mra. Adial E. venson, whose rand | cr wenn Typ ah Ape Resin ve ripest) & franchise] WASHINGTON, Jan. 11, 1911. [officer of the postoffice depart-/busband was vice president during ee te renee avers obtton a y Dear Ded: fn. Weet Virginia twe| moat. Jone of Cleveland's administrations ~ What would the trackiess trolley do for the United States? Special Privilege senators are to| When the thing is boiled down to| “Substantial, appetizing breakfasts Why, give us new municipal and suburban electric Ines at one-| “uocred Scott and Biking, One is/its last ingredient it is a use of cc armen ge aogier third the cost of existing facilities and, presumably, carry passen; Clarence W. Watson, pr tent of | goverument power in an effort to)» andiahments, so far as men are Correspondingly cheaper. Wouldn't THAT make music, though? the Consolidation Coal Co. thejsuppress free speech. It is ustny|concerned Tr may yet happen that the haughty strect railway monopoliats wit) ‘st which controls the coal out’|force in reply to words. The great: — i put of West Virginia and western | ost minds that have ever lived hava| POET—How much @ffer their property to the public, and be giad of the chance. Maryland, and the other is John J.lagreed that the proper answer al rooms, please? musical comedy show at the had come in. They saw a face| that looked familiar. NOTICE TO 8U “Aren't you White?” the first one demanded of @ man sitting alone| The Star is anxious to see that at , table in asks ee every subscriber gets his or her sure am,” said the man. | “Well, you've certainly got a good paper every night. If your paper o * bubbled No. 2. | fails to come by 6 o'clock kindly | 1 bet Martin Beck has to slip | notify the circulation department 4 jyou @ plece of change once in ajof The Star and a paper will be . SCRIBERS. re your fur McGraw, who will succeed to the/| words is words. Landiady—One dollar a night & place by the choice of the legisla | Sincerely, RATH, [Suicide with gas, 50 cents extra ee aan CUTAWAY. vit ye volunteered No. 3. sent you by special messenger. THE CARNEGIE HYMN ture after Senator Elkins’ son a os — AY. ‘¢ saw you at the matinee yes-' Main 9400 or Ind. 441. Mlied in the short term. . = _— — — — _ ——— McGraw has been identified with A college tibrarian, retired on a Carnegie pension, has produced a| Standard oil operations in Wont hymn which Mr. Carnegie has had published by tens of thousands and | Y'rsinia for years. j ow offers his countrymen as “a substitute for ‘America.’” In the coal investigation it was| Who said we wanted « substitute, Andy? And while your money|*2OW® that collusion existed be MM doubtiess buy and distribute hymns by the ton, are you sure you] ee" the Watson coal ¥ FURNITURE SPECIALS From Poynor’s Second Annual Sale We money enough to make the people sing ‘em? and the Baltimore & Ohio and "1 , Pennsylvania railroads and that But you are having lots of fun, ain't you, Andy this fad parved to Grive independ- ent coal operators out of business TODAY’S GOOD SHORT ONE That “the proper answer of words is words” is « conviction | growing in the minds of some of An Opportunity to Save $10 to $20 This Week You May Buy Here on Credit “Of course, doctor, German measles are seldom serious?” the more broad-minded public men | 5, ' ing w; "4 ae “| never met but one fatal case. It was a Frenchman, and when he| in consequence of the recent jailing aS ‘Liberal Be niga a Year, the Poynor Store adopted @iscovered it was German measies that he had, mortification set in."—|of Fred D. Warren, the Girard, e ral Business Policy of extending credit. You may ‘oman’s Daily. Kas., editor of the Appeal to} open an account now and arrange weekly or monthly pay- Reason. Whatever may be the ment : character of the paper published. by Mr. Warren, or whatever any: | |f THE FOLLOWING SPECIALS ARE TAKEN FROM THE MANY BAR- GAINS OFFERED DURING THIS SALE We must dispose of all our Winter Garments to scandens: : OBSERVATIONS one may think of {ts teachings or| its methods, there is an impression growing that {ft {s not wise in 4 WHEN the Carnegie Trust Company goes broke there's nothing aes to permit me . in a name, cup and Judge Pollock to use ° o oO the Powers of the federal courts to WE imported $200,000,000 worth of luxuries last yenr, laces nnd| send editors to jail, Warren is nid " " embroideries being the big end of it. Somebody has Toney to burn.|Bow incarcerated in the federal |} Our loss your gain. Sweep- prison at Fort Scott. MRS. E. H. HARRIMAN wilt ccgaaise a national bank as a monu- At worst he has been guilty of| Ment to her husband. And an entirely fitting piece of sculpture nothing more than a technical ‘will be. violation of a very doubtful federal oe. @ statute. His incarceration is in MANUEL Is down, but Gaby is still in it for a lot of free adver-| reality an attempt by federal court tising. She prospers alike on the fortunes and misfortunes of the | *thority to suppress his criticism | poor boy. of the courts. Other editors begin | ° ° o to take the view that the pre SEEMS out of season, but the papers are denouncing Tammany |°*dent Is dangerous. Hall as “a menace.” Fact is, Tammany is trying to elect a senator] Today it may be the editor of a make room for spring sam- ples. Everything must go, regardless of cost or value. ing reductions in Ladies’ Stylish Coats and Suits—priced at one- half the cost of fac- tory production. Long Coats that 4 to succeed Depew. socialistic organ with which they ' : 6: % have no sympathy, but tomorrow it sell for $15 | . = UNDER the new census the lower house of congress will contain | ™4y be the enforcement of th | 42 new members, making a total of 433, each member representing a| trary proe of the federal ju-| to $20, now— 5 Ai A cir oa aac ice constituency of 311,800. diciary against an editor who has| a ° ° ° the courage to criticise some public) Z TOBACCO TRUST pleads not guilty on the ground that “amoking | 2" Of great power, or disagree |} . fs a Juxury.” Objection overruled. Some luxuries are more binding| th the court, or violate a tech Fi than the necessaries of life. nical ruling by an administrative | b 6 oon — = y BASS of New Hampshire is the youngest man ever inaugurated HEADS OF GOVERNMENTS. This $22.00 Library Table, very solidly constructed, may be This $27.00 Bird’s-Eye Maple Dres ; governor of New Hampshire, and serves the youngest cause that Caen 3, 388%.) 6 had in either golden oak or Mission finish. $14, 35 with swall’ front, ‘fine’ French plate, eval: ever carried @ state—insurgency. Austria-Hungary. Francia Joseph, emperor Bale price .....s.ceeee seveee lisa 4.15 6: eck Helalum .-- ‘ior i megrenertaceene ie Mir emre $Reee sostent ai . PROHIBITIONISTS are planning their campaign for 1912, Talkjcnme ..- "hovang ‘Tung. emperor ‘ — % bout the democrats of Vermont, their persistency against advorse 5 1 preslanat | J Those selling for $25 or fate is nothing to that of the prohibitionists! eo Germany : PATRIOTIC New York millionaires claim residence in Europe to| Greet, Britain «+. save paying duties to the customs house. Now let's put a heavy tax on their American incomes spent in forelgn countries, ° o o CALIFORNIA women are agitating the whipping post for delin quent husbands—that is, some women. Happily a very small minority | parmm«; are personally interested in the issue, and some do thelr own licking. | ius... o o o ' BOTH came the same day-—the rain that broke the California $ Fr k’VITL. king | iArmand ¥ 14 w more, now— drought and the election of an insurgent senator that broke the long x spell of California railroad rule. And then the sun shone forth glori William Howard Tati, president | ously from a clear sky. 4 ee ae Joe Woodman, manager of Porky “JOHN'S too old; I ant a young society blood,” is what they|Flyam recelved a cable mensage | testify against Mrs. Schenck in that Wheeling poisoning caso, Aged |{!"0m Promoter McIntosh im Lon-| This $17.00 Dining Table, exactly like husbands will now see to it that the drinking water 1s bollec ey |4on, asking Woodman to send oat, with the exception of claw fee! r 5 . polled, If they) yon to England at once so that exception of claw feet, | This $11.50 Rocker, with gen have to do the boiling themselves. eee he can box Battling Jim Johnson, WISCONSIN presents a shining contrast to most other Middle | th colored American heavyweight, Western states in its farm statistics—more farms, more acreage, more |! Feb. 2. As Flynn has a couple | owners, and no more tenants, than 10 years ago. Wonder if advances | matches in this country Wood- democracy under Bob Lafollette had anything to do with it? man wired that it was impossible Pe ' for Flynn to sail now. ay be had in golden oak or darly uine leather seat, finished in o LOVERS of Charles Dickens should buy the Dickens sftinps to| W boast quite a bit about the paste in copies of his works. The proceeds go to help his relatives. |glories of modern “civilization.” Dickens not only entertains the millions with his stories, but he|That same clvilizajon pauperizes fights for humanity, He was an insurgent long before the one {8 nine of & great olty’s pop insurgency, And from the grave his voice still pleads for oe ee 500 ARCADE BUILDING Open Until 9 P. M. Saturday This $17.00 Chitte of imitation quar has four dr plate mirror carPrts FURNITURE. Rances 7068-710 -712 PIKE STREET

Other pages from this issue: