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a adh sit: Puke Member of United Press. Published Daily by The Star Publishing Co. Brtered at Seattle, Wash. p ‘Steffens Talks of Joseph Fels, the Millionaire, i ila hi al al ect ae. cham enna THE STAR—FRLDAY, JANUARY 27, 1911, By mail, out of city, 30 cent J edad ~Misertoves ’ hat eeds Jom o Says That ilionaires Are Kobbers|°” "':."):: ea oy chat, Needs it : . | iLike @ fastflitting meteor, a fas the pen list a ' eae: sat . fant flitting Certainly 1 i are " ' Noted Magazine Writer Dis ma for him.| A flash of lightning, a break of the that teach : cusses Character and Work] He ¢ ow he way ; Mvety city has seen tra . of Rich Man Who Is in Se « a oe ee ee teacher—her face lined v A un attle Urging Important Tax the D0 Ep many tears and s1 : th obey A 8: Changes f does not Why Railroad Rates Should NOT) urdy boys at r girls , anhood and woman o« jcause, He gives op for » miles (haul-| od w relief, either of ng ¢) on American j t then, when it wa classes, He poured a ve an increase Sl <i ol board Fein, w in ndon to put the unemployed on | of since 1899 | id she give t . é . his mind wa t on Home isn't the place where you TI ere d ny al place ft was on the land. He saw no use|hang your coat. Home is where % " 4 in feeding empty stomact he wa love | for her : } j for ' to fill the vacant heads of What with a ) Mary, whit Pa BY LINCOLN STEFFENS ob and the over wided head: High financier » nothing fer Juxury, she has had to buy woks and 1 t oats re of th t b siaht of wha r benef And the deuce of it is at t ' at . 1 e ‘ dd emecives if they|we 4 do much for our own institute fees and subscribe aga ; Saag n nu tf the D Beeenere feat mu ete nae t At you owned but not used Dest years of her life. Certainly ugh t wn him; and then,| ate pert. | A cor rrigation fespect and comfort till t ‘ |with the uy rous to f Ad tes of the pe traw > point t erta you admit wu mrpeneee oe, re Os n th ate asury w hi avented by a Texas man | fact that it calls for but a stig : : re ixn't much of him ph most of the money for the a s be ts Sikh deat the tort ta JOSEPH FELS. of Suggestion? its on the ache th ss i st _ of Danville meg he Star , t th c deration of bin ome] than to collect money. And most of son-in-law) mixed up in “ee » anew hem really fail at tt a andal the legi re You your.| Naturally. Toey think they make| An old fashioned woman. who : t. Fels knows that he doesn't| sometimes complains of fads in the| When the Japs start to march Oh, NO! layman wouldn't do for the bench. Morse.6 ae esr ie Was wane beaetes | public schools haw an opera bag | across Grandoldtexas ; watch = Eerie te Bet & bird; ahve e hen.” Vow coule anynedy Dy eg? ba “ » |and « letter marked “Exhibits Nos. | man who can draw and shoot quic eenatitutional lawyer find out a thing like that ch,” waid Fein THEN IT HAPPENED” |$*65 Sr cnice che chore citeeci|ern. scat - his tiny body hasn't anything “ — comment to defenders of the #ys-| | to do with his being. Quick, nerv | (Our Daily Discontinued Story.) | |... The opera bag is made of Senator Henry Cabot Lodg calle | his horsepower, so/| soft burned leather elaborately | himself a literary man. 80 does BANG! | at of Theodore Roose-| monogrammed and befringed. The hin work, like an} letter reads Arizona again led the states in he is gay about it t | Dear Aunt I had exapec to Mr. J. P. Motgan will buy ontrol terest in all the he says, eae get up to see you.during the holll-| (he production P Sanvelaaee r ’ “ll sell mega . dave tat s diseapointe with ontana chigan ndependent telephone companic Then, ° f ~ ont he'll sell oech at. he K hic nan ( ity] aes § bw was Samana This ts he eng Ne Bis interests to the Bell company—or grab the Bell company /eud. & . aresubin thal lly rushed to death. The li—and the hére will the millions of telephone users |!°™ Wa" y. Addressing the , 1 pe pena Wet shoes should be allowed to fi—and then whé Armours o rich men he OPE « 1 am sending 1 « " ~ * ” id Mr, Ketch. “Th ‘td get off? birthday present I made myself, |¢ry om & aha Rub with vy No, take ‘em right In,’ ys old Mr, Kete’ ney won’ ONE of West Virginia's United States senators will be of, by and fer the Consolidated Coal Co., but that dear cunning little old Standard Of Co. will pocket the other. It is a cold, dreary day when Deacon Bockefelier doesn't pick something right off the bush. THE WEB OF LAW ‘The average American citizen ts subject to 16.000 laws. Some patient crank has counted them. Lawyers make laws. They it their business to get into fegisiatures, and from time out of memory they have ruled there. Law Jers interpret laws. All jud are lawyers. Incidentally many law Jers execute laws. Nineteen of our Lawyers not only make laws b k the Greaking of them—most by others, but sometimes by ther Law that are also judges have been known to prosper through the mis Eeterpretation of laws, pe Having hedged us about with the maze of a myriad and a half Statutes, all written in words intelligible to nobody but lawyers, the fewyers apply these laws in the light of an astonishing legal prineiple that they have evolved, to the effect that “ignorance of the law is no excuse” SIXTEEN THOUSAND LAWS AND IGNORANCE NO EXCUSE FOR BREAKING THE LEAST OF THEM! Get Kt? See how they catch us going and coming? ‘The short of it is that the game of law is a sure thing game-like ‘the bucket shop business. The lawyer, tike the broker, Is the only one fm the came who stands to win ALL THE TIME About time we were getting wise to the game, isn't it? EDITOR down east has started things by discussing which of Adam's ribs was taken to make over into Eve. Actually called it a “make-over” and every last woman in his bailiwick is demanding space In his paper to say what they think of him. Only takes a little thing to stir up the giris, nowadays. Civilized human beings do most of their eating through habit, and M is a bad habit. Savages, with whom the wherewithal to eat comes @aly as the result of direct effort, do it better and manage to get along without physicians. We are cursed by having our victuals too close @t hand “A prolific cause of chronic indigestion is eating from habit, and Simply because it is meal-time and others are eating.” says The Dietetic @nd Hyxienic Gazette. To eat when not hungry is to eat without relish Gnd food taken without relish is worse than wasted. The aborigine who had to stalk and kill his deer before breakfast Buffered none of the modern disorders of the stomach. No doubt he! Went hungry many a time, but to be hungry is far better than to be a “food drunk"—a term invented by Edison, and fitly to be applied to most ‘of us most of the time. That good old feeling called hunger ts in a fair way to fade into Mere tradition. The average man perhaps cannot say that he has Feally feit that feeling once in a dozen years To be sure, when a meal is delayed beyond the customary time, abit protests In an uneasy feeling which !s erroneously supposed to Be hunger. But the genuine, sharp. gnawing demand of the system Mor food most of us left behind with our childhood. “| RRESPRE: LE disaster” Is what Standard Oll threatens if New Jersey cinch is broken. And the awful fact is that Rockefeller ‘And Morgan have power to give us just that, at any time. Neither would Qhey go hungry should they bring it on. Think hard on thi MACHINERY AND WOMAN’S WORK A lady writes to ask why machinery, which has revolutionized the fork of man, has done little to lighten the burden of woman's work fm the household. She says “A single steam washer in the hands of a 17-year-old boy will do the work of 250 women with washboards. Why not the laundry, the Senera| kitchen for heavy cooking, and the general nursery for ehildren? PARALYZED in the lower limbs and living in constant fear of the Sseassination of her boy, the poor czarina of Russia is not to be envied any shop girl in the world. Happiness, after all, is not #0 ch an Sffair of the pocketbook as of the body and mind. OBSERVATIONS ANYHOW, H. Cabot Lodge has got the world’s record for dropping from # high altitude without breaking his neck. o 0 Oo RELIGION goes merrily on in India, Twenty-four killed in a rectnt riot between rival sects. Hope they guessed right and got to heaven! o 0 Oo WOMAN served as governor of New Jersey for 12 hours between tie outgoing and incoming executives, And New Jersey didn’t upset, either. o 0 o RAH! RAH! Rallroads are reducing rates on rat traps and auto- mobile hoods, Soon the consumer can afford to consume a nice fresh rat trap every month. 0 0 Oo ALDRICH says his new ela} group. Put Nelse’s little plan in Smithsonian Institute alongside ‘Teddy's best wart hog! o 0 o WE like that multimillionaire New York girl who married a police. man just because he saved her life and she loved him. She's the “beat dresser in America,” too. o 0 Oo CHICAGO adventurers about to organize a revolution in Brazil and | seize the rubber industry? Not Mr. Aldrich's rubber industry? Well, we guess they won't if the American navy knows itself! o © 0o LAUNCHED another $10,000,000 warship, by gum, whether we have money for anything else or not! The warship is a necessity of life, 4nd most everything else comes under the head of luxuries. We can't get rich under present | conditions without robbing some | I've done it: you are dotng| it now and I am stil! dotng tt. But Ia And he Isn't {t strange?” he says. “They don’t see that. They don't think it robbery; they don't believe | mean what I aa sensation of news. The truth I utter t# old, but it's news because Here tn where Joseph Fols may | tn, achieve his distinction among rich} burst th nk could not be controlled by any finan-| i ma it at school, We devote an| ae to prevent hardening turb me. i'm going to be out of town tonight.” bi thin kind, It is extreamly inter esting. I hope you will find the bag useful as well as ornamental ‘One bour a day,” sighed the old they wouldn't keep b night. “No, take "em rig old Mr. Keteb. They Everybody is on edge over it and turhb me—I'm going Just one more day before the Sirius st. bench show! posing to spend the damn whieh I made it” And he tn-| fashioned person, “to make opera | S¥¥ry dog in the block is going to town tonight.” : mien to meateh Biss @aihes bags and similar handicraft, and be there except one or two that, If anything more ts 1 for dollar in the fund he has estab. thes @ second year high hoo! are confined mange or dis However quite a few with mange and dis temper are going to take part, but their owners won't admit there's anything the n bar these, but you have to be mighty diplomatic with people where their dogs are concerned All the seroots are already in the ‘ exhibition hall, old Mr, Ketch’s Maya’t I be a preacher That's his idea. It will get OW Up?” asked the an the purps used to the unusual sur ‘Of course you may. roundings, he says, and they won't 7, Want {0.7 his mothe be under such a nervous strain u when the time comes for them to pupil produced an tl! spelled letter! Hike that.” © extent of his swag. t) te and inaugurate a new ers ture, considerats for Sirius st. 1 4 is aughs; not malici } amusement; and some The older I get the more 1 won Several things Indicated that/ der at "em." It was th John Smashington Hitt did nol wish | er of a down town de to be Interrupted | speaking. He stood w One thing was the sign “This Is| man walk away y Busy Day | “You see her the he went on. Another thing was a heap of| “Well, she came in here a while ago work three feet high on his desk./and explained that she had an ac Another thing was an arm on Mr.|count here, but didn't have at the Hitt that was 17 inches round at | store across the street, and she had biceps and just about ready to on some goods there that she sleeve |liked and wanted to get $2 to buy be reviewed by the elite of Sirius the] Ignoring these little tokens, Tit-| the other people's goods and charge MARRIES FOR MONEY. st. At that I passed the word and of the givers of! willow K. Buttineky, @ young gen-| the two to her account here the owners began bringing in the Health. money.” It's a business. |tleman with a mandolin raffle prop) “What did you do? While love bas wings, friend| bench show entries. Knowing how) In cases of sore throat, ready heret ({CONTINUED.) ching a wo Mamma’s Boy And yet, the fact that mney gives me a certain! xy and so my statement h: n says it.” may prove to mete Rockefeller has found that out; and oattion, breesed in past the office) ‘Bicked her onto t credit man. | ship has a strong arm. j oid Mr. Ketch was so sensitive to compress works wond: they all have discovered | boy [And th he goes with the two . jm and annoyance, I not only oughly bathe the neck i that it ts harder to redistribute THE END. dollars, Can you beat itt | How Diaz must love Madero! thought this was wonderfully sweet next morning A GENUINE REMOVAL SALE The Washington Clothing Co. will put on sale their entire stock of Men’s and Youths’ Clothing, Hats and Men’s Furnishings at a price with- out parallel, regardless of all the bankrupt, fire, court and many other sales too numerous to mention, Come and investigate and you will be thor- oughly convinced. There is nothing reserved and anything we advertise you can rely on. _ Our reason for making this great reduction is simply th We did not care to pay the rent asked by our former landlord, and also compelled to raise a large sum of money to satisfy our creditors, have decided to close out the entire stock for what it will bring. Realizing that the people haven’t much money, we are compelled to make exceptionally low prices in order to raise the required amount. Below we give you a list of prices, and kindly ask you to come and inspect our goods and see if this is not one of the most reliable reduc- tion sales you have ever witenssed in Seattle. Shoes and Furnishings Clothing $10.00 and $12.00 Mtn Seccses..-. $2.98 $3.00 Men's Endicott-Johnson 4 PUD BW: BRGDR sine ces cedecins cet s Suits $2.25 Men’s Iron Clad Working 1 $15.00 Men’s Shoes, regular stock.......... seveoes a HME Sic vivessvescasiiaceoubeeesven 2 $4.00 Men's Endicott-Johnson $2.39 $106.50, $18.00 and $20.00 MOE crs ve eo : covees voccdecved Men's Suits » ceseeseese 198 $3.50 Men’s Klimax Special, Patent $6.00 to $10.00 Men’s Odd and Gunmetal Shoes ................ ce Pi Pee Righagre as. 2 $2 98 Sweater Coats fe ss $2.50 Men’s Pure Rex. Wool Sweater Coats wee hbeeeeescseees Pe Cc $3.00, $4.00 antl $5.00 Sweater $1 56 3-for-25c Men’s White Handker- chiefs, 6 for ..... sett hae Cc Coats . . Ties 15c Black and Tan .00 Men’s Watsontown Logging . 5 : eed en’s Watsontown Logging $3.69 $2.50 Men’s Pants, sizes 30 to 34 i 5 pe ; ai fee Pit fe Mea spose ghd. - WENGE Fic cae eabiree Cob eehde sen vanys OB 25¢ and 50c Four n-Hand 50c and 75c Men's Velvet and eres c Carpet Slippers .... 50c and 75c Men’s Ribbed and Fleeced Lined Underwear ..... c $1.25 Men’s Natural Wool and Pend. UR SCWROOT oa ii6i sé ithds 0b0e Alc $1.50 and $2.00 Men’s Pure Wool Underwear ... eoeoes c $3.00 Men's Corduroy 00 Men’s Blue Serge and Cassimere 75c Bib Overalls ieee 50c 6c 25c Boston, Parisian and Manhattan 7c eye Cartera gs 6\ccauce saces ¢ emhenes aeegh 50c and 75c Men's Working $1.00 Men’s Working $1.25 Men's Colored Sateen 25c and 35c Police, Firemen’s and Dress Suspenders rete fy c 25c Men's Fancy Silk Arm wands... 4, 10c Men’s Plain Arm Bands Sale Starts Promptly 10 a. m., Saturday, Jan. 28 WASHINGTON CLOTHING CO., 319 Pike St er day to artistic work of v. of him, but | was worried whether es by Make my bench show auspicious 2 and co’ n't know what it atter with them. I'@. Ob. how I wish tomorrow was ab I do. I s’pose I've got to go to church all my life, anyway, an’ it's a good deal harder to sit sti? than to stand up an’ holler.”