The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 27, 1913, Page 4

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Pe ue Trlvate Main F700 SCH PSN ving full Ex han oF Re joe of the Latter Rutered ite at Seattle. Wa postoltioe as second-class matter re Ey mall, out of elty, & ef mon, up to six mow, six mos. $1.90; your 03.35. hed Daily by The Siar Publishing Co. ' hater Main 9400 | ° HOW TO GET NEW POPULARITY AMONG | THE WORKINGMEN FOR THE RED, | WHITE AND BLUE. ' ; President-elect Wilson recently said: “Tt eved in this country that a poor man has less chance justice 4 administered to him than a rich man.” He added: “GOD} FORBID THAT THAT SHOULD BE GENERALLY : TRUE!" So I" ¢, perhaps it is up to us Inquire, Is the be In just one day's crop of news, taken at random, we read A © of the co of commerce impeached for grafting--he had rled » le b y lé ants before his court tele Md at requiring that all evidence in equity cases be in h a law had become necessary deca ral judge ts, In & government sult againat the 8 Machinery T the ¢ s instance, ordered the doors i, Ww even Atty. Gen, Wickersham admitted (ended to Gefeat ¢ ds of jus At eat pains the vernment had got a grand jury to tndict f the New Haven and Hartford Trunk railroads for con strain trad but t ts’ lawyers have discovered nt which will “mean months of delay.” To inquiries whether reports were true that the conspiracy tndfot- ; ments against the pre nt of the Woolen Trust and others for “plant ing n La © last wit were about to be dropped, the - istrict ton made no answer—yet we remember that t thous dynamite planters tried to get, was kept in fail 10 1 without bail, on a false arge, William Wood, when : arrested, cal ald down five crisp $1000 bills as bail and smilingly | of coincidence, in a dispatch deseribing the parade a The day that the poor man feels he has as fair show before the law in this country as the rich man and as much of a voice In making it, that day will see Old Glory proudly saluted and revered wherever workingmen assemble. That day is drawing nearer. are proper ir “he is charged with Hbeling a king. | Have we gone back to that superstition of 60,000 st * garment workers In New York, we are told that “red | flags were scatt 1 all through the line of marchers, ONLY ONE AMERICAN FLAG WAS SHOWN j The instinet of & people is generally right. When honest workers | in great masses turn from an accepted symbol Ilke the Red, White and Blue, it doesn’t necessarily mean that they lack In patriotism. As a matter of fact, they are intensely patriotic sely devoted to high} ideal What it mea i they have come to | upon that symbol as not standing for what admirers all ought to wish {t to stand for— FREEDOM AND JUSTICE Isn't it, then, better worth our while to try to make the American flag stand staunchly for t blessings than to quarrel because people who don't think It doe t sh our enthusiasm for it we | ades of Thomas Pair the Divine ht of Kinga? Is it possible that there are things monarchy mast not say about a monarch be an offense in the republic of the United . thing as a political offense whieh will close gee? | ve would we class him as an undesirable imm! 3 fn an Ktallan sh iventurer Cipriano Castro s he not an ex 5 one of that sisterhood of repu to the a south, about which we like to make glowing after speeches? : i And are not he and Washington in the same politi revolu-| } tionists | door titor Seattle Star: The minimum wage bill for women now pending in the legisiat ought to have support of every member| of the house and ate. It deserves the enthusiastic advocacy of| Fi every man and woman in the state. It ll be of great efit to the 1 female employes, and also to the employers. If passed and put Into : operation, it will increase efficiency an! bring comfort ahd happiness as well as protection, to hundreds of homes rtueloving man @nd woman ought to strive for its enactment and enforcement M. A. MATTHE 8. y read-| been Introd: has been aced fx » legislature, brought to w Editor The Star: I see fing The Star that you are p attention ogres sin the true sense of the word| Its enactment would undoubtedly are pushing for progressive leg e of great ben the citi islation in our state. I me you of this state, along lines will allow me to cail the attention ben. monstrat of our lawr yome of the| the hund flar institut i Aetidin be - heir billions of dollars of petcent sn which have been in moat has a »peration thre ho Dore ni in certain ions fraud a it at ch mply support average > ¢ and can be obtain West to : t m the U. 8 I think nd tax would correct the ev . that if the state would st » powder for tl eran a be efit. It is cost per hundred, and the state it for less tha t and theret e hundreds « nds of dolla t “ ing Aga of Oregon h 1 4 of d 4 Zz t Hl yorrow ol ) i 1 1 would | t pert | as pertain 0 such ui zation and | efore | ussured that the { f the | she 1 the bers of the 4 E. B. MELLE 709 Alaska Build i} hat prod ¢ i ? If not, what did? Our sland . i the teacher wae terbt 40 gores. of Tin,” answered the prize pupil the school land ha red and Right. Ar hat t do we | T have 10, and by our hard work we ee d 1 have raised the value of that one Wool and oa 3 had th ° iron, they have made < ly Iron is mi in Wales, but we half of it would go to further im-|do not import it in America. In wove the lands of the stat Yours | 40s ring the qu OF y at r progress, J. H. LAW | rer I only ng Bellevue, Wash, | what this country gets from the va 5 e = jous parts of Great Britain N Editor The Star: A of the| what do we get fr and bili providing for the a zation | Americans! ‘Cle veland Plain |4 of mutual savings banks, which has! Dealer. Canada’s Finest Resort—$10,000.00 for a name. 617 Second Ave. | Monday jauto is that Osn\i Ase. ae Paro or ox We. YTe, I wt ® mail brought an al A pair of s chained and padlocked sht itgaten On eakrtah phata, WA an bstitute for the at the entrance vil, @ globe of goldfish and a ‘ wokoo clock to Bee! t; while bor—that fi representing Liberty |Ovenee Sock to Gesleyeport; wi a litter o’ guinea pigs, an individual package of silage, two ducks and a second-hand set of mule harness went out.” Somebody connecté meat will t That'll be wants waterr an nelons Here's a Combination. Mies Anna Rough and William F. Raatz were married esterday a ternoon at Goshen at the F h Lutheran parsonage by Rev, f r th Mr. Raatz is a prose a e@ in the Trath job ¢ rt " ti « br hes until re tly be r at the H. Bt ykes store KE Ind. Truth J, L, remarks >» women try! throngh a single section of a storn can sometim cause f as much excitement as ¢ who gets off a moving stree to squeere Slightly Mixed. The attendant had shown the {tors a beautiful, ent ble statne and po! tistic merits from a Then one ask Alaba. No, vie mar ite ar ts of view naluc out The new president of France is 4 small man, physically, but big enough for what the Job amounts to. What They Took. 8. D. Money and R. Mullen, of Ment pelie dro out to A. E Reese's 4 took rabbit chase Uaton Ch Cor. Mont Leader. f a er Philadelphia horses in the em of the re to have a two weeks’ Vacation thia summer. T \ifference f nia betwooen a horse a a va it nee if it given feels tion and takes n auto, he rude 1 flirting ¥ maid, | 1 little later on this sight met t air one’s eyes. “Boo-hoo!” she bed. “Chuckles has got an other girl! Look at him, with his arm around her! You ought to have heard Chuckles | chuckle after she went away crying for it was only @ guitar with a hat n he had been cuddling up ‘o. But it taught the fickle flirt a pretty food lesson at that, SETTTLE STAR—MONDAY, JANUARY 27, 1913. CN M | I {i f ott ner rat We Lh-20 vee, bry Truly Yous MMR E ty Me Welle FROM DIANA’S DIARY creetly Chances a Visit to a Prizefight, Wher: ent be Hero from Disaster Mies Diliptokles Ind! Her Prese Lolo, full bloafied Indian In afraid of her own race, and feapite her 16 youre she shedders at sight of a redelkin. That is the peculiar antipathy that has been asserted by Lalo ever since her early prat tling years, and a strange thing @bout it aff is that it led to the dis covery that the girl was blessed with a sixth sense ability to read the mind of her ter fathoe. When Lolo was a she could tell by bis expresriqn whether he saw an Indian in the.dfs. tance or whether bis mind was bent on Indian affairs, Then the little one would hide after the warning againet her bu read in her parent's mind The strange talent of dian maid was fostered is on the vtage in an exhibition of mental suggestion She reads every an fo he wee In thing her foster father sees while black sticking plaster blindfolds her, and while her eyes are band aged shoe shoots an arrow and a lrifle with perfect aim, the targets being articles placed by the man whose every thought she seems to be able to divine J, L. Cotton, Lolo’s foster father, formerly was Indian agent in South Dakota. He it is who accompantos the girl on her vaudeville tour o te a direct descendant of Chief RainintheFace. She wan when the de ation of Indian Jadopted by Cotton jot her parents on the reser whieh he had control left the infant a walt From the time Lolo was able to crew! she showed aversion for In- Indian Chief’s Child Hates Sight of His Own People Now she} ¢ |dians, Lolo te not able to read any- lbody’s mind but Cotton's, All he has to do is to focus his ‘es on & love letter obtained from a mem ber of the audience and Lolo will as they are ber own Meeh and blood. She ca ing that comes over her at sight of a member of her own race. Best Short STORIES of the Day An Associated Charity worker ma all ob & poor mountain woman in a Southern town, ob jserved that her bree gimall obi) dren we s “It's w pity that they le with their eyes, a | pathe jain't nothing eyes, ma'am do you disfigure Lem with Klanne asked the visitor In won dermer The woman bridled Why think they look lovely, sho sald. “I like them on little chil dren I think they're real dressy Harper's Bazar. Next door to wh we're liv Hut he has been whips all} “I want to be sure not to miss now is a fan named Ra the ebampic and that ome uin'” a bit anxiously said the ‘ on't bother muck t ahqithing. Any that can e Me r, accofding to the Kansas ideals of life ut they mre| Bruise a g beating Is entitied ar iderate ne re. and fa€) to a ¢rack at better men. So Ignata! ero that, podner!” re. akes them refined ¢ ch té-efit!is dreadfully grateful for the plied the landlord of us. This family has an ath-a-letic | chance. lie, Ark, “We'll son named Igoatz, who is clever} I sometimes watch young Raus ¥ early enough lwith the ves. Ho ie a pretty mitt training in his back-yard gym ornin’ so’s you can be at nice sort of young fellow, too, and | nasium. For a young roughneck, t promptly at train time hopes some day to b ra first-|he is real grac My brother und In cold for two class at fit the ¢hampion | Dudley is over there half the tim hours and twenty minutes, or such light weight pends helping him’train. Dudley a matter, waitin’ for the train to Just at present young Rausmitt the iad next door is a world come.” j has got a date for a clash with |But that is sort of premat Sae | “Uppereut” McBrutse for 10 rounds |I really think he is a good scrapper, areal purse, The kid has been|and much petter looking than this}. Martan Mushand¢ boxing for about a y and has ty MeHruine Mt. Baker Park tr pulled down as high as $40 for a| However, I'm perfectly neutral,|borbood. It had swelled ) |fight and as little as carfare, but|but If anything Nke that has to|{hrough efforts of truthfal real Ithis fs his first good ch. If he/happen to either of them, I hope it] @™ate agents | |comes out of it a winner he willis McBruivc that gets k| Marian was in love with the | pme notches up the teddas,” Of | knooked off. n t boy who brought the liver/ course, McBruise is not a c’ hampton, | (Continued. for breakfast | dasa al es Het the market boy scorned When a woman informs her hus|cup of coffee cost 36 cents, is, we| Marian; she was ven, he eleven band that she has something to say | imagi: just the kind of a man ee to him {t means that he ts due for| who would refose to pay a quarter,| Years sped on | a scolding. or a dime, or @ penny for the privi-| Ike Katzensnooker, the erstwhile | — lege of permitting a hat boy to|market boy, Krew to rosy, rotund Wanted. hang up bis lid manho 4 married a cook lady | Someone to discover a substitute| At any rate, we hope he is In a bo f house. He gets $1 for kerosene and gasoline. Apply | ® week an have seven little to anyone on earth excepting John Esquimaux Wanted Katesensnooker | D. Rockefeller. | Marian Mushenmilk is now a elites | A contractor in Oakland, Cal.,|proud beauty, and the wife of th | Hi Rar says it begins to look as| Who has a city contract has asked |assistant superin of a gen If we'd have to wait for slow freight |Counct! for an extensi } counter. He gets § to find out ‘xactly the name o' th’|He is laying a sewer they have en little ailing of Mr. Bill Rockefeller, os-| Pipe. His plea is that } 8 running around | | caped, ble in getting me — | = the job i ng in the pipes} MORAL:—Do as you darned A Kansas farmer lost a $600 dia-| And cementing the j n the] please; it will come out the same! mond fn his barnyard. Washington | !nelde way in the end. farmers consider it good form to - take their diamonds off at milking) 4 pity ae 1 love myself, | do, | do, | time. ae Cae i wa has a e | love myself, | do; | sich Dern aie atta sirl that! But when it comes to loveliness, |} know a man whose wages run| “ed him for § ch of | always think of her, | One hundred plunks a week; = | Promise. is he wears are on th | | His wardrobe is one shriek. | Nailin head Da iaceel aia ine pi core | Pen eee poner oom Ns the ten. | that, the t Hne ywean't rhyme, There is tnother guy | know, 1s aes Kg eg Aaa te ani. Dee ee eet Makes sixty doliars per: | Meee aig : cue talon rene ~ He thinks ten bucks an awful blow infiuenced by i ikl = | On clothing, | inter. | 2 j A chap who works along with me, rill Nin tar ton the | Has thirty ev'ry Sat. Wrong Moment,” i the pathetic He spends one-half on clothes, | yarn of a Queen Anne hill cook and we | raid : jets Have got the styles down pat. Tilly tri one dark night to] | Then there’s a fellow | recall, | Bill Grimac the Motoreni al | n Chorale’ fell : j Bil nbvak, the motorman on y envelope ‘most nude; la Qu Anne car les her aboard But, holy smoke, he beate us all |He ia jealous because she loves And dresses like ® dude! another. So he decides to wreck | | he car and kill her. She suspects { CONCLUSION: | {s foul Intention, To foll bis sor }If by one’s garb one’s income did vengeance, she tilts the trolley | stands, y With the trolley tilted, the Nghts in | Less clothes—the more your're | the car go out. Bill t it | worth r brake in th fasknees ; ne Vl lve my life in southern lands, ia 'MHALTAR@A to epiiitara EE. (he bial | Clad as | was at birth. of the hill, and all are killed, A Grand Mistake. Editor Herald: There was a Two beans (Lima) will be | Misdirected Energy— grand mistake made in your last iven to the woman perso T » Tac > |Herald about. me getting marrled.| man character or child human [stand what yea mosey ty ee I did not get married; the man got| wh d ma | Fe ie man go © sends in the best title for * | Rainier, the license without knowing what this cWeery little picture before Having a joke copyrighted he was doing, and please correct{ Christmas after next. Trying to perform the Argontine that Bete nd in the next week's | The title must not contain the Tango In a hobble skirt she e Heral M, stating that f aa aot mar | vers Mid lant: @OnGs wagon, | * Teying to perform the Argentine : , 1, , or tooth: | Tango |Green County, Miss, Herald brush. *| Trying to perform ‘ Lae ees 4 Address your answer to the : . F | he new governor of Illnois, who4 editor of any paper you wish, History in Poetry, |Fetused to eat in a hotel whore a’ but don’t send it to The Star. Her lps were ‘alr, = She called his dare, ° He was right there, | >. It was a bear, Come in and see our free pictures. We re xolug to have some good verses later on 617 Second Ave. 7 i bs : nie Inaier & man Is the easter it 0. d luck to keep not D yp with read it aloud, word for word, with} out faltering Lolo declares that, way down deep in her heart, she lov Indians ANTON & P “The Economy Store,” Second Avenue, Bet. Spring and Seneca New White Lingerie Waists $1.25 tal in every respect to any $1 49 or $2.00 Waist shown-this! n. Beautiful Marquisette, Voile and Lawn Waists, all new iels. About thirty different styles to choose from—all sizes, 34 to 44, Second Floor “Middy” Blouses 49. Former prices 98¢ and $1.49, Every “Middy” Blouse in stock to be closed out at 49c each. Two different models in the “Middy” with blue collars and cuffs. Assorted sizes, Women’s House Wrappers 69¢ Regular Price 98c. Good Percale House Wrappers in medium and dark colom Grays, blues and blacks. Several patterns and all sizes up to @ Good, dependable qualltic s and ava in the leading materials that are sure to ploase you. WOMEN FOR WOMEN’S FOR . $12.95 SUITS SUITS $14.95 WOMEN'S FOR WOMEN FOR .... 8 Nearly 100 Women’s and Misses’ Coats Reduced One-Third in Price Thoroug Department Fourth Floor. Tapestry Brussels Rugs, size 9x12 feet, seven good patterns, d garments in boucles, zit 8, polo coat to close out at, $9, 35 ings and mannish mixtures, all | each ....... ” 1 at a reduction from } freavy printed Linoleum (ett nal prices o only), per square ONE-THIRD OFF yard Second Floor Half Wool Ingrain Carpet, oe yard wide, patterns in lot to choose from at, | are and See the bargains we ng in Women's In Demand Third Floor The figure of the most unusual measurements seldom fails in find ing the correct model in R. & & Corsets because the R. & G. range is very extensive and includes mod: els designed to suit the needs each type of figure. Ask to see this display on the Third Floor. No. 1 is a model for the average figure, low bust, long skirt, four hose supporters attached. a rial of extra quality coutil, trim med with plain band of batiste finished with emb braid, drawstring and-extra hook below clasp. Price é Ask to see our stock of Brag sieres, at prices ranging from= $3.00 to 25¢ Free Stereopticon show. 617 Second Ave. ° \SESSZSBORZTes _ r a nee a ee ee is

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