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— ee aren me Saas se srr — sn erpcomrmercerare om r ar ea eae memerreranoes ee sessctaces 7 THE STAR—-MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1913. PHONES “2282 oiii""Si"arparmsata RATES BLY SEATTLE MADE GOODS. THAT'S A GOOD INVESTMENT By Condo| ATT ? ’ sie ve THOUSAND __ Kicks on Unequal Taxes. | Forever! Here . Man Who mm THis Cure\ | tarmac acieeaet’ — Says He’s Going to Do It TO THE BOTTOM OF THE for good government and justice, I the Answer Riddle of the Trusts OUR coal bill, if you buy anthracite, will go up another 10 cents a ton on September 1, because Pennsylvania has decided to exact a tax of 254 per cent on this kind of fuel, i | ; | : py | Instead of taking the tax out of the trust which has made yyityl based on its marketable value at the mine Whi ily CANYON, DAVE DOUGLAS, . Wish to Gal) your attention to Cet ~ “ - f tain conditions in our county in the BERKELEY, € Aug. 4--|ossify the body. Hat at least one hundreds of millions of profit through its capture and exploit y All! I! AND ONE OF US HAS 4 |torm of unjust discrimination of] Just exactly 400 years ago Ponce| apple every day tm the year, Chew ation of this monopoly of nature, Pennsylvania takes it out of our, taxing oyster. aa! he. 22, Leon Krew old and died search thoroughly.” a M q ¥ | ‘The petty charges brought up be| ing for the fountain of eternal ‘= iaknieiaait the caer earmunusned consumer. ss cures Rite fore the recent grand jury are in youth A man has remarried his t may take some time to convince Pennsylvania that il | significant compared to the taxation!” ‘Today Harry Gaze, a young man| wife, but there was money in it ment of this problem hasn't been wise. The common nyntem is appaaabes as take Who Was tor | - fo Clas’ as wie BC TE in Pennsylvania know it now, but the exploiters are in The property in the western half " snpor of King county 1® ansessed four| times as much per cash value as | property tn the eastern half of the county. Our timber lands that control. Some day, let's hope, the exploiters will be dislodged, and then Pennsylvania anthracite, if any be leit, will be han PLEASANT BAKING DAYS dled for the people. Alaska, too, has great coal beds, luckily still in the hands crulse 50,000 feet per acre, valued of the people through Uncle Sam. The exploiters have been at $4 a0 per, housand, is anseesed at esa 06 Sen ae lands no farther from Seattle, but | turn out “just right” are an every trying cunningly to get there the same grip which they have | day occurrence when you use wsed so cruelly in Pennsylvania, and thus tar they have been in the southern section, are assess: | baffled. : | ed at $40 per acre, with a $100 per| But the coal of Alaska does not any good in the a Oe isa gun oaninaie CRESCENT is assessed far more tn froportion | pt Sa hE oped. The time has ground. It will be useful only when dev ; is to come to lay broad plans for its development, and it YOUR interest to think about HOW | Under the Poindexter plan private greed won't be permit. | @ to do as it has done in Pennsylvania. If private capital and enterprise wish to go into the coal mining business in Alaska, it will, under this plan, have opportunity to do so, but mot &s a monopoly, with a monopoly’s contempt for fair py IT WILL HAVE TO MINE CAREFULLY, PAY D WAGES, R IVE EQUAL TREATMENT ON TLROADS AND SHIPS, AND COMPETE WITH UNCLE SAM HIMSELF, WHO, INSTEAD ¢ -F POCKET to his value than the man with) larger holdings in other parts of _ BAKING POWDER county A. D. D. Ite action te sure and uniform, It does not cause the fough to ratee up suddenly and fall, but works surely and evenly until the food ts baked. 25c PER LB. He Wants More Cars. | Editor The Star A few minutes) before o'clock the other day, I] boarded one of th for Alki point, that is # cara which ding room y the time we Yen! Vay the car) ly filled The car} a single with lots NG THE PROFIT, WILL DIVIDE IT EQUALLY BE was comfortably” filed”) The car (EEN THOSE WHO DO THE WORK OF MINING i} was jammed before wo left th AWA th MAW It seoms a pity that more cars| ih AND HAULING AND THOSE WHO BUY g Yi) wy! The Poindexter plan, INSTEAD OF TAXI THE -* Li Lay Y Wifi CONSUMER AND SOL ZING THE WORKERS AS ] MUCH AS HUMAN NECESSITY WILL STAND, PRO POSES, FOR THE FIRST TIME IN THE HISTORY OF INDUSTRY IN AMERICA, TO MAKE THEM BOTH EQUAL CO-PARTNERS Put this plan into execution in Alaska and, don’t you see #t will PROFOUNDLY INFLUENCE the course of HOMNGORTY |i lanatnianeaiesapeaanieieincan elsewhere? } aSmeceenaAteeOLrCS' Smee ae — $F It is THE ANSWER TO THE RIDDLE OF THE, AN ro alle believe a thovvand years of fe wil AIR GAEL AE iB cannot be put on ® route over| which so many people travel, e- pecially to the Alki bathing beach They have the cars, at least enough | of them were In ev , to ¢ tact tha not act in furnishing on the Alki line shows HARRY GAZE. gotten his birthday, claims he has| found 1, and expects to. live *"'RESINOL CLEARS ze never e is & curable disease,” | (i regard they have for 1 should be a law which would | he says “I have forgotten how old | compel them to put more care on|! am and I never expect to die. 1) heir patrons one nvery Expense. a im Wh enna" Every 11 month: peording to REAL CIVILIZED, those Chinese! They've started at non as Love for [Questions Immigration'’s Value to science, we build entirely Saw | Pimples and blackheads disap. put their republic by cutting each other’s throats Editor Most Anything | Pacific Co: body. The secret of perpetual youth | pear, unsightly complexions become My husband fs a very quiet man. Editor The Star: I have been alts the building of a better body | clean, clear, and velvety, and hair reader of your valuable payer for each succeeding year. We don't | health and beauty are promoted by nome time, and have read many in grow old; we become old by not|the regular use of Resinol Soap teresting articles relative to the| growing. There {s no limit to a'and an occasional application of opening of the Panama can%,, but | man's age except the one he fixes Resinol Ointment These soothing, nable to discover in what himeelf. Banish the idea of matur- healing preparations do their work const will be ity. Make war on the ‘prime of|easily, quickly and at little cost, ning of the big life’ Cooperate with nature, don't} When even the most expensive cos defeat her. Cheer up, the best is|metics and complicated “beauty This coast will be flooded with | yet to come.” | treatments” fall. cheap labor, immigrants who will! Gaze himself ts the picture of And the best of it is you need | work for little or nothing, just to youth, muscular, alert and vital ver hesitate to use Resinol Soap ret something to do. Thus we! There seems to be nothing of the | and Resinol Ointment. There fe indulging in lengthy conversation Word “Damn”? 2090" y once or twice a year, but The Use of the Wor MATE | Sink be has ‘vows Teasing in. your . : ‘i : column the bright remarks of PEP ERE glad to hear from Dr. Stanley Hall, moralist and! Seattle husbands he has "beenene psychologist, that we may say “damn” when the oc-|quite verbose, endeavoring to say . thing that I would think €asion requires, and not lose caste with the great of the earth, ugh to be printed. He who have, he tells us, always, when deeply moved, indulged in | succeeded the other day. W eating cherry ple when sud _ strong language. Jexclaimed, “Oh! Ouch! Pacific It is a relief to know this, for it must be confessed that /°™ oh nt r pats the matter?’ he asked sometimes used that pungent word and afterward won-| “My tooth struck a cherry pit,” I workingmen, who are taxpayers,| poser or freak about him. j nothing in them to injure the tende if it was just the proper thing. | answered. will have to work for the seme as Walk Every Morning. erest surface. Resino! is a doctors When the other side has three bases in the ninth in-| | “Who digs all the cherry pits? these {mmigrants, or else leave the| While Gaze believes he bas found) prescription which for elghteem with two out, and the score a tie, and an easy one is he asked. count the fount of youth fn the human| years bas been used by careful ° ” . by | Pretty clever, wasn't t?—Mrs. D. ‘There is somethii > 1 do not! mind, he regards the physical as an| physicians for all kinds of si understand ¢ people | important factor. affections, They prescribe Rest en to short and fumbled, letting in a run, how in the name |g. q of goodness is a fellow to express the tumult of his feelings if Ramey some short and ugly word? ou always noticed that when gd beware of an engine without a safety valve. | He sig Aen Thcoes a et there’s a considerable choice in cuss words. And,/ jegsnees or cheats by graft frankly, we believe you can get the desired relief for your| somebody else follows right © you kid! going to farm this loggedoff Iand| “Take brisk walks every morning. | freely, confident that its soothing, | when the rea! estate sharks are sell-|Take water and sun baths. Bat) healing action is brought about by ing {t for approximately $200 an | sparingly and only when hungry.| medication so bland and gentle ag jacre? N. A.C. | Bat meat if you cannot enjoy other! to be suited to the most delicate or |foods, but nuts and fruits are the irritated skin. Resinol Soap and ‘ f | Plea for Labor Body lbest diet. Kat as much uncooked/ Ointment are sold by practically fiyne” artist, with his brass weep) payor The Star: Karl Marx,|£004 as possible, for heat breaks | every druggist in the United States, up the vital composition of food. Trial free; Dept, 3-P, Resinol, Balth eee Cheer up, brother; haven't short-circuited feelings in most of the emergencies of life| slong and shows up the fault? | fo, . nob : : Z Ps : r | | Don't sob € 19 it can't| starter, is to be firmly and dect : t going into the kinds of profanity which give grief and | dew) be Cively choked. That te unless be |0UD4er Of socialism, in defense of % 4 by ¢ « ” " » ~~ 7 Fruit contains element: ore, 4 F anguish to pious souls who chance to overhear | ave ay postcards Cc. 2 4 Hear that hear|is willing to play ragtime, for rag poh Bae “3 Ne eee ae) ad ints that do not | more, Md Presi yi i y volt | ° ‘omen do a lot o th Loker tuft do rT pa '? - pe her- sident Wilson, foozling an easy stroke on the golf|eciish things, but you never saw | Gee, ain't Pm Bo pe pln | ae and nothing but ragtime Will any (when papers were rigidly | censored by that government) LOW EASY muffin Grote-Rankin’s | links, might have torn off a line of language that would have one get up ins street car and give| tabes the forced a special session of the presbytery. But he didn’t. He|her seat to an exceptionally good | Gilde, slide’ Let's get on deck ing, well dressed boy of nine | There's Mammy and Sammy and “You accept the greatness and power of nature without demanding PRICES TERMS i 4 - s i ms . loc | merely said: “Tut, tut!” Mildly, sweetly, just like this: “Tut, (0° f a ‘4 RAP And, behold, next day it was in all the papers, proving | (eon *nd let an old man sland” You! Granny, by heck! that th ould bloom like the | 4 3 A Py ¢ have nothing on me, old top. 1) Wave te i th femand that dif. "| how virtue is often its own reward Inever saw f Pt fave to shore Gosé-byes galore. Sout wank . Ps never saw & woman in @ street car) Should old equaintance be for- y shout So, though Dr. Hall says we may say “damn” without | give ber seat ybody : Se ee the one narrow path. We Offer the Diamond forfeiting fellowship with the lecet, we're not at all certain! eee ave mighty spirite are stil tn 4 4 ii st for i; ' i 1 cost a Loe Angeles joker | world, one for good, one for evil. | ba ahd best for us to cultivate the habit. Which reminds ma PB fl acoginph ee Angeion Jolas bg pf al ace siren a5le}| ect ic eaner Thee uf f. , snake In a plonic party at a This does not alm to be a poem. | apace in a certain Seatti¢ afternoon | n ; oe tm one a es widely known for his original | rk. Any newspaper would |It simply couldn't without being paper to brand a certain labor on) cussing. Folks used to come from miles around to hear him iy have paid his fine if it [arrested fut it's the way “Auld Senieetion Be wrereerern: Thi W k t 35 ag ee ; 4 in tI Why seek to strangle this organt S eeK a Lang Syne” will be rendered tn the near future when ocean liners take swear. One day he started for town with a load of potatoes. | At the foot of a steep hill, wishing to be entertained, a naughty | \ tha denartate hoy lifted the end-board of his wagon, then hid in the bushes) The average « "At the present it Is the enustom on| at the top of the hill. }lees telegraph, announces the Paris|many otean steamers for a cor Pausing to rest his team, the farmer looked back and | academy of science, ts 2 net player to play “Auld Lang & second. This shows the Syne” just as they are about to |xation? To thore who understand lit, the action of the editor is a class action, It breathes the spirit of class unity, @ thorough underten4) All Summer Furniture Is Now Attractively Priced for | a Final Clearance. ling day | Thus it ts boped that the flooded | SICK HORSE GOES All that remains of our fine line of Summer Furniture ure in the musical program on saw al! his potatoes scattered along the roadside. But in- “ ; roy cars are not, as many passen.|hotet the gang plank stead of exploding he sat on a boulder, took his head be-|gors do not think, the fastest things| The cornet plays It with “expres tween his hands and mused. i in the world. | alton.” He puts tnto the plece all the |tears at parting will be dammed up P hy, a. Disappointed, the boy approached and asked: “Why don’t * +> throbs and quavers he can—and/|and, tnstead, everybody will hum is now offered at about cost. This is positively your last and you swear? 6 In Washington they no longer Jand whistle, tango and turkey trot best chance to secure some of these artistic pieces at but @ Betwixt a groan and a sigh came this reply: ber ae ere cats the vent Heels ge the) fraction of the price you would have to pay at the beginnin, » ‘i + : + y ir “Son, ae me, use; there are no words in the En “Chautauqua champagne.” lines can reduce of the season . e ca ie conveying my emotions.” ee woe and by substituting By caine the milder words, you escape a troublesome| It hae been announced gay ragtime ntimental alre, putation and are less liable to disappoint your friends. re ey the ed year What's the matter with expanding $16.00 Natural Willow Arm ave ypted wentert Cee Me 6 kcse . $10.90 Toke the case where the hero- fashions, and judging Sgr on gelled MEDICOS and pharmacists tell tales out |number of revolutions they found ine in the play has been driven $14.00 Natural Willow Arm what a perfectly killin ist call! their styles in Mexico, from home and {s misunderstood $14.00 Nz 2 J of school, P y killing history they recall Pgirare by all her old friends, and the| Chalk Gd. v0 fee $9.50 villian is about to deprive her of| papers—not her curl pa. uments that will $10.50 Natural Willow Arm “The voice of Robert M. La FOREE FOR. 555 she $6.95 BY PAYING $500,000, Standard Oil settles its Texas) gojete 9 " says th $102,000,000 penalty suit. A crumb is better than no bread,| Transcript, te signany a 1 but the in Texas In the bright jcon of that her inno-cent 2 Why must the violins do a $10.50 natural Willow Sew- ee aper there is no such part of 5 " tremulo effect, sending shivers ing Rocker for......86.95 speech as “cant. TENT Sucriow see down your spine and making you still keep on the safe side of hic-|feel as bright and cheerful as a $ ’ Mow STUDYING |OUR PRECISE ARTIST)‘ + OE, tea $1400 Natural Willow 1 It is that several hun.| Wouldn't {t de great during these ocker for .....-.,$8.95 THE dred p * and their friend eepy epleodes ff the orchestra > Sc rh on the dock are moved to gush: anked up and then let loose on $12.00 Old Hickory Settee. . 4 of tears. There's not a dry eye|"Too Much Mustard,” or “That eee EEN CAN SO Rea $8.95 within hearing distance, even on | Clothesline Rag ? e 2 the fish in the harbor This is just # suggestion, and it $4.15 Old Hickory Sewing Rocker for .........82.95 Now a leading steamsbip line|is hoped that ft will be taken in OF THE announces that the “Auld Lang|good part by the managers, Little Fellow You're “The Picture sd rs oF - of Health” Chief Aims $4.00 Old Hickory Rocker for . -. 83.50 $25.00 Stained Willow L ing Chair for ve 814.98 $15.50 Stained Willow Arm Chair for ............89.85 EUGENIC MARRIAGE | =e PROVES A FAILURE tics: coos. rest in the morning from a dream of peace, His wife was shaking him When you wear Trueto- BOSTON, Masa, Aug. 4.—-Fugen- called ‘at the Lynn police station) by the arm. Nature Teeth you look well ‘ ‘ fowl “ " , : fo marringo 1# a tniluro; take {t/And asked for police excort to her) “John,” she whispered, “there's teria ie toes Il The National| \swjitBivedge lccrnme tor at Snot fe hrs ye Bua emanates ~embarrass you eyery time you of Larue, the fket cemmaie welt y away her belongings. Pa one dren tilng " yawned TOP ewiesns saan ccuudee DOG DAZE couple in th meet a friend. City Bank be all right o You po ae you haven't | Much Superior to the Galty Sait| but ten't a guarant ap: | jpown » . ater Kind. piness they both agree, though they | 2 thing seemed safe Beautiful sets, mounted on You Can Start a Knut Paulson, who Is engaged in |ndmit boing unable to agroe other-| Is Great Relief Outside waited Nellie, a big chest- i vuleanite or celluloid, or gold, Savings A salt water fishing off the coant of | Wise. ° nut mare, belonging to Thomas Mor or Piel it. 30 if you prefer, $5, $10 and $15 ioe pep rea with One Dol-] Masnachusetts, remerbered some} ‘Today saw the end of their dream| NEW LONDON, Conn, A fan, contractor. "Halloran found we. per eet, according to material ar and foe! at hgme {four Bank, | of bis friends by shipping teom|of matrimonial bliss. The Perron|_ . = n, AUB 4! ghe had a bad attack of colic, He $3.00 Old Hickory Straight used, Fully guaranteed. Capital and Surplus fully paid || fresh salt water fish the past week.|home at Lynn was dismantied and) 0"? Smith, @ native of Old) treated tho horse afd put it under Chair for ... my Lyme, who died in a hospital for] shelter so ee eee oll : The doctor heard a muffled fum- Maniac’s Death [pine and, urged by his wite, went down stairs to investigate, Every- $4.00 Old Hickory Arm Chair $4.50 Ol4 Hickory Arm Chair That it may $600,000.00 |—-Manistique (Mich.) Pidheer, It ia probable the courts may be toe called upon to jolve the Per-|the insane at Norwich, was one of Nellie, feeling sick in the middle of the night, had broken the halter, Just to meet Ambassador |rons’ eugenic bonds, all because the) the oldest insane patients in the| walked out of the stable and @ PIKE 6 » and gone Boston Uniform Courtesy Wilson, Secretary Bryan had to |bridegroom of one month asserts|{inited States. He was the #ev-|t) the doctor, ive up $2,000 a day in hi that he unexpectedly returned ho T " @ y 6 M®!enth patient admitted - 1620-33 =, Avenee. ig es oe line of feed talk, Too bad tert night ond was soundly thrashed | fation at Middletown, sreentnan te Hest modern outside rooma in Se- and Oppostio they didn’t arrange to sell the y © man he found calling on bis| years ago, and tt 1s estimated that|attle, 26e to 0c, Stewart House, 86 FIFTH fe privileges of taking moving | Wife his board in various asyluins has Stewart (near Pike Publie Im present location 11 years pictures of this conference, Mrf, Catherine Perron, the bride,! cost the town of Old Lyme $30,000, Market,)—Advertisemgnt, Gado teon ne w. a &e oy. . a