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THR sCRIVrs NOrTHW NEWEPAPERS Telegraph News ited Breas Assootation Bantered at the postoffies, Seattle, Wash. ae second ines matter, Published by Star Publishing yy every evening except Sunday a ve _ Some Divisions ID you ever look at it in this way, as it is put by Francis Heney? | “The average American is perfectly content to per- | mit the five profit-paying public utilities—the gas, elec- tricity, water, telephone and street railroads—to be oper- | ated by private enterprise, while he, a citizen, assumes jee Walley WhMendd Gi PUA tan Nevarnen at. Tolan, Wb OL re the eight nox-paying and exceedingly expensive public | whether Joe wants to be elected vo he won't be forgot or whether he utilities—the public schools, parks and playgrounds, fire, | thinks he has been forgot and can be tod police and street departments, sewer system, hospitals WHERE? 7 ” | Young man desires young lady to go with, Address , and jails. Daily Nows.—Advertisement {In Evanaton (Ill.) News Note, too, a similar division that has existed in other . oe ee ” folk 4 foo sroduction of|.. A few days ago Pike's peak wae reported to be sinking and now Fespects. Transportation of folk and food, produc | the bottom of the Atlantic ocean Is rising off Sable txland, But don’t | minerals and fuel, and, very largely, the manufacture of every-| worry. The top of the ocean in the neighborhood I» still level thing that goes into clothes or buildings have been left to Anewered by Mr. Cynthia Grey. corporations—private enter, rises that have not hesitated to Please tell me how to make an apple turn over.—Ethel Mae W. ae F | You can make an apple turn over, Hthel, in the same way you make! Gxtort big profit. & peach roll cee ee of army, navy and all branches of gov But, the expe ernment There are strong engaging in business Undoubtedly, the government should promote legitimate b Uncle Sam. arguments to back the proposition that ~non-paying—is ymme by “ is not a proper function of government. | **°* - on No, Sadie, take your hair off first off their shoes at all ee ee When | undress to go to bed should | take my shoes off first?—Sadic Many of our most stylish citi I have one of the new style rubber cornets and when | try to play it q 3 the rubber stretches so that the notes rebound. What shall I do with it? enterprise. j—1. OT ‘ ( iN : : 4 the it, | It vulcanized * But when private enterprise bites the hand that feeds si Have It vulcanize RP Wear tp B @ radical change is justifiable. ; : Is It a good plan to wear shoes longer than your feet? Evangeline 4 A can citizen is not to blame if oppression by If you have found shoes that wear longer than your feet pie: j ‘i The America i : h ks lake uf profits in send us the name of the dealer, We should like to buy a pair private enterprise has shown him le bigness o ol ee 8. e Operating the public utilities. ED MORRIS, deceased Chicago packer, left between 30 and 50 millions. Mr. Morris departed this life for his eternal | reward firm in the conviction that beef is high because the blamed farmers don't raise enough steers, It is hoped that he left a moiety of his rake-off from steers-on-the-hoof to our de- serving institutions for moral uplift—of steers? Naw, of Paupers! | ||HERE FOR? / | || Posie For The Irresistibleness of Facts | | [GROUP oF | | | ROGERS STATUAR ISN’T it curious what an enormous strength there is ina well assorted bunch of facts? Take, for illustration, the now celebrated case of iocrad messy, the tiger trimmer. | Before he butted in, the fusion campaign in Gotham was! ambling along with the speed and enthusiasm of ice} swagon. It was hurling accusations at Murphy of the glit-| an tering generality family—stereotyped and stale. And it looked as if Murphy's man would have a walk-away Then this smiling, red-headed, newspaper man, who hadn't a thing in the world but the straight goods, all wool and a yard wide, opened up with names, places, figures and dates. And they haven't picked up all the remains of Murphy| What did it, ask? Facts, facts, FACTS. WOMAN IN Plainfield, N. D., sues railway company for claiming other things that she cannot play ‘as well as she could before an accident. Thhis is in- deed a sad affair. mes 2 About “Bob” Bridges ; HE STAR welcomes the candidacy of Robert Bridges to succeed himself as port commissioner. It believes "Phe people of Seattle are indebted to him for the splendid Lon M }to how to preven table. I regret leaves continuing the fallen leaves Briticism and for which he has received no reward other than the belated thanks of those who are just now beginning #0 realize that it was Bridges more than anyone else who} Btood between the port district and those who would have} ‘fobbed us for their own gain. “Bob” Bridges has been a good servant and so long as ; the is willing to serve us we should gladly accept that service. |—s. T. McA nasturtinms light, Minot (N aw and the sett D.) Reg REPRESENTATIVE CAREY of Wisconsin is in wrong | the “hello” girls, because he called them inexperienced ‘ . They don’t want to be called “persons.” Bet that’s =. half as bad as what he calls them when he’s trying to get ai ’ NOW CHINA'S president has kicked 300 balky members | Chinese president is no heathen. | (Copyright, 1 and| _Jf. as I think, peal or suspend t > "THERE'S ONE difference between our elections Buerta’s—you can always tell who is dead after ours. very Home Needs ss: This Great eat Remedy @ Wo Home Can Afford to ‘to Be} { Without a Mild, Reliable |{ HAT ARE, We) A in moat of them, yes, | you think of the overcoat. out of parliament. When it comes to using the big stick that | | Author of “On Board t FAILS TO SHOW UP. ARE YOU SURE WE YOUNG MAN YAON'T TALKING IN \HIS SLEEP WHEN \\HE PROPOSED? A STREET OF FAVORITE eoeeee it depends a great d My Dear Mr. Grey: I wish to thank you for your very kind advice and suggestions as leaves from falling off my mahogany drop-leat t the that none of your suggestions proved to fall off. However, I have found instead of losing them an I used to. : 8 "wervice he has given them as a member of that body, a os ck oe 4 ‘ H a just QUESTIONS MR. GREY CANNOT ANSWER— Bervice which has brought to him a large measure of unju wobec pele Bi A Sal ead A lant Where can I send sotled stovepipe collars to be Inundered? Please print a formula for making ink that will write backwards What should be the cost of a pair of tron ores for a skiff? eee } | But Who Cares About the Setting for Poker? | peas, poppies and potted balsam ing was an ideal one for the spirite orter. HERBERT QUI CK SAYS TODAY By Herbert Quick he Good Ship Earth,” Fireside by the Newspaper we are, as a@ matter of he law providing for free ships and Imposing tolls on what shall we do about toll We can let everybody 913, Enterprise An " olley and {t would be mon: do this rather retard the in our pc than charge vement of {r ight in game of and duty, passage for our coastwige ne ships of other nations, tolls whic’ HOVY OF TEN A BRIDEGROOM NK HE MUST HAVE STARTED HERE THROUGH HIS SALOONS valuable, A way to Should a man wear his overcoat while eating In a chill parlor? — I, though, on what the 180 I now make 1 v ©, the even 500. GOVERNMENT SHOULD BACK UP AND START OVER AGAIN ON TOLLS sociation.) bound to them serve as ornaments by hanging them on the hall tree.—Mra. L. Ww M LR The gorgeous purple California thistie blended perfectly with the Etc., Editor of Farm and re # ships through free and} 4 make the world a present of the canal, for one thing; | kets as a nation to would even If the Interest on our investment ts twelve or fif. teen millions a year and we it would still & good investment the efficiency of our navy the annual charge. of the transcontinental rallways—and worth many times twelve millions a ye that will ar operated the canal free, It nearly doubles and that alone is worth| der construction at Park ay, It will break the freight monopoly | + be Si Small Sees a Pup That. Isn't as Tame as It’s Lame. “POOR Ld TTL. @icows LAMAN YUST TAME HiPD Noma ANG Kae | = A | rhe | we ploy Pe. G000 To ~a Away AND GEV OAS THAT + | COUT BELIEVE Hb WAS Lame AT Ae lt NEW YORK, Nov John Purroy Mitchel takes office as mayor, January 1, there will be at his disposal 260 ectty jobs, pay ing annually in salaries over $1,000,000. That gives a hint of the Intense and sincere sadness that broods over Tammany hall.. But only a hint. A mililon a year in salaries fn Just a dr pared to the “graft loat to the 14th st the next four years . 12 —When haul that {fa statesmen for . An unusual display tn the show wi of one of the biggest jew elry houses in Maiden Jane fe at | tracting att n. It also has a sentimental tnterest for many an old New ¥Y The window Is filled with pocket nuch | books and othe leather goods, | fashioned eof : who, at the Hippo with the rav ge and passed on t pachydermal happy hunting ground. Queenie was supponed to be about 150 years old, She was brought to New York {In the early 40s, and had been exhibited in| many museums and amusement parks here. She left four children, ranging In age from 20 to 50 years |who are traveling with various shows. eee The largest spartment for which a leaso was ever signed in New York has taken by Samuel | Sachs, a banker, fn a building un and 2nd at. There are 94 rooms baths in the apartment and eight which o* i Laxative-tonic But no such generous policy Is necessary. Welcupies the entire sixth floor, and : can exact tolls which wiil carry the charges and not|hag an area of more than half an # No well-regulated home should reduce the usefulness of the canal, avoid offense to! sere. without a laxative, for there is the nations of the world and deal fairly by our treaty 7 oobi as Bm a day in a family of sev- obligations be ersons that someone doesn’t To do this we need only adopt the rate-mak Gempiain of headache, of sleepless use. ee Pie AND CHEESE or show the first signs of a Herbert Quick Tolls through canals are generally ulated on ie a an odor ne ory ‘Ing methods any competent freight agent would dé meres doth 06h Seles © A laxative then becomes a neces- the tonnage of the vessel. No matter with what she is loaded, or pig Fe | @ity or what was a trifling conges | whether she is loaded at all, she pays on her tonnage She pays as A cage in which a bird is sing: | m at the beginning may run into | much {f filled with hay or crushed rock as If her cargo were sllka,| ine | serious cold or fever. No harsh planos or tourists Sts and Cheees | Femedy is needed, but simply a No railway man would ever be so Insane ar to adopt auch a scheme | id laxative-tonic that will make harges t I believe this is exactly the scheme which our law an ple—oh vidon 4 Iver active and atir up the pts for Panama canal I believe the tolls are $1.25 a ton 47 7 | Bowels. People who have tried a MRS. M. F. SMITH ething that, anyhow When the phosphates of the Columb The ean clove at many things, end a | valley are mined and ground for fertilizer they will have to pay $ suet 9 cass heads of families, wh it to tiny babes, and grown/| 4 ton The go 1 the Treadwell mine in Al ash a can go through at Thick cuts that woo the Taunt seen the Iittle ills run t pl taking little ger|the same rate he millionaires owning the Treadwell mt can bite { Will tell you that there nount, find y effective. It| personally go through at $1.26 a ton This ts erue high for fert! Crisp crust a sweet content better than Dr. Caldwe is mild and ¢ pleasant-tasting | lizer and absurdly low for gold. 1 submit, millionaires should have a ment brianine Pepsin, which you can obta and free from ¢ higher rate than manure De aise Mal Lis gions store for fifty cents or on It does not hide behind a high| All freight rat #0 calculated that the traffic will move free | age aby . io: a bottle, the latter being the | sounding name and absolutely } ly The good od a low rate get {t The goods which can pay Old Time, be oft. your seythe { family size. free from ohibited ingredi-|# high rate without feeling It, pay ft | avinning) | Among the great believers in|ent. Famili nee use Syrup The government should back up and start over again on Panama! Ple and cheese | rup Pepsin for constipation in| Pepsin foreve after avold en-| tolls We are now steering right Into the middle of a bad muddle in| Cleveland Plain Dealer. } id or young, and as a general | thartic salt pul and other| which w hall be In the wrong. We should make the tolla according | @ “ e msehold emergency remedy, 1#|harah medicines, for these only do|to the value of the things carried. Hay, crushed rock, coal and lum : z ra, M. FP. Smith, 710 N. Cherry St.,|temporary good, are nauseous and| ber should pass through at a toll very much below $1 ngos,| * mn Antonio, Tex. To use her « a shock to any delicate system.| lemons and fruits should pay more. Silk still more. Twenty passen SEES MILD WINTER ds, she says she will bleas Dr.| Such things should never be given| gers welghing a ton could easily pay twenty dollars. A ship with'no| —— dwell to*her dying day for she|to children cargo should go throngh free, in the interests of the @anal, if she 1a| MADISON, Wis., Nov. 14.—It's q believes that through his remedy ‘amilies wishing to try @ free| coming back with a load going to be ‘a mild winter, accord yrup Pepsin, she found the way|sample Wottle can obtain tt post-| These are the neiples on which all Just tariffa, and most which] ing to Michael Quann, director of F permanent good health paid by addressing D 3. Cald-|are pot just, are.levied. The adoption of them would settle the treaty|the zoo here. He says the bea Ss Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin 1s| well, 419 Washington St; Monti-[ question, &t would settle the matter of reducing freight rates gn the| wolves, raccoons, foxe® and dec F feientifically compounded Pay {te | cello, I Spo tal card with your ' uilways, And it would make the cana] a paying property. have not taken.on their customary / purity is vouched for. others! name and ad@ress on it will do. HERBERT QUICK, fur coats in the bucket com-| Main 090. Priv Secting with all PHON: RAT change vom. euartmente, By moti, antiy, hey six mos. By carrier, i moot Advance, enn, 98.26, tly, ‘tee month, IF YOU WANT TO BE HEALTHY, TAKE A LONG WALK EVERY MORNING AND GARGLE MUSIC ON THE WAY By ABE HURWITZ. Ket¢ham, manager of the or, wuld it without bat Ung an ey “Boe's out for her matutinal pert vocalizer.” 1 end I, not so many ates at the old me | years ago. high od him of languagelfer r before had | sumpect 4 intoxtea tion. Was he kidding me or show ing me a good time? | 1 had asked him a simple, efvil question, thusly “Whore can I find Wynue this morning?” Sings as She Walks. Mins Wynne ts the girl with the chestnut brown hatr and dreamy eyes and soulful expression whol] | Minn Estelle | | makes such a delightful sweetheart | for Steve Baird, the chap ne up a neat bundle of Ix in two days and causes who see “Ready Mone this week with who ndoo- | leave the | an ache tn y je from langhing so much. | Ben finally elucidated as follows ‘Miss Wynne practices ber sing» \ing in morning walks But why should Miss Wynne take this odd sort of vocal exerci pt required to « Ready Money? Good Thing, Bhe Says. firmly bellev e¢ when sing thing for one to sing good mort ing, even ff one can't wing,” ts the paradoxical explanatio by Miss Wynne of her “Joy ing habit,” as she calls tt, sald explane tion being accompanied by a merry musteal tinkle and a flash of glinten. | ing rows of pearly teeth Estelle has « captivating way of ughin | imei tunsraceec8:"*8* SOUP TO NUTS! EAT WITHOUT FEAR tion at 100 per cent Miss E Wynn Mise Wynne was f¢ y itn wants namely Tea eees"aul2 QF DYSPEPSIA—PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN & reputation as a wa For nevernl seasons, however, she has heen [featured {n William A. Brady's | OIGESTS FOOD WHEN STOMACH ; stomach and intestines, Head. productions, but she stil) can Te. CAN'T—NO SOURNESS, aches from hpomtag- ar presi trazzini some. In fact, her votce unknown where Pape’s Diapepsin is growing better, she thinks ~ oetdsec tages In used. It really does all the work | of a healthy stomac! gest | PB el tht? Aaa snag a You can eat anything your stom-| your meals when your stomach |fore, continued and every moraing ach craves without r of Indiges-|can't. It leaves nothing to ferment, tion or Dyspepsia, or that your| sour and upset the stomach. food will ferment or sour on your| Get a large 50-cent case of stomach, {f you will take Pape's; Pape's Diapepsin from your drug- Diapepsin occasionally. gist, then eat anything you want Anything you eat will be digest-| without the slightest discomfort or she gets a healthy bunch of ozone into her system. | It's a trick of the profession, you | see, one that vocalists must learn— |to crowd the greatest amount of| air Into the human eratem at the (4: Bothing can ferment or turn| misery, besides, every particle of potent goog Vy — into acid, poison or stomach gas,|impurity and Gas that is tetgour Racrypees pared ale which causes Belching, Dizziness,| stomach and intestines will vanish. , od for the conatitution,|» feeling of fullness after eating Should you be suffering now anyhow,” says Miss Wynne. “Walk-| Nausea, Indigestion (Ik of|from Indigestion or y stomach ing is the best sort of exercise an4|jend in stomach), s8,| disorder, you can get relief in five is made all the better by actively Heartburn, Water brash in | minutes exorclaing the voca Pig Causes Death AURORA, I, vocal organs,’ THE WONDER MILLINERY CO. 1525 SECOND AV. 216 PIKE ST. We Are Still Selling Our Splendid Fall Stock Nov. 14-—A pig caused M. D. Kelly of Sycamore, Ill, to break his neck in an auto mobile accident near Sycamore, tn which Charlies Johnson of Cortlang. lil, owner of the machine, and Hf at Unusual Prices |N. Gilmore of Sycamore were tnter nally injured, and M. Raylia, als REDUCTI EA ETH of Sycamore, was brulsed OUR UCTIONS MEAN SOM ING! Tha automobile was going raj You Must Come in to Appreciate Our Offerings idly when {t struck a pig that ray acroas the road. The machine was turned over. \ A Message for You Overcoats—the New Ones in all the Snappy Styles and Nobby Patterns are here. Dozens upon dozens of these classy gar- ments are now unpacked and on display—there’s one to fit every form, and the prices have been marked right down to where you can hardly afford to be without one. ON CREDIT—TOO of money hasn't even a Come to the store and get your coat— come tomorrow—make a small payment and let the balance ride as a charge account until most convenient. That's the way at the Eastern. The look in,” question ready $332 -34 Second Ave. Near Union &t Seattle’s Reliable Credit House