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THR sSCRIVES NORTUW EAT Men are unlovely, but their works are fain— Ay, men are evil, but their books are goods The clay hath perished and the soul, laid bare, Shines from the books In heavenly solitude, Light on each slender stem pure blossoms rest, Like angel-envoys of the heavenly powers; Of all earth's maidens these are first and best, And all | love is here—old books, freah flowers. Rosamund M, Watson, Lister and Logged-Off Lands OV. Lister of, logged-off land under approved and signed, the bill, which King county Wote next Saturday, on the creation of a logged off land dis trict in this county. This was after the governor had obtained the best ad Wice available on the measure. "But now the big owners of logged-off lands in King Wounty, who are holding their property for speculative pur are fighting the proposition to establish a district They will neither sell their lands nor improve them! WHY? Because they know that unless they dispose of their vacant lands and get settlers on them, that their taxes are going to be raised and thus relieve the small home owner in the city of a part of this tax burden There is a clause in this bill by which, if the owner of| d-off land refuses to sell at a price not exceeding $20) acre, the logged-off land commissioners are obliged to cer-| that fact to the county assessor, And the county as-| or, if he does his duty, must assess them upon the valua- they themselves have put on the land Now do you see, Mr. Merchant and Mr. Workingman, y these men are opposing the creation of such a district) King county? | WOMAN IN Poughkeepsie, N. Y., offers reward of $35 for return f her husband, dead or alive. She's a perfect spendthrift. bi . %, ° ° Tying It Again P) NE of the precious bloodthirsty thugs imported by the| Standard Oi! gang having been killed while out gun- for trouble, they are going to try in Colorado just what) perpetrated in West Virginia. They have established a military court for trial of alf ons charged with offenses in connection with the strike. | © The national constitution, the state constitution and MM rights of man that conflict with military procedure will] : Suspended and men will be railroaded to prison without} knowing with what they are charged, without benefit f bail, without trial of any sort save the farcical proceed-! ng called military trial. 7 Later on we will spend thousands of dollars on a ‘Congressional investigation to discover what it was all about ‘We call President Wilson’s attention to the fact that the head of the military, that he is guardian of the al rights of every man and particularly we call ‘Attention to the point that Colorado is not West Vir- By this last we mean that the larger part of Colorado's f element is composed of American citizens who have made desperate by past outrages. there should ever be a repetition of the shameful of human rights shown in the West Virginia in- when we have an executive empowered to cut off of- heads is beyond our comprehension. The policy today seems to be to promote blood- hed in every instance of conflict between dollars ‘and men, and we are much mistaken if this is not | HEAR much about the big salaries theatircal stars get since! tax law went into effect. manity Learns by Its Mistakes n 20M the same sources which have been wanting Uncle Sam to throw his support to the exploiters in Mexico, the peons aren't fit to rule,” comes now an outcry) Wilson’s policy in the Philippines | Not self-government learned in the only schools which! teach it, the school of experience; not government made! the governed to fit needs as the natives conceive them, benevolent despotism imposed from without; the gov-| as WE think the Mexicans and the Filipinos should governed, is their contention. | Tt is as if they should say to the backward peoples: | “Don’t try to swim until you have learned to swim; and,| learning, don’t go near the water.” Always there have been a few folks who thought they) “Mimew better WHAT THE MANY SHOULD DO than the themselves knew. And always those self-chosen few have been wrong, as| have proved. There is a maxim of time. DOING. ¥ Let the Filipinos make mistakes if they will. Mistakes q ware the price of progress. A thousand centuries of guardian- bi hip won't teach them as much practical wisdom as one gen- ©% eration of their own mistakes. in education which has stood the It is that WE BEST LEARN TO DO BY HEADACHY, BILIOUS, CONSTIPATED, CLEAN YOUR LIVER—DIME A BOX A, - “You're bilious! You have nd don’t resort to harsh sensation in your head,|that irritate and tnjv |ber, that your sour, disordered iB bed taste tn your mouth, your! stomach, Iazy liver, and clogged bert, your skin is yellow with | nowels can be quickly cleaned and rings under your eyes, your|regulated by morning with gentle, &re parched. No wonder you\ thorough Cascarets 10-cent box ugly, mean and {ll-tempered.| will keep your head rand make ‘Our system is full of bile and con-| you feel cheerful and bully for Waste not properly passed| months. Get Cascarets now-—-wake f and what you need is a clean-| up refreshed-—fee! like dotng a good Up “inside.” Don't continue |day's work-—-make yourself lea @dillous, constipated nufeance/ant and useful. Clean upt yourself and those who love you,! up! . CANDY CATHARTIC hysvics emem 10 CENT BOXES -ANY DAUG STORE * ALGO 25 fe SO CENT BOXES - WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP Murphine | will | | | er’s court on the a THE STAR—SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1913. EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR THOS, A, GDISON TAKING THREE HOURS MeeP Between INVENTIONS. ADIES AND GENTLEMEN, ITH YOUR KIND ATTENTION 1 WiLL ENDEAVOR To GIVE You, A Few MITATIONS. Wey [ts tT THat JUST AS Svre AS I CET SHOES SHINED; IT MORE THAN FIVE M BEFORE SOME YAP “PERCY, THE IMPERSONATOR” : MILLIONAIRES HATCHING UP A ScHeNe TO BLIP ONE OVER ON THE INCOME TAX. SECRETARY BRYA! PUTTING THe Tack WW CHAUTAUQUA | nan Biny Sunvay MAKING THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION AS ATTRACTIVE AS PossiBce. wean a sagen eet fee pay. ISN’Y NNUTES STEPS ACL Byivia Pankhurst, says a London cable, will refuse to pay rent as the next move. When you refuse to poy rent the next move soon fol-| . Our Own Encyclopedia ‘The north star appears to the hu man eye to be always in the same | place, but 999 persons out of 1,000 | “get turned ‘round” every time they go out of their home city. eee We haver’t been hanging around the White House lately but we'll wager Jessie Wilson spends about an hour every night carrying junk out to the . eee Alderman Pretzel of Chicago is trying to abolish the tango. We don't know, but our guess is due altogether to his name, that the alderman thinks the tango ts a crooked dance. eee We hear of persone every Gay Who will not take ® hint And when they're kicked the things they way Are hardly fit to print Springtield (Mase) Unton man who fiipe a moving car lands upon bis ear. 7 to aay things that are Rot even Mt to hear ——Chicago Hecord -Meraid Smoking on Street Care Editor The Star: Smoking on street cars has been discussed at long intervals for several years, but the nulsan ntin because en smoke. Were the or reed we would have a tol-) erably clean and certalaly stookeless cars. A gentleman never smokes on a crowded car, for a man worthy of that name abstains from anything that may annoy another person Bat the felfpw who smokes on a car does not consider the other passengers. He ts blind to the pal- lor on the cheek of the working woman beside him. Sincerely yours, GLENGARRY, city, | Wanted—A Job for an Optimist Fred L. Bonlt, Seattle Star: You had better get back to your “pre tending.” You have this to be thankful for; A good job. I have worked conscientiously from the 11th of this month to date on a commission basis, and the result #0 far in cash 18 $9! And I would have had a better supper tonight if I had been in jail. But I am still an optimist. 1 have a fire, a bed, and almost enough to eat. And, thank God, up “| till now I have not broken the lawe but, like the de- "in tonight's for what I too far. and able to work, put me next any n use A tor and I will be eful, In , alt, get back to Your wife is not two and three help feed two of our country; cent man turn migh: am will and if firm that ¢ PAY HIM ou k to conventional » up,” 1 will 1 my name b | FIRST U, 8. WOMAN saat ! She h ved! Who? The | horror of modern ffrage woman She's now a juror in the fed eral courts, too. Tho first woman to have that distinction In thin state is Mre. Abbie McKilligan of Edmonda | She is sitting in Judge Neter- | Sam Gross | | perjury case. PASE RT PR t his optics ereet Are quite unfit to ee. oe YOU BET IT I8 and address, which I have gtven as| @ guarantee of good faith and also) | in the event of your being able to {put me next a job. I have 20 | years’ selling experience and am still an optimiat. SINCERELY, | WOMEN TO HOLD BAZAAR | | The Ladies’ Ald Soctety of the | Woodiand Park Methodist church will hold thefr annual bazaar at 7102 Greenwood avenue Tuesday and Wednesday From 11:30 to 1 p. m. each tho ald society will serve a cafetoria| it. lunch Wednesday evening from 6 to & the annual dinner will be served in| the church parlor, with all the sea-| sonable dishes. Wife—There are a lot of things to be thankful for thie year. Hubby Wife—Well, we might be thank ful that, no matter how high the A woman In Butler, O., found a Jar of 40-yenrold apple which she sampled and declared to be good. We should imagine that if apple butter improves with age | it might be good by the time it's \Do Your Teeth Need | Attention? | We can fill, inlay or crown your | decayed broken down teeth— sanitary bridge-work Refored In the Met of witnesses to be heard DOUBLE ATTRACTIVENESS or constroct where your teeth are missing and make you a plate or plates that will be a comfort and of useful service to you, instead of an or- nament in your mouth that yon cannot use to masticate your food with, We will do this work as pain loss as is posrible with up-to-the minute, sctentifie methods, Come in immediately for a free examina |tlon, Ours is better dentistry and woe guarantees all our work, EASTERN PAINLESS | DENTAL. OFFICES Cor, Ath Av, and Pike fts., 1505 4th Ay. Office hours # & mM. to # p.m; Sun Anys & to We Administer Gas. THAN I know the gtrt I love to be MOST TENDER and most true; But, better still, I know she has The LEGAL TENDER, tod! * . Be a Spug end give your wife something useful for a Christmas present—a lawn mower, for in stance, E. H. tdarriman’s son hae start ed in at the bottom to learn th railroad busine Starting at the bottom must mean @ job on tho Mew Haven -Well, what, for instance? | cost of living gets, it's stilt worth | butter | Mato 0400. Private xe meeting with all depart PHON RATES By mati, Gatly, one month tm tho; wix mon, 61.0; ome your By carrier, ia city, 260 8 mom ar, WINS PRIZE WITH SKETCH OF T.R, The letter which follows was! Graduates | written by Letha Ducommun of 1451 university 1880, and becam W. 37th st., and wins the prize box o of candy offered the New York assembly in tag by The Star Cir Spent five years on @ Dakoty jecle club for the ranch and learned lots cowboys. For his bra te a0 hy much pleased with her work and| feels proud to have this girl on the membership rolls, . lots about politics. from Harvard . Dear Uncle Jack: Here's character sketch you asked for. hope I win the prize Size of an ordinary man, about 65 years old; dark hair, a mustache, greatly cartooned; large teeth, dimples, a smooth fi wears cyogiaeses; broad (shouldered) and deep-chested, the 1 best character sketch of the for the battle of Las Guasl mer president,p he was promoted from | Theodore Roose ant colonel to colonel, é velt. It i When he returned from Cuty F mighty fine de he was considered a very ’ scription of the man. He wrote a number expresident, and books, one of which he {t would not be “The Rough Riders, nec ary to fireth ES - know whom I tha had fn mind tn order to under stand of whom she was writing. Letha is a regu lar contributor. She never misses & contest, and,» snare | naturally, is a fre T. Roosevelt quent winner. Uncle Jack is very =e ts = A PUZZLE CONTEST * Do you like to work out puunieg, boys and girls? If you do, you will be interested to know that the Cir cle's weekly prize is to be given fc solving @ puzzle. The contest will |give every boy and girl contestant }an even chance with bis competitor A reproduction of the puzzle ap | pears in this column. After looking the outline over, there are few who should experience difficulty in find ing the solution. j The Contest | The outline mast be cut into four pieces of exactly the same size and shape, It's easy when you know how, The figure ts exactly that of & square, to which has been added ‘the half of another square, divided | diagonally, Here {t ts a) | (i The winner will be drawn b |from those successful in solving | the puzzle. 4 The contest closes Friday ve Exterior and Interior Vi f Children’ noon at 3 o'clock. The letters will ews of iren’s Hotel first be opened, and then put intoa! How would you like to stop at an} who decided that little folks large box. From it one of the) hotel which had been built just for) travel and must have a plage | judges, who is to be blindfolded, | onidrent |stay at when traveling, or whe | will draw the winner. This ps |*pending a week or two at the Paste the work on a sheet of pa-| This picture shows one of that! side, built this hotel just om per. The name and adress should | kind over in England. pose for children. 3 be written plainly. You see, many hotel keepers do |not like to take children because a ” . ~@ they make a noise and scamper THANKS CIRCLE CLUB | (around the halls. ce — ————~--@ | So a very thoughtful manager, | Dear Uncle Jack. I was very) much surprised when I saw that I/ ‘yt had won second prize in the Star pend reo fe henge pind —, 1 Circle Corner's turkey contest. The |My address is 6568 I8te av hw turkey certainly tasted good. if) M) address te 86 a W, only you could have been here.| payne edhe After it was cooked {it looked to weigh at least 16 pounds, and 1/9 thank you very much—Mary Lee. 25th Av. Grocery. a —+-—@ | It. * Dear Uncle, Jack T have been | membership card. I am in the high reading The Star for a long time|sixth at the Salmon Bay school. I and am greatly interested in The am 13 years old. My address is Star Circle. 1 wish to join. Please | 6558 18th ay. W.— Agnes Purvi But everything ts fitted up firet thought for the youngsts There are big playrooms and ing rooms and nurseries and door play courts at this hotel. Dear Uncle Jack: I am I joined the Circle. I am i] years old, and I never ; been able to attend school play like other boys and girla| But this gives me a chance draw pictures and oy stories, which I am vi of doing. fai! “ ERNEST S. SPRAGUE, Orting, Wash. | WANTS A MEMBERSHIP * Bh eeio'e = iw & Dear Uncle Jack: I have been reading The Star Circle for a long time and am greatly interested in I wish to join. Please send The Standard for Baking Powders the World Over is an Absolutely Pure, Cream of Tartar Baking Powder REAM OF TARTAR is the crystallized acid of grapes refined to absolute purity and ground to a creamy flour. It is de- clared by physicians the most wholesome of all fruit acids, and has been proved by long and universal experience the most efficient and satis- factory for baking purposes. Highly refined products of the grape, properly combined with. bicarbonate of soda and a little corn starch to absarb atmospheric moisture, are the sole ingredients of the ideal, high-class, standard baking powder. Many acids have been tried during the last hun- dred years to find a substitute for the grape cream of tartar which would cost less. In recent years alum, which makes a baking powder at a cost o! two. cents a pound, has been used because of its trifling cost. Alum, however, has been disapproved \x yd scientific chemists and physicians and is not em- ik ployed by manufacturers of high-class powders. Cream of tartar powders being healthful them- rd . selves, add to the healthfulness of the food. 108 jce ant en tiga’ the Re’ he cer he Fir yong B he res! pr. 3 jo Lone yesterd Pull 400. Dr. 3 yas mi Mis shi Dr. ™ ach» new sfied 1 regath ofi28-¢2i22- BFS 02258 002322 =