The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 17, 1913, Page 4

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MEMBER OF THE SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUR OF NEWSPAPERS Telegraph News Bervice of the United Presse Association. Entered at the postoffice, Reattle, Wash., 90 second clase matter, Published The Pablishing Company every evening diay Where Do Woodrow Wilson, You Stand ? RESIDENT WILSON’s side-stepping of equal suffrage P was, perhaps, in keeping with political etiquette and all the regular formalities and conventionalities, but we rather expected ‘HIM to pass up such considerations and hit the nail on the head. Mr. Wilson has convictions on the issue one way or the a one that it is important His excuse other, and the subject is so great to know just where all men of influence stand. that he does not urge upon congress anything that has not been the subject of “organic consideration” by the democratic party also be that will come home to roost with him. It is tantamount to an admission that he isn bigger or more his party, WHICH IS A MINORITY PARTY p Such courtesy to the democratic party is highly compli the fact that whole people are organic, unorgantc sorts of con- may be an excuse and it may an evil chicken advanced than any the nd mentary, considering giving the sideration. It Ame of millions of an attitude toward a paramount issue Wilson all subject sounds like notice to the world that in re- important a matter as enfranchisement ica so citizens must wait until the democratic party publican assumes Where do YOU stand, Woodrow Are YOU for the enfranchisement of the millions of ‘American women? ; If so, why are YOU not fighting for this right thing as you fight for other things which you believe to be right? Are you really only as big as your party’ THEY'VE INSTALLED miniature printing presses on St. Louis street cars for issuing transfers. Exact minute passenger enters car and last minute transfer can be used are printed on the slip. Another way to cut living cost gone! for help in a BELL-HOPS WILL answer when suffragets ring Chicago hotel, hereafter. be they'll be better able to find or replace hairpins and things than bell-hops. The Difference LTHOUGH reported apathetic as to the probably early approach of the rebel forces and the prospective over- turn of Huerta, 25,000 inhabitants of the City of Mexico the ether day filled to overflowing the amphitheater in which Belmonte, the famous Spanish matador, and Ganona, the jdealized Mexican bullfighter, gave an exhibition of their skill in sticking a dumb beast Every seat was taken, the aisles were crowded and hundreds stood upon roofs. What an interesting study in phychology, this. The government at the imminent peril of its very life not being THEIR government, or a thing in which they are interested, the folks are content to let it take George do it.” thrills and entertainment; so to the bullfight they go with the liveliest anticipation. We, too; like thrills and entertainment, and expend on! them a great deal more interest and a great deal more money lions for a ticket to heaven and no body things they are crazy | Tl peer than we do upon government, which ordinarily runs along as Our agents, our Georges, determine. But let peril threaten, visible, spectacular, concrete peril, and no bullfights could hold us—every mother’s son and every mother’s daughter would be on the job of defense. For, underneath, it IS OUR government. And that makes all the difference in the world. MINNESOTA CITY bars women from police force examinations, if they are in love. sloners think married women don't love their hubbies. NEW YORK chef has been fined $3,000, under foreign-labor contract 1 They're going to try te etarve Lo are Import pez, the bandit, {n the mine. There's!annually, Th no sense in keeping him ta the mine. Turn him loose on the earface with out star gun » outside. ee The chances are be'll THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1913. the United States born in this coun more one The London suffragets say they | will be ready soon to face battle [ships The girls must be buying try weigh mu | A New Jersey woman announced bathing sults, Z its chance—to “let| just before her death that she had | bought a ticket to heaven for $300 i eek and now her relatives are contest The bullfight, however, is their affair in that it affords ing her will on the ground that she | was crazy, We don't believe she | was. She got it cheap. shee country who ba WANTED to 70 piano key? plain girl mustetane ® with plain horse “tam from Pittsburg.” writ That bars married women—uniess the police commis | 1. 8, “and have not lived tn long enough to understand meteor.) allarities, but I notice n A Man enters ological that fre wh | Everything But Wag | There are not a few men in this| been paying mil) law, for Importing a lot of French cooks. He claimed they were artists an office or store he will be asked and should be classed with opera stare. GENERAL ORDERS have been issued In Minneapolis to police and plain cloth It is the high quality of Royal Baking Powder that has established its great and world-wide teputation: Every housewife knows she can rely upon it; that it makes the bread and biscuit more deli- cious and wholesome— always the finest that can be baked. men to guard eggs at central market, since a case dis-| | ‘Is it raining outald it generally re ee | About 5,000,000 pounds Never experiment with so important an article as the human food It is economy and every way preferable to use the Royal, whose work is always certain, never experimental, There a ound, but their use many imitation bakin, rd from cheap ingredients, Nitcest Hasan They may-cost littl: may be at the cost of hes Our Own Encyclopedia of Where does in Seattie? nuts Following Orders Mra at seeing her son standing on his Goosenberry was horrified head against the garden fence “Tommy,” she cried, “what are you doing now? Standing on my head,” replied Tommy. “Didn't yer tell me to play omething that wouldn't wear my shoes out? cee However, you can still buy a piece of custard, as it Is called, ple for five cents. eee Sunday School Teacher—What Is | meant by the quick and the dead? | Small Boy-—-Them that gets out of the way of automobiles is quick, jand them that don't ts dead. . Literal Description ‘Ave’ those } belligerents ?” jasked the Isdy, as two urchins showed signs ching | No’an replied a boy tn th crowd, “They're second-grade kid | see | Maglistrate—How did you manage to take the man’s watch from his pocket when it was provided with a safety catch? Prisoner use me, that's a professional secret. teach you, however, for $5. | * . air, but I will . | His Status “The man standing over there ts Jone of the leading lights of this production star?” stage electrictan,” Tough on Pop! s> M'NEIL ISLAND PRIBON Editor The Star: I read in The Star some months ago the artic prison on MeNetl's Island, 1 was} myself recently discharged from the} By Abe Hurwitz inland, and I know that the “re-| forma” there, following your expo] We tangoed in. the dressing sures, are not genuine, Though Warden Halligan may deny it, the | 70! infamous “stool pigeon” system tn| Of course I eame to get an inter still employed there. Indeed, it ex-| view, But tends beyond the island, as I have | Well, ft happened this way been followed to Seattle by a spy, Teele is a wee, Wee Inesie from the arden Soda MTP, [auld Bcotiand, whose rich Hi'land - jbrogne ts nae richer than the TAKE 'EM TO DINNER |aparkle of her eyes Editor The Star: Here ts a sug ‘Teenle is, of course, only a stage gestion for those of us who have|character. I saw Teenie from the work and three meals each day If each such family would invite at least one of the moneyless and friendioss men in this city to eat Christmas dinner with them, this one square meal would be a great help. | I have not forgotten the time that a plain dinner on New Year's Da gave ine strength to hunt for work ;When I seemed about at the end of | my Une. INTERESTED. front of the house at the Metropol {tan theatre last night, in “Bunty Pulls the Strings.” A graceful, Nthe, chic little figure she present ed No wonder Rab is madly in love with her A Pretty Miss Her tty shake of the head light, sprightly tread, her sweet, soft-toned voloe, were redolent with that treshness and sprightiiness of youth which cannot be alone mera lart of the stage. FROM GEN. CHITTENDEN | Editor The Star: I desire to thank! Phat 1» you for the hearty support which] jnroryview b you gave to the Port Commission; J, was between the second and | projects at the recent election. The | tnird acts, and she wasn't to go on fact that two of the propositions | yor a while were lost by a nerrow margin was it down,” she said, amiably, as certainly not due to any lack of! she yulled out murdeaus-looking support on your part, but evidently |natpin and took off her little hood, jFesulted from the legal phraseology | incidontally tumbling down & moun of the ballot, “Bonds Yes, “Bonds | tain of brown hair—all her own No,” which conv the iden to the public that additional indebtedness| Can Talk Bostonese I thought | was going to would be required | nie was now Miss Esther | Very pHa ten | Ford, who, it Is true, had been boro | ae viet aa and raised in the shire where Bob: H. M. CHITTENDEN, Pres. |i. urns hailed from and had nin the United tes little over years, but she had absorbed kee inflection to admit year's delay, Governor Lister has|¢house Yan appointed the commission to in-| her even among & select circle of quire into the feasibility of estab-| "O°? " res shing a state-owned xtump powder |, 12 Tack, Mins mene: Tee kaved YBe factory for the purpore of giving) UOCton My og the ranchers of the state of Wash e |ington cheaper powder to clear) Nething Doing on Interview thelr land of stumps Miss Ford is very, very young. | | State Powder Factory. Editor The Star: After nea It will be remembered the last | She's under 20, I'm sure, 1 must legisiature ap ated $50,000 for tell You that, because it accounts! this factory, and the money is now | for my failing to get an interview lying idle in the state treasury | from Ler. re to be used as soon as this 1 made a noble effort, too. she ever lose thousands of ® Worth of valuable jewels? No, she did not. Is rhe a militant suffraget? No, she doesn't know that she is or she tan’t. Dil che have any interesting love affairs? commission reports to the governor. | Just how long this will be ts prot Hlematical; but one thing i# sure, | |the most industrious class of peo-| ple in the state, the class which ts }doing most toward developing tts richest assets, will continue to pay two prices to iw ite prodeet eee ee a 0, her heart has been This in unfortunate, because the ee, and still is. high cost of powder {s one of the| Did she have to run away from chief drawbacks to the agricultural) ® CoPvent to go on the stage? development of the state No; her father, It is true, obsect- Stump powder can and should be | 04. but they great pals now, furnished to the people at onehalt/*54, oh, tf she could be back home of the present coat I have writ-/ With bim and mother for Chrtst- ten to various departments of state| 4S But she's going back tn sum- at Washington, D. C., for informa-|™e?, So that will help tion regarding the cost of making! “!™ afraid I'm not very good for powder. There seems to be the |" Interview And she same reluctance among the depart-| 8" Very, Very sympathetic. And ments {n regard to giving out such {then, apropos of nothing in partio- information ax {s manifested by the | “4r: manufacturers themsely “Wouldn't It be merry to see a But the time tn close at hand lot of Scottish boys and girls in when the pe will wake up to| Kilts aance the tango? the fact that this sort of informa-| Teaches the Tango ays tion justly belongs to them, and| Sh» bobbed up from her chair then they will demand {t, not as ajAand merrily executed the tango privilege, but as a right | steps. A. T. CHURCHILL CHICAGO.—An argument as to whether the goddess of Iberty| holds aloft a torch or a lamp atart-| jed @ fight and a fire in a rooming| house, and caused two arrests. REAL ESTATE hed oftien sane “Caa you dance It? she asked. I had to admit ignorance. “You poor, poor man,” she cried; aust teach you at once,” 1} | Ay first lesson tn the tango {thing in that dressing room }_ And now Boston dip, too. Financier Fails to Unseat Judge of - Supreme Court ALBERT HANSEN Jeweler and Silversmith In Now Located at His New Store |] 1010 Second Ave., Near Madison. John Burkett Ryder Does Not Make Good His Threat to Take Case to the United States Senate, John Burkett Ryder, known all over the United States as the “Oc- topus,” a sobriquet given him in a book dealing with the methods of high financiers 1n controlling so: called trusts, failed dismally in his efforts to unseat Judge Rossmore of the supreme court of the United States. Last night Mr. Ryder ad- 1 his defeat at the hands of Rossmore, daughter of the Rossmore in saving hi father's good name, the engagement of Miss Rossmore and Jefferson Ryder, son of the financier, was announced. Mr. Ryder not only consents to the wedding, but declares that his son will inherit his vast millions, All of this interesting story and BY A DENTIST ON FIRST AVENUE People come to my and complain ab office every day ut helng robbed of their money by nome dentist on Firet-av, rope| much more is told at the Seattle resenting himeelf to be Dr B J. Hrown,| theatre this week by the Hailey or hin anststant and Mitchell players in Charles | BEWARE of this thief who steals my| Klein's great drama, “The Lion and patients and lives off my reputation |the Mouse.” It all occurred on the MY OFFICER are at stage of that popular playhouse < F last night. It will occur again to: 713 First Ave., Union Block) »i:1: | as The Lion and the Mouse” ts one | » nave you Just one! of the best productions presented | owt ey er] this season in Seattle. The com | , te you Tenn > |pany presenting this interes | Old Man—Is that your mamma} Jc Ked*by othe «| compelling drame ie soo eel eae Jyonder with the beautiful set of) denne yi eet ie io your dentar| favorably Known to require intro- furs work duction {n these columns. — The Willio—Yer, sir When you come to my offices. be sure| quality of entertainment provided Old Man-—-Well, do you know] re justetine | DY the management of the Seattle what pogr animal it is that has to|* "| Theatre is well known to thous- jauffer in order that your mamma ne | ands of theatre-goers in thig el might have the furs with which | Although Messrs, Batle and she adorns herself so proudty? ROWN, D. D. $. Mitchell have gone to great ex Willie You, gir; my papa. j A pense in order to procure this play date: beepeagee - for their patrons, the prices remain b daugnarg tee Matter og uin,| 713 First Avenue [at the sme low figure—50 conte UL #. Parcel on Thuraday-Washta Ga) | Open evenings until § and Sundays! for th pleat o-Ps Journal until ¢ for peopia who work. ‘for matinees.—Adv. HOW’D YOU LIKE TO HAVE THIS YOUNG PERSOR > s> TEACH YOU TANGO? AND IN HER DRESSING ROOM? | od var vnce am | A STAR MAN HAS So! knew | had to interview her. | I'm going to learn the! ~ judge whom he sought to impeach As a result of the millionaire’s ef. forts to remove the well-known jurist and the diplomacy of Miss | PHONES ™*!t_ 1100 _Zrtrate surhaage came RATES ™, 2°" 4087, one month poy hey xix mow, 8180, My ‘carrion, tn olty, Bes — / ad a> s> Trying to blow up a toy balloon, a Connecticut child drew the soft {rubber {nto her throat and choked to death. : | Los Angeles has a Chinese policeman. ees j Toy bill for American children thi r is estimated at $20,000,000, cee ee } Bets of 2 to 1 have been recorded that there will be no war with j | Mexico, of ceeee Misesour! triplets have been named Thomas, Woodrow and Wilson by J their proud father. He also named them Herbert, Hubert and Hobart. oecees Judge Addie was the magistrate before whom a woman was arraign- e4 in Hammond, Ind., for selling addled e; oo ee © French woman le suing the government for 20,000,000 franes left to her by ancestors in 1675, tied up by Litigation and seized and spent by the first Napoleon. Archaeologist discovers that dogs were given such names as Rover Prince by the Egyptians 500 B. C. : oe | and eee Il!inols man who threw eggs at a woman was sént to jall by a mag | | istrate for wasting the eggs. ; If It’s Correct, Cheasty Has It o) wow Christmas Suggestions Beautiful Cross (London) Neckwear _— Leather Goods Rare Display of Magni- Carry a message of sin- ficient Silks, gleaned from | cerity and warmth ot the world’s finest looms, | Christmas time—they are and woven by the fore- | so good, so tasteful, so most silk makers of two satisfactory. Every ar- hemispheres, awaits you | ticle is designed to give in our Christmas exhibi- | lasting pleasure. Espec- tion, | ially fine display of Needlework and Sewing Note today the ar- Baskets. | ray of Neckwear in | our Second avenue For Smokers—Novelty window—a_ veritable cigarette boxes, cigar kaleidoscope of rich cases and magazines, and tones. extended showing of the new humidors, lined with Neckwear Prices | fragrant cedar and other 50 cents and up woods, Gloves for Men and Women Always it is our policy Evening Clothes in Perfect Taste Evening Benjamin Clothes and Tuxedo Suits | to feature the best lines are the last word in re- | of wearing apparel that fined dress for men and money can buy; that’s young men who appreci- | why in our Glove De- ate the newest styles and partment we carry fancies from New York Dent's, Fownes, Cross and London. More than | (London), F. C. & Fy merely fitting your per- | Updegraff and other son, they adapt them- | makes, for both men’s and selves to your person- | women’s street and dress ality. use Prices range up Evening Suits, $35, $45, | from $1.25. $55 Wouldn't a glove order Tuxedo Suits, $30, $40, | help to solve your Christ; $50 mas problem? A Gift Certificate ap- Silk Night Robes and plied to Evening Clothes Pajamas, Sweater Coats is a splendid remem- | and Vests—comfort wear brance. of every sort. Cheasty’s Haberdashery Second Ave., at Spring St.

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