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We're just about all set for the Little Chimney fF man, has the tree set up. ear fare of the children, and they’re all going to be there. ibring ‘em all down to Dreamland. We want a There will be 4,000 packages of ¢ RAIN TONIGHT MM PM More Than = ; j ; ! 2 = | Wonton Every Da = : 2 > -E D i T i Oo N= |Z ATTN THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES 7O PRINT THE NEWS E MM MMMM VOLUME 15, NO, 255. pion OUT | SLUMMING, | SEES "BOES | } | | | Mayor Cotterili saw 1,200 | men Sunday night, who, for | want of a dime for a “flop,” | had to sleep on the bare floor, either at Providence hospital or the Open Door. . —— seevral hundred others ja. | cheap lodging honses below Yes- ler way who bad Heh enough to for their | saw 500 Rindge fed with “Mulli.| gan” at Providence hospital and! Several hundred ut the new Salva-/ tion branch on First av. “Anything we can di fev’ pd Monday morning. provisions to either the Provi-| dence, the Salvation Army and the 7 Door, certainly ought to be; ‘without dela MEXICO SEEKING. Reading From Left to Right—Sisters “Aatora Cubiilo, Eugenio Garia, Za bei Quizuain, Father Jose Garcia, Mother Superior Anastiasia Gor. ostiaza, Sisters Ana Cidi, Clementia Legasa and Celerina Oraz. Mother Superior Anastiasia Gorostiaza of the Order of Virgin Mary France, arrived here today. He was received as a national guest with much honor. ‘Ostensibly he came to thank the mikado for Japan's partic!- pation in Mexico’s national ex- position two years ago. Really it was rumored he sought a Mexican-Japanese ai- Hance. "SCHOONER BURNS: aa out in the engine room overturned lantern ex- wowed, tire swept through the hal- ibut schooner Bertha at 1:15 this afternoon as the vessel was in dock for repairs between Luna Park and the King & Wing shipyards. These photographs were taken by W. H. Durborough, The Star's staff photographer, at E! Paso, the day the refugees reached safety on the soll of the United States. WAPPY RETURNS; THANKS THE STAR Pul cath | college for his holiday va and his daughter, Joan For all the tears that dropped at the reunion, ft was a happy, joy- ous, radiant party The past was brushed aside. "The promise of the future made them step lightly and hopefully Wappenstefn has already recety- ed the offer of employment as a Sunday | private detective for © f the | biggest corporations in el Whether he will accept it, has Grateful beyond the expres- sion of words to all who aided in securing his pardon, and at peace with the whole world, Charles W. Wappenstein, for mer chief of poiice, pardoned from Walla Walla by Gov. Lis- ter, Is spending the day in the bosom of his family. He arrived in Seattle |morning and was met by Mrs, Wap: ‘pensteln, his son, just_back from) Demet tm aa ENTE | My future plans,” he sald to ‘Christmas Gifts | made, We will remain in Seattle Special at $1.00 . badly burned about the face. The fireboats Sno- quaimie and Ouwamish, aided by the West Seattle fire department, ere fighting the flame: |home at Lake Sammamish has not been o¢cupled for so long that tt |has become too damp for habita tion Just at present. My boy will |go down there after Christmas to fire it up a bit. We will, in the meantime, look around to seo If wo cannot rent our cottage in the oity But | cannot tell you bow thank ful | am to the many who proved such friends to me. I want to thank The Star. | want to thank everybody. I harbor no malice or « nde toward anyone, I am at @*” On page 6 in today’s Star are 40 ads, each of which tells of a Christmas Gift Bargain at $1.00. Every merchant rep- resented on this page has put his most attractive gift offering that can be sold peace with the world WASHINGTON, Dec, 22.—Indlea t + + + tions ore that the currenc bill will at $1.00 in his ad. This page will prove Sask couiveustand OG migued. by . President Wiison before night a big help to those who have delayed "Tile douse a snot expected eer! + H H + pusly to oppose the joint « ference making their purchases till now. You will COcttiee akeimebitiee cmmarure * *, . ‘ H The bill was ve the ght-of. find gifts of all sorts and descriptions list- ay Bey gh a A eed . : journment will follow as soon as ed on page 6, and each is a special at the ie ident signs it ; gh A Bome opposition was expressed in $1.00. Don’t fail to lool it up. aon as & tae senate to tho agreement of tho confreres to strike out the senate 1 provision for an Insurance fund to |guaranteg deposits in national | banka, Kids’ Christmas tree at Dreamland Christmas day. It’s going to reach right up to the roof of the rink, and will have 1,000 colored lights on it. Pi ‘These nuns and this priest were forced out of Chihuahua, Mexico, | rf by Gen. Francisco Villa, commander of the rebel force that captured the city. TOKIO, Dec. 22.—Senor de Their valuables were taken from them; their churches and convent La Barre, Mexican minister to + icoted. PASS BILL TODAY. Th “Dad” Wagner's ready with his big 40-piece band, and Joe Schermer, the Dreamland lo all the public children’s homes in town we have sent money for the ll the mothers and fathers in town who have only enough money to buy food and clothing for their boys and girls to andies and fruit, and a toy or two, and some surprises, and there’s going to be a doll for every girl AND TUESDAY; MODERATE SOUTHERLY WINDS. SEATTLE, WASH., ONE CENT 23 Wi"2ixt ine MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1913. NEWS BTANDS, Bo religious | believe, Dahistrum is keeping hid arrest |den @ younger sister of Miss Eng- lund. “Rev.” A. Dahiatrum, cult leader, who is under at Tacoma on a charge of violating Ladies, Please Tell Us How You Stand It Being the Mann white slave law by tak-| They are searching for her to jday. They want her as » witness | Lenora Englund, the officers say, home in that city to Fresno, Cals! oghistrum met at a religious serv and from there to Minneapolis, has/ice, He told her the Lord had bid- ing Eleanor Englund, 19, from her 26 wives, seven of whom have chil-|den him to take her as his consort, vara a aes Para a ae dren, accerding to information giv-| #7 prevailed upon her to go away | me with him, it is charged. en out here today by @ local de 1 They went to Fresno, Cal, the| merase. renner lofficers sald, and there, after a Dahistrum is in charge of the time, Dahistrum told the girl the B “Fred L Bo United States court authorities and| Lord had bidden him to take her y Fred Boalt wae given a preliminary hearing be Mine is the dominant sex. I am a MAN. I am strong. younger sister, Clara fore Commissioner McMillan When he took Clara, Miss Eng |i endure. I am a husband. A woman is my mate. The Dahistrum now has a wife and|!und told the authorities, she Im-) woman has begat me a man-child two children at Mountain View | *dlately ore. Sen | When I think these oe f ee) hehe hl erred | i thoughte, T:~ ecallt! itis my jarm, near Evere om he Is . x SOHTEL SARDOTN HEPES WOMB! strength and dominance. trying to divorce, according to the/ giri from Chicago several years! tiie “the photographer, feels detective bureau. ago. She, It le charged, is hie only | aa 1 do 7 wh In Seattie, off legally wedded wife. : 8 Some * ey --——- | He, too, is a MAN. An old-fashioned man, whose thoughts run in a narrow | groove Jake says the place of woman is in the home “Housework — that’s what they're fitted for,” says Jake, “that and minding babies. women!” scoffs Votes for poodle Who gets out and hustles to keep the home to- gether? The man Who |gets out and fights in time of war? THE MAN.” But I-—-I take a_ broader view. Let's humor ‘em, say 1. Let's let ‘em believe they, are equal partners with us in the business of life. Let’s not be forever reminding ‘em that they are clinging vines the lower animals it is the male that wears the | fine clothes. The lion wears the mane, the stag the spread- ing antlers, the bull elephant the tusks. | Aye, and the strutting pea- jcock spreads his flaming |feathers and utters raucous cries, and chanticleer hurls his |challenge at the dawn, while jtheir mates, drab, demure and {properly humble, cluck their homage to their. lords and masters We men are not |}We do not need of our dominance. brawn and brain, higher intelligence. like that. such proofs Ours the ours the | The Picture Jake Took on Second | Av. Note tW® Neck Bared to } the Winter Breezes So it is our pleasure to trick our women out in fine feathers. We work { earn so that they may pursue the changing fashions. Pretty, fragile creatures, their very frail- ty is the bond that holds us to them é Why not humor them? If they are vain, do they not dress to win our smiles? “But they (80, too far—too far,” complained Jake, the i photographer. “We have given them too much ireedom. It Will Women's Invasion of the Inherent Rights of Men Come to This? the women who have been given the most freedom—the a 4 : a rina modern women, the forward women, the suffragettes—who are the most extreme dressers. Come with me.” ‘SUCH A PLAGE T0' $25, 000 BLAZE COURT ORDERS Jake had his Graflex ready. We got into our great coats, for the air was chill outdoors, and there is grippe "| about. One cannot be too careful. é | IN A Besides, Jake's place is steam-heated. So we got into 4 our greatcoats, I repeat; and we buttoned them up to our | PY rey parte sre ere for tho iremen with scaling ladders WASHNGTON, Dec. 22.| chins; and we turned up the collars; but, first, we wound thief who stole four o fought for nearly two hours in an 4 mufflers about our necks terday from the Plymouth Congre-|(? a five : i 2 ete "church, Sixth and Univer passerine bo eubaoe esgy erage on —The supreme court of Before starting out I handed Jake one of the throat @ which broke out @ y ? , | ’ tity. “FW. Fowler and W. 0. ng trom an anknown cause in the the United States today) lozenges that I always carry about, and took one myself, Adams ofb the Y. M. C. A. reported | g75 409 stock of the United States dismtesed thy I ¢|! say one cannot be too carenul the thefts [Rubber Co, in @ warehouse in the | @IsMmiss ie appeal oO Thus warmly clad and sucking lozenges, we went out | Ww Aap ing, at First ay, 8. and the Seattle, Renton & upon the foggy Streets a ABANDON CARGO ‘The Reynoide Puctre Co, with Southern Railway Co. from| | We stood at the comer of Second and Madison and 7 Ja $15,000 stock, on the ground floor shivered. q f f under the damaged butlding, sus the decree of the apres And as we stood—and shivered—a young and beautiful 7 | The steamer Jeanie, which, last tained about a $6,000 loss. The court of Washington, di- ebnbantl Tac « : Thuraday, wei antive, om Whe) cone wag Hediy watertoanel and r j “ ” woman approached. Her eyes were bright. Her lips were southern end of Calvert island, 48 |Gamaged by smoke, Fire Marshal |recting it to give and re |red. Her cheeks were warmly pink. She swung by, and 4 re ported a total tee ik ; me ve" 'Hringhurst fixes the entire loss from | ceive transfers to and from| Jake's camera winked or ee tee a F heeigpehan oi ad ihe we oe at $2 eM re manbet the Seattle Electric Co., | She was, I assure you, a vision of loveliness and strictly det ere e a aboare y stock loss An ile he “ boat was saved, but the cargo, val: Walker building was damaged about its of the city |'” the mode. But there was something about her strangely ‘ ued at approximately $15,000, prob: | 32090. Tt iw valued a 000, The within — limi pa ah TF) upsetting and unsettling to our notions of sex dominance, _ably will be a total loss firms sustaining a loss carried {nO @ a. of one-half | She was as tall as Jake and half a head taller than TI. surance. fares. 1 could not be a sturdy oak to such a vine. Nor can I Although the exchange of | picture her as clinging, but only as standing squarely on her Tt comta a trifle more and ta i) \I § sq ) louger to com f transfers was a eaphltion con- /two trim, straight, tightly skirted .legs tained in both the Renton and i is nk er height or carriag she 2d. Ge, Sranchiens, It had te t re : . her height or carriage that set us ponder- xg ing t was her dress. eruinement been ignored for years NEW PENNANT COUPON BILLIE BURKE POSES Jake's lips were blue with cold. My teeth were chattering. Bundled up though we weré, we suf- fered from the cold. The woman’s dress was edged with fur. BUT HER THROAT AND BREAST WERE other important agreeme nts 9 at the joint committee con ‘ollow Striking out the senate amend- me it which would allow the use | of the new federal reserve BARE! notes as ban®& reserves; that | 4 k the minimum stock of each re- | THIS THE ATHING GIRL “How d-d-d-d-do th-th-they d-d-d-do it?” asked Jake. gional bank be $4,000,000, a WEEK 1 said I d-d-d--didn’t kn-n-n-ow Sompromise between the $3, | N-n-n-n-no m-m-m-man d-d-d-oes. S ' " ‘ e firs 7 Ss 4 ) va « « blll’ and the $5,000,000 minimum This is the first of the Art Series of Pennants to be so we each took another lozenge and hurried back ta of the house |f put out by The Star. This coupon and 20 cents entitle the office. And now, close to a radiator, | am writing, 4 w Ax soon as he wigns the currency |} voy to a Pennant at The Star office, or a f The Star ]/ and again, more to reassure myself than anything else, bill, President Wilson plans to leave |f > . the:te Abe doihtent bel for Pass Christian, Miss, for a|f Branches. Twenty-five cents by mail mun " \three weeks’ vacation. 1 Tama MAN. I am strong. I endure.