The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 23, 1913, Page 4

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MEMRER LRAGU Service of 1 Entered at the postoffice, Seattle, Wash. aa second clase matter, Published The Star Publishing Company every evening except Sunday or THm Newer, United Press Ansootation. That funny little fellow, Hillex, who ran Taft's campaign (into the ground), has got off some more wit. “Republicans and former republican’ y far In a protacol of union. if a surrender of principles not Involved,” says Hilles, The cat and dog lie very quietly together when dead, Only a Tide-Over ' SMALI o university, who wrote a book ROE of Chicag wrk and other men pocket the profit, can co-operation, some men do the w not but has since made a painful discovery. ental inertia,” he writes, “but I had n cy last, must be reorganized into fairer “I knew there was I was not prepared for the justice,” w mg ago had he The professor might have lea moved less among books and more among men intellectuals For of the pleasantest pastimes in the world at it doesn’t « The limitation upon it is t f ” ed wealth t It neither stops the inflow equately helps those who| are in the levels of ¢ a are at the bottom to climb upward A gift of sympathy, of brotherhood, of un jerstanding to of food one less fortunate is fine; and even a g money, or clothing to relieve acute need is admirable 3 PROVIDED, it doesn't take away from the chance to se-|! cure the greatest blessing of all, which is JUSTICE. t Privilege, whenever conscience smitten, turns generously 4 to charity. But charity the It is} ‘ better than arrogance, brutality, indifference; as things are won't balance account Wwe cannot do without it | whose arm was better ay at the no conception of the extent of it 8 revelation of how many people there are who are supposed | & to be intellectual leade who are interested in any phase of secular or reli charity, but who have no in Ee hire has star Root for president M9 course cha $s popular among Of course charity is { P Gallinger that we can’t be outdone, the comfortable to reach down to the lowly with alms is one] wo're going to start one for Wesley | Jones, ither Hi Gill or “THE STAR—TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1913. - SH! CAR DON'T PICK UP, I P to prove what ex Prexy Eliot of Harvard has also lately Ga Walch, ies Bea =o am, a HERE'S ANOTHER THING —— MY been preaching, that our present: wage system, under which/ ports his arm ts all right: again ~~ _ DIFFERENTIAL pers One time we heard of a pitcher | tn the sum ver than winter, We forget his ame. . Our Own Encyclopedia | In 1911 the mines of the United | tates produced 4,687,063 ounces of nd. included the gold that} mines in auch large tities that promoters sold ck so they could get money workmen to carry it away fn heelbarrows. r Ly Senator Gallinger of New Hamp od a boom for Elhu| Just to show Our choice for vice president Is Dr. Matthews, Speaking of Spelling Progressive The most recent of titled Eng h women to go tnto vaudeville {s| agton. You sald it. Some . “——-SO You Ste, FT HER From COW To INTER= MEDIATE AND RELEASE THE CLUTCH, THC RUNNING AND MY CARR [S SLOWING DOWN. | OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE when T THEN THE ENCING'S EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR Conversationally George B. Worley does not bub ble over, He doesn’t spill any great buckets of language as some mayoraity candidates do, nor any little ones, either And George was the first to file speaking, | for mayor in the present little sotto, which is having the time of ite young life keeping folks awake, But George bubbles just the same. When George bubbles, he doer ft In pictures | He puts his bubbles down in} black and white, so you can se! them without too much trouble, and at your leisure. He 4d in veigie you Into a mass meeting and talk In circles to you. He gets you at your home, when you're the dally paper, and he ma look at the circles. Method in His Madness There's much method tn Wor| ley’s madness. | There's efficiency, There, that's the word—effi clency Worley’s business 1s to put the! “fish” in efficiency, #0 to speak. | That's what those ttle cir} oles, or bubbles an, if you take} the trouble to follow Worley | Worley has been o nt of Seattle for the past r mittently, a cons * portion of der the time in the city loy as an| engineer, and more ly an wu} erintendent of the contract to| wild the Interbay section of the! North Trunk sewer Engineer With Record ‘The last wan a little affair that | amounted to nothing more than a million dollars or #0, and Worley’s bid, as head of the Colson Construc tion Co., was $100,000 under the city engineer's estimate | But, to return. Worley has been digging sewers in Great Falls, It is, however, at tide-over Paderewski would be » good man t is, a for Dug. He plays well with either 2 Worth while men ’ n't want to be cared for, | band, ; 5 MIE C Ck eee _—— _ They want, ani for the _justice demands, THE CHANCE] uy, dts: Gguires:, cuba TO CARE FOR THEMSELVES. says Col. 14) Russell, “in which || Our Daily Animal St CLEVELAND WOMAN seeking divorce because her husband said) he would not buy any Christmas presents perhaps hasn't heard of the SPUGS. Where Everybody Feels at Home | HE UP-TOWN march of fashion recently left in the hands of a rich New York congregation a down-towr building and the problem of what to do*about it The congregation was Episcopalian, but the neighborhood lwas Catholic and Jewish, hence there was little need of ‘continuing the institution as a denominational church, So the bishop and rector, with the assent of the con- gregation, invited all the folks in and said, in almost so many words: “The building is yours. Yours for a social center. Yours to rest in, to play in, to learn in; with two exceptions: “No one must proselyte and no one must discuss socialism.” In other words, the building wasn’t theirs at all didn’t build it cr own it and in it, they weren't free » Many persons wonder why churches aren't doing better as social centers. Here’s the answer: They're not and cannot be democratic; the person who doesn’t “belong” cannot fee! 4 at home. \ They kissing is unknow countries In which there are few contri wines’ Go. ts || WILD ZEBRA run a thread motetened with the ewest- core Ant fe gorge with eut—CRieago (11) something useful for a Christmas present—a sterling silver hair re while President Wilson has a cold | poisoned liquor. it is not in his feet But they are CAN’T TAME merican women. oe For that matter, there are The zebra ts & beautiful wild ass several vari . . | Killing Them Kindly are « only in the slightest | » quagka, one variety, Unet within the Inet become ew yours. The zebra would be especially valuable in Africa if {t could be domosticated, as it ts immune from the “teetse fly,” which induces the fatal sleeping sickness and kills most other antmals; but the sebra is tamed with great difficulty, and, far, with little success, and 0 fe is comparatively useless. a stows e@ water from the floor through Be @ Spug. Buy your husband celver, frinstance, The Brute nish 3 “Ho's a mean man.” From a note received by a school| “How #07” cher “When bis little girl begs for an Irlando cannot come to achool|ice cream sundae he asks her if is week and maybe not next by! « wouldn't rather have a gold 9 dc is suffering | watch when she's 19." om nervus persptration.” | Three children In New York, say the dispatches, died from drinking What other kind It should be understood that! or liquor is there? “Strange how few of our youth ful dreams come true!” “Oh, I don't know! Now 1 guess I Ancient had © oun The Pieri had the hour tees; The ari today wears clocke upon Mer howe to show her clase I remember how i once yearned to wear long trousers them longer than almost anybody | state topics, and in the country!” h woar | Mont., and fn Helena, and in Seat-| Ue, and engineered for the North- ern Pacific, and in Alaska, and knows so much about public im- provements that he. also knows that what the public doesn't know could fill several encyclopedias, Counts 'Em All Up So, after he cashed in on that million dollar job, George stationed | himeelf right across the way from the city hall, and started to count the number of foiks who went {nto| |the municipal building There were so many count George knew a lot of those folks were after a lot of information that the clerks were either too busy to give them or didn’t have the ex- perience and knowledge. Also, George knew that he knew. “Why, then,” said George to he lost OTHERS MAY RAN (6) (9) ' FOR THAT’S GEORGE’S WAY OF RUNNING FOR MAYOR He put out bis sign, and, beingyear, friends, Romans, and counteys an enginee t once drew the plans | er hand specifications for diverting the), And that first place be the ma stream of information seekers from way te to know ‘worley . the city hall to his own office n efficienc er neer.” Watch for Worley Bubbles ‘ n't 5 to have any nd that's what those circles: Worley clubs, or ¢ tive commit ou've § In the adsgme: tees, or such’ like They're not really balloons, but| Hut watch out for the Worley it's Worley'’s way of getting your! bubbles pal mM wid | himself, “wouldn't the public be giad to pay an efficiency en- gineer, who could tell them al! about their Improvement and taxation problems, a little fee for the information?” So, after taking a little trip back | Fast, and collecting a lot of little books with a lot of data on all con- cetvable municipal, county, and also §6equipping |himself with several brand compasses with which to draw fectly round circles, Worley opened up a carpeted and mahogany-fur nished office. or In Peoria a generous person put a pot of money into a fine institution with every convenience for public as semblage and gave its management into the custody of liberal trustees, who invited everybody to consider it “theirs to command.” There weren't even the strings that go with a church --the place was absolutely free. But the folks didn’t come. A great instituticn had to confess failure year went by and tle The leading trust found out the reason: “Folks can’t feel free in a building they don’t own.” Tey own the schoolhouse. There all can mee on a natural common level, woman to woman and man to man. Practically it is the only place. but in a public schogl building equipped Other places can serve some of the people, 4 as a social center everybody can feel at home | q YOU HAVE THE BUILDINGS. ARE YOU GET-)| TING OUT OF THEM THE FULL MEASURE OF POS-| SIBLE VALUE? IN QUEEN ELIZABETH’S time, when a barkeep got up a new fancy drink, they called it a new “merry-go-down.” DR. BOSC, distinguished French pathologist, announces that can- ‘cer germs are carried in fish and snails taken as food. We can cut snails out of the menu, anyhow. WHEN THAT old board of ordnance of our war department pro nounces the automobile more “economical and certain” than the mule,| it simply shows its ignorance of mules. VILLA HAS seized a brewery. Looks as If he's going to follow in | the footsteps of Huerta. UNTY BANKS? Editor Th r 1 ha reading The Star for th or twelve re. I like very much, prinetpally for it is takin: special ege in all matters best interests of the people as at whole. We now have the parcel stallment plan post and a great many other Hard to Get Money @ommodations not enjoyed in for-, ‘The mortgage comes due before fer years. Why not @ government | the purchaser can realize profit ®ank in each county in every state? tre the land To renew the mort This bank could be located in o ge is diffichit, also to get mone near the courtheuse of each county | to pay ¢ 2 mo a bank where the small land) A ant owner could go and borrow money | cour ld be direct from Uncle Sam for a long, “bi o the farm or short period and at a low rate Iso have at of interest of the money trust Easier Said Than Done. The of the propert ould be rom the ta 1 vation rthouse.” T stract cou be small cost own Jim fill ”" Pres res t d for an fA 0 A ears to prepare ear at a che th farme to to the| cessfully says,’ movement.” at have mone 1 ten order to m back to the farm 8.0. RUB. | the ach Wilson INCHES TALL HAIR AND SL INCHES TALL. AND HAVE SL FOR ONE MONTH OR MORE EACH. DOLL COUPON NO. 1. I am not a subscriber to The Star, and wish to thave The Star delivered for one month and thereafter until ordered discontinued, for which I agree to pay the carrier twenty-five cents a month. (Outside of Seattle, 35c per month in advance.) ee Tomorrow Last Day FOR BOYS AND GIRLS TO WIN A DOLL THE DUTCH CHARACTER DOLLS ARE ELEVEN INCHES TALL, DRESSED IN VARIOUS DUTCH®COSTUMES. DH EPING EYES, AN ASSORTMENT OF DRESSES TO CHOOSE FROM. THE JOINTED KID BODY DOLLS HAVE NATURAL, PING EYES, AND ARE THIRTEEN INCHES TALL. THE BISQUE DOLLS ARE FULL JOINTED, HAVE SLEEPING EYES AND ARE ELEVEN BOYS AND GIRLS LIVING OUTSIDE OF SEATTLE CAN ALSO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS OFFER BY SECURING TWO PAID IN ADVANCE ORDERS The choice of any one of the above dolls given free to any little girl or and 12 years who finds boy between the ages of 6 two people who do not take The Star and gets each of them to sign one of the cou- pons printed here. This neighbors and ask them if they take The Star. Call on your If is very simple. they do not, ask them to sign one of these coupons to help you win a doll. Bring the coupons to The Star office, 1307 Seventh Avenue, and select your doll. This offer expires December 24. two subscribers for one money. All you need is month. Do not collect any PARENTS MAY BRING IN THE COUPONS, PROPERLY FILLED OUT, AND SELECT THE DOLLS FOR THE CHILDREN. 6. Private exchange com a with all departments, ?HONES ™“**.. RA Dy moll, dotiz, one month in advance, hey six m * By carrier, T, BUT WORLEY ONLY BUBBLES, NTT = = Why Not a Gift Certificate? z Marvelous Creations in Chri stmasNeckwear Most Beautiful Display of Specially Selected Gift Cravats That Modern Silk Looms Have Yet Produced We've searched our own and lands afar to obtain wonderfully attractive and especially distinctive neckwear to lay before you this Christmas season. The results surprised even us, as they are certain to surprise you, for the array of silken weaves is fairly dazzling in its charm. Any man or young man may well be delighted with neckwear that bears the stamp of Cheasty’s Haberdashery. , Prices 50c, 75c¢ and $1.00 of PUTULENNAULANNANUUUUUGaUaTocaaeaegtgtan See the feature display neckwear in our window Shirts for Men and Young Men Splendid Line of New Patterns and Weaves, $1.50 and $2.00 We've a wonderful showing of plain and fancy bosom shirts—and you know they are always ac | ceptable at Christmas time. It is impossible for any one man to have too great a supply of shirts. These” were especially selected for Christmas shoppers, and j represent the latest fashion creations. Here you'll find, too, the new plaited bosom shirts for dress and Tuxedo wear. Cheasty’s Haberdashery Second Avenue at Spring Street. Store Open Tonight and Tomorrow Night. Cin DANCING HIPPODROME Phome, Nain 176 ROBERT CURTIS ICTRICAL CONTRACTOR e Wiring, Repairing, Installing 1018 Post St. Séattio THE FANCY DRESSED DOLLS ARE it DOLL COUPON NO. 2. I am not a subscriber to The Star, and wish to have The Star delivered for one month ahd thereafter until ordered discontinued, for which I agree to pay the carrier twenty-five cents a month. (Outside of Seattle, 35c per month in advance.) Nahe oa. csceeteaus casncdismet cg beanie Address ....

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