The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 27, 1913, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

LEAGUB OF Bervi ftlee, Seattle, Wosh., The Star Publishing Company every evening except Sunday Batered at the pos! Holy Days side as they fet a word ine Most times, to be Wailing spirit and Miscloses what sou of this reunion living; ma tr: Smudge that w And, say, maybe But he draws the fatted calf all right you think he can’t get away we mustn't overlook her Sis has been d Getting polished or fin fished or someth drous wise lore lifted right out of the book again, even tl to her by express make us wonder if there's not a new home and the language rs which come | And so the merry days glide by, the truly holy days, when the best in all of us gets dusted off | How they fly! Row they're al ther year's coming days were holidays treated to exercise. | It seems only yesterday that they began; and But there's th Life would DR. J. LEON WILLIAMS, of London, 500,000-year-old skulls of prehistoric men, Before he announced that the ape is an off-shoot of primitive man, thus Looking New Yorkers over, an off-shoot one way or the other, pretty | hadn't been | Feversing Darwin. But it doesn't matter. You can see that there wa: @arly and thorough. |A Grocer’s Ad Talk PEN YOUNGSTOWN, O,, lives a grocer with a F i advertising grocer, Wertisements; and "Yecent one: Some of you people give me a pain about the high cost of living. You don't know any more about it than my kid, 9 All she knows is to throw my watch on the floor, pull my hair, coax me for pennies to buy candy most uptodate poultry farm in the country. laying strain of hens in the country. that money can hire. fresh eggs at the present ti of the amount, yet you say | am robbing you. strictly fancy Florida oranges at 15 and 10 cents a dozen. poor farmer that raised them, after paying for the picking and Packing, gets about 10 cents the balance. months old. 1 have the best. | employ the best men It costs me nearly $2 a dozen to produce | charge you about one-fourth I'm selling you The railroad company gets You rush over to the opera house, pay $2 for a Beat, to see some chickens and old hens show their legs and shapes. That is al! right. You rush down to the millinery pay about $20 for a hat, the first cost of which is about 3 that’s all right; you get a swell hat. chiffon dress, nothing to it. but it’s the styie—it’s all right. But when it com thing to eat—you have a fit. Take my advice—take care of your stomach. You pay $50 for a 1 can put it in my overcoat pocket, NOW IT’S planned to speed up the bees. Northwestern beekeep- Bescciation proposes to send the honey-makers South during the f BO they'll work the year ‘round. Ali work and no play make FEDERAL GEN. MERCADO says he will evacuate Ojinaga and Then the rebels will War in Mexico is one blamed swap after another. Chihuahua and take KELLER, blind, deaf, and once dumb, told an audience in Philadelphia recently, how she had, through years of patient endeavor, broken Out of her bondage One part of her address stands out pron | § When the question as to her political views was trans | “mitted to her by her instructor = plied that she was a suffraget and a socialist through her hands, she re- SUDDEN WEALTH “ = gener was read, ft A BONUS of $100 has been given to an Orange county, California, » who presented her husband with triplets. Supervisors sald, i thought such ent enny to his wife and eact ebildren. Baking Powder) | Absolutely Pure Recognized everywhere and by experts as the very highest grade of baking powder— superior to other brands in purity, leavening strength and keeping quality. Made from pure cream of tartar, the product our of grapes, and the most healthful and useful of leavening agents. @ hay SAY! OLD TOP ¥ woud you Scarce my BACIC BETWEEN TWe SHOULDER, BLADES PLEASE ! wey OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE — WELL, WHEN THEY PULLED HIM OUT, You SHOULD HAVE SEEN WHAT A SIGHT HE WAS. His SCALP WAS NEARLY RIPPED OFF, AND ON THE CEPT SIDE OF HIS FAC® Was A RAGGED GASH THAT LOOKED —— ~ > MR. CLERK, YE MUSSED UP THE DINING ROOM SOMEWHAT. MAXG OUT A BILL FOR DAMACES AND SEND IT VP TO ME IN MY ROOM, When the will o had bequeathed one served, only The elephan ed by some # wonderful mont sald to be in Intelligenc other antmal phant's tusk iMiard be tance, and phant ts ruthlessly slain. "st. Michael's rematr Sabrina, Its use insures the bread, biscuit and cake paler rr against contamination from the cheap, improper or injurious ingredients from which lower priced f baking powders may be made. In Its youth ATURDAY, ips TEEN’ Our Daily Animal Story ABOUT THE ELEPHANI The elephant teeth, four in each eight of the teeth one time, Tt three sete of ng into use when the first ones a that ything from a toc a good-wized log he elephant all extant land animals, from a thousand generations of do mesticated stock eserves a great deal of credit quickness in surpassing almost any in the most resilte own a are made of this st to THE DIARY OF FATHER TIME A new t#land { in the is a much rarer le than fm th previously. et high, with a ¢rater top, came up throug 6 ear 4 long enough to be named fter the British man-o'-war commanded by the captain who dls Mediterranean | Graham's shoal, between Sicily gnd | Africa, Is the ret and which , and existed for a few months ns of Graham's June, and three miles around A university ha® conferred a de-|of another vaudeville family At sree on Actor Sothern. It was, of present the boy Is 4 years old and course, a Southern university. (ROMEM AR BRUTCS 2 OF/0Ga (erseal ‘ (yxe mus 1s wo ? ¢ uma on WY) cf 2 MIM AY SHARES J ¢ ee nal In Chicago there Is to be built the! world's largest and most curious | garage. It will be buflt entirely un derground, will fill the space under 12 city clocks, and will comme © 2,000 cars daily It will cost eee A German has invented a device for lighting gas buoys by wireless The recetving apparatus ts s tive only to the proper impulses. nai soe At a wedding in Lynn, Mage., the bride wore a gown made years | aco for a wedding which never took place. The St. Louls park department took a census of the trees in the city, and found that there were 18,180 of them. The muntetpal | nurserte two years more than 66,000 trees land shrubs, valued at more than/ cee o A boy went Into a hop to buy a cent'’s worth of nuts. The man at the corner, a cheery, good-natured soul, sald to him yu can have them mixed if you Ike | “All right.” said the boy, you may put one or two co. nuts in, If you please 6 o al | | James Murphy, an employe of a/ |Chicago packing company, was Jroped and branded by his fellow Jemployes Just before his marriage. Two hundred cowboys escorted the wedding party to the church, dress Jed in their chaps and spurs, and | riding their ponies. | ee . A turtle caught recently at Cutty hunk ‘sland, Mass, tipped the scales at 65 pounds | Certain of the Chicago theatres will have vated in the lobbies cer /tificateg stating that the ctraulation \of air in the auditorium is good, and that the atmosphere if up to the standard : | eo ete Y., is called Cupid Hall, for the rea on that the boarders usually get married after a short stay there es A vaudeville contract has been signed for the year 1926 whereby the third generation of a line of fa mous comedians will appear in a sketch with the second generation jew ha have grown tn the last/of appret A boarding fouse in Roslyn, ’N.| “Mad Anthony This was the great American soldier who won the strange nlck war of the revolution He commanded famous retreats ain! th seemed cupled besiege every al | He ate coming seemingly ficulties He wan born at Waynesborough, Pa., on the first day of the year 1745, He seemed to ha to fight, for he jum battle togs at tho first sign of how tit the service of his country until bis death at Erie, Pa, in 1796 His greatest { Donpite the prevailing Yuletide spirit, the Circle club members did to contribute to the reg weekly contest. The con not testants nu ‘od over 6 The subject of compet Why Are Newspapers a G stitution were instructed to give thelr view in a 150-word essay. The winner was Ruby McDonald, aged 13, whe lives in Isenquah. Ruby is the iit tle miss who was mentioned in the Cirele Column last week. A letter 1 in which she fons to become a from her was told of her amb’ | successful so: writer As wtated in the Cirel an open Invitation will | Ruby, as winner of the con last week pay -n visit to The Star office and thoroughly inspect its various de partments ° j NEXT WEEK'S CONTEST The Star ( offert, ) the Circle club's bership roll. The various dra utests which the Circle very por have always be All drawings mast black Ink and th ”e done | executed on regulation drawing }paper. This is not absolutely nec-| ry, though, if none can be pro cured | Write your name and address plainly and neatly on the back of the drawing, Address it to The Seattle Star Circle club, or to Uncle Jack in care of The Star office. eee various lit One little girl-—or maybe it was |» boy—sent Uncle Jack a handsome penwiper, composed of two staal! tting paper. Upon opening it Uncle Jack found the! penwiper cut In the shape of a! pages of b heart see le ry THE WINNING ESSAY By Ruby McDonald. THE NEWSPAPER We really couldn't do without The newspapers o'er the land, Where would we get the news, Were it not for the newspaper man? You ask why newspapers are a great Institution Newspapers are a great institu tion because it is beyond a possi y to do without them. We woul be totally ignorant to practically al occurrences, local and in all other parts of the world, w f the press Newspapers, both good bad are a benefit to the community. A good newspaper wil he wspaper will oppose him. Ther » to distingulst I fore the voter is abl |the good candidates from the bad| candidates The press is indirectly respons! ble for suppressing crime. A per son ab more f arful of the publicity tn ¢ on than the conse quential punishment 1 | Settled the Widdy mw? man ‘pines’ for a woman? about the softest wood there ts. FALLS INTO BAY Dock work William Jones. terday, when he was seized by out | was dra ALMOST LIKE DAD the girl ia 44a. Jenter politic, but will never hold’ enough to get it first hand from the office,” RATES ",.2"8,,4 HOW ‘MAD’ ANTHONY WAYNE LED SOLDIERS TO VICTORY OVER BRITISH REDCOATS — by hin reckless bravery 1n cities when the enemy swarmed about him on med strategic forts, over impossible Alf. been born into his es with England and never left ary achieve ment was the storming of Stony fon was, The boys and girls » exteniod © his power ¢ started through the mountains, Massachunetts He marched all that till eight in the evening ° je’s artiste will pre |sido next week. The weekly prize a handsome box of candy, | will be given to the boy or ¢ }who sends in the best drawing of jany kind. | There are n fand girls soldier was place and anxious to act y talented boys of midnight nd formed two colum work should be onets Main 9100 necting RAVE AMERICAN “Mad” Anthony Wayne Storming Stony Point {to the attack from two different points, followed by the two main fivisions, the left led by General Ww Not until wit pistol shot were iscovered! fired, but the ad- rd with n was aroused with the cry of “To arms, to arms!” But it was too late. Soon there was the deafentug rattle of mush and the roar of cannon! General Wayne, always in the lead, bad been hit on the head and stunned, but he soon recovered. The determined onslaught of the | Americans was too terrible to with- stand. The garrison hauled down The capture of Stony Point was considered one of t most import i! one of the greatest achieve the war rp THANKS FROM UNCLE JACK. remembrances re [ceived from a number of Cirelettes, | | THE TACTICS OF SOCIALISM SYNDICALISM SABOTAGE DIRECT ACTION ANARCHY paid for by Rawte J. |" cle I made mention ad Haywood, and tn Justice to organized labor I must call ention to the fact that the orig!- w organization has whatever with Haywood in known as the it not for support an est man for office A bad organization will hold a mass Odd Fellows Tenth and Pine streets comber 28, at § p. v organization last convention recogni Gom of confining their e dustrial unionism and economics. to commit a crime Is Soctalinm ts fundamentally of eco- nomic intention and democratic Its adoption must be by auso society ae & whole hae no other wi He who would rob Socialism of its democracy has ittt of Booialism and t He who would restra’ understanding La little conception of de- Saviors of the Party or Disrupters, Whicht last national convention of | ¢; J 9 was introduced by Delegate Franz Rostre is now, and for four years of the Socialist It provided as follows: $ | Political Actior Why is it,” queried the fair) ‘ toed that t t OM y ey alway! i | wesolution was signed by four dele | widow, “that th always say 2 prea by sone eles and are now ates who were a he party In this Gesignated as 1 suppose,” growled the fussy bachelor i's because pine is . how could a political party be ept united by people with #uch ex- yosrod intent? qualifications undor Rostrom’s reso- adherence to of Socialism ae srs saved the life of would not be , an engineer, yor a spell of dizziness while fishing at |pler 9. He fell into the bay, but | stancos and environment over which a this, the resolution ts unsootal- and undemocratte would be destructive to organization inatoad of cc in a written auto World's Referee, “IT learned by slow | WASHINGTON William Jen-| nings Bryan, jr., just admitted to| degrees my Soctalism trom Dr the bar, announced that “he may| P24 sive hiny full credit for tt have nover had energy and patience reat Soclalist writers” The resolu. Hon above is conclusive evidence of the fact, and by the way, the Wo te Ang Oe ig ey wt at et ust boasts about it, and _ the \~ ation of the exploited class @ effected by polit means shall have ocet shail have cccaston to Goal with hin ine was circula’ M. Wells: 7 PROPOSED AMENDMENT To po National Constitution of the oe! Party—Nominati for Pubilo Office. Judge of eligibility under thie ene tion, and no appeal shal! be had from i deciaton, execpt as to tts geod It requires little commen that this proposition ts beurd Te prosoribes individuals without rea- fon other than that they have edu- cational qualifications, and ts void of all democratioand soctalistte prin- ciple. It has for its object the de- priving of indtvidual - Inentat political right. +. ‘Among other "Seasons amendment opted ‘tie hould bi following ven: ©) Cnr f' ‘In cities where the class 14 sharply drawn, this provision would the nomination for the of- nontioned, of wageworkers on- iy, thus leaving out the employer lawyers and vari is the lawye arious kinds of sat,, Wous in a lawyer, and, if edu- ° on isa very, he is probabil: Sorrect, but If education Ise growth |dependent upon experience, he is wee, considering education al to the c detrim Producers of Te Save the Party. The following P 1 gives tp ie ‘agraph was also ‘This proposition is m |stir up strife, but to t within the party. Already mfddi class politiclane are dividing our members against each other in eon- filots over office, Let us once and for all tell these members who come n outside the working class, that tn offices which’ they but there are others to Are not eligible. With entive for political scheming |thus removed, many factional quar+ rels now disrupting the party will an end, and numberless vented Mr. Wells faile to recog: fact ‘that no the “Direct Action va that was causing party and that he was © strong porter of the Hayw Direct A faction which has com- pelled the organization of political Soctalists into a new Soctalist in this state. Whate of the Wells amendment may deen, its effect would surely be to- ward destruction tead of con- struction. No outside influence will be required to divide the Sdctalist party while its members talk and use Direct Action tactics within the party, and seck to the mas jority will and ald of Haywood I. W. W. members bein brought Into the Socialist party fo! that purpose Tt {e needless for me to say that rom and Wells’ amendme: trouble in conrention, of Seattle, of and safe whe: standpoint of been ablo party's pol platform © 8 & opposed to Cinterest of mmon peo= t 1p imi 1 and copied by all other politica’ xt Saturday's ) be continued tn r Star. (Advartivoment)—Rawin J, Brown,

Other pages from this issue: