The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 6, 1914, Page 4

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THE STAR—TUESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1913, NOWTHWEST MEMBER Telegraph News then LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS. Services of the United gress Entered at the postoffion, Beattio, Wash, pe second clase matter, Vublished by The Star Publishing Company every evening except Sunday OF THR SCRIPPS We’re Getting Wise | OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE TTACKING those progressives who are attempting to) protect the people in the passage of Alaska raileoad mM GoING Home! iF I STAY HERE IT'LL BREAK UP TNE PARTY BECAUSE 1 CAN'Y STAND IT To SEG A Big HEALTHY MALE LIKE You PLAYING A P/ANO WHEN You REALLY OUGHT TO BE HAULING THEM !! legislation by the present congress, Congressman William | E. Humphrey of Seattle, in an interview given out at! Washington yesterday, attempts to make it appear that the opposition to the leasing clause in the Chamberlain Alaska railroad bill is raised for the purpose of attempting to defeat any legislation tending to the development of Alaska Congressman Humphrey knows the inference he tends shall be drawn from his remarks is absolutely false He knows as well as any man in congress that Senator Poindexter in the senate and Congressman Bryan in the | house are making the fight of THE PEOPLE AGAINST | THE INTERESTS. “This greatest menace to the bill,” says Humphrey, “I fegret to say, has found active support in Seattle, where! the people are especially interested in this legislation, by many real friends of Alaska. They do not understand the ) situation here in congress.” It is the same old underhand fight—the ery that the people “do not understand.” | They tell us we are asking too much—that if we'll | just ask a little we may have it. 4 They've told us that for years, and for years we've fallen) for it. | But we've grown strangely wise of tate and have passed | that stage in our political development when statements such | as Humphrey makes find weight with us. in THE ESTATE of John Jacob Astor will save $12,200 owing to the i ‘ion of the inheritance tax law by a New York surrogate. Ev- | ery little bit heipe the Astors. t HAI the revoit ie coming! Put your ear to the ground and you'll hear “Decent dress for decent women!” And the murmur is in femi- ‘nine tones. Oscar Limited ROOSTER with only one tail feather is not a pretty bird and now that they’re beginning to look Oscar Inderwood over, they're finding that about the only orna-| fient he has is his leadership of the House There’s no question about the energy and skill with J which he has directed the tariff matter but he is a candi date for the United States senate, and his record is very! much reactionary. Oscar has opposed the initiative, refer-) endum and recall, direct primaries, and woman's suffrage. | He has voted for special legislation favorable to the water! i may Be Needed Some Day | Power trust and helped to defeat eight-hour legislation NOTICE—The party whe ha *mOsT THE DIARY OF AN FATHER TIME The climbing of mountains has occurred sporadically from ancient times, In prehistoric days the Alps were traversed by two or three trade roads, the most Important be ing that along which the exchange in bronze and amber took place. Italy was invaded over more than one pase tn early times, Had- ‘at once T!4n climbed Etna to see the sun ot rise. Towards the end of the 12th jcentury Peter Il of Aradon climb- ING|| Py The people are in the midst of the job of cleaning up|is ins Sy ; ad United States senate. To let Oscar in would be a good|” °°" "*,° ) deal like letting a fellow “track in dirt” when one is scrub-| Henry Miller says “Hamlet” Is/a dragon on the top. In the 16th * the worst play Shakespeare wrote. century mountaineering advanced hing the floor. That always makes mother mad. It may be—es played by Henry. | considerably, and a up of regu : ein OF loa UG deans a 9 now eee lar mountaineers wi most form- A man who wae bitten by a bed-jed at Zurich, but civie and relt says: “My hat Ie in the ring.” If It’s that little old waffle head-) bug while in a sleeping car has | «ious troubles blighted the enter piece, Franels, it's going to get kicked something it. | suse the St. Paul railway for $10-| prise. During the first half of the - | 000 for the injuries done. We'd 7th century mountains were neg- CLEVELAND Ie deep In that good old post-bellum game of finding jike to match that bedbug against lected. Dragons were still sup- || and losing Charile Ross. It isn’t so hard on the heart as almost win @ certain bull terrier tn our neigh-| posed to linger among them, and ning a baseball pennant. rhood. ges dor | they were thought to be the homes eee of devils against whom outpost ~ OTIS le one editor who can’t complain about particular attention! Who Hae Thie Kind of @ Moree? | chapels were built. net being paid to hie editorial utterances. WANTED—-A horse to gather sp rugs 4 - en around town for Ite feed Phone tT! X. The only knocker that we can Frank Stanton. —-A@vertisoment in Hee i AN ODORLESS onion has been grown at St. Ciairesville, O. It's) "188% Manton 4 |] @ crose between a Bermuda and a goiden yellow. That'll be a hard ae ae blow to the jokesmiths. Our Own Encyclopedia CHICAGO'S ten policewomen will cast aside tight skirts and don| Sealskin comes from the seal, muskrat, coney, coon, squirrel, rab- ja — garment so they can run better, ‘tle reported. To or from 8 bit, cat and, for aught we know, | the black bass and trout. DURING Its first year, the average baby coneum aks H ts ene ee out of every 100 bottiefed babies A MISTAKE WE ALL MAKE R i CREAM BAKING POWDER A Pare Cream of Tartar Powder Indispensable to best results —saves ‘worry—saves work—saves money— saves health—saves complaints at table bear with is Opportunity, and that knocks but once. Preseription for Postt! 500 quarts of + of others, n your @ of Giycert gredients hom Ja halt pint of | well Take o after each meal Smaller ¥ eet it from Don't fool w tures. It ts risky. For the past |aix years this haw had a wonderful demand. P hed by the Globe Pharmaceutical Inboratories of Chi- NAVY YARD ROUTE Steamers M1. PB Kennedy, Tourtet and | Athion Colman Dock, Reattie: £:00, 10:30 & om, 1 le uncertain subject to change without Fare 80¢ Round Trip. DR.E.J.BROWN Walter (sighing)—Ab, I shall lead a different life this year. Clara—Why, you have no bad habits. Walter i | Ret a few | I know it. I'm going to Then next New Year's day there will be some reason for my friends to pat me on the back and say encouraging things to me. ee Fritz! Scheff has been married Understand {t, though. The | is her| | | | again present holder of the title of thelr ontist on First av, rep: to be Dr. & J. Brown, Our Daily Animal Story WILD BOAR FIGHTS TIGERS; EATS SNAKE You want to see with clearness and comfort. hh thin thief who You want your surroundings to be seen at iI} their best. You'll choose gas for its continu- ous, dependable service under all conditions. And when you Modern Gas Light fulfills every requirement t ives off my 4 The wild boar {s the ancestor ot} 7 fi A U wis eimnin' oe, “uspononeed aot | 203 First Ave., Union Block mal keepers would rather have any er animal tn the 200 Ket loose | 40 | than the wild boar, No animal is more vicious; hunters sasert tat jeven when the animal is run |denti |through with a spear it will en-| deavor to force itself along the shaft of the spear to reach the holder of {t. The natives of India say that a wild boar will drink at a stream between two tigers; it doos not know what fear fs, It will eat anything—even poisonous snakes. The farmers of New Bngiand| some time ago were persuaded to} breed the wild boar into their stock hogs to counteract the prey laicnce of cholera realize how beautifully by other Myh-class 1 make « dollar and when I do your dental of illumination and convenience, you will have | nothing else. £3 and see my picture tn my alen, at the entrance of the a: tte Just like the one In thin advertisement. Boware of fake Dr. Browns, EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. S. feattlo’s Leadng Dentist 713 First Avenue Open evenings until # and #undays watll ¢ for people who work. SEATTLE LIGHTING CO. Henry Bldg. Phone Main 6767 ed a peak in the Pyrenees, and saw! © e | latest husband, but not necessarily | ~7 place of wrapping paper Ea re z When Building a Home [Ber net hasan, Pe a | a a our designing and engraving departments, which are at With the government taking | creased pulling power of art your service without charge ° ° fee their plural wives and «RO BBE D tatio over th y :/ large. Plan Its Illumination [fetaron or Newark NM 3. taking et ee | away heir blanket Du ni ly c sec 7 om, ¢ 7, > ae : £ 2 bY If | Srey, et. blanket, Sasinete, smal) EY A OLN LIST Sees: For the actual printing only of your stationery will any I}| the warpath ! : * Carefully st __________] @N FIRST AVENUE. | charge be made, and our prices for this work are the same me to my offices, be sure CS Main 9400. Private exchange com Becting with all Gepartinante, RATES oes Gi aree, chaiee By carrie@, in otty, Mo a month. ILONESOMEST MAN IN WORLD: PHO He’s President Wilson, Says Star’s Woman Writer, in Pass Christian By IDAH McGLONE GIBSON. PASS CHRISTIAN, Miss., Jan, 6—‘Here! You can't | come in here!" said the walking arsenal “But 1 am in!” I answered with a smile. | The human arsenal looked puzzled and then he said: | “But you will have to go right out again! “You see, no one is allowed in the president's vacation quarters here at the Pass.” . “What would you do with me if I should say I wouldn't | go?" I asked. | Again he looked puzzled, and fingered the handle of his forty Colt waveringly, and then he answered, “I don’t know.” “You see, lady, no one is allowed to go into the garden about the ‘Little White House,’ but I never met anyone so determined as you.” “Come along and have your picture taken!" I said, look- ing up at 6 foot 7, and taking in his blue coat with its big star, belted with his revolver holster, the old-fashioned hand- | jcuffs hanging out of his pockets, and the formidable “billie.” | “All right,” he answered, and then I knew the game| was won, se eee | At the end of the broad hall tn the old Herndon mansion at Pass Christian, a bright wood fire ts always burning these days, as is also in the great firepinoe of the living room, which ts furnished fn old Colonial furniture, and hung with family portraits upon its cream-| tinted walls. | In one of the deep Colonial arm-chaira, Mra, Wilson looks rather tired, for if the truth were known, the “first lady of the land” has) been considerably exercised over the health of the president | Everyone loves a lover and the denizens of Pass Christian would) have it that there is a romance budding between Miss Margaret and | | Mr. Ben King, who is kin of the Misses Smith of New Orleans, the | | most Intimate friends that the Wilsons have. I asked Miss Lacy Smith about the matter and she was filled with tndignation. “Now tan't it too bad to say these things about poor Ben and Margaret? Why, they have hardly seen each other more than three lor four times, and now just because he has paid the young ladies the attention a gentloman would give to a gentlewoman, every newspaper | in the country is saying this, 1 don't want to even give dignity gh to It to deny it.” Every time | see President Wilson it is borne upon me | that he is the most solitary man in the United States, the most solitary president who has ever occupied the White House. At Pass Christian the president sees no one, talks to no one, except his personal physician, Capt. Grayson, and be- yond a bow and perhape a hand-wave to the many children who cluster about the garden gate and the links where he plays golf, he seldom has anything but a smile to give to those who salute him. It is well known fn Washington that the president has no intimate men friends. | His whole mind ts taken up with affairs of state, and he views people entirely in the mass, not concretely There is only one man in the United States that is spoken of as the fri of the president. io M . M. House of Texas and New York, and it Is ven he |e refused admittance to the president as je received, and no other man in Washington LZ; idah McGlone Gibson persuades Pass Christian's chief of pollee to allow her to gain access to the “Winter White House.” GIRLS! BEAUTIFUL, CHARMING HAIR, NO DANDRUFF—25 CENT DANDERINE Besides beautifying the bair at once, Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, pur es ifies and invigorates the scalp, for- Your hair becomes light, wavy,\ever stopping ttching and falling fluffy, abundant and appears as hair. soft, lustrous and beautiful as a| But what will please you most young girl's after a “Danderine hair | will be after a few weeks’ use when cleanse.” Just try this—molsten a/you will actually see new hair— OF YOUR HAIR AND STOPS TRY THIS! DOUBLES BEAUTY, {T FALLING OUT. | come and go or to pour out hie opinions in the presi- cloth with a little Danderine and fine and downy at first—yes—but dential ear. | carefully draw {t through your hair,|really new hair growing all over The Misses Smith, however, are great friends of all the Wilsons, | taking one small strand at « time./the scalp. If you care pretty, Mise Lucy and Miss Mary Smith have enjoyed the greatest intimacy | This will cleanse the hair of dust, soft hair and lots of it surely get with the Wilson family for years, and {t ts through them, indeed, that | @irt and excessive of] and in fust|a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Dan- the president came to Pase Christian and took the house of thetr| ® few moments you have doubled |derine from any druggist or toilet friend, Mise Herndon, for his vacation. the beauty of your hair. counter, and just try it. vv HAVE YOU AN IDEA One That You Would Like to Have Made Intoa Design for Use on Your Business Stationery? yy. | VERY who business man appreciates the importance of using a printed type letter head in If such is the case, a phone call will place you in touch with if not lower than the usual prices that prevail in Seattle Remember, a phone personal call or a post card is all realize or that is necessary that have in mind. to on idea you TELEPHONE ELLIOTT 3696 229-230-231 LIBERTY BLDG. OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE Hov Pros wert ovis! aun: our Rome. 08 ke meal come our | compe |

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