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MEMBER OF THE SCRITRS NORTHIWHST LEAGUR OF NEWSPAPERS Telegraph News Bervice of the United Prees Association. tered at the postoffice, Meattle, Wash., ne second — matter Published by The Star Publishing Company every evening except and he who keeps m motives of ox- or both——Max ° All truth Is safe, and nothing else ls saf back the truth or withholds It from men, pediency, is either a coward or a criminal, Muller, When Gunmen Govern HE NEW FREEDOM is in reaching the copper i! . country of Michigan, What they have up, there looks : very much like the old tyranny, aggravated. | Those of us who have read history used to wonder why slow j ' it was, in ancient and medieval times, that the folks, the A 95 per cent, were so docile when predatory princes exploited i and robbed them by means of private standing armies. ; Why didn’t they rise and put the robbers out of busi-| | ness?” was the question which ran through our minds f Well, you can read the answer in Calumet | The folks have risen, as mach as they can, They are! willing to starve in their zeal for liberty. But they cannot fight, for the exploiters control the law and the guns The governor of Michigan is against them. | The courts of Michigan are against them. The hired gunmen to whom the public authorities of Michigan have turned over the police power are against | H All the persons who make a profit out of their labor and therefore are pinched when they strike seem to be against them. Their leaders are shot and abducted; they are penniless in the stress of midwinter. What CAN they do? | What would YOU do under like circumstances? MARS, MINNIE B. FRAZIER, than whom there is no greater when it comes to writing the editor on current subjects, adde a postscript to her latest /et! “Excuse typing” she says. “My trusty old typewriter has gone ‘Tloo-ey,’” Little wonder! Wt surely has worked hard—and well—in Its day. WHICH IS worse, to st: @ raincoat or to borrow an um- brelia when it Is raining? Washington, D. C., judge thinks the rainceat thief the more dangerous, and sends a man to the “pen” for two years. What’s Happened to ’Em? HAT does it all mean? First, along comes J. P. Morgan with the admission that interlocking directorates may, after all, be an evil, and} that there aren't going to be any more of them so far as the firm of Morgan & Co. is concerned. | Then the Ford Automobile Co. pushes Morgan aside! and gains attention of the audience with the announcement that it has $10,000,000 this year and that it’s going to have it every year hereafter for distribution among its employes And it further says that it’s going to reduce the hours of labor from nine to eight each day, and that it’s going to hire 4,000 more men, so that the reduction of the sae! hour won't make any difference in the output of the plant And that no man over 22 years of age is going to be paid less than $5 a day! And we've just finished applauding when the Seattle What does it all mean, anyway? ST. LOUIS man is held up by robbers, who render him un- conscious with perfume. He had beautiful visions, fioated through brililant streets and sat on a goiden throne, And when he awoke the ungrateful wretch complained to the police. “GO TO HELL FOR ICE CREAM,” say signe In Farrell, Conrad Heil of that town is an ice cream manufacturer, “TWO ALBUMS full of friends valued at is one of the items included in a fire insurance claim in ing, Mich. Cheap bunch of friends like that might just as weil be burned up. TYLENCHUS DEVASTATRIX has invaded the United States and beefsteak and onion lovers are alarmed. The pest Is commonly known in onion worm, and threatens to destroy the industry. AMERICAN “CHICKENS”—the human kind—will soon be cackling like the real thing, declares a London scientist. Woman is talking so much t he declares she will soon lose her human voice. (His name is not given, for good reasons.) “IT’S CHEAPER to move than pay rent,” was an old- time New York expression. jut mot any more. it now costs $25 a load In the city and $35 a load to Brooklyn, and $45 a load to the suburbs. LOOK OUT for all strange monkeys. from the Johns Hopkins ity, strange and deadly disea One has escaped inoculated with some » THERE’S SUCH an awful let-up In expert advice on im- pure food, bacteria, vegetable diet and ready-made clothes that ‘we would even welcome a few kind words from Andrew C: negie on the disgrace of dying rich. HATSHEPSU; ANCIENT Egypt's greatest queen, ruled as a king and wore man's attire and false chin whiskers. We present Hatty as the | ‘ancient limit of equal rights. For Ladies and Misses. ‘ ; | These are thoroughly reliable \ \ | rubberized Raincoats, carrying the ! maker’s personal guarantee to you. In colors, tan, Oxford, pearl, | | brown, blue and black. Weaves } are diagonals, serges, mohairs and corduroys. Some with belt, others plain Hnit $20.00 All Suits and Coats at Greatly Reduced Prices. J. Redelsheimer & Co. | First and Columbia 4 | ‘THE STAR—THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1914 OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE AH, GOOD MORNING, SIR. WOULD YOU GWE ME YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS I AN FROM T' SIR* 46 érry DIRECTORY OFFICE. WWDGING FROM YOUR BREATH I SHOUD Say You ARE FROM THe CORNER For every tear of regret for hav- ing committed crime there falle a shower of tears in rage at being caught One would think, from the num- ber of fires set by merchants who have not been long {n this country, that they must have got a wrong impression upon first seeing tho statue of Liberty In New York har- bor carrying a torch. ee Chamber of Commerce steps out from the wings and says ° Se t00? : 4 . Dr. Montessori, the famous it isn’t going to have any more star chamber sessions—that | rattan Gheeatan’ claten' te ake hereafter everybody's going to know just what it’s doing! | tanght {diots to write. Oh, that ex plains the authorship of an anony mous letter received the other day ee A Western egg shipper deciares 50,000,000 eggs are being laid every day. That may taste as though they were laid in 1911 Amateur her chief pen work © thene are * quite plain. Chicago Examiner Learned . at School ‘I thought you learned how to draw at school! You haven't a tail on your cow.” ‘Oh, that’s all right, pop; the teacher says for ua to pay no at tention to d ils.” oe Stewart Edward White, Just re- turned to civilization from a hunt ing trip in South Africa, says there is plenty of big game left. He counted 1300 specimens one day be- fore breakfast. Generally a man counts those things at night We ae Now, we don’t know what time Mr. White eats breakfast ee Somewhat Indefinite Messrs J. L. Batley and Wid, both of board t 7 at the b fmm to and looking over need * Cedar Falls The unfortunate Miss Brance, the central figure in the Monticel. lo, N. Y., tragedy, has received of fers from half a dozen theatrical managers, Theso managers no | doubt are the ones who cannot un derstand why a minister here and there denounces the stage. raat ia Part of It, Anyhow It was on a Broadway ear, A pass stooped and picked up a coin from the floor. Three of the Highly Specialized “This i# a song about a girl named Molly Ve can't publish that.” Why not?” asked the composer, tmidly “We only publish Nellie songs. MOST ANYTHING. be so, but they! ther passengers eyed him with env die sald Which of you people | dropped a $5 gold piece I ai elled each of the three We sal the er to the nearest him «a nickel New York Times. a Of Course “What a striking-looking man Why not, when he's a pugilist * #8 Take it to Caterwaul & Yelp. They specialize on Molly songs, I be Neve.” —Judge. . oe Lucky at That Man wants but little here below and seldom gets more than half of that-—Philadelphia Inquirer. ‘A Happy Bald | Headed Man Well-Known Politician Nearly Bald | Now Has Heavy Growth of Hair, Telle How He Did It. A Western politician, well known on account of his baldness and ready ‘wit, surprised his friends by appearing with a heavy growth of thair; many of his old friends did not know him and others thought he had a wik On being asked jhow he did it, he made the fol }lowing statement: “I attribute the remarkable ‘growth of my hair to |the use of the following simple recipe, which any lady or gentle. man can mix at home To a half pint of water add 1 oz. of bay rum a small box of Barbo Compound and % on. of glycerine. Apply to the scalp two or three times a week with the fin tipa. It not only promotes the growth of the hair, but removes dandruff, scalp humors and prevents the hair from falling out It darkens streaked |faded, gray hair and makes the jhalr soft and glossy These in |qredients can be purchased at any |drug store at very lttle cost and | mi at home.”—-Advertisoment | SEATTLE BUSINESS DIRECTORY Select from the Goods of the Fol- lowing Merchante—They Are Thoroughly Reliable and Solicit Your Patronage. RAAAAAAAARARRRAL PENNANTS moved to larger quarters” Our New Home—1104 7 ay. Lindquist & Lund, Inc. RESTAURANTS German Delicatessen Shop C. F. Baasch 913 THIRD AVE. pe __ CAFES 3 KB. Vv. ADAMS J.D. THAGARD The Mecca | 610 First Avenue 219 Unton ser: FUNERAL DIRECTORS SACREDNESS We shall not mar the sacredness, humiliate you or belittle our pro fession by bidding for the burial or cremation of your loved ones Let us know your wishes and they | will be complied with _ BUTTERWORTH |. & SONS * MORTICIANS 1921 FIRST AVENUE "Tut HE DIARY OF UU U0 U UUVO IG N ACT of the British parila ment, dated June 30, 1837, put an end to the use of the pil fn the United Kingdom, a | | A lory | mode of punishment so barbarous, | and at the same me so indefinite ity, that ft is surprising that it was not extinguished long before, The pillory consisted of a wooden frame erected on a stool, with holes and folding boards for the admission of the head and hands A man being condemned to the pillory about Elizabeth's time, the footboard on which he was placed proved to’ be rotten, and down it fell, leaving him hanging by the neck In danger of Mis life. On be- ing Hberated, he brought an action against the town for the insuffi clency of the pillory, and received damagen, HE DESERVES IT | EUREKA, Okla, Jan. &—Dr. 1 J. T. Allen, who lived for 60 days on an exclusive diet of peanuts, applied for the Nobel prize in 1914 on the strength of his experiment with the goobers. jin ite sev bottom of a kettle and no crust will form on the kettle's Inside. Ee} that are badly broken down jand too far gone to save, can |be removed and be replaced |by nice, clean bridge work ja credit to yourself and the | dentist, too. Reliance Dental Office Suite 301-302 Eitel Bldg. Cor. Second and Pike, Next Door to Bon Marche. Formerly . Eastern Painless Dentists Cor. 4th Ave. and Pike St. See Your Hair Through the Microscope The only correct method of saving your hair. Migge Laboratories Bulte 501, Bidg. Central SEATTLE CUT- RATE DENTISTS of cut-rate OHI We are the originators dentistry. WE STAND BACK OF OUR WORK FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTER ‘Amalgam filling . $1 Gold Crowns... $3 ‘Full Sets Teeth $5 & Up Any work that doesn't prove antintpe tory will be repaired free of charge. at any time Come in BOON—today, if you wish— for free examination and estimate 207 University St., 2nd and Unlversity BL, Opp. Fraser-Paterson Co, Put a clean oyster shell In the! Bridgework . . . $3) | Frances Starr and | NEW YORK Jan. 8.— David, Belasco certainly has the courage of his convictions, and a little bit more, when he offers Frances Starr In “The Secret.” ] Of all the queer theatrical dishes to set before an American audi ence, this play of Henri Bernstein's 1s one of the very queerest Its central figure is Gabrielle Jannelot, a woman who seems to be all ¢ is good and unselfish and lova She has been happily married for |twelve years; her husband adores her, She bas a friend, Henriette Durand, to whom she seems to be} devotion itnelf, But all this ts only a mask Tho| real Gabrielle is a monster, a fiend. She is obsessed by a strange} mania, She cannot bear to see anyone whom she loves happy, unless she is the author of that happiness. She has secretly stirred up a bitter quarrel between her husband and his sister. She has been responsible for two tragedies in the Iife-of Henriette, | because she could not bear to see any man make Henriette happy. Tho climax of her devilment is reached when, after Henriette has| finally made a happy marriage, Gabrielle contrives to bring under one roof, at her aunt's summer) home, the bridal couple and a for- mer lover of Henriette’s. There {s awful trouble. Hen- Pn ah nat © i ar) ~~ PENNSYLVANIA Lancaster: To enable them 8) keep open nights under woman's | labor law, department stores here do not require girls to go to work | | until 9 or 10 o'clock in the morn Ing Reading: Wm. Arnold, 92, ctvil! war veteran and one of the oldest andertakers in the few days ago. i state, died a| MICHIGAN. * | * Detroit: David 8S. Sutherland, |general agent, Michigan Central! R. R. for half a century, died sud-| denly last week le - —+¢| KANSAS | Bonner Springs: Rolla Harvey. | an alleged bootlegger, was shot to death when a posse of men sur jrounded the city hall building, where he was suspected of con-| ducting a “Joint” on second floor, Junction City: Chas. F, Sexton fell from his horse while drilling at Fort Riley a few days ago and died shortly afterward. Vermillion: Albin Nelson, a farm hand ‘here for eight years, has re ceived a $25,000 Christmas present from his father In the shape of a| 30-acre farm south of Chicago. Leavenworth: Mrs. Chas. Mon-| ues, who married “Capt.” Vincent Menuez after a “mall-order” court ship, left him the morning after their wedding when she found he was caretaker of a cemetery. | If “si OHIO Same; Columbus: Miss Blanche Roun daughter of Samuel Roth of Cincin- | nati, has been appointed official stenographer to tax commission. ers at Dayton Hamilton: Mrs. Mabel Shriver, | teacher of agriculture and history in high school, has resigned to |marry Harry Schenck, a former pupil ¢ | |OWA Des Moines: | Webster City wr his | wife that he was going to Kill him-| |self and has not been seem for a| Wileockson of week.—Judge KyB. Sigourney is toAe candidate again | for district bench in the Sixth dis triet.—City Fire Marshal Nutt has }ordere@ immovable seats in the} | Auditorium afd Colis#um, threat-} Jening to glose them if order is not obeyed India’s methods of storing grain | jare still very ancient and {nade-| quate, The first modern grain| elevator tn a@ll that great p@in sula is yet to be finished in the Punjab province, sil Private exchange com PHONES “*rotite with ail dopartmante, RATES” Gill in “The Secret.” riette’s happiness 1s completely | wrecked Both the men are nearly driven | mad by the revelations which come out when the storm breaks. But,| at last, the troublemaker has over- reached herself. Her own depraved moral nature 18 revealed, in all ite hideousness, to her friends, her husband—every | one. | Then she becomes a pitiable ob-! ject, supplicating, pleading that she| always wanted to be good, but was ruled by cruel impulses stronger than herself. Loathing finally gives way to pity in the bosom of her husband He first devotes himself to rec-! onciling Henriette’s deceived bus-| band and his heart-broken bride. | One ‘reason why this unusual! 7 mall, datiy, one manth in ad S60) six, mes, 91.001 one your, 8 By enrrion, in otty, 160 @ m THE THEATRES THIS WEEK Metropolitan—Dark Moore—Yvonne De Treville tn Seattie—Halley & Mitchell Stock in “The Spollers.” Tivoli—Keating & Flood Co, tn “The Substitute.” study In morbid psychology is ab tracting very good houses to the Belasco theatre is, doubtless, the excellence of the acting. Marguerite Leslie is the Hem riette, Basil Gill is Gabrielle's hus band, Frank Reicher the husband of Henriette, and Robert Warwick the former lover of Henriette. Sales “LYAVE you wear in the are set. $14; $20 and ECZE You who are suffering the tortu Salt Rheum or other skin di are miserable, whose nights are mad terrible {tching, burning paing, le® m of a soothing, healing treatment lieve will cure you. end it gation on your part. Just fll th write ma giving your name, age and free of cost to you. ee ee ee OUT AND J.C, HUTZELL, 379 West Please send, without cost or o! MBMe . wcreerecsessees POStOMC® . ceveecerseees State, Greatest of Clothing of our great January Sale of Cheasty Special and Alfred Benjamin suits and heavy ovecat 7 It’s an opportunity you shouldn’t Not only are you assured of x splendid value (every garment abso- lutely guaranteed), but each suit or coat is typical of the most modish $15 and $18 garments are $12 and $18.75; $30 and $35 garments, $22.50 and $26.25, etc. Sale reductions in- clude Burberry (London) and Man- delberg English coats and raincoats for men and women. Cheasty’s Haberdashery Second Avenue at Spring Street. CAN BE CURED | Will Prove It to You Free Rich coupon be tenereereorreserosooroess Street taken advantage yet cities where fashions $25 garments, $15 and SNE CISION IESE ° of Kozema, Itch, ou whose days 4 e sand you a trial an cured Rundreds. art ree, postage pais, withou' fow roe) mall it ma address I will send the AIL TODAY- — — ———- =< @% Main-st, Fort Wayne, Ind. e