The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 13, 1914, Page 4

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THR scmurre yORTNW eT LEAOGUR REWSPAPERA Telegraph | Service of the United Press Association. Entered at the pestottice, Ronttle, Wash, ae second ines matter. Published by The Star Publishing Company every evening except THE STAR—~TUESDAY? JANUARY 13, 1914. 1 What Alaska Means to Seattle “ATTLE gets 90 per cent of Alaska's trade : S To the average Eastern mind Alaska is a little like Greenland—-mountains, glaciers, icebergs, polar bears, pen-| : guins and Eskimos eating blubber, with now and then a miner in from the creeks with a poke in his pocket And the intelligence that Seattle gets 90 per cent of Alaska’s trade will cause no quickening of interest in the East But in San Francisco and Los Angeles the news hurts. | For Seattle in a single month—QOctober, last year sold to Alaska meat and dairy products to the value of $165,088. | In the same period we shipped north boots and shoes | so worth $33,841; rubber goods worth $20,000; breadstuffs! wortl $72,961; coal, $21,000; cotton manufactured, $47,298 ;| eggs, 100409 dozens, $43,021; electric machinery, $47,000;| explosives, $99,990; oils, $96,734; tobacco, $45, spirits, | $63,681; photographic supplies, $25,270; wood, manufactured, $4579; fruits and nuts, $45,600; and vegetables, $45,305 hese figures are taken from the government report of customs duties, for October, 1913, just San Francisco's share in the Alaska trade was $30,000. issued cents—one dime, five 2-cent postage stamps. state to hand out the luxuries cheap. The Sniffles | ‘O DOUBT you've noticed that as soon as cool weather N comes and you light the furnace fire and stay indoors /as much as possible, you at once become subject to the sniffles. It is one of the great American diseases—the sniffles. And not to be sneezed at, either,. for, unless remedied | promptly, it is liable to lead to ailments more serious— catarrh, for one; sometimes pneumonia; oftener ite: gees What the cause of the sniffles? There may be a variety of causes; but a prominent one is the drying out of the atmosphere by artificial heat. The} protective mucous lining of your nostrils requires a certain} amount of moisture in the air you breathe, otherwise it be- comes dried and then irritated. The swift change from the overheated indoors to the cold outdoors increases the irri- tatien; the sniffles develops into a worse “cold” and that may go from bad to worse until you're lucky to escape bic undertaker. Of course, the one big prevention of the sniffles is plenty) of exercise in the open air. That enriches the blood and strengthens nature in its battles against the microbes. An- other is plenty of fresh air inside the home, and especially in the bedroom. But along with wisely try a third: Keep in each room an open jar containing fresh water. Its evaporation prevents the heated air from becoming dry and harsh, protects the nasal passages and puts a wholesome dampener on the sniffles. Les Angeles’ was $32,000. | Seattle's was $1,387,768! : | TO DATE, Wisconsin's eugenic leg fixing the cost of common law marriage at the smal! Wisconsin ie the | | is these admirable safeguards you can EASTERN DOCTOR says more married folks go insane than unmarried. That's no way to encourage the young people, Doc. Speak Up, General ! AJOR GENERAL WOOD, chief of our army staff, | adds: “Unless PRIVATE manufacturers are now encour- declared they will not be in condition to do so,” etc, ete We don’t know who is threatening to declare war on! Wood, but let’s put him to the acid test: General, do you favor Uncle Sam as manufacturer that ammunition and those guns? of BALLET GIRLS of National theatre, Mannheim, Germany, have submitted to dismissal rather than dance bare-legged. Some ballet girls have a lot more sense of decency than their managers. THE UNIVERSAL ENDING Wherever you tarry the neighborhood's merry With many a rollicking air; The “rag” visitation has conquered the nation And seized on the people for fair; From ocean to ocean the feet are in motion, Though many regard them askance, By night time or daytime, or worktime or playtime, Everything ends in a dance! When banqueters gather to feed and to blather, They end with the tango or trot; While every convention you happen to mention Will turn to a dance, like as not; Bold anarchists, plotting, will finish by trotting, Providing they find there's a chance; Wherever a gang goes you're certain of tangoes Everything ends in a dance! From cheap bill collectors to pursy directors, From burglars to Kings on the “Street, They one-step, or two-step, or practice a new step, With eager and lyrical feet; From breakfast or dinner each saint and each sinner Arises to whirl and to prance, And some day a sermon will end in a german Everything ends in a dance! BERTON BRALEY “CASCARETS” IF HEADACHY, BILIOUS, SHAKY, CONSTIPATED—DIME A BOX Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indl-, gases. bad breath, yellow skin gestion, Sallow Skin and Miserable | mental fears, everything that ia fleadaches come from a torpid pd Ab and nauseating. A Casca fiver and clogged, constipated bow-| hy joment will < ara A ag Mo els, which cause your stomach to} your druggist will keep your lave? become filled with undigested food,| active, Bowels clean, Stomach which sours and ferments like gar-| sweet, Head clear, and make you bage in a swill barrel. That's the|feel bully for months. Don't fo first step to untold foul misery get the children ys PRICE 10 CENTS ASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP. aged to manufacture ammunition for our guns, after war i) 1 When a Train's Late. B | “What's | When Greek Meets Greek.| Catch the Point? a>acee |SPEED In the 23rd Inning, Cecil of the eagie eye biffed the pill right on the nose for a homer. ee That's one way of starting this litle narration, Here's another ie ee | In the 23rd round, Cecil drove the enemy to the ropes, lifted a haymaker from the shoulder, and scored a knockout. can have | You your cholce, for the matter with the} An enterprising florist, to Cecil's middie name is either Base vexed with the speed they were|crease bis trade, dinplayed thin! ball or Boxing, or Both, though at making. letgn in his window the present moment Cecil B. Pitz “If you don't Ike this train,” the| “We give a packet of flower gerald te engaged in the noble pur. brakeman retorted, “you can lnooda with every plant.” sult of being one of Seattle's city out and walk.” His competitor across the street) (| dads “By Jove!” said the grouch, “I'd | promptly sought to meet the com They're still trying to figure out jIike to do it; but a releation com anition by placing in his window|, Both were Seen! Pg the) at the city hall Just how Ceetl land | mittee is to meet me at my destin-| the following announcement nding actress was thin. She quar-| oq the job ation, and I don’t want to get in| “We give the earth with every | Sao nn ci ob and) ‘The cards, It seems, were stacked | ahead of time.” plant.” pg le A ge Hla for Norman Abrams or some other j Sieumanetilies sae omember, please, that I am chap. jthe ster.” ] | “Yes, I know you're the star,”|Cecll Has a Habit of Miss Dillpickles Finally Becomes Engaged to Marry, but it has happened. The long-delayed words have been spoken. That which I've asks for $6,000,000 for field guns and ammunition, and | skidded through life, has come to ings felt, was bound to occur while 1) He yy gn Aan eh ae —— | rive us the efght-hour law for men,|and Childe Mlassam, the foremost | o he ram regular A < gg : . pass. I've negotiated the hainpin|caller. I didn't use any love po.|°*Y - let that be our opening aco ve a baci s| | curve of life's highway tions or black magic on him. I aeons pond i cennenelan mnatemniatd It han happened. The lohe-de ain't no Siren. It Just happened yed words have been spoken. ['m naturally—two unmortgaged souls |to be a glad bride! drawn gently together by Fate Those ago laid another think coming. I've not only | wafted into the seventh or elgbth | nabbed a man, but he's 1914 model.| heaven of blivs, but I can't le |I ought to be screamingly happy.| about ft. When Cuthbert left me | Cuthbert Hugginblossom will make|I wan in a kind of dull trance, It a BRALEYS POEM TODAY| "0ST ANYTHING. of the gent dies in 1 The world Is full of philanthro | pista who want to build thelr monu high time, too. a marriage for several years.| The feeling reminds me of «hen |Y know how {ft ia. Marriage in| T was a little girl and fell ont of |what girla begin to think ahout|the barn. 1 knew IT had had an |when home gets their goat, Pajexpertence, and that's xbont all land ma are delig ' (Continued,) | Ten per cent of the butter and legge produced, says the department|about the only thing they will do lof agriculture, | consumer. According to government reports, rate of their class one a minute lost $129,000,000 tn man didn't the other retorted, eyeing with an| Landing When He Runs amused smile the leading actress’) put when th 4 h on the 28rd long, slim figure, “but you'd 100k | round, lo and behold, Cecil B. better, my dear, if you were a little! ¢, i | meteor.” “THE TRUANT BRIDE” ballot came Fitz ald had five of the councilmen's , and that entitled him to the |Job, which same he is now filling, and for which he will be filing for petion. 1 has frequently nner to puzzle. It's one of his favorite pastimes. It was that trick of his which won him a few years the Hour of Her Triumph Is Embittered by Maidenly Panic. vote A “Screecher Film” in Six Reels By Fred Schaefer landed tn In Editor’s ago—in 1908 or the bouts—the | title of champion amateur Mght The Eight-Hour Law Welght boxer of Seattle, Ballard, What next? What new phantom of mockery will arise in the path of the working girl to haunt her with impotent fear? and the Pacific Northwest. He knew how to land and where “and it usually left hin adversaries |stunned, if not puzzled Tt Is the dawning conspiracy of} Later, when the young athlete in Ballard, He sure the business world against the|looked around for more worlds to | runuer. eight-hour law, The law is good.|conquer, he organized the Puget it was made with the intention of/Sound Amateur Baseball league, just remarked, it's no bettering our miserable conditions, |captained the Ballard team, and but, from ft as from every other) won the league championship for got it ing over eight hours, but, owing Ballard Aerie of Eagies Those amateur teams were crac to the present scarcity of work, the nok affairs, if you can hark back te business men do not have to em-|those days, and pn poadiae | ploy us, because there is always) young genius was drafted into the ;® man to step Into our places, and | professional leagues from out the work any hours required, usually | crowd Fitz played with for the same wages. Fitz was a deer on the bases. The retary of the Elks’ job he is now holding. Me ver from a VERY RECENT experi. thought | 1 know this to be the truth | - == ence of my own, such as many ! others will doubtless have e00n, now that the | h § ‘ unions and agitators in our be- half have been In vain, since the chief aim seems to be, “ little | ELS Sh22 5 | THESE PICTURES! employers, The efforts of the STOP A valuable collection of paint- THIS! ings by American artists, pty here by the Seattle Fine Arts so- clety, 1s open to the public free of | charge in the new quarters of the/ as much work for as wages ae possible.” How many women are there, I ask you, who would not prefer long hours to none at all? To this complication there are but two possible remedies. Either we must abolish the eight hour law and so put ourselves on an equal footing with the men, or they, too, must have an eight-hour | law Surely Raillargeon building, from a. m. to 6:30 p. m. on week days and Sunday afternoons and even-jat a time, this will ings This collection Kee is assembled by Vm | Which shall {t be? How shail| Gardner Symons and includes such|amazed. Your hair will be wavy, to be a glad bride! this difficulty (which is still only | well-known names as A. B. Davies, | fluffy and abundant and possess an 1 | This young man, Cuthbert Hug a tiny cloud on the working giris'| who fathered the now famous col- ame cob gig softness, luster and jection of modern art shown in the in New York last winter, ) horizon) be eliminated? 1 of dvifted In. "Since ft must always hoped,|ginblossom, just ki be one of these, | Armory Besides beautifying the who predicted I was long when it didn't have its hands full away on the shelf have| I suppose I should have been all happened with the swiftress and force of a sledgehammer. nd husband I've thought Some people are so lazy that) the| with their feet in to play the piano. | never reaches | And what per cent never eee | should Roy lin, Wratdiig toe thecteibel oars | Why You Can Always Find a Man], Andrew Thomas, Jr. who recently sus. | to Sell Life Insurance 1 orm tah r to his he I Saeaeees egg oe reer > ag ted.—Mur- | putated atumes Mt myn | 7 * James R. Garfield Is being sug- | t f ern be! ai birth | Somted for governor of Ohio. “Again stalled lemen who mai oe get-rich-quick awin 912 and 191%. The middle get it all, did he? : Famous Sayinge— The fellow who was out the night before: Ob-b-h! Ya otta been there.” The “G . “My favorite stor: writes T., Ie PHON similar attempt has arisen a com-|two consecutive ye: 905 . plication that fs almost insur | 1900 @ years—1905 andjeven though it wa mountable | The entire difficulty ts that the | Fit? Was Some Runner jof running for an office, law prohibited women from work. |Even in His Baseball Days WASHING HAIR! MAKES IT GLOSSY, SOFT AND ABUNDANT try a “Danderine Hatr Cleanse” if you wish to immediate- |ly double the beauty of your society, on the fourth floor of the just moisten a cloth with Dander- 11:30] {ne and draw {t carefully through your hair, taking one small strand cleanse the |hatr of dust, dirt or any excessive ofl—in a few minutes you will be him. FITZ IS THERE WITH THE AND THE PUNCH PPP LLL LLL LLL LLL LLL LLLP PPP PPP PPP the do Cecil B. Fitzgerald | and won| which | by But as far as running for a pub-| Wis. office is concerned, Fitzgerald in Seattle, having tved here before gave it the 5 tiniest | 18 }representation 1n the counell, They were really getting fugseg up over it, and they called a magg meeting. There who harmony out gerald?” And nobody was th | gerald for everyone in Ballasg knows him—and they descended upon the council in large and multh tudinous numbers And #0, when it appeared that Norman Abrams couldn't get fing votes ex-Councilman Griffiths. He's a clean cut, | of Individual, and has a determined jaw and keen eyes, He's a fellow who gives you the impression that he knows what he | Wants when he wants it, and he's too strong and reliant dulge in any double-crossing H. What Party He Belongs to He doesn't kao ities, and hasn't figured out way he'd get around ts still one of what party he belongs to, the choicest topics of conversation was He voted for Roosevelt for some|dent, for Judge Moore for and for John Murphy for pi Heing some runner, as we have | ing attorne wonder he ran for the councilmanfe job and|any pledges Councilman Cecil It's no wonder, we repeat,; ball Fitegerald has issued a the first time|ment that he’s first, | Fitagerald ever ran or even thought the time except|/man, and he's going to he! when he ran for president of the the municipal railway a success, He's had some experience in out, or when he ran for exalted railway business, havin; ruler of the Ballard Lodge of Elks, the Loyal Heights line for and won, or when he ran for sec-| Treat. lodge, Chosen Private exchange come Reeting with all departments, Pallard citizens wanted were various aspl wanted the meeting to en And it didn’t look much Ike So what does some ¢ get up on # chair ang ‘What's the matter with Fig knew that anything matter ) they whooped it up for Fits the name being necessary te erjack, succeeded aggressive type n't Yet Decided to the council wit municipal He's an expert profession. Fitzgerald is a native of O But he grown to He is married and has l children. GIRLS! CLEAN AND BEAUTIFY HAIR; — NO DANDRUFF—25 CENT DANDERINE | TRY air. hair, one To begin with, a “commercial” artist is entirely different from the artist we used to read about in our school bf None of this “art for art’s sake” for He is not thinking about how high a certain drawing will elevate him in the world of art. how effective his picture will be as a SAL! MAN for the man who is having it made. } If it is a bird’s-eye, showing farm lands or city lots, the finished drawing will give & forceful impression that here is the ideal place If a coal car is the subject, you can't help thinking what a delightful observation car it would make with a few easy chairs in But don’t blame the “commercial” artist for his mercenary motives. of the members of the “GEE, GO! CLUB.” .UB” is composed of live wire business men, who are really in earnest about making money, not merely “kidding, themselv {, GO! CI es along.” application of Danderine pene — of dandruff; 1: ora: @ scalp, stopping and falling hair. i Danderine is to the hair fresh showers of rain and sut are to vegetation. the roots, invigorates and sti ens them. lating and tles cause the hair to grow strong and beautiful. You can surely have pretty, lustrous hair, and lots of it, if will just get a 25-cent Knowlton’s drug store or toilet try it as directed. STAR WANT ADS ARE MONEY GETTERS It goes right oe Its exhilarating, sti life-producing ? bottle Danderine from counter His mind is centered on It is all the fault H While they give proper } Tf. 0, fifisiessistilie, elect—the city dads said, teste shucks, let's vote for Pitsgeul wey and make these Ballard folkg happy.” 7 And that’s how the former we weight champion of Ballard ang MP that chars ments out of other people's money.| ities re ie ri i ne one with this headline : f attention to avoid needless expense, their best > “WILSON STANDS I nib gai — ier tocnn ston Ageia Menry| HUERTA MOST go" efforts are centered on MAKING money. | + +8 | oe lf a member gets the idea that his advertis { The withdrawal of Morgan, Baker| A Pittsburg girl etopped traffic by ing is not paying, does he stop advertising and others from a lot of directorates | appearing In the down town section Far be it from a member of the “GEE, GO pues soot than soon persons real Wearing a bustle. What puzzles us CLUB.” HE ILLUSTRA IT. Members — 108 means a lot more work for! is how a woman could get a bustle ||| + thie club have w suspidon that thle the messenger boys. under the modern ‘dress. ; of this club have a suspicic ha g ! +2, ® | “tore j public cannot read English. Accordingly, instead of sitting up nights writing a lot of claims and descriptive matter, dais gis We Heard Something! oF course, she might have put it{{| about their particular product, they use a first-class illustration, WHICH PROVES THEIR CLAIMS, And we all ike This Before? Pp Sentence 7 ) - makes the}? the outside | know that PROVING a thing is the daddy of SELLING it - * r than they] see | Now, if you are really serious about MAKING money, it will certainly pay you to join the GEE, GO! CLUB, brs pac nia! My Idea of misdirected energy,” and illustrate your proposition. ‘Their headquarters are at ab t but Man-| writes R. W. B, “is rinsing out a is Dh A Ghimeatiree | ae MOP Oe THE RAPID SERVICE ENGRAVING CO. fe | oes f Berton Bisley and Harry Kemp There has been a great deal of 229-230-231 LIBERTY BLDG. : | have atarted a poetry due ut it} talk within the past few days about strating, Designing. i D, ic F € Zinc E 5 dooun't interest us, Wa watched almaking great. wealth resneotavia Illustrating, Designing. Opposite Postoffice Halftones, Zinc Etchings bull thro last fall Telephone Elliott 3696. “The fastest engravers on earth.” ywing contest In Cleveland| Rut we haven't heard of any talk about making It unpopular, James S. Ditty, Mgt

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