The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 19, 1914, Page 4

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NORTHWEST MEMBER or THT GUE OF NEW jee of the United te Entered at the postoffice, Seattle, Wash, clase matter, Published by The Star Company every evening except Sunday THE STAR—MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1914. | Many Are Tartedl With It. in It’s Pitch Just the Same NCLE JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER recently told a € leve wickedness land chum how to become wealthy without 1 The recipe is simple—taken from his own experience ; “See that tract of land there,” he asked, pointing to a part of his Forest Hill estate, “All I did was to buy $5,000 seven years ago and now it is worth $70,000.” Suppose we look into this transaction and see whether not it is wicked or : Lawful? Oh, yes; in which it’s different from i © the stirring adventures of Uncle John’s earlier days i H days when he didn’t hesitate to put spies on a competitor or dig pitfalls in the form of rebates. Then he dared; though stern moralists don't he did, it—he was up, out and doing But this slicing growth, to put it in because of the toil of others the game of a sure fruits of the labor of others? the off with patient bread. Isn't it, then, brows, meanwhile doing nothing himself? ‘ohn because he happens to be a popular target. ppe pop’ fine points. When a man, in seven years, by doing nothing, men somewhere have been getting stung AS FAR as that bee sting cure for rheumatism goes, it’s a question of whether a fellow gets stung by a bee or a doctor, LAST accounts, there were signs of a break the ih Starved and Frozen | The company was succeeding in having evicted by the courts from the company houses. A fierce blizzard was raging. children. the company was confident of ultimate victory. Victory? 9% mate allies, starvation and deadly frost! bm victories can the nation stand? Bunker Hill. OFFICIALS OF the lemon trust In the East are no doubt getting sour on account of legal difficulties that have arisen. Playing Both Sides BSERVE that heim smelters “Sndustrial disturbance” in Tacoma. struck for better wages trians and, backed by the law, the Guggenheims cut wages, the Americans went back Lately, struck; whereupon, Don’t smile! There’s nothing funny, ture of retributive justice about it. manhood and the lowering ,of citizenship. It of men, that the rich can have still that need. And society does not see that loser. more they ultimately, GERMAN- AMERICAN BANK 2nd and Marion Comparative Statement on Official Call Jan. 13th Deposits Jan. 13th BEN vo ninbad suey $655,740.10 Deposits Jan. 13th, 3) EEN fog Saag 469,273.48 Increase in de- posits .... .$186,466.62 Personal attention to pa- trons and conservative meth ods account for the remark able growth of the GERMAN- AMERICAN ~ BANK it for some of those | and, | approve of the ethics of what 1 in | there was at least the element of human: hazard in off of vacant land in the path of a city’s a speculative pickle while values pile up what is it but a spider's game ;| thing gambler dealing marked cards? No wickedness to reap where you haven't sowed; to make Well, that’s coming to be a matter of divided opinion, with a grow- ing number of plain folks inclining to take the other side The good book puts it as one of the commands of the} Lord that in the sweat of their brows should mortals eat} a little impious that Uncle John or any other chap who reads that book with the eye of professed belief, should count it cute to be able to eat not only bread, but also cake, steak and terrapin in the sweat of other men’s Now don't think we're trying to stretch a case against) The case is} precisely the same against every other pocketer of the incre-| ment he hasn't earned; and the fact that we've all been in} or tried to get in on that kind of graft doesn’t alter the! can lift # $5,000 value to $70,000, you may take it from us that other A‘ in the union ranks in that northern Michigan mining region. miners The miners’ wives and children were very hungry and the blizzard meant awful suffering for these women and So, some of the miners were deserting their union, and Merciless Greed’s victory through its legiti- How many such | True patriots should esti- mate such victories as the British estimated their victory at at the Guggen- Some time ago, the American workers at these smelters The Guggenheims imported Aus- the police and other represen-! tatives of legal force, defeated and drove out the Americans. and the Austrians to work, and it is now the Austrians whose heads the guards are cracking. | nothing of the na- It is the debasing of is using the awful necessities of one set of men to cheapen another set} don’t it is the chief < ap Tve see Quire OFTe WONDERED IN YOu You ON THe STREETS YOU GIRLS THERE ARE See N WN, AND I've How MANY OF R FAMILY } | Jan, 10. of the most expensive and exclusive NEW YORK, Into one jewelry shops on Fifth av, there jeame a Woman of perhaps 45, and a (girl of about 20, undoubtedly her daughter, Mother wanted to give |daughter a ring for her birthday, and desired daughter to make her own selection ‘The jeweler brought out tray att er tray of costly settin rubles, emeralds, pphires, rquoises opals, diamonds, He expatiated up- on them, one after the other—the latest, the most unique, the most ta ul, ete, They all bored th girl to distraction. None recet more than a petulant frown or @ word of disapproval. Finally the jeweler displayed an and emeralds, The mother took ft from him and held tt up pleadingly to her child. “Don't you Mke that, coaxed, The girl eyed the bauble indiffer ently, (Ite price was $2,600.) Then, an though tired of the epivode, languidly drawled “All right mother dear, I'll take that.” The jeweler courteously dear?” she > her to remove her glove, #o that he might measure her finger, Tho frown returned to her face, “Oh, | can't do that” she protested, The merchant ventured to ure The mother added a timid plea. The girl rose, greatly annoyed. “It's al- together too much bother,” | sald, turning to the door. “Some day,” murmured her moth ler to the jeweler, “when she's feel tng like it, I'll persuade her to »' in and have her finger measured.” THAT CINCINNATI man who says he wak In the mid: of the night as well ae by sunlight, is SOME nature faker. — Notwithstanding which, there aro) | people in this country distressing |thelr minds over the price of rump | steak, his hens up them lay by electric light, * Most JAN ING Up Against it “Well, Milly seems to be up oe. it.” w sot" “She dislikes her busdand, bet ian’t handsome enotgh to appear in a divorce court."—Judge. eee “Are you going to for the campaign?” as | nent statesman's friend. | “Not exactly that,” replied the jeminent stateman. “My idea ts to ‘open a estate campaign for the of- | fice.” in an office the emi- | Lopez, the bandit who was cor- nered in a Utah mine, has been | seen in Los Angeles. No doubt) tunneled his way to Los Angeles. | eee —— | Simeon Ford says hotels are bul!t | te cater to the wealthy, We al-/ ways had supposed they were bullt | to cater to the hat check contract. ors. | eee Still, that may have been Mr.| Ford's way of expressing the same | idea. cee The observer at the Flagstaff, Ariz, observatory has discovered Mars has 12 minutes less daylight) than astronomers had supposed.| Why doesn't Mars adopt Eastern time? eee Henry Ford joins Carnegie in the dectnration that it is a dia grace to die rich It is strange that you never—did you ever?— | hear a poor man say that, oe An Extreme C. | Mr. Beanbrough seems to be| greatly bothered with indigestion. | I should say so! He refused to {attend a moving-picture show the lother evening, because one of the} scenes had a banquet in It.—Judge. | eee H New York woman ffragists | have adopted a slogan Soneentra tion for Twenty Months, and Vic-| tory in 1915. That's not such a }long slogan {f you're an endurance | conversationalist. STOMACH MISERY, GAS, INDIGESTION “PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN” FIXES | SICK, SOUR, GASSY STOM- ACHS IN FIVE MINUTES Time it! In five minutes all stomach distress will go. No indi gestion, heartburn, sourness or | belching of gas, acid, or eructations of undigested food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache, Pape’s Diapepsin is noted for its speed in regulating upset stomachs Jt is the surest, quickest and most certain indigestion remedy in the| whole world, and besides {t te harm. les. Millions of men and women now ir favorite foods without. fear know Pape's Diapepsin will | save them from any stomach mis ery Please, for your sake, get a large! fitty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin| |from any drug store and put your| | stomach right. Don't keep on being miserable—-life is too ahort—-you are not here long, #0 make your stay reeable. Kat what you Ifke and | digest {t; enjoy it, without dread of rebellion in the stomach Pape's Diapepain belongs in your |home anyway, Should one of the family eat something which don't | agree with them, or in case of an at tack of Indigestion, dyspepsia, gas tritis, or stomach derangement at daytime*or during the night, it Is Miss Dillpickles Finally Becomes Engaged to Marry, but the Hour of Her Triumph Is Embittered by Maidenly Panic. A “Screecher Film” in Six Reels By Fred Schaefer “Come out!" Says Pa. “He's Gone. He's Disgusted!’ vi looked in the barn, but didn’t find Without a notion where I was|me. After a long timo-—after going, I left the house and ducked | everything had quieted down—my into the barn. | wanted to con-| pa came out to feed the horses, myself. The wedding hour) “Come out,” says pa. “He's ld have to pass without me, I gone. He's disgusted,” knew my mind now sili had There was a feed-bin with « Hd.) IT know I'm a fool, and: I've al most broken « heart But pooh-pooh for my critics I got Into that Of course, | hated to leave peor Mr. Hugginbiossom standing in the One thing they CAN'T say. They parlor, holding a useless wedding can't say I'm a bold, brazen thing! ring in his trembling fingers THE D. Everybody will sympathize with sae him. But suppose | was a horse dropped between the shafts before | he got it home? There would be no sympathy for him then, would there? Hnb, [ guess I've got as much rights as a horse. It was rough on Cuthbert, but he had to be disappointed. Rather that, than a life of vain regret for a girlish error 80 I moralized TENT Sucrlonw crouched tn the dark, hot, dusty feed-bin, my scald ing tears making a wet mash of the contents Some commotion 1 heard. The EXTRA Daily Healthogram. HOT “WATER, WHEN AP. PLIED to the skin, opens the |! gpeciaL cur Rates ALL THIS pores, Cold water closes them NTH, Hot water should not be used ge Once a year, at the purpose. of more than once a day to cleanse J the skin of the face, as it robs || @dvertising the high quality of o n Dental work, we cut the R the skin of too muc h of its nat , ural oil Hundreds of people wateh for this s and take advantage of it. Come in today. Special prices WITHDRAWS SUIT _ 2! this month. TO AVOID SCANDAL | Examination FREK. Dridgework (first-class, per tooth) by ase ’ Poa pee - $3.50 to $5.00 PP sap dak gs _ Belgium, open God “Crowns (22k, and extra drawn her divorce sult because of | h&2vy .+ ++ $8.60 to $6.00 her dislike of seandal the case Trueto-Nature Teeth (finest arti threatened to expose, The duke is, ficial teeth In the world) La 00 up. the pretender to the Fyench throne; his wife was formerly the Arch duchess Marte Amelia of Austria. s fl en iS $ handy to give the quickest, surest | relief known Best modern outside rooms, 26¢ to 50c, Stewart House, 86 West Stewart —Adwortisement. | 1420-22 Second Ave. Opp. Bon Marche, Seattle. exquisite combination of diamonds) naked) WAAPRDALDAALL PIRESE Occastonally world ait up and take | and Waterloo, and Horatius at the bridge, and Ther | mopylae, and Hill |Bryan without | knickerbockers at the king's court, and Doc Matthews hesitating to take a $1,000 vacatian But they jolted | this Jaded little sphere of ours a mere jot com pared to the time | when Bert Taylor, he of the sten forlan and mega phonic votee, who always Was secre tary or reading clerk of repub- lican conventions j in this neck of the woods, moved that the nomination of the tate Tom | Humes for mayor be made unant mous, and there came forth from one corner of the hall & lonely but | decided and emphatic | Bert wanted to, lacerate, “No,” | ef en they brought Hert wanted to locerate and decimate the And he demanded | Whereupon Austin E. Griffiths, | anti-strap hanging law, father of grounds, and of the famous police bill and several other bills, and of three football another growing up, arose with a large body of surrounding him. calm and y repo j And did they throw him out? | Far be it from such. This happened in 1900, but then, | wan a hefty citizen Maybe he’s not as big as Tom Griffiths, his oldest of Washington r of Burke Griffiths, who is some pig #kin artist himaelf, and maybe Ted Griffiths, who in boy, who captained the University football team PARP LPP LLLP DLP PP PPP PLD A. HEFTY AND DETERMINED) |SORT IS AUSTIN GRIFFITHS AAR APPL LLLP LLLP LPP LPP PPL something happens that There was the Austin E. Griffiths macerate, and lighted his cigar, and that's something he never did before nor after, {t being his habit to chew his him to, and Bert's Adam’ | apple ceased climbing into his mouth, and he qu spitting and sputtering, he set up a yell. macerate, impertinent Insurgent to know who {n-a-certain-torrid region he was, and wanted him thrown out players and as now, Austin: Main 9400, Private exchange PHON' necting with all departmeatae RATES ic) tin ines, 61 80)" one poset eae By carrier. to ety, 250 «© month, PIIECE sdd<CCE playing end on the Broadway nica be bigger than his But Austin ts no midget school now, wig He is of huge proportions makes the east and west, with shoulders a yard de, | 1 4 vide, and wi & big head (not a swelled one, either), with @ bs | | forehead, situated firmly on a big neck, wi 5 ly o eck, Warranted Cur | sound, and not too much rubber tn it tt With all that, Austin loves peace—is a member of " the International Peace association, was president of the Charity Organization of Seattle, je a member of The the National Association of Labor Legislath the Academy of Social and Political Scienc ea director of the National Playgrounds le: others — ae Griffiths is a student and works al! the time, He will dig into dry statistics and will read eg. says and lectures, and get himself well informed on the topic under consideration, AND WHEN HE HAS THOUGHT OUT WHERE HI5 POSITION OUGHT TO BE, YOU COULDN'T BUDGE Him, ORDINARILY, WITH A PAIR OF OXEN, a | STEAM SHOVEL AND A DERRICK, WORKING ALL AT ONCE. Griffiths, as we have Indicated, thinks for himeelt That's why he was leading the army of voters on ong side, with Mayor Cotteri!l on the other aide, on the famous police bill. Yet it was Griffiths who ized the Young Men's Republican club in behalf of Cotterill, a democrat, so as to beat Humes in thet 1900 campaign. 4 In the same manner he took hold, organized ang became president of the Poindexter club against | | Judge Burke for the United States senate at a time | when Poindexter didn't seem to have any more chance than the city light plant getting the courp house contract He's a serious, conscientions man, insurgent and a@ progressive, He believes in municipal ownership of public uti! ties and fights for it. He maps out his course and © follows it, without regard to consequences. He be Neves in the commission form of government and anxious to have Seattle adopt it. That's why he resigned his counciimanic pos tion, though he had two years more in office. He — wanted to present the advantages of the commis sion government, as he saw it, to as many people and he consequently filed for mayor, as raised on a farm in braska, to a little log school a few months a year, until be determined to become a lawyer, an ambition which he realized when he graduated from Michigan, 1888. He, came West the following year with his 1| who is now president of the Seattle branch of the: | Mothers’ congress, spent a short time in Oregon, and then moved to Montesano, Wash., where he held the position of city attorney, built up a good practice, Gam moved to Seattle In 1897 for a bigger field. He ran for mayor in 1910, but withdrew in tavor of A. V. Bouillon in an effort to defeat Hi Gill for the republican nomination. ™ is Griffiths, ag desquamate desquamate her of th Je pla MICHIGAN oo 7 nn Marquette: Because of lack of) snow, Umber wolves are extremely | ferocious this winter in Big Bay| country. Grand Ledge: Bodies of Harold Sacket and Elmer McDaniels, two} boys drowned in Grand river, have| been recoverd, Petroskey: he eagle, “Old! Baldy” has returned to this place for the 21st consecutive winter; he | | spends entire winter here. b] | Clio: Petition is being circulated | | for all night street lighting. | Detroit: Two men representing | |themselves as policemen entered |the home of Mra, Hannah Wrisley, | 118 High st. recently and were get lting ready to carry off much of| |value when she discovered they were impostors; they escaped | eC 7.2% \¢ INDIANA } | |e ———_-——_—- is This state is third In corn-grow ing states in thé country, accord- ing to reports from Washington. | Shelbyville: Mr. and Mra. David | Mullendore, of Jackson township, | celebrated their 50th wedding an-| niversary a few days ago Tipton: Helen, 9, daughter of Jas. Lane, was run over by an L, BE. & W. train last ek and her left leg has been amputated Columbus: — Jefferson Guthrie, | 45, was accidentaly shot by his 10 year-old son while they were shoot-| jing ducks. Seymour: Martin Gerth ts suf. | fering from injuries received when | he and Wm. Glixner were butcher ing hogs; Glixner was shooting with a repeater when a shell ex ploded and the bullet penetrated Gerth’s lung. New Castle: became sheriff of Henry | Jan. 1, has distinction of being first | democrat to held that office in the | history of the county | | TT, THE DIARY OF FATHER TIME In these days of typewriters and | fountain pens, it is interesting to! study the materials on which the ancient Greeks were accustomet to write, Stone, brass, lead and wood | | were employed when the design] Bonslog, who county | Jas as to record a memorable event | yr common and private purpases | the more used materials were! leaves, Inner bark Of trees, pareh-| ment wooden tablets, simple or cov: | Jered with wax, ivory, linen and| | Egyptian papyrus | | The usual instrument for writ-| Jing on the harder materials, and Jalso on the tablets covered with| wax, was the stylus, This was! pointed at one end and broad at the other, for the purpose of era ing letters and smoothing the sur-| es of the wax, ff a mistake were | It was usually made of iron, | pometimes of ivory: For drawing the letters with colors, a reed sharp sed and silt for the purpose, like | he present-day pen, was used, ‘The | lee was common black and was) | prepared from soot and gum. | Here’s a European Specialist Who Says He Hae Discovered you are afflicted with a paunch and want to get rid of it, quit at night. « been developed by the famous Dr. Galisch, a European medical who has made a long investigation of the causes of obesity. |Galisch has formed some conclusions regarding the reduction of that are entirely new. tion diet did not do them a whole lot of good. tion after the rigorous treatment was usually more than made o when the patient was permitted to go at food again. mitted to eat until their appetite was satisfied. he found was that when they did work and exercise after eating, the fattenting effect of the food was considerably lessened. | now day when they are working. | that makes them fat. § flesh should eat a breakfast and a second breakfast and a good lunci” —if they feel hungry at lunch time. they should eat nothing but a piece of toast and drink a little tea, DO YOU WANT A SYLPH.-LIKE SHAPE? ARE f YOU FAT? THEN CUT OUT YOUR SUPPERS | Fat Folks Grow Fat While Im Repose, and Not From Food Eaten In the Daytime, When They Get Plenty of Exercise. People grow fat in the night. Not in the daytime. Therefore, This is the sum and substance of the newest obesity cure that Fs He found, among other things, that putting people on @ It hurt their health—sometimes permanently. And it did not really cure obesity, for the reason that any redae” He found that people who worked and exercised must be pet | But the great thi In fact, “i erts that people do not grow on what they eat during It is what they eat after they quit work Therefore, Dr. Galisch believes that the person who would redue® But after that it is just as well” “The Columbia ~ River Route” | IS THE NATURAL WAY 7 TO THE EAST | The ride along this beautiful river provides you ® scenic trip the equal of any in America. You can make the trip East through Salt Lake and Denver without additional expense via the Oregon Short Line —AND— Union Pacific THREE FINE TRAINS DAILY TO THE EAST i z FOUR FINE TRAINS DAILY § to Portland and the South. - Up-to-the-minute equipment and service provides for you Steel Coaches i Automatic Electric Block Signals ; gt Smooth, Rock-Ballasted Roadbed de Heavy steel rails E fo Standard Pullman and Tourist Sleeping Care Splendid Dining Car Service Courteous, Efficient Employes. You pass through more large cities than by any. other tram 4 contine! ntal ine, aa . = fs Call on or Telephone J. H. O'NEILL, : Agent, | 716 Second Ave. % Tel. Main 932, District Passenger,

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