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ve THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1914, Nort fwret News MEMNER OF 1 LEAGUE OF NE Bervice of the Untied Pree As Entered at the postoffice, Seattle, Wash, as second class matter, Published by The Star Publishing Company every evening except Sunday. “When, one by one, a doving student has gathered from all departments ef human learning a multitude of books, they are not alabaster vases filled with the -sweetest perfume of the human soul, they are living creatures; they are companion: they have received the homage of our best hours, We h hung our hearts upon them, and as they sprang from the noblest parts of their authors, they are clothed with the noblest associa tlons of our own lives—Henry Ward Beecher. Grab ’Em All HE SEATTLE COMMERCIAL CLUB opened up a field) for thought in the report last night of its municipal affairs committee The increase sites And power sites, be it known, are in these days when private corporations are overlooking no} chances to prove up on them Even those power sites that ARE left won't be there make every effort to of the by city the that facilities report urged acquisition power its power few and far between | long. And it looks as though the wise thing for the city to do would be to grab everything available that can be of assist-| HAIR AS HER BEAU UN LAW-ZEE! AND MY HAIR ALL WET! ance in generating our power for all time to come. For some time, you know, Seattle is going to be a pant of a million people. EASTERN WOMAN who beat her hubby over the head when he started to argue in favor of the Hetch-Hetchy project probably thought he was talking about that Oriental dance NEW YORK woman Is suing a railroad for $25,000 dam- ages for loss of her husband. Then there was that Massachu- | setts woman who wanted to sell her live hubby for $1,000. It's | queer how the market varie: ! ° No Compromises! UST as the decks were cleared for action at Washing-! J ton, reaily putting the hooks into privilege and) doing something that would helo 85 per cent, were pulled, a panic the politicians were seared and the a tministration foot for the soft | pedal. Government ownership of telephones is to be postponed. | for the strings | was threatened, reached its By~so-called dissolutions, arrogant trusts are to escape) the penalties of laws long wilfully violated | The department of justice suddenly discovers that it, has no power to prosecute the looters of the New Haven and the Frisco—their guilt is not to be considered personal Instead, there is to be a “Constitution of Peace,” with) privilege holding on to the swag It won't Woodrow. The quitters. This tremendous menace of concentrated wealth must be faced bodily and fought to a fare-ye-well. Breathing spells; yes. But no compromises and no surrender. do, American people aren't | ESCONDIDO, CAL., should have a conspicuous place on the map. A woman there has designed a buttoniess dress. SOME ONE suggests that we shake off the yoke of the egg trust. You've got to get the egg before you have the yolk. Uncle Sam Guarantees Deposits HE PRESSURE of bankers, to which congress yielded, against the guaranty of bank deposits, which was in the new currency bill until it reached conference, may have one unforeseen result Tt may stimulate postal savings. You can take your savings to the postoffice and he sure) that they wili be as safe as a government bond. Uncle Sam doesn’t speculate with them. Nor does he pay the iiterest rate which the average bank of discount pays on time) you deposits. But he guarantees your deposit He doesn’t want} to use your money tc make profit and then fight against in-| suring the safety of it | We think the bankers who drove the guaranty feature out of the currency bill made a tactical mistake They claim it was done to prevent wild banking Then let them volunteer to set aside a guaranty fund and admit none to its benefits whom they think aren't safe bankers. It is their job to make banking safe to make a profit out of it Otherwise, there’s always Uncle Sam, you know MEXICAN NATIONAL anthem |s “Mexicanos Guera,” meaning “Mexicans, at the Cry of War" all occasions across the border. EASTERN FARMER brags of a cow with a wooden leg. e met that sort of steak. | | | More Power to Him! | 66 Y SHORT to put 4,000 more men at work,” | the Detroit motor man | Maybe you were delighted with this announcement, but did you note the way it was put, which is one of the very | best points about the matter? “We shall be able,” he said, not “We shall be compelled.” It is the difference between “We to.” It is the difference between doing duty because we love duty and doing duty because it is duty. It is the difference between saying things with the heart and saying things with the mouth JING the working day we shall be able said Henry Ford, are glad,” and “We've got CLEVELAND UNDERTAKERS complain that doors of apartments are so small that they have to raise coffins on end to get them out. It's pretty tough when a person can't even be buried comfortably. OUCH! MY BACK! RUB PAINS AWAY; END LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, BACKACHE fifty, gone. Don't stay crippled! This sooth ing, penetrating ofl needs to be used only It takes the ache and pain right out and ends the misery It 1s magical, yet absolutely harm Jess and doesn't burn or discolor the skin Nothing atica and promp Get a small trial bottle of old- the soreness and lameness Is time, penetrating “St. Jacobs Oil” When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheu matism has you stiffened up, don’t suffer! Get a small trial bottle of old, honest “St. Jacobs Oil" at any drug store, pour a little In your hand and rub it right into the pain or ache and by the time you count once else stops lumbago, aet-| misery 96} It never dis-| © back ete ly appolr especially if they're! SC HAS THE GIRL WHO'S JUST WASHED HER! The aiodiiiaee of | Johnny Mouse. XPECTEDLY rove. $ J i \ {iim iif | pi An RIVES J i HERE'S wa, SACK, mrss ETHEL. \" iH 1 | Caweve Nawenr) (A ane 0) iF 1 HAD MACKERS ome CHeese scare AOULON 'Y some wlo wwe RAC MEMS WA AO wd HEE wat 4 nt wide at 1 Bhimp—Malem ON on wks Bridge for Mr J) #unbeam . " dutta af Link Steffens is urging New York suffragets to wee powder, But he forgot to warm them to be sure to rub it off after using oe. A rich man in San Francisco was | went to jail for speeding his auto. When did they learn he was rich— after he went to jail’? eee Every morning is the coldest to the man who betlds, the fire, . Usually bag | oat Meet at the LU ime—in indiana % planned that Patter ospectin Foster ran ts “What's the matter” “I wuz jist slidin’ down the rope when I happened to think I would fall If the rope broke—#o I let go! . . A Woman Wouldn't Collect Taxe: Be Able to Would She? * tor the Lutes gale 1ENON HENRY OF (Wis) Jo Shey boyean Baseball Jast night Winter No game of darkness Gossip on account ee A New Hampshire commission declares Harry Thaw is not a peril Sure he isn't. He's a meal ticket . “Can you eens an egg?” asked the late J. P. Morgan. We! don't know a@ great scramble | few to unseramble a It Can’t Be Done be how strong a you can't black | “it punch a potato's eye. matters you not have, In fact, if we were writing a pop. ular song (aren't you glad we are not?) we'd write one about the trusts, o 8 © And the title would be— Everybody's Undoing It.” “ee Told the Truth Fortune-teller--You are going to | have money left you Customer--Glad to hear It only got a dollar to my name, Fortune-teller--Well, after pay. ing me you will haveone left you! But we notice there's | Jan hairdresser, ried a romantic showed her sacks of gold. Afterward she found the sacks full of coal and sawdust CHICAGO Woods, 1—Mre said she mar miner” when he Grace two My definition of a bachelor ie | ingle man with privileges. | Frost-bites, Chilblains, Corns, Callouses and Sore Feet. Quick Cure, wons dread t ail unt, the pears | tion of Calocide moves louses can Sweaty, smelly f [ing feet nee | Bunions | druggiat will get it from ent package | to put the wore nditton. Each pa: able Instruction yo + | Questions Gill's Bincerity | “+5 Editor The Star: It seems to me Any | that The Star has dropped a stiteh x or from its usual clear-sighted policy f pours | of advocating the best man for of- fice. Your paper wields a vast {n- ontaings Tluence over & great num g Ko. ers (myself included) who ormul§! supreme confidence in the integ- rity of any candidate supported by The Star. Therefore the bid for sympathy for Hi Gill pearing in your paper may exert a very harm | ful influence over the sentimental ly inclined, In case this man should n be nominated for office. Please consider a moment this man's plea for office consists sole- ly in the selfish desire to retain | the respect of his boys: Remember the thousands of par ents who live to curse his admin-| istration as the cause of the down: | fall of their boys and girls, as dear! to them as ever hin boys are to him. He should kneel tn heartfelt thanksgiving every night that his| boys are safe. Let him prove his reform to his own boys and gain their respect It is up to him, not to the voters. | Think of the cost to the city of bis | reform, It took the loss of thou. sands of souls. There are plenty of good men willing to be mayor. Would you choose a shipwrecked | vessel, overhauled and mended, | pro-| rather than a new, = staunch-tim-| decay. | bered craft? | tin fine ALBERT 4ANSEN Jeweler and Gilveramith In Now Located at His New Store 1010 Second Ave., Near Madison. EVERY ONE Is INT IN A GOOD PLAC TO KAT. This Home-Like Restaurant The Meals Are Good WARREN’S LUNCH Formerly Wheeler's—218 Union |B view WHY SUFFER TOOTHAC lor at | Now considering he has reform Co., Seattle, Ween, [04 and | would surely put no mersairelh |straw in the way of his reform | must we then reward him by con-| ferring on bim the highest office in our city? If he was sincere he would not be seeking self advancement, but | rather humbly praying for pardon for the mistakes of his administra. tion OTHER, OHI CUT-| RATE||| THE DIARY OF DENTISTS FATHER TIME nh | We make a specialty of teeth hout 1. * » m en: j without plates by our painiess! ne action of a Missourt minis method ter, who recently censured one of | IP |his congregation for going to sleep | * the experience of Sir Guy. Fleet | wood Wilson, in making his first Gold Crowns G3 | eee statement before the Cal- Jcutta, India, council. Sir Guy e blames ft on the climate, which, he Porcelain Brid ework 3 says, has much to do with the spiemanennes g jamount of sleep a man requires In India sleep overtakes people at the most unexpected moments ‘Full Sets Teeth $5 & Up, On the occasion in question, the | room was abnormally hot and} | Any work that doesn't prove) eloge when Sir Guy got up to read | satisfactory will be repatred free] partly due to the heat of a Calcut- | Of charge At ény time ta summer day and partly to wear Come in SOON—today, If you|iness at the length of the report, | wish--for free examination andjone by ofe, every single member | estimate. of the council dropped off into a |WE STAND BACK OF OUR|deep sleep, Finally, Sir Guy says | WORK FOR 12 YEARS’ he himself actually fell asleep in | GUARANTEE the course of the delivery of his - University St, 2nd and Uni-| Statement. . ‘This surpasses “the feat of the late duke of Devonshire | who paused tn the middle of his |maiden speech in parliament to) yawn ‘ | | Rest modern outside rooms in Seattle, 26c to 0c, Stewart House, 86 West Stewart (n ke Public Market). Advertisement, versity St, Opp. Fraser- Patterson Co, | position \ atlver-throated |board, and he's \Make Your Meals | weakened digestive juices will jenriched and you will lose your fear | travel, Jericks in the back and sharp s PHONE RATES ”, Ld nnn" ‘CANDIDATES FOR MAYOR PSRPECE NO. 3 By Abe Hurwitz Approaching the subject from a Mireutical standpoint and taking careful and conscientious Inventory of the mayoraity stock in Seattle of recent years, we rise to remark that Judge Richard Winsor is the flomsiest candidate since the hal ecyon days of old, when Judge Ron ald and Byron Phelps flung wide to the caresses of every vagrant breeze thelr perpetual Insult to the tonsorial fraternity But precedent, It ruled against the reaching almost an when Hi cranial as well as He Ignores Pri However, Judge of the greatest little precedent extaht And, besides, George Dilling fol jows Gill with a crop of silver tresses that has been @ constant source of jealousy on the part of Congressman Alex Falconer, the as well as silver. seemeth, hath alfalfa crop, impregnable Gill flaunted celal nudity 1s one wreckers of hatred Then came George Cotterill with a tizely mustachto Now Judge Winsor gproposes to knock pr nt to smithereens by not a beard a gonte in the mayoralty putting a full beard let, or side-burns but a full beard gallery or | 80 Unfashionable The other nine mayoralty asptr ants may fume and rage and decry his assault upon fashion, and the barbers, union and non-union, may hold protest meetings, but what! avail is it upon one who has been | so unfashionable as to break away from the republican party after years’ loyalty to {t to become socialist? Answering sald query, we submit here isn't ghost of an avail Winsor is 74 years old now, and nly socialist who has ever ed to an office in Seattle | He is president of the school | pretty fective at/ the job. Opened up an office tn the Hinckley block just for that purpose Having been a member of the | lower and upper house of the Mich: | ‘igan legisiature as a republican and county judge, and delegate to the constitutional convention, Win sor planned to retire. But the so clalists put up his name for school director. He didn't expect to be a Afraid of You Afraid of Food. Just Take 'e Dyspepsia Tabiet and You' ts Digest it All O. K. All yan men and women who want to eat and are filled with fear, stay this kind of folly. Just carry a little Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet In your purse or pocket and after) your meal! eat it like you do candy. | The meal will be digested; the) be of food electe know, The zdseee Judge Richard Winsor d, Socialists » day after election, is quite never do, as flossy BIG VALUE GIVING BRINGS MANY BUYERS Main 9100, Pri necting with ° exchange os “ll departments,” snail, daily, one month 10 ad in mon., 81.80; one yom rier, in elty, 250 » AP SP PPP LIL PPL LLL PLL BPD DDL picked up the papers and read he| will recall some ed. It being so easy, Chance of a lifetime to secure you the|on the ssse<~e “RICHARD WINSOR”, IIa ;kungelferously as tleally, | alt | Quite a Strenuous Citizen Prior t ‘ & @ soctall Judge Winsor joined the populist, and actively participated” im the — tirring campalen which gave Beat | tle it» first ownership | enterprise, the plant. q Winsor wa of the most 4 strenuous opt * of the fake 4 Harbor island scheme, and, though jl he is past three score and ten, he is still quite a strenuous citizen, TANGO IN NIGHTIES CHICAGO, Jan. 21,—At tending a tango party where the dancers wore only pa jamas, was one of the ac. cusations Mrs. Gladys O’Don- nell lodged against her hus band, in asking a divorce, TALKS ON SALESMANSHIP w the will Y, M. Friday L. Bilger, Seattle address CA evening Hardware the stude course in salesman Mr company, Grand, Player or s' traight Six “What | Can Do to a Meal Now te} Simply a Shame.” that these tab-| thousands all Don't you know lets are carried by jover the land? In their bags as they in purses or pockets when they attend banquets or after thea tre parties and meals, early or late. large or small, are easily digested | without harmful effects. | One element of these tablets is 80 efficient that one grain of it will digest 3,000 grains of food This is science brought down for your use and ft js nature's own science, No matter where you live, Stu art's Dyspepsia Tableta will be found even in the smallest drug store, although it be only a cross roads druggist | This popularity {s based solely upon the reputation, proof and test! monial excellence of these tablets in every part of Our land, Go to your druggist today and buy a box. Price 50 cents. I sincerity Piano at prices never before offered in the Northwest Resting my case with the prospective buyers, putting before m the itive proofs of the real sevings poodle at my thirty day option sale, sincere and earnest talk of the real merit of lid makes of anos in this still large stock, is tn store. Such names as Chickering, Kimbal rf and Ste inspire confidence. Regulat instruments have been sold in the past seven+ nown and the present savings are apparent to all, ent investigate rate of selling, February t where Lean exercise my option. These prices will prevail but ten days more. first will see the stock We urge you ta now and participate in the big savings, Here are a few figures that are worth your earnest pied $1,000.00 Grand One Weite Mignon, now. Eight $900.00 value Player Pianos, now. ight $700.00 value es Pianos, now. $750.00 val 08, Three $600.00 value Payer Pianos, now 142 Upright Pianos, ranging upwards from $118.00 to $478.00 each and all representing unprecedented savings. Liberal terms of payment extended. Great Edison Wax Record Sale Forty thousand (40,000) Edison | standard two-minute wax and Am- berol four-minute cylinder records to be sold at less than cost. The first time in the history of the” talking machine business that these — records have ever been offered or per- Pi mitted to be sold at these figures, 3 Two-Minute Records 6 14 24 50 100 record now. records recofds records records records records 35¢ 35¢ 35¢ 35¢ 35¢ 10.00 These very extrordinary offers to apply on pianos and and © which are way | below actual cost. How $35.00 worth of these two- minute records can be had for $10.00 and $50.00 worth of these four-minute records can’ be had for $16.50 is shown below: Four-Minute Records records records records records records 100 50c records records as above outlined are bound to create a furore furore among buyers and we “advise « early ‘attention to these ame nouncements in order to get the benefit | before i jate and avoid crowding. FOR EILERS MUSIC HOUSE By R. S. Fringer, Eilers Building, Third Avenue and University Street. No Rest—No Peace There's no rest and but little peace for a person whose kidneys are out of order. Lame in the morning, suffering tabs }of pain with every sudden strain, the day is just one round of pain and trouble It would be strange {f all-day backache did not wear on the tem per, but {t Is not only on that ac count that people who suffer with weak Kidneys are nervous and irritable Urte acid is polson to the nerves, and when the kidneys are not work ing well, this acid collects in the blood and works upon the nerves, causing headaches, dizziness, la nor, an inclination to worry over trifles, and a suspicious, short tem per. Rheumatic pain, neuralgia, set atica, lumbago, neuritis and gravel are further steps in uric acid pol soning. . Don't neglect kidney weakness cross CS ‘Every Picture Tells A win “Oh, | shall go mad.” “When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name” DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS Sold by all Dealers. . Price 50 cents Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N..Y., Proprietors — An aching back, with unnatural passages of the kidney secretions is cause enough to suspect the kit neys. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills, ® remedy which has been used fot years, the world over, for weak Kid: heys, backache, irregular kidney && tion and uric acid trouble. There are cases enough right in this elty © to prove their worth. Read Seattle testimony: SEATTLE PROOF Mrs, B, J, Roy, 706 10th’ avy 8& attle, Wash. says: time I was troubled by sharp pall through t small of my Sometimes the pains seemed change to a dull, heavy, bearlig down feeling that took away all my energy, but I thought it came frog disordered kidney When about Doan’s Kidney Pills wi good for such troubles, I begat ing them. The pains and aches left and T'soon felt as though I had been given a new lease on life.” sales manager of — ts of the Hilger will Winsor talk on general salesmanship ang of his experiences road for the benefit of the lan-| prospective saleamen “Por a lone eee ee |r Perel ia iat) i ie +9 y