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NORTHWEST Beiegraph News tation MEMEER OF THE scRIFrS LEAGUR OF NEWsrArrns Bervice of the United FP (flee, Seattle a by except ry Wo 4 secon) The Star Publish Sunday. a ee SEC THE INK STAINS ON THAT HAND # THEY ‘CAME FROM THAT FOUNTAIN PEN T ISN’T often that a Paris f has much to commend YOU SOLD ME YeESreRDaY AND it to a mere man; but there's sense in this new leg muff WHICH YOU SAID WouLD for women which is soon to come from across the sea NOT CEAK Mi It consists of a ed trouserette of ‘silk which the Walr one dons when frosty winds make the slit skirt too @auzy and aerial f fi out-door use ly But as if to sh r tay sensible Tong at a time, here newest in upper garments are to be lower in cut than ever before. Not only are bosoms and backs to be bared and likewise arms, but the decree has gone for the waist is to be lowered beneath 3 leay tape-like patch of cloth to serve i) ach arm, as gallus. j So, madam, if nt in style, put the bulk = @f your clothing below the belt a the BE Mty to look as much as possible like a colleg a marathon you want to be ri nd, from waist line up ¢ athlete d ing GEOGRAPHICAL MAGAZINE ’ sheik’s son may not smoke in the presenc of respect to him. Same here, somewhat. walt until father gets through with It. writer says that an Arab of his father, out Boys often have to KANSAS CITY church Is going to have movies regularly, and another is going to abolish the collections, They'll have to give tay dansants to get back the old-time Wednesday and Sun- day night crowds. : : : Co-operation in Helping Mother r IN Chatfield, Minn., a group of progressive farmers did so well with a co-operative that when| $00 of dividends had piled up ready for the picking, in d of “blowing” or banking the money they decided to ‘do something for Ma . They knew that Ma had helped a lot to make the dairy a ess and they wanted to show their appreciation in the way she'd best like So they voted to build an addition to the creamery the “ " for a first class steam laundry wash house does over 5,000 family washings @m average cost of 95 cents each, while Ma sits in the! or and reads the magazines. Team play and straight thinking are all you need to country life. And city life, too. creamery and fixin's Today this a week WHEN EXPRESS companies’ wagons carry big signs so- | _ Heiting business and telling of new rate cut, it looks as though ' / ~ = a reel must be pretty well patronized. the pai post pretty pa MORE IMPORTANT thow do yow explain it when he has MAN IN Portiand, Or., says his motheriniaw never Inter. ues tenet? lamily affairs, except when she advises him to In speaking of « What has become of the old-fash- ke That wouldn't be so bad in July—but foned woman who waed to w ai lacey gloves without any fingers eee And where is the 0. f. woman who wore her hair in a net? ' he tay or Lik? P. 8.—I'm not quite sure about e, Come, Woodrow-- Be Frank the hen question, but I do know) CBLIC confidence in Woodrow Wilson is very high and|that when a roosters crows, it's well deserved. But it is a serious question how tong | morning res t can keep it at its present status by dodging the important | A lawyer was escorting some “ ladies round the courts in Man of “votes for women.’ |chester, Eng. In the corridor they He cannot consistently close his mouth on all subjects|came on a pile of antique spears, the harmless but ponderous Specifically declared for (or against) in the Baltimore | weapons of the javelin men, piled is in; for he is more than the leader of the democratic party|* corner outside the snd’ — | J “What ever are these used for is president of the United States. lasked one of the fair visitors. Moreover, wisdom did not cease with the adoption of} “These, my dear lady,” said he, Baltimore platform or progress stop. No odds tow much your bead aches; how miserable you are from natipation, indigestion, bilious. nose @ “Cancaret™ tonight straight ena you out by morning. Clean your stomach, liver and bowels tonight; end the headache, bilousness, ditziness, nerrousn: “are used by the judge in the crown jeourt when he charges the grand Come, Woodrow; be candid. | jury.” the sour, gassy stomach, backache : | cee Are you for or against? ’ HARDLY LIKELY sir au “Didn't Oliver Goldemith CALIFORNIANS FALL back on climate as booster mate: |, Didn't Oliver, Goldamith once rial, when all else fails. Wonder if climate in the Golden 1 dent yemember the mame State has anything to do with the 2,785 divorces granted in said the janitor. “Who was the Loe Angeles (the Ange! City) alone, last year. peat?” | “He was a poet.” A JERSEY judge condemned a man to kiss his wife, vPnen Wa hardly Whely thet he says report. Huh! That's no punishment. Some of those erty fone ioe ‘We news Wo dersey judges have mighty kissable wives. demand the rent in advance.” | oe IN TUNIS ft is proper to make much noise In eating soup, 0 that your host may think you like it much. In America you pound on the plate with your spoon and yell for more. ONE ON HIM A SPECIAL A certain millionaire did not ap Feature, covering the farm on prove of foreign missions One} values of the Northwest, will d | Sunday at church, when the collec a CHICAGO MINISTERS’ crusade for a church-going Sun- day doubled their congregations of February 1. Advertising tion was being taken up for these) war in The Star Saturday, Feb. ° dl missions. the collector approached | iy sure you read The Star's Farm, | PS al i the millionaire and held out the} Seed, Implement special KIDDIES OF Hereford, England, are having a joyous ex- The millionaire — tra vacation. School teachers are striking for a salary of per year, and the kiddies are quoting that old gag about ey an ill wind that blows somebody good, or thereabouts. collection bag shook his head. “lL never give whispered Then take something out of the LONDON SUFFRAGETS have got to calling bishops and bag, sir,” whispered the colle * archbishops “rotters.” Don't seem to believe that “soft speech “The money is for the heathen Ee curneth away wra' very much. oa, : - cee | Eats Freely but 1 ee att Has No Dyspepsia NAVY YARD ROUTE) H Kennedy, Tourter faa | Athion Leave Colman Dock, Seattle: @ xcept Sunday), #:00. 10:90 & m., | | 2°00 (except Sunday, Sunday, 2.20), 6 % 1145 pm bject to change without | to missions,” he Steamers 1 Fare 80 Round Trip | | goes downtown she carries her $15 watch where an amateur thie could lift it with his eyes shut. But if she carries more than $1.17 tn change she always puts {t in her stocking j (Paid Advertising.) eee A Little Pepsin in a Mild tae ; wilt Baw oy oe — Lar po ; ative Promptly Corrected States, has been warning the Ca a Bad Indigestion nadians of dangers from corpora Fortunate is the one who can eat| tions. Will ought to know, They ieiping’ without “suffering. the elected him once | tortures of dyspepsia, but as few] ee are so fortunate, care should be] There May Be a Reason But taken in the matter of diet. Eat Hanged if We Can Think Pe ing slow! ticating the food] of Any ae thoroughly taking a 8) F I fo had quite a fail ; ag after the meal of the| oy. he wan carrying two buckets 2 dige stion grown-up per pped a ‘ the water | @on ought to know the ar a heraeit —E eo « Tele. | <7 foods that do not agree c ’ eee | A Phould be avolde — | A Cincinnati paper calls atten. 7 it the er tacts to Go ls to taxol ltion to the fact that the board of aa , the next thing to do Is to take ew in $4,850 for an au @ mild digestive tonic with laxative| vat in used only three roperties, and there ob | the year, That's dan ethan Dr. Caldweil’s Syrup Pep-|years had all the worst symptoms The board might use @in. It contains the greatest of all|of chronic dyspepsia. Since taking : aids to digestion f pepsin. It} Dr. ¢ ip Pepsin th ee mildly on the bowels, which to-|4joncher says he is 64, be doe ' she avian } gether form a combination for the | loo ‘ than 40. Without @ kick age he f Fellet of dyspepsia or indigest rup Pepsin is sure in {ts re % Manes that is unsurpassed jits, and a at In provement over in en the stomach and bowel muscles| mints, or tak catharti salts ac coast abut the gindahe ja fo that they can again do their|etc., all of which are harsh and | qome, part about, the amour an| C. B. FITZGERALD work naturally jout outs nauseous and at best do but tem-| a”! ackina@ coats. #14, and when that happy mo yorary good. Yo Obtata | PO mUNemine ones Recently Elected by City Council Gomes all medicine can be dis-| Syrup Pepw Jrug store for A peal to Fill Vacancy pensed with. It 1s the best tty cent lar a bottle. |T™ % wears an inctsible| Candidate for Re-election Councll-| @dy obtainable for any disor of | Results are alw arayteed or thet brings with it sero man, Two-year Term the stomach, | and bowels, for| money will be refunded ES Sie See | sinter Gyspepsia, “constipation, biliou Far ing to a free or +t ad igi hess, headaches, drowsiness after | sample can obtain tt post Whene gr her tnvinibie stockings don't! ating, was on the stomach, et ab & Dr. W. B. Cald show | STAR WANT ADS Thousands of users will testify to| well, 419 Washington’ St., Mont! alge this, among them Mr. J. W. Gouch-| cello, Ill, A postal eard with your! You can understand, sometimes, BRING RESULTS er, Stites, Idaho, who for several|name and address on it will do. i why a man plays an accordion, but foc nT Be BOXES =A ARN BRUS STORE RK WHILE YOU “SLEEP |JOHNNY “WE ARE GOING TO NAME HIM REJINALD PERSEVAL ANSERS THE KI0S PATHER ny, wenady—little gorgie went out calling with his pa and ma the uther nite the folks they went to see had a new baby that they was very proud of, partickly because it was a boy and they told gorgie’s pa and ma that they was going to have the erissening in few days well, well, says gorgie’s ma, and what are you going to call the dear little angle we are going nald perseval father hully gee. want fighter my goodness no, says the kid's pa, nuthing of the sort, does that sound to you like a fighter’s name, gorkto it may ays gorele, but if you call that kid rejinald perseval he will have to ma nod with his mitts when he goes to scool, take it from one who knows *0 probly the kid joe, and save his life Johny HATPIN IS FATAL MILWAU cE, Feb 10.—A hat- pin stab wound, inflicted by a young woman tn self defense, caused the death of Daniel Sweeney here to day. Doctors found that Sweeney slowly had been bleeding to death internally for the last two weeks. the hatpin having caused a slow hemorrbage to name bim rej) ansers the kid's do a saye make gorglie, wot of the kid, ‘ou to |\THROWING THE BULL NEW YORK.—Because one of his matadors pushed a bull aside to get upstage before a movie camers, Hyman Epstetn, promoter of a fight at Coney Island last summer, was fined $100 for cruelty to animals. “CASCARETS” IF COSTIVE, BILIOUS, HEADACHY AND UPSET—DIME A BOX. and all other distress: sluggish Liver and Bowels of ail | not be a fighter’s name,| they are going to call) } relieve your | the sour bile, gases and clogged-up | waste which Is producing the misery, | A 10-cent box of Cascarets keeps | your head clear, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular and you feel bully for months. Don't for get the children—thetr little to. | siden need a gentle cleansing, toa CANDY CATHARTIC Insist on Seattle- Made Goods In doing this you enable the manufacturer to increase his | ploy more help. REMEMBER, the greater the weekly payroll, | the greater Seattle. Bakeries TamateGrotto B & Chili Con Carne - * Chicken Tamales Main 5306. We Deliver, 1811 Thire Avenue. Whe! Full “Centennial Best” FLOUR Macarom Washington Brand Macaroni, Spaghett!, Vermiceiti, Alphabets, Elbow Cuts, Egg Noodi Manutactured by A. F. GHIGLIONE & SONS Por table Hou ses y , Bunga Garages, Bto All alzos and atylos, jo in SHATTLB and shippea everywhere. Sntietied owners are our references. Attractlve—Serviceal buy or bulld HOUSE CO. output, and compel him to em-/| poll bsamepeceecmn atty, one memth tn e@vance, 20; ome vent, $2.16 oly, the & month. RICH SOCIETY WOMAN PLANS TO_ WRITES} CULTIVATE BABIES IN HER GARDEN Mrs. Loule Brackett Bishop, Who WII! Withdraw From Society to Devote Her Tim of Her Fortune to Baby-Gardening. ject many The editor ts obliged let 4 a Large Part LETTERS TO THE 2 to re- | one or | t for another of these reasons They are too long written on both sides of the The writing cannot be paper. made been out. fully discussed by pre | vious writers in this column. They are The subject bas SALOONS ACCOMMODATE Editor The Star letter of 8. L. it was not for the ks for loggers, there pr camp ing to Seattle from as great a dis-| tance as 50 miles of trouble getting their oh eh many lum jall kin checks cashed. So far, In anewer I wish to say that if saloons cashing would be workers com- who would have I bave found very few | people, as a rule, who are willing to take a chance check presented by a stranger. think the saloons are very accom-|do that, modating, and In no way do they compel anyone to spend the money with them Would 8. L. stranger, even if on a Seattle bank?) Not on your life, cash a check for a C,H. B, HAVE WRONG IDEA Editor The Star dally papers that there ts a move |seventy-five cen I see by the ment on foot to crush labor untons in various parts of the country, in which active part the business man It seems takes an to me that the business man has a wrong con- ception in this matter (the strug-| gle between capital and labor) If money the laboring for his labor he will spend this tncrease for food, clothing and | {\r", man gets more shelter. The average business man reajia the benefit. If the street car | company, the railroads, the steam- ship companies, the sawmills and the big coal dealers succeed in cut ting wages to a point of starva tion, they naturally will make , ofita for themselves an shareholders. But the st percentage of the profits | the capitalists On the other hand, gets better pay, and it means more | in this locality money for th man. East to swell the pockets of if the laborer the money stays business oO, R average 8. KILLING CATERPILLARS Jone ly around can be done At hat diluted 1 1 |to swarm on the Fdltor The Star: 1 wish to sug-| gest to your readers a method which I find most effective in stamping out the dread caterpillar, | In the st place, the trees |ehould be pruned well, After this examine the trees careful and by close inspection you will | find the tightly the small limbs band off with a knife and put tt In| | can and burn it, until spring. ng time use crest spray banded, coacoons Cat this This is all that | When they begin arms of the tre |} take the crest spray, full strength, with’ a small paint brash, dip in the quid, start at one end of the swarm, shake your hand as you move the entire length, so at to saturate the entire swarm, Do not allow the brush to tough or they will fall to the ground and web, JAMES GLENN, | rule PIGOTT AND THE S&S. E. CO. The ten tor warning for a time the effort to inject fous bigotry into this campatgn, Is are at it again sstion {8 not the fe The au tle lectric | C ‘0. Your wise ago stopped colts. but Star days but “Shall th rule Se attle Seat and | BULL BROS. Just Printers. 1013 THIRD AIN 1043 to} on an outside |‘ Shall Rome! She’s Going to Gather Them From All Corners of the Earth and Bring Them Up Herself—There’ll Be No Teachers, Only Assistants to Guide Them in Their Play. BY HONOR FANNING strong and beautiful, I saw the CHICAGO, Feb. 10—A gar “pterdagen . rey Y. oobi’ puild splen exp? e denful of babi: A garden in foun ee the aaltine of which the twilight of years of life will be brightened by the 8 and colts and pigs. cal tunshiny presence of babi “That's good work; | am glad This garden of bables is not a someone is doing it, but the dream. It is a carefully analyzed,| same kind of work should be thoughtfully planned project which done for babies. | will be put in practical operation “1 love bables, | love human- soon by Mrs. Louls Brackett Bishop ity, my own babies have gone of Chicago, a mother, a humanttar- from me, so | decided to start \ian, and Incidentally a soclety wom-, my baby garden. an who wants to spend her old age It be an immense task, for | “cultivating” bables my garden is not to be @ garden | Of her baby garden, Mrs, Biship of a few blossoms | says It will be planted with flowe | All my life I have been dream-| from every country in the world |ing of this baby garden of mine 1 had thought first of making a dreamed of a beautiful place in| trip around the world and selecting | ynien the bables would have a|the bables myself, but I won't have chance to grow and be sweet and/time for that, #0 I shall write to the ruler of each foreign country land the governor of each of our states and ask them to send me one baby each I'll only specify that {t must be an orphan, but, boy or girl, black or white, red or yellow, high cast or low, will make no difference to me. | I have a mother's love for every baby I set my eyes on and I would | just as soon cuddle a little Jap from Tokio in my arms as a little babe from Boston. “1 will have no teachers in my baby garden, though | wil! have trained assistants to guide the babi their minds awak- | en and inquire about life and the world. “1 want the children to grow naturally—the garden pian again—with just a little prun- ing and @ little weeding, and a good deal of tender care and nourishing, a good deal of sun- whine, fresh air, and plenty of ‘sand-pile’ exercise for them.” EDITOR Duwamish valley “Our best citizens” ging to use the light plant to in- sure “reasonable rates,” but we will never be free from the corrupting in fluence of this company till it is driven from Seattle. Truly yours, WILL ATKINSON. ‘Do we want another Arms to de- stroy our light plant?” |. Pigott'’s plan for CITY CAR LINES will take from the Seattle Electric Co. its power to tax us for millions yearly tn car fares and also deprive it of its despotic power to rob men of their homes as in the (Paid Advertising) SHALL WE RAISE WATER RATES OR ASSESS TRUNK MAINS TO | BENEFITED PROPERTY? COUNCILMAN OLIVER T. ERICKSON are now be An important question which pre-)men who own little homes in Bal- [sents itself pretty constantly is the pt Feta Lg ey parte cae a Be this ment, it will interest them to bower of municipalities to make ex-|hear an analysis Of thin’ connote tensions of utilities and a case. During this controversy 1t omt against benefited prop has been strongly urged t owe most common of which 1s to am follow corporation and ne cost of water mains to property |make the water users foot the bill. jthat Is to be served. It is argued |The assessment for this trunk main that @ private corporation does not|!s three milla a square foot. Thus, but on the contrary has to|@ working man with a lot forty lay its own mains and pay taxes on|one. hundred, would be. assessed them besides. That is a favorite|twelve dollars, with ten years time clincher with owners of vacant lots|to pay it. Interest and collection ‘ood one from thelr stand-|charges would increase the amount pointe But, for the water user there|three dollars and make the total as- * another story, In times past|sessment fifteen dollars, or a doliar jhome owners of Seattle paid a pri-jand a half a year for ten years. | vate ration from two to three| If we decide to issue bonds for all for water pumped |these trunk mains, our minimum ington. The same|charge for water, which Is now fifty cents a month, ‘must be raised at least twenty-f! cents a month in cade Mountains, now o month. Waterjaddition to raising the rates for protected by les of|manufacturers and merchants. The ershed own raise in the minimum of twent well five cents a month means thr | change doe t justify local|lars a year to every workin ‘ Asnensments who owns a home. The bon controversy in our city|run for twenty years, maki jgounclt ne which furnishes food|assessment against his home for thought along these lines. Under|sixty dollars. N which Is the a state law wo are now authorized |better, a doliar and a half a year to make districts and « the cost|for ten years, or three dollars’ for of trunk water mains against bene-|twenty years? Water mains have |fited property, About a year ago|to be paid for with money, and It ouncil Was advised that many|up to working men wh | fight suc assessments to consider whether hin a few years. The estimated |they and those in business shail was eome two millions of dol-|foot the whole sum in their water |iara all told. We had to consider a| bills, or whether the seven vacant bond Issue or the assessment lots out of every nine shall contrib- Issuing bonds involved an Increase |ute their share districts would require trunk mains w in the water rates and as an assor-| I maintain that tt ls good public nent to the benefited property was|policy for cities to own and operate |deemed fair, a trunk main was or-[ail their public utilities. To get all lard district. Aa-/the contributions that can be taxed up to vacant lots and land, thus re 1c ng the cost to the consumer It Under muntetpal ownership in | w been do tle we have reduced the c > f this ¢ ray|water from two and a half doliars question of making such assess-|a month to fifty cents, and leht ments is now to be submitted to/from twenty cents a ktlow hour the voters, A vote against the a sessment plan will mean an tncrease in wafer rates. It will appear on the ticket as proposition A. As it is claimed many to six cents, I believe light furnished home owners in th an be ‘not impair the Income of our working plant OLIVER Th, ERICK SS Houses Without Gas Are Least Desirable A home nowadays without gas is considered as near modern as one without water or sewer connections. Gas is no longer considered a luxury, it is used economically by all classes When compared with other household ex- | | | rinks to insignificance. | Gas will heat your, water, cook your food, light | pense, the gas bill | your home, and may be used many other useful purposes ! Lc ATTLE LIGHTING CO. Henry Bldg. Phone Main 6767 nesta cee ooo =