Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| | | | | | Rn : , t= UP ANOTHER NOTCH! MORE THAN 43,000 COPIES OF STAR SOLD DAILY! PERTINENT AND IMPERTINENT POKES AND JABS AT PLACES AND PEOPLE | “HOW GRAFT died” in Chicago Ie title of series of articles running in Chicago paper, We hadn't heard of the death, NICK LONGWORTH wants to go back to congre: IF ANY of Trenholme's employes or friends failed to get — | an Invitation to eat at the New York lunch yesterday when the “etraw ballot” being taken, do not blame Dick, It was | entirely an oversight. but he cheer EX-PRESIDENT BILLINGHURST, of Peru! This sounds Means that there | good, Not because Billy in an ex, but because there'y one = | | foreign ex whose name we can get into the paper without | THIS FEDERAL baseball | busting a IInotype machine, | good for the lawyers ONE OF “Home Run” Baker's twins—juat arrived—io a girl, | states that women may be putting ‘em over the fence by the time daughter grows up. Lee INTEREST RATES falling In this country and more idle capital that wants to get busy | MAYBE OUR cafeteria candidate for the council can tell us why, with all the men in the “Robin Hood” company playing the Metropolitan theatre thie week, they should have —- picked a woman for the role of Allan-a-Dale abroad | FOR THE benefit and delight of our readers at the equator and north pole, we have to announce that thin is the season when a change of 65 degrees in 10 hours is apt to come in the Middle West wrangie is beginning to look see. How big a family hae Nick ralsed? EASTERN DOCTOR says boys are at their best at about 10 a. m Some of them are that way at about 3 a. m.—when they're a SON ANNTMANUUNNAOENAUUNNNAOUNUUNGNUNGOOOENUUUNADOONAUONEADN Le saa nnn tna i nents = More Than = = = 43,000 =| kd = =| Paid Copies Daily = SVT UMUUUUUUUUUUUUNUNNAANUAOUGOQGUAUCAGNOGONQAOUUUUUONOGNGU ETE: VOLUME 15 ROOSEVELT A SOCIALIST, SAYS TAFT Ex-President Chides Teddy in LET CHAPERON Article in This Week's Saturday Evening Post. 60! JUST TRUST SOCIALISM IS ISSUE! Deciares Lines Are Sharply Drawn and Intimated T. R. Is Headed for Perdition. FOLKS, HE SAY That socialism ie the central political issue to which the country is coming was the opin- jon expressed by ex-| Taft In an article on “The Fu ture of the R iblican Party” In this week's 2 enw moss urda) eni ost, ol The ‘rpeesiaent’s view is that bis party net only is not done for, Sbut that tts work Is before ft, In combatting this doctrine. He Blames Roosevelt Speaking of the Inst national election, he did not, he admits free- lly, “prove a strong vote getter,” attributing his poor showing to the criticiam and attack to whieh he had been subjected throughout the) | preceding days, and to “unfair ac-) lcounts” of the Chicago convention | widely circulated » through Roosevelt's genius tn the matter of | securing publictty.” sult of the LealieMolvilies, in which | Mrs. Lesiie-Melville is noted for! It was soon after the ball that her| Says ty Won't Last \the Earlof Fitzwilliam ts named as her beauty and ber charm, and also b nd filed sult for divorce. “But,” , “will the electors od a ps Si and {led AH. who cast their ballots for Col. Revell Roosevelt at the last election re | main members of the progressive CHICAGO, Feb. 11.—Alexander! party? Those who really believed ‘HH. Revel, man of wealth and fath-|{n its platform will, er of one of Chicago’s most popu-| Otherwise, it is his view that the Jar belles, says he does not believe | party already shows signs of disin- in chaperones for young women. | tegration. Modesty, honesty and faith im “The truth ts,” he says, “that the planted in the hea of young peo- progressive party s born in a pie are offered by him as substt-| passion and lived in an excitement tutes for the lynx-eyed dowager in|that cannot be maintained perma- the corner of a ballroom. | nently.” “When I was 4 young man,” he) Teddy a Socialist? says, “I was allowed to take the| Of the president he remarks girl who became my wife to enter-| “Mr, Wilson has established his tainments without a chaperon \leadreship of the party and h maintained discipline in a way that | 9 commands admiration.” | Finally the ex-president gets ly ‘ kable de oa am very wise. remarka demonstration WAR WITH JAPS? down definitely to the question of/" a1. practical School of nisi. | Aliah Baraba's: God-mind in my socialism “It makes no difference how sin- cere Mr. Roosevelt Is in his protest that he is opposed to socialism,” he says, “with the doctrine he advo- cates and the promises he makes, he is moving toward socialism as NONSENSE, SAYS EDITOR TAMURA In answer to the question, “Is war Inevitable between the United States and Japan, unless Califor nia repeals her alien | law? Tay Tamura, editor of the North American Times, a Japanese woek- ly published in Seattle, expresses deli in a letter to The Star, that war not imminent. Tamura says “I would like to state most em- phatically that the California law, when considered alone, will never| SAN JOSE, be the direct cause of war. It will,| Smith's saloon WOMAN SHOOTS UP A SALOON IN WILD WEST WAY Feb. -11-—-R war shot up” In however, undoubtedly serve as the|true Wild Western style at 1 a. m most obnoxious monument of Call-| by a woman, who says she is the fornia’s unrestrained hostility, | proprietor’s wife, and who {* suing meaning almost 4 against the Japanese people. Cal ffornfa should not "discriminate against particular people.” aration of war him for divorce “to show she was married,” she said | The place was crowded when the| woman entered and opened fire, | and proprietor and patrons fled in| glass failing | filled with ‘ panic, with broken about them and the air pistol cracks and the whizaing of bullets She was locked up. FOR 8-HOUR DAY, | Kingery yeste filed for the pee oe He as © measure! ‘Total registration for the 1914 providing for an elght-hour working | city “efection Is 74,112 day for both men and women. Tpe| In 1912, Seattle's first two yetitions contained er-|the registration was 74,672 wage . All those who have failed to reg Attorney General Tgnner has|ister lose their votes, both in the ruled that initiative petitions may| primaries_and the general election | be signed by voters, although not|in March.” registered, but canno ertified to” in che ‘> tha tedulced number of voters have ires until ‘| TO CAN FISH ON GALILEE BANK ' fe prove| JERUSALEM, Feb. 11.—Arrange-| Hyat wells i » of the ments were @™losed for a sardine} Advertisement. @ Pine) cannery on the shore of Galilee. ° Col |these days, awaiting the scandal |over the affair, as the earl (sa great | @Mtly he concedes. | RAIN TONIGHT AND THURSDAY, MODERATE EASTERL,Y WINDS NO WASH. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1914 SEATTLE SMART SET HOLDS ITS BREATH WHEN HUBBY SUES WIFE WHO POSED AS DARING “SLEEPING BEAUTY” Mrs. Leslie-Melvilie ae jeeping Beauty? Feb. 11.—The London )co-respondent. King George and | for her lack of discretion fx holding {ts breath/Queen Mary are greatly distressed | erie LONDO? ‘smart set n she appeared at the fi | mous Pantomime ball in the dispha- |nous robes of “Sleeping Beauty.” that is said will attend the divorce | favorite at court BOALT TAKES DIP IN MYSTIC WITH ALLAH By Fred L. Boalt | HAVE just finished the post-graduate course in the Practical School of Wis- dom. It took me 15 minutes. clear? * When your God-mind has become | obedient to your conscious will, you can easily project it. Allah Baraba showed me how this is done. It was to me, whose God- mind has ever been out of hand, a off places | have aiways longed to visit. Space forbids my treating with other phases of Allah Baraba's sci- ence. And what is here set down is necessarily sketchy and incom plete. 1 could, but for lack of space, ex- plain the significance of dreams. The famillar dream that you are dom is, for the nonce, at the| Yer Presence departed ona long certainly as water runs down bill.” | of instruction explains every- of And how are we to have harmony? | your God-mind are en > * journey. Of course, I did not actu- Snoqualmie hotel, on Pike. ally seo it go or return, because I Allah Baraba is the head of it. saw only with conscious viston He is also the faculty. He! The body of Allah Baraba was 7 4 still in a cane-bottomed chair, en knows all things. His course cased in a frock coat. The fingers Allah Parbara continued to comb the long hair of Allah Bar- aba. Allah Wouldn't Tell thing. He has, to quote his own words, “taken the phil- osophy and psychology of the Orient and occidentalized|) Where He Had Been them.” But the real Allah Baraba, the ge Hd part that really counts—the soul, It le quite simple. the spirit--was far, far away. The body of Allah Baraba was very plexus. | know this becau | still. The eyes, the conscious mind, Cincinnati, once, Mike Schreck, | shining through, regarded me the boxer, hit me there and | did not come to for 20 minutes 1 learn for the first time that my solar plexus is the di tributing center of my sub conscious or God-mind. Mike didn’t know he wae taking lib- erties with my God-mind when he hit or | am sure he wouldn’t have done It. it wae shrewdly, a little furtively By and by Allah Baraba retarn ed to hin floshly shell, and the fleshly shell sighed. He would not tell me where he had been. oe This thing of projecting the as. tral body can be utfized in our busy Western world, The Hindus a friendly bout. have fooled with it for thousands The seats of the conscious and|of years, but they have never ap- subconscious minds are in the| plied {t to a practical use. brain, side by side. They can, or at least should, co-ordinate, Thus | eee, abun pepe Bolg ay fx mpanned the gulf between the| g¢ral self shall go where, bus- Finite and the Infinite. inees calle, leaving my flesh ‘This is indeed a wonderful truth.| here in the office. My flesh Tells Why We and conscious mind can attend i to purely routine matters, Have Nightmares After hours | shall take tong, But the Finite wars upon the If-| pleasant trips—to the South finite, and iwe have nightmares Sea Isiands, the Holy Lands, Harmony! That is what we need the Argentine, and other far- running about in public with noth- ing on but an undershirt and are dreadfully embarrassed, though nobody seems to notice, has a sig- nificance. It may be you ate too many dill pickles. I could tell you how to perform miracles. Miracle-working is real- ly the abe of Practical Wisdom {1 could prove to you the efficacy of prayer. There are good prayers and bad prayers. For Instance, Allah Baraba told me of a horrid Baptist minister who prayed for the th of two persons whom he disliked, and they died. With a little practice, I am sure I could kill any one simply by say. ing my prayers | But having been entrusted with the key to the All-Wisdom, I must juse it wisely and well, I shall de |stroy no one, but shall strive to make the world. better and hap. | pier. The SeattleStar THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS ‘CAN IT BE BOU ‘This last trait was emphasized re- | CTI NIGHT EDITION= © i SUVUUANUUUUUUUUANNEAAGAAOES SOA AUUOUUUUUONUUUUAOOUUEN NA UMTS ON TRAINE NWS «PAN A ONE CENT If It Can, Then Today We Introduce Seattle to Its Next Mayor, J.D. Trenholme, the Highest Cash Bidder for the Mayoralty Office. | Is the mayor's office for sale? Can it be bought? If it is for sale, and if it can be bought just with money, then J. D. Tren- |holme will get it and the other candidates may as well quit now. Mr. Trenholme thinks the mayoralty is for sale. His campaign is strictly a cash proposition. And some of the other candidates think the same. THEY COMPLAIN THAT THEY HAVEN’T A CHANCE BECAUSE THEY HAVEN’T ENOUGH |/MONEY TO COMPETE WITH TRENHOLME IN HIS CASH BIDDING FOR | THE CITY’S CHIEF OFFICE. | On the other hand, there are candidates who don’t think money talks much these days in political matters. They believe the outcome of the mayoralty contest will depend upon things more vital than money. They don’t seem to mind the Trenholme money. They may be wrong, but they appear to believe that votes cannot be pur- chased in Seattle. ile Maybe they are right. We hope they are. If not yet, it is only a of a few years until the That is just what Mr. Trenholme is doing today. He. is buying his wa into the mayor's chair IF THAT HONOR CAN BE BOUGHT. The only question is whether or not the mayor's office can be bought— whether or not Seattle is still in the market offering her chief executive position to the highest cash bidder? If it is purely a question of cash—and that is the sole basis on which Trenholme is playing it—THEN RIGHT TODAY WE WILL INTRODUCE TO SEATTLE ITS NEXT MAYOR. ; } HE IS J. D. TRENHOLME, THE HIGHEST CASH BIDDER, THE 'WHO IS SPENDING FIVE TIMES THE MAYOR’S SALARY IN ORDER i GET THE JOB. F i AGED VICTIM OF CONDUCTOR IS CLOSE TO DEATH Judge Fred C. Brown has no sympathy for reckless auto! Tuesday afternoon, Russell Thompson, who ran down and toxicated, was sentenced to serve 90 days in the county jail. “There have been altogether too many cases of people driving aut” Buffering from a fractured hidelien aiilte under theigt He bes sult When eesind ty). @ Wasim ee os ¢ court said, as sentence street car conductor, Henry Behnke, 60, passed an un- WON’T L SE SI HT favorable night at his home, 918 27th av. 8. George Perovich, who has frequently acted’ as an interpreter for His condition is very critical | Seattle Montenegrins, is held by the police on charges of larceny by embezzlement. He was arrested on the complaint of M. Mendeovich, who asserts Perovich has withheld $1,100 due him from an Alaska min- |ing company as damages for an accident in which he lost the sight of oda: V. L. Cline, 25, the conductor arrested In connection with the case, is at iiberty under $1,000 | one eye. bonds, pending the outcome of | - cee the old man’s injuries. | ’ ehnke accuses Cline of D ATH CAN T SCARE THEM knocking him down, after | ve abusing him In a dispute over SAN DIEGO, Feb. 11.—-Undismayed by the list of six fatalities to the age of a transfer. army men using army Wright aeroplanes, and culminating Monday in Dr. W. J. Richardson is at- the death here of Lieut. Henry B. Post, one of the most skillful fliers tending Behnke, who has been | ever known in the service, aviators of the North Island school today re removed to his home from the | sumed activities, i Providence hospital. | CAPTAIN IS ON TriaL| WHAT KIND OF ANIMAL IS HE? angiesuie | PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 11.—Gov-| SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 11.--Carl Westerlund, a sailor, was arrested |here for biting off the ear of Sam Regan, during a street fight. “He ernment investigators today began , in, the trial here of Capt, Berry, of the | Dites like a dog, and scratches like a cat,” Regan said, when asking for a warrant steamer tucket, on a charge of negligence in connection with the sinking of the liner Monroe by the Nantucket, near Norfolk, with the loss of nearly 50 lives. BACK TO THE FARM NEW YORK, Feb, 11.—Hans Schmidt, convicted murderer of Anna Aumuller, was sen- tenced today to die In the elec- tric chair during the week be- ginning March 23. Sehmidt, a former priest, killed Miss Aumuller, cut up her body and dropped It, piece Hindu sits and thinks, That Sit and think! | is how it t« done. Meditate! Concentrate! Between NEW PENNA times, relax! When your conscious mind and rapport, all things are possible. This Is prac tical wisdom your God-mind and my God-mind are part and parcel of that Universal Intelligence which is the Great Architect who created ALL. We have, then, each of us, within ourselves, the alkin-all, Is it not One coupon apd 15 cen office and 1320 Second Ave at branches. Bathing Girl, Co-Ed, Matinee Girl, Office Girl and Debutante. NT COUPON BILLIE BURKE POSES ts for each Pennant at Star Twenty cents by mail and Flower Girl, Stage Beauty SCHMIDT MUST DIE throughout the ordes | wished to make FAMOUS CAPITALIST SAYS: “Turn to the Soil.” J. J. Hill, the world’s greatest railroad magnate, in a recent address before the Agricultural Society of the State of Minnesota, said: “Farms are producing far more substantial wealth than gold mines, and men who are now seeking gold mines should turn to the soil to make branch of the state supreme court * ‘i 4 their fortunes Schmidt stood erect as a soldier ‘ . . | 1, He showed It is a known fact that one of the chief reasons for the much-talked-of “high cost of living” is that the de- | mand is abnormally greater than the supply. It is no great wonder that the men who are farmers today are be- | Into the river. nee was pronounced by Jus Vernon Davis, of the erlminal no emotion whatever and paid no attention to the spectators in the court room, When sentence was passed, |) wk : | Schmidt turned and held out his|{| coming steadily rich. The prices ry high and a hands while Deputy Sheriff Bow- |) ready market is easily found by the farmer, | ers put on the handcuffs, He was 4 : : Farming is the one pursuit that is not dvercrowded. The Star, in keeping with its “back to the farm” move- ment, will issue a “Farm Featuré” on Saturday, Feb. 14, Whether you are a farmer, farm owner or city man, you cannot afford to miss reading this “Farm Feature.” Chere will be valuable information for you whether you are in a position to igvest or not . | Read the “Farm Feature” in ‘The day, Feb. 14 taken to Sing Sing prison to awatt death Before he papermen asked went {nto court, news: Schmidt if he any statement, He a note penned as fol sent back lows “Beyond this vale of tears There’ life above, Unmeasured by the flight of years ||| And all that life is love.” Star on next Satur- candidate who stternpts to buy his way into office sei BING! JAIL, 90 DAYS. severely hurt Mrs, Carrie D. Cameron, of 1915 E. John et., January 19, while ine — GHT? 4 bit