The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 24, 1914, Page 4

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Mevern oF SCKIPRS NORTIWRST LEAGUD OF NEWSPAPERS — Tolew Bervice of the United Press Assoc! Tee Company every evening except Sum The Tide That Can’t Be Halted HERE'S a story of a king long ago—Canute was his mame—who picked a pleasant day to meander down to the seaside with his courtiers and order the rising tide not to wet his fect He could boss many things, but he couldn't boss the tde. In the last act of this touching little drama the king was shown with dripping sandals making tracks for the high land (a : In the story the rising tide was of real salt water S the kind that is generally found close to seasides - But if for modern purposes we think of the king not @ crowned head, but as a type of BUSINESS DESPOT, of the tide not as salt water, but of INDUSTRIAL IMOCRACY—of the rising demand of the great mass of ters to be in on the management—then the parallel is There is this difference, however. Some of our business s have ceased to command the tide to stay halt and Stead are SUPPLICATING IT TO STAY WHERE IT IS In the Survey, for example, Banker Higginson of Boston © almost pathetically pleads with the 85 per cent not to “hate the rich” or put them out of business. He is so little in justice, as there should be; but almost none for individuals. Let any man earn success by merit in free field with nobody gn handicapped, and you'll find ‘that his neighbors will be good sportsmen enough to applaud him, even when he i) ise enough to make the measure of his success a pile uous dollars instead of the satisfaction which comes superior service. TH IDE ISN’T RISING AGAINST SUCCESS, BUT OR ALI s [> We'd grieve to see such a tide halt | Fortunately it isn’t likely to. Wouldn't you? ROOSEVELT WILL run again, If the people want him, says Jacob Riis of New York. Run where? f 1f JAPAN’S naval heads hurry, they'll soon rank améng the great powers as grafters, too. tke a Look at the Soul of fashington City, People! ERTAIN beautiful gnaidens in Argyle, Ill, have conspired lid on its red tight district, throwing 300 women into street or among other tenements. " Whereupon—and rightly—some who had urged the ac- fion thought it would be well to provide wholesome employ- for such of these un fortunates as were willing to do est work. _- They planned a small garment factory requiring $25,000 set it going and then went forth among the well-to-do to # the money. After three weeks of diligent soliciting, they secured— much do you think? Just $1,500! The rich capital of the nation spends millions on amuse- ts, millions on gaudy display, millions on society func- but to provide honest work for evicted Magdalenes ae $1,500! A CITY WITH THAT KIND OF A SOUL EX- PECT TO BE PURE? Who among its people are the worst social offenders— the women it would starve into sin or the purchasers of its virtue? BURGLAR IN New York Is fe! with a boot-jack. they're still using ‘em. And in New York, too! 1T'S A question whether that Ironton, O., father of 12 chil- dren, who was presented with triplets, is to be congratulated. SAVANNAH, GA., judge rules that a man has no right to kiss his own wife against her will. Well, he couldn't kise her against her won't. Good Cheer Aids _ . Digestion of Food Dyspeptics Can Make the Rest | of the Family Happy by Using a Laxative-tonic. The temper of the family and the food cheer around the table de- © pend so much on the good diges q tion of each indivi sent that | the experiences of som former dyspeptics who overcame thelr trouble should be of interest to those now suffering in this w The best advice one but it is advice that heeded—is to eat slowly tieate each mouthful refi However, if slow eating d care ful mastication fail the next aid t# one close to nature, Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. This remedy \* an excellent digestant, and in addition to helping in the digestion of the MAJ. 8. MARTIN You can obtain Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin at any drug store for fifty ts or one dollar, the latter , acts gently on the liver and Bras, ridding them of the .s size being bought by heads of fam tition of waste. that should iltes already familiar with ite mer Jong ago have been passed off. It|'t# Results are always guaranteed fx safe, reliable pleasant-tasting, Whee 7 will be refunded and results are guaranteed car bee 20a wee Meld Pena you t e lacy of chewing Maj. 8. Martin, of Joplin |mints and tablets or of taking now 77, thinks Dr. Caldwell cathartica, salts, pills and similar ip Pepsin has helped him to aldragtic medicines. Unlike these longer and happier life. He hasigyrup Pepsin does not love its not felt so good in years As he has! good effect, and by automatically since taking this excellent medl-|training the stomach and bowel cine, and in spite of his 77 years| muscles to do their work, soon re-| he says he feels like a boy Stores these organs to nermal It fs the ideal remedy for indi-| Families wishing to try a free gestion, no matter how severe;|sample bottle can obtain It paid by addressing Dr. W. B. Cald well, 419 Washington St., Monticel lo, 11]. A postal card with your game and address on it will do, constipation, no matter how chron & fe, biliousness, headaches, the stomach, drowsiness af fog and similar annoyances, on| r eat euch with what is going on that he really thinks hate is] motive of current unrest | OF COURSE, IT ISN'T. There is plenty of hate for| | wishing to leave a degrading vocation it can dig up only a} MADAME HOUSEWIFE | By Jim Manee fhe bakes good cake—sometioas she doce | _ And other times ft falte INST INJUSTICE, THE LACK OF A FAIR CHANCE) ane sweeps tne house and dusts around calle keeps them clean Whe pare the monthly P. S.--"Say, ma, cookie, will yat ee Littio Johnnie and just as iittie | Tommie were on the eve of making up after a whole week's quarrel, which started when Johnale an- nounced he was going to have a |dirthday party to which Tommie \~ pot coming. ‘Aw, aay, you didn’t have any good time at that party yesterday,” |sang out Tommie from a neighbor. ing tree bough. “T bet y'a I did, too,” answered Johnnie. “Ah, KO on sick today?” Then why ain't you Jimmy's Way Willie (whispering) — Say, Jim my, why don't you show the teach er your mumps, ao that he will let you go home? Jimmy—No fear! 1 wants the whole school to catch ‘em, so as I can have some of the fellers to | play with! | a ae The Meaning | Head Master—Tell me the mean ing of the word “appetite Tommy—Please, sir, when you're Jeating you're ‘appy, and when | you've finished you're tight! “Ae yiey | Everything was going smoothly |the program was an unusually long one, and the village school room was packed to its utmost capacity In the course of the concert a lady and gentleman appeared to sing a du | Mrs. O'Flynn nudged her bus- band Don't yer nee, Patsy,” she ex claimed, “now that it's gettin’ late in the evenin’ they do be puttin thim on two at a time He—! have your permission to call this evening? I shall be very pleased but don't forget that father switches off the light at 10 o'clock He—That's kind of him, I'll be there promptly at 10. oe. “Listen,” said the superintendent |to the class of boys and girls which one of you can tell me what sins of omiswion are? I can, air aid a very small girl with very large eyes Well, let's have it, Sadie.” They are the sins what folks ought to have did and didn't, sir,” ee | Must Make Good | Freddie—Are you the trained nurse mamma said was comin’? Nurse-—-Yes, dear, I'm the train ed nurse. Freddie—Lat's see some of your poste] tricks, then! o- That's Just It You do not 1 don't quite offer enough wet you, duke," Conscience is the amount of innate knowledge we have In | | OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE Wietor Hugo. — Tt a | Stewart |draw a THE STAR—TUESDAY. Another raised your bid."—Judee. see quite get me. Mistrese—Bridget, the pie is aw ful. And you told me you could bake as good ples as any cook tn . Tum. But all ladies I ever worked for mixed the ples themselves before | baked ‘om, mum. Mamma—Where have you been, Lisbeth? Little Linbeth—I wae tn the kitchen watching cook take the shingles off a & s Grandma—How old do you think I am? Small Eva—Well, 1 don't know, but you don't look awfully new. ar) It's sometimes easier to bear it than it Is to grin . ee Don't worry—uniess you can lary for so doing. . . Most fire escapes are patterned after the straight and narrow way. ee Just So “Why do you write so many let. ters to the newspapers, old man? De you suppose anybody wants to see your views fn print?” “Well, {t's better than talking to yourself."-—-Judge. Rest modern outside rooms, the to 50c. Stewart House, $6 West Advertisement MAKES BACKACHE QUICKLY DISAPPEAR A Few Doses Relieves All Such Miseries, Bladder Weakness, Kidney Trouble and Rheu- matism Promptly Vanish It is no longer necessary for any one to suffer with backaching, kid- ney trouble, have disagreeable blad der and urinary disorders to con- tend with, or be tortured with rhew matiam, atiff joints, and ite heart wrenching pains, for the new dis covery, Croxone, quickly and surely relle all such troubles. Croxone is the most wonderful r system of uric acid and driving out all the poisonous impurities which cause such troubles. It ts entirely different from all other remedies. It ts not used for the purpose principle of cleaning out the pot sons and removing the cause. It soaks right in through walls, membranes and linings, ike water In a sponge, neutralizes, dis sIves, and makes the kidneys sift out and filter away, all the urie acid and poisons from the blood, and leaves the kidneys and urinary or gans clean, strong, healthy and well t matters not how long you have suffered, how old you are, or what you have used, the very principle of Croxone fs such, that It {fs prac tieally impossible to take it into the human syste without resulta. There is nothing else on earth like it. It starts to work the minute you take it and relieves you the firet time you use ft If you suffer with pains in your back and wides, or have any signs of kidney, bladder troubles, or rheu matism, such as puffy swellings un- der the eyes or in the feet and ankles, If you are nervous, tired, and run down, or bothered with urinary “disorders, Croxone will quickly relieve you of your misery y You can secure an original package| Ot werk p of Croxone at trifling cost from any first-class druggist. All druggists are authorized to personally return the purchase price if 1t fails in a single case. edy yet devised for ridding the like anything else ever It acts on the the FEBRUARY 24, 1914 { BURIED ALIVE | | Deep In the whirl of belt and wh | And flying dust and clanging steel, aoe A child is buried cz — all the day rom out of doors and romping play, Buried alive from glint of sun, From comrades blithe who shout and run, | Robbed of his childish heritage | By ghouls who pay his tiny w | Within this grimy factory le buried youth that once was free; lAnd here, all dull and lifeless, lee The joy that dwells In childish eyes. Here lies the glow of childish health In for the sake of greedy wealth; le a morgue of babes, my | friends, | Burled allve—for dividends. | Here tes the dream of better things | Crushed by the toll each morning brings: | Here lies Ambition—caimly stain |For Mammon’s rich and ruthless gain. | Here Is the tomb of hope denied, Of Youth o'erburdened and crucl- fi | Buried alivel—oh, Lord. how tong Shall we suffer children to bear this wrong? JERTON BRALEY. Have You Seen Him?] Mre. Pike of 143 N. Charles 8 | Topping #t, Kansas City, Mo, has jappealed to The Star to ald her tn | finding her husband, who was work jing for the Pacific Telephone Co, | | the last time she heard from him are calling for him all the time,” sald Mra. Pike NAB RUNAWAY Attempting to enlist tn Unit ed Staten army at Chico, Cal, John |M. Meyer, Jr, 18, Senttle high |achool boy, who ran away February 2, has been caught. AN ATTRACTIVE PICTURE will double the effectiveness of your advertisement or printed mat- ter, Try us with your next order for half tones or sine etchings, | THE RAPID SERVICE ENGRAVING CO. | | 230 Liberty Bldg, Opp. Postoffice Elliott 3696 } FAR VISION | Without Li in the | Lens ltor ‘near and far vision, with no lines or cement scales to loosen |They are ground in one solid lene land save two pairs of glasses. Can | be made in either toric or flat lenses | and can be mounted in Shur-on Eye | glasses or spectacle mountings. 'Curry Optical Co. EYESIGHT SPECIAL! Third Floor, 306466 Arcade Bidg. Bring This Ad With You TEETH Poetry | By Albany Denti in People's Bank Bullding, Second and Pike, Our story ie short, almple and plain About bridgework teeth of gold, porce | tain |r of And Of ex acting teeth without any patp. you'll wend your friends ayd come hack ae teeth gnd making them Without making charges away out of Of all things elm We guarantee al hi that Dentiate can do work that we do for ‘ * And w I! nurprise you at emaliness of Of our name you must know, as through. out Aton You will r & good word for the Albany's Cut Rates, Kryptok Invisible Bi-Focal Lenses) «| pulpit naut wood Mt will last and will | Private exchange with all deyartnen Largest Family in France and Mother Who Wants Legion of Honor Medal From Nation for Raising It | Mme. Malet, who holds the baby in this big family group, is asking the president of the French repub lic for a me of the Legion of Honor. The family group itself furnishes the grounds for her application, This picture is one of mother, father and 22 children! Mme. Malet brought up the largest family of children in France—and the happiest, she says. The youngest child is 14 months, the oldest 24 years. | (Paid Advertisement.) Corruption Corruption in politics is alto gether too common. Public service corporations! are the source of 90 per cen! of municipal corruption. oo Municipal ownership will do THEY. MCA Editor The Star; 1 noticed an Jarticle in your paper the other day the suggestion I make might not} come ami If the ia only one man fit for jin which an unfortunate man ip the mayoralty chair, why have an Portland, who was turned out of election at all? Why not turn the Mow’? With this evil, |the Y. M. C. A. there because he office over to him for life? Give Tig ee * unable to pay his room rent,/him another chance. There is no Vote for the Lake Cushman was quoted as saying about the/limit to the chance that might be jy Power Site. It is the key to Y. MC. A. that “they are Itke all accorded him. The expense of elec- | fg te City Plant. the rest—after the money.” |tions, to say nothing of recails, ere 1 had the misfortune to stop at| would help him to lower the taxes. | Ask my friends about me. the Y. M. C. A. in that particular A READER. eee city some time ago. I rented a aeneemete room by the week, and 1 was! charged the “modest” sum of $6 NO JOKE IRA D. LUNDY per week for my room alone and MA “4 25 centa extra each time I took a| SYDN 8. W.—A ten-year-| bath. I had'my choice of taking Old boy was summarily expelled for} that room or sharing a room with | Writing this: “Wine is a mocker. three others at $3 per week. That is true, but it only mocks all 1 think that such an outrage | [ol teetotalers who do not know a should be brought before the pub- | food thing when they see it.” x Remarkable Values in Women’s Spring Apparel A DAILY READER. Our assortment is complete, and you'll find the most elaborate collection of beautiful and striking new Spring models In Women’s and Misses’ Suits, Coats, Dresses and Millinery—in all the latest | Candidate for Councliman Two-Year Term. Headquarters, 303 Bailey Bidg. Telephone Elliott 1336. DISPUTES HUNTER Réitor The Star: 1 went into} Shushanna in August and stayed there over three months, prospect ing and locating claims. Mr. Hunter stated in one of your) recent issues that no claims were) located on Bonansa creek until! July. 1 talked to James, Fred M. Best and Carl Whitman, and I had every reason to believe them when | they told me that discoveries and | first staking was done in the mobth of May | colorings—-the newest styles—that bas Fvery musher that went over) ever been shown, even by our own estab- that trafl will join me in my state ment that the only good food we could buy was at the Chittystone | roadhouse, and it wasn't pork and | beans, either | Had ft not been for Oscar Breed-| man’s pack train, many of the boys| lishment. Buy Your Clothing on Credit. | It’s SO Convenient. You never miss the money spent at all. would have gone barefooted and} Select your new Spring apparel—no without food 1 while the assortment is complete. You 1 am going into Shushanna don't need to pay ft all at one time! A again, too, CLIF ON. | small amoutt down, the balance when - you can spare it in weekly, monthly or— EXPLAINS HILLMAN SUIT Pay us when you get paid. Editor The Star Through some | peculiar mistake the papers made/@ | }it appear that Mr. and Mra, C. K, @ Sturtevant, who had recently pur-| chased 6,000 acres of land in Sno-| homish county, known as the Birm-} lingham area, had entered suit! jagainst C. D. Hillman and asso-| el | clates for annulment of the pur-| 1332-34 Second Ave., Near Union St| chase contract, and Mr. Sturtevant ttle’s Reliabl. . was credited as having said that Seattle’s Reliable Credit House the title to this land was defective Pa Jon 2,000 acres, while the balance was worthless. This statement ts absolutely unfoun: and is in no way true. Mr, Sturtevant has no lintention of cancelling any concract | for the purchase of the Birmingham | lands, nor has he ever stated or| intimated that any of the land is| worthless | Rather to the contrary he has| always maintained that the Birm:| Ingham lands a rich and valuable | The object of the suit ts simply jto compel Hillman and his asso clates to live up to their contract with Mr, Sturtevant and deliver | complete and clear title to all of ATTRACTIVE SERVICE The Four Daily Trains From Seattle TO CENTRALIA, CHEHALIS, PORTLAND And Intermediate Stations. THREE DAILY TWO DAILY To Olympia, Hoquiam and Raymond and Aberdeen Bend Parlor cars, coaches and dining cars To South Best of equipment. ere aan from yen" on day trains. Standard and tourist cars and coaches failed to do. RV, on night trains. Sales Manager, Office of C, K Sturtevant | FOR GILL NOW Editor The Star: 1 attended a recent service at a church near the} | foot of Queen Anne hill, and there TO NORWAY In May, 1914 Mich With the Sons of Norway Now, I don't know anything more about Hi Gill than can be gleaned | |from the papers, nor am T acquaint DIREC T TO CHRISTIANIA by the specially chartered Jed with Brother Trenholme's vir-| American Line 5. 8. “St. Paul,” from New York May 7. } jtue, but I do believe tn God and SPECIAL NORTHERN PACIFIC TRAIN from |love my fellow men, and to hear|]) p ( Minnéanct St. P . iaieo bittasiy: asesiied. team the? acifi oast to Minneapolis and St, Paul, where the pas- | sengers will joig those from Montana, the Dakotas, Minne- sota and elsewhere, and proceed to New York to embark on steamer in one grand party For rates and sleeping car and steamer Reservations on Steamships of All Trans-Atlantic Lines Apply to J. 0, McMULLEN, City Pass, Agt. 107 Yesler Way, Seattle, Wash. Telephone, Elliott 5750. NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY A. D. CHARLTON, A. G. P. A,, Portiand, Or. ally aroused my dislike for any more such sermons The people have evinced a strong desire to grant Hi Gill's plea, Is it} the duty 6f the godly man to elect | himself judge and jury, to pass on Mr. Gill's sincerity? Up until the time T heard the ser-| for Trenholme. Now I| | | |mon I am for Gill CON H. N. KENNEDY, Gen. Agt. TAN READER, | . | MAYOR FOR LIFE “Editor The Star As a aubsertb. jer of your paper (not only one jcopy, but we get two at our house), ait } ee

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