The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 31, 1914, Page 5

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ry LANYS yy == Asie)» * = H Anty Drudge Helps Another Over. worked Woman Mrs. Muchwork—“Well, I give up! I can’t stand | on my feet another minute. I am nearly dead now and not half my work done yet.” Anty Drudge—“Of course you are nearly dead, doing your work the way you do it. It would kill anybody. Here, Mary, run to the store and get me a cake of Fels-Naptha Soap, and T'll finish your mother’s work in a jiffy and show her how to do things the easy way.” ‘The easy way or the hard way---which? The hard way means long hours standing on your feet, doing the hundred and one things that housewives have to do every day in the year. It means hot fires, over- heated kitchens, scrubbing, rubbing, scouring. On washdays it means steam- ing boilers full of clothes and hours spent bending over washtubs and boiler. The easy way means to let Fels-Naptha Soap do the hard things for you. It whitens clothes and makes the dirt disappear, without hard rubbing or boiling. It dissolves grease on pots and pans. It cleans paint and wood- work. Use cool or lukewarm water. FELS-NAPTHA § Follow the | directions on the Red and Green Wrapper. Vegetadic sim Hestery Steam En@ineer Practice. RING SCHOOL Y ing. Machine Sho} SEATTLE ENGIN 108 West Roy Street Piushes, Velvets, Silks, Satine Felts, Velours, blocked Into the Iatest atyles—blocks now {n Leip en cepa’ | SEWING. $55 mt \ | MACHINES J New Machines rented WHITE SEWING MACHINE Co. ttt Tailed (Near Tihs) Mate 1878 " DR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8. PERFECT DENTISTRY The finest obtainable price. The stroagest guarantee ever offered tn Seattle. A clear saving of from 25 to 60 per cent at any of the price asked by the ordinary | dental offices, and better work and more satisfactory service in the bargain. Painless methods only— nothing to hurt, nothing to fear. Nothing but the very highest grade materials used and dentists who} are experts. Regular Extra Heavy $10 Gold Crowns PReguiar $10 Never-SIi Plates > $5 WE GIVE GAS Regal Dental Offices Dr. L. R. Clark, D. D. S., Manager. 1405 3rd Ave., N. W. Cor. Union 8t. Note: Bring this ad with you. 2% Conte Send the Heavy Work to Wet Wash rer Pomc, ROUGH DRY "pi". Ver Doren Minimum Bundle 50c A Coupon in each package tells ail about Colonial Dinner Set offer, Call Queen Anne The Washing’s Fine 9 CENTRAL LAUNDRY AUTO SERVICE Snow White Work Wise House Hunter her house at home. She The hunts STAR “FOR RENT” NU BONE CORSETS | | | | | | | | | } | } jis safe moves OUR LAWLESS POLICE] KICK AGAINST LEGAL | SHIP BUYING | WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.—Sharp | protests to President Wilson's plan jot building up an American mer- chant marine by purchasing Ger i}man ships in American ports have reached the state department, it Is today 900.000 ILLEGAL ARRESTSMADEBY COPS EVERY YEAR NE out of every 100 persons in the United the course of the year—an astounding record. have realized it before. Are we such criminals would indicate? Are one million the true gauge of our civilization? In the following article, Attorney John H. Perry tells you how the police, educated to wield brute force instead of common sense, make nine useless arrests out of every ten: learned The protests were both England and France, through their embassies here. England protested would be a # neutrality such violation pur tates is arrested during You y never chases | Amert BAPTIZE FIFTY bined. f Do you know that even after | spending $3,500,000 per day to | preserve peace and enforce the crime laws, only two out of Joriminals than any, other nation} AUBURN, Aug. 31.—Fifty men. By John H. Perry under the sun? | women and children, 11 from Seat i , ogr-|_IN AMERICA LAST YEAR/tle, were baptized in the Green| Do you know that Neal | THERE WERE NEARLY 10,000| river yesterday, marking the closo| ly ONE MILLION F MURDER AND HOMICIDE CASES.|of the annual ‘conference of Sev Be = = , = wo In the elty of Chicago there reienth Day Adventists PLE W ERE ARRESTED more than 200 murders and homi-/1,000 people witnessed the cere in the United cides. While London had only 19| mony States last and Paris 15 Almost any one of) = ay if ae our states alone had more murders year? ONE than all the British empire com | CAN’T CRACK IT out of every H UN DRED of our popu- lation! made an unsuccessful attempt crack the safe in the O.-W. R. & N. ; frightened away and escaped on Do you every 100 murders in our land lone of the company’s handcars know that by many 90 out of every 100 mur. Seer. Peatns $5 from a cash the substitu- derers are convicted and pun- | PON ROT ALE NR Ne ed? Between 1884 and 1914—30 years there have been 000 murders in the United States. One out of for Billies that number could be DE- every 66 of the murderers was CREASED ONE THOU. LEGALLY executed. In the same can Ground Chocolate period approximately an equal num SAND PER CENT? ber of murderers—about 3,000 ntdie sees ...70¢ were LYNCHED. There has not | l-lb. can Ground Chocolate Chief Kohler of the Cleveland police tried the 75 y. RULE OF REASON a feW| rorcement inh fake they take (he years ago. The result was! law into their own hands, hence so- r lied mob law been one lynching in 76 years. England in 20c can Solid Pack Toma- Jeans, Small White, i i ce ree ee enw ewes that while in one month The American Bar association Bijcid Rice, Siam, 5 ander the old system they| statistics tel! us that in 46 per cent . yo Q 2 e “»|of felony cases new trials are . arrested 2,800, under the) franted, and in 60 per cent of those Jap Rice, 5 Ibs new system in one month) cases new triaix are granted on BRolled Oats, F 5 some technical grounds in no way [ic they arrested but 350! involving the guilt or innocence of (HD, IDS: -+ss +e ssesees Po you know that there are more | the accused. These cases had all Granulated Sugar, unlawful acts committed tn the ar-| heen tried before juries who sawil...... .cscecceesee rests of one million of our people eard the defendants and their|B-r.mato P : caudally. than the ‘honlled Gffaute| signee Tomato Puree, per ca ers commit themselves? | Why reverse any case on techni That 19 out of every 20 of the | cai grounds? | one million people arrested are ‘And what have the police to found “not guilty” and dis bout 19 out of every 20 charged? This |i us with persons art being inno- a shameful record of over 900,- cent, while less than two per 000 unwarranted and unlawful cent of the murderers of this n 8¢ John C. Leslie Co. Sanitary Market The above prices all this week, in the forenoons only. a arrests. country are detected and pun- Do you know that this blind,| ighed? vicious maladministration of police <A officials costs us $3,500,000 every day of our lives? That its tax against us in one year would more than pay off our billion dollar na- tlonal debt? Do you know that under this system of police anarchy and tyran ny America is producing more DRINK | The Original Neal Treatment Is Safe, Sure and Thorough—In- | dorsed and Recommended by All Who Investigate Ite Merit A Corre ction Through a mistake in the issue of The Star, Friday, Aug. 28. Robt. A. Tripple was | mentioned as a candi- The old methods of treating the| drink habit are only resorted to by | those who have not taken the| trouble to investigate the original Neal Three-Day Treatment—the modern method of treating the| drink habit, The Neal Treatment| is superior to all others because It | and sure, and always re-| the craving for drink in three days without the use of hy-| date for county com- missioner. It should have read, “Robt. A. Tripple, candidate for County Clerk,’”’ sub- podermic injections, The Seattle a ¥ s Neal Institute at 1736 16th Ave, al ject to Republican Pri- ways assures satisfactory results maries, Sept. 8, 1914. and a “square deal.” Call and tn-| vestigate or write or phone for| book of information, Phone East 4381. All drug habits treated. City office 802 Northern Bank Bidg. STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 1914. lodged by| More thean|she can say anything that will be GRANDVIEW, Aug. 31.—Yeraa), to! | depot yesterday morning, but were PAGE 5. Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS | Q—Although | have never had the pleasure of meeting you, | feel | that yo ‘© a dear friend, so often | have | been benefited by your good | advice to others, it seems to me, if people really do as you tell them in your anewers, they would come to no bad end, . | am a woman of 30, have bi married 10 years, and find myself sort of drifting. When | go Into anything it Is always a whole-heart led affair with me, and so It was |that | went to the marriage altar, Indeed, the happiest day of . Howey found out very that my “Prince Charming” 3 | soon did not respond; he soon grew cold and very settled; | could not walk, sit or stand to please him; every thing | did was all wrong; often times he did not even speak to me for days at a tim think, In my girlish wa haps | wasn't quite as | should be.| | took special pains to dress and look my very best, but he did not| seem to take notice of me. Natural-| ly, | grew thinner and pale, for || | was so unhappy. | So life wore on for three year when a lovely child came to our home. | had thought perh |things would be different then.) Again | was mistaken. but | was, oh, so busy caring for my babe—I had some one to love now and time! passed 60 quickly. | One day | simply quit worrying. | took my baby with me and went on a long jour where we we: carefree for the whole day. many things of Interest about me) that | had not noticed before, and) baby was such a comfort tome, || | began to be quite happy In my own! |little way. The result was that |! | gained in weight and looked better| than | had for years. | seemed to! have come to the end of the rope,| as it were—my cup of bitterness was full, Several years passed this 1 always did my duty as al housewife and homekeeper, made | 1 could about! ways treated my| husband with respect, in spite of many heart-breaking remarks he! used to make to me. J never lost| my temper, although It was Indeed| trying at times. Now | find that he sees his mis- take; he decla every day. | learned to love me, for surely nm |did not love me at first. He is a |kind and good as any one can be; but, alas! my heart Is heavy. || was deceived in the beginning and) ems to me that | never will! for him as! did int weet, | pure, trusting way. | certainly do not believe in digging up the past However, it has left such an imprint upon my life that it affects the | began to) that per| of present, and therefore | mention It 1 am afraid to go into this “love| tife” again for it may not be real.) No, | am quite eure | cannot love) him as} did, for the confidence Is| |lacking. | If you have an anawer for me that |you think will help me out, ple i print it a8 soon as my turn com HELEN. A.--Cynthia Grey does not flat ter herself with thé thought that of real help to you; but your let |ter is a fine answer to the myriads of young, broken-hearted wives wailing that now, since they a | married, their husbands no longer) jlove them. Your experience has made you jook at life through stronger lenses and is the beat proof on earth that good looks alone cannot hold a man's love. There must be some hidden flower that will bloom on) land on after the rose of youth has) faded | | It is barely possible that you can| love now as you did ten years ago. That was a girl's love; this should be a woman's love, Don't try to rekindle the old flame. Don't try| to keep a dying flame lighted, but guard the new love that springs from the old ] When you find yourself drifting, catch on to some new interest, cul tivate it until it is strong enough} to hold you | If you will stop long enough to compare yourself now with the girl| your husband's love is lasting and sincere, He put you to a severe test; you stood it, and now you ar prepared to reap the seed you have so carefully sown. Yours will be a harvest of everlasting happiness, 1| am sure. Q.—I am a girl of 16 and In love} with a boy of 19. He does not seem to care for me in the way | would like to haV® him. He is good! to me, always kind and attentive, but never in any way gives me hope that he loves me. Miss Grey, can you tell me a way to win his love? | have known this young man for six years, and all the time have cared more for him than any other boy | know or expect | know. | Please do not throw this into the waste basket, for | shall be wait- ing anxiously for an answer. | . G | A—You are a very silly, foolish girl. You don't know what love is You are merely affiicted with pup-| py love, and it is time your mother| or some one took you In hand and} drilled some sense into your head | by some method. A boy of 19 1s |no more a man than a girl of 16 is ‘a woman. Why under the name of Heaven does a girl of 16 think she| has to be in love simply bec she has the friendship of a good boy or man? If you 16-year-old! sirls who are trying to play the) me of love would dismiss such thoughts from your minds and oc ‘oupy yourselves for a few years with something that would tend to{ make you senstble and useful wom-| there would be fewer broken ts and a whole lot less work | for the divoree courts. Your 19-| ‘year-old friend probably realizes this, and I admire him greatly for |the stand he is taking | Twenty-four driving wheels, each 2 inches in diame are part of |a locomotive recently completed at| Philadelphia, the most powerful yet! | built | Mrs, Ed A. Smith, of McAllister | ville, an invalid, owns a hen named Collie, which comes into her room every day and lays an egg in a nest| made of a shawl, Another hen fol- owed Collie into the room recent- ly, pushed her off the nest, then laid an egg. | political reasons. jited in defunet Christopher, Knick PSTABLISHED 1676 ac J Joudgall 2 fouthwick R. B. Gage, Receiver Second Aloe, and Pike St. Store open 9.a.m. to 6 p FOR MEN Sale of Fall and Winter Underwear 440 Separate Garments 420 Union Suits.... $2.50 is the regular price of every garment in this sale, and we have just re- ceived them from the best makers of underwear in the country. a) LY There are two weights, each 50 per cent wool and 50 per cent cotton, in a soft, natural gray color. The | Union Suits are the famous '| Globe make. Every garment is guaranteed to be a perfect fit and of the best work- manship, and above all is guaranteed to be non-shrinkable. In the ordinary way every suit is priced to sell at $2.50, and as we will be unable to secure any more of these numbers, we advise you-to take ad- vantage of this unusual price of $1.65. Just Inside the Pike Street Entrance, First Floor. | MURPHY CHARGES — SHERIFFS TIPPED RAID ON CLANCY'S. } | | 4 H. H. Smart nabbed for speeding Patrolman O'Dell hurt when mo tor bike rams wagon Liner Crown of Toledo, e | HERE ° here last) April, becomes British troop ship. _ Rev. & Shayler reaches New) «vou're a tiar!” that chauffeurs who work for the York from Europe “You're another! R. J. Ritchie, forger wanted here, Biff! Boom! Bang! again escapes in Orient a Macdonald Harper, Seattle boy,|the sreecsitor’ wr joins British army Seattie will share big portion of tourist travel diverted to Pacific. Storms delay sailing of Minneso- ta for Seattle. Forest fire near Tonga, Snohom- ish county, beyond control Tilikums joined Suquamish tn- dians Saturday in paying respects to memory of Chie ttle. Jas. M. Dawley d Harry Cook, -robber, arrested. Mrs. Geo. 8. Worley buried at Tacoma today | Wilson's Modern Business Col- sheriff's office solicited promising protection; that cards of iff talke of | Sheriff Cudihee’s deputies running ecutor, or vice versa, the|for office “were being handed out |words are short. Many of them from these roadhouses and jare in dashes. | Yotes of the patrons solicited.” And it's all on account of Clancy’s| Murphy says he was absent from” roadhouse at The Meadows, which the city when the first raid on was vividly described in The Star|Clancy’s roadhouse was made, end by Robert Rounder. that he had never failed to advise Sheriff Cudihee raided the place|the sheriff on that subject. and captured a lot of “wet goods”| He further says that when Dep- one fair day, between 6 and 7 p. m./uty Thompson later came for fur- He'd have raided the place a/ther advice and told Murphy that | week earlier, he told the public, if} a deputy had been placed to watch he hadn't been delayed by the prose-| the Clancy house, he told Thomp- cutor’s office. json “it was an idle waste of the He had asked the prosecutor for | county's money, and the only thing an opinion as to what course to/to do is to raid the roadhouse every lege alumni banqueted turday | follow, since Johnny Clancy claimed | night until it is closed up for good.” night |it was a club and not a roadhouse,| Murphy says that when the road- Foundations laid for new Stuart|/Cudihee stated, and Murphy, the| house was raided, a night or two building, at Fourth and University. | prosecutor, had never replied. ‘later, “there was no there,” and that Philip Andrew of Stiliwater| Murphy Writes Cudihee jthe raid evidently had been tipped grabbed as speeder Now comes Johnny Murphy and | off. J. P. Kirk dies of ptomaine poi-/says to Sheriff Cudihee—well, it’s| soning. | some language Johnny uses. | Pastor Russell forecasts end of! Summarized, Johnny says in sub-| war for all thm | stance, in a letter to Cudihee, that| “1 can only say,” says Mur phy, “that it | sad commen- tary on the sheriff's office that, when it had knowledge of Albert Richards returns from war only a boneheaded sheriff has to| crimes being committed, and zone. be advised whether a “blind pig’| the laws being violated, depu- Body of unknown man picked up should be raided; that Sheriff Cudi-| ties, instead of making arrests in bay hee's raids were always tipped off| then and there, are sent to the ittorney’s office Mrs. Mary J. Cole succumbs. Cops vote to abolish their long frock coats Liner Al-Ki arrives after difficulty in fom. to Clancy so that no one was at home when the deputies called; provecuting for opinion: | of ten years ago, I believe you need | @—— a ar iele + not hesitate to enter that “blessed | | | kingdom of love,” nor doubt that)® | JUST A REMINDER German armored trawler Gerda | een? ma rae blown up by striking German mine off Langeland. Senate confirms nomination of Attorney General McReynolds to supreme court bench. j Idaho stockmen ship 11 carloads) of cattle to Chicago markets, Bet- ter prices in Chicago. | Private White, 21st infantry, | Vancouver barracks, killed by fist | blow in fight with Roy Miller. | Everett Yacht club plans series of races for Labor day program. Six of crew of abandoned schoon-| er Scotia picked up at sea by Ari-| zonan | Seattic Shriners initiate class of 26 at Juneau Interstate commerce camaie sioner will hi complaints in Se-| attle Sept. 12. Lumber shipments from inland empire 421,000,000 feet dur reach ing first six months of year. Fire destroys fruit warehous: with loss of Pacific coast shortened credit terest rates, Bohemian American Press asso-| tion appeals to state department to try to save life of Prof. Thomas | Massaryk, condemned to death for | Richey-Gilbert at North Yakima, | 0, bankers have not or increased in-| City of Auburnshad $2,500 depos- erbocker & Howard private bank Statistics show 296,695 children in schools of state. | Wilford Herringer and Geo. Pur- ver, Canadians, serving time in state prison, will be deported when minimum sentences expire, | Prize list complete for boys and girls who will compete in agricul: | tural and industrial contest, to be MII MIL UNSWEETENED CONDENSED There is only one held in Tacoma Armory, Oct. 28-80, | Nine senators and. nine repre: CARNATION QUALITY sentatty opponents of woman's | suftra s, put on black list by Na It is always uniform—Clean—Sweet—Pure— Pe nny epan'e: Racha aasoola- | Rich Milk from Contented Cows. To guard against neutraity vio-| lations, United States officials took | Housewives tell us there is “none equal” to arge of all wireless telegraphing | Carnation Brand in quality and flavor. at Panama. | 3 Three hundred guests driven out | of doors by a $100,000 fire on the | top foor of the Isleworth hotel, At lantic City, During a birthday party at hie|) home in San Francisco, Michael Majk was probably fatally stabbed, You ask for it—and insist upon getting it. Your Grocer, the Carnation Milkman

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