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STAR—TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1914. PAGE 4 IT HOPS Youu UNG \T, DNA. TU Ser You 4 UNCH To TAR'G Alona’ ? GOING I's } | Diana + | Dillpickles ‘ In A Dignified | | Way to Carry j Lunch A 4-Ree “Screecher’ | Film | THE LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS IS VARIOUS gpcnrcanssisesboiiantiatinlinitl VELL, LAM | | GOING avAy ON & |} TRIP o8caR SEE. HERE 65 4 |] VOYAGE BOUQUET || AXOUNG LADY LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS. FOR INSTANCE, HERE "Two BUNS AVD 4 AickLED MC's WRIST! AND OH, HORRORS, WRAPPED IN 4 NEWSPAPER |” SomerHt iT WON'T look Like LUNCH! NO, DER FR 66 FER *PAREVELL®, UND Disa SWEET BASIL. MEANS “GOOD VISHES’ HERE 189 fORGET-ME-NOTS VHICH MEANS J "REMEMBRANCE * AIN'T IT Fay FIR You To SPRUCE UR EX? “BOSS, AS You LOVE Me, LEND MG NG TO CARRY IT IN SO VOT'S A ONION “UM wise! COLD “HAR, HAR, virtues!” roe ASK HGR Tro sine!" \ "THe NEW STENOG, Focjow sf PiPe We Music ROLL ro 3 ER, Sg AB WORDS BY SCHAEF; ER—MUSIC BY MACDONALD WHY, RAW, IT'S FER FRAGRANCE, 4n ONION! UND “RIED 1” (SS FER Liver? (THE SEATTLE STAR OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUP OF NEWSPAPERS) Telegraph News Service of the United Preee Assoctatios. Entered at Seattia, Wash. Postoffice as Second-Ciass Matter. y ma! if city, 35 per mon. six mos, $1.80; year 63.28 oe meth, out of city Sag carrier. eft nth. 4 Dally by The Preble! y “achanae ectina kles Should Be Beaten TILL K. SICKLES should be defeated for county clerk | for several reasons. His very candidacy ts an affront $0 the spirit of our laws, which limit the term of county offi- pers to successive years. The Sickles family has had direct charge of the office ) Six successive years now, not a two years that D. Sickles was chief d county clerk. D. K. Sickles held whe office Soin 1909 to 1913, and W Sickles has been holding it since. are father and son. When D. K. Sickles’ four years the office foree, a political machine in its worst form, A dpicked W. K. Sickles, thus defeating the very purpose of the four-year law. | If W. K. Sickles is elected and serves out four years, D. Sickles will again be eligible to run for the office, and thus would remain in the Sickles family indefinitely. But outside of that, there is ample cause to defeat W. K. tkles. Arbitrarily picked by his father’s office force because} bore the same name and would get many votes on the} ength of his father’s reputation, young Sickles has no real| lifications for the office. That is discerned by the irregu-| office hours kept by himself and by a number of his depu-| and by the increase of the payroll during July, when| is less business and work in the clerk's office than any/ Wher month in the year, with the exception of August. | ‘other moth in the year, with the exception of August. } There is ¢ more serious charge against Sickles, too. _ The law prohibits an officer from taxing his employes for campaign expenses. j _ Two years ago “voluntary contributions” were made by ‘the county clerk's office force in behalf of Sickles. Those ‘who failed to make any “voluntary contributions” were fired | the day after election. | And this year the Will K. Sickles campaign fund is again getting “voluntary contributions” from the office force. (Ponto, THE PUR?) ws Co. Phone, Main 9400. Private | departments. i] ae i Reporting Under Difficulties A WORD about how the war news is gathered. Did you see the way France is going to treat the war| Correspondent? Won't let any go near the front. Each must $end, in French, only what the general thinks is fit to print ‘WAR PROB LEM Tf he tries to tell the truth, bing! off goes his head | Well, that’s how all the fighting nations are sitting on the News lid. They're not fighting to sell papers or to appease | the curiosity of neutrals. They're battling for life. So they " won't have the truth told if they can stop it. They want the| truth juggled to fit their needs. _ Germany, too, is so far cut off that only a dribble of news of any kind gets through from Berlin. That's why we don’t the German side. It can't be got—not yet. But every effort that The Star can make, alone and in company with| other American newspapers, to get the German side and all sides fairly is being made. We're going to get the straight news if we can But if you think it’s an easy job, try it. VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept. 1—~ Canada 1s perplexed. Stfe doesn't know what to do with the thou- sands of Austrian laborers within her borders. Small armies of these foreigners have until recently been working on the transcontinental railroads, but now they are idle, and longing to return to Europe to fight. But Canada has them now, and | proposes to hold them. They are | virtually prisoners of war, The majority of them are destt- tute, No true Britisher or loyal Canadian will give them work, be- cause their country and Canada are now enemies, But Canada can't have them starving on her hands, Thus far nobody has advanced a satisfactory solution. ALL NEW STUFF TO THE JUDGE Police Judge Gordon took his piace on the bench yesterday, after a month's vacation in his camp in the Olympics, where he fished in bliss. ful ignorance of the war and every- thing else, The war had just start ed when he left, Hence it was necessary for him to subdue Bel- \elum, capture Liege and Namur, land prepare Paris for stege, all in lone day, when he returned home, RELIABLE ARTICLES That have done their work well and proven satisfactory. SLOTTED CASEMENT WINDOW ADJUSTERS ove Ae For windows opening in or out. Holds window tn any position by regulating bar in slot. This has proven more satisfactory than other adjusters. eS * 81,00 The handiest high gtade plier we know of. % TO 1/4 BRACE SOCKET WRENCH Qe to 50¢ For either square or hexagon nute STAR CAN OPENER, SCREW DRIVER AND BOTTLE CAP MUP EMEIR cs ssocvesescccsseccccssese voetcensecesesevoucsones The best 741N. UTICA COMBINATION SIDE AND WIRE CUTTING FLAT NOSE AND BURNER PLIERS ever bandied by us. STOW & WILCOX KNIFE HANDLE MONKEY Solid bar of drop-forged steel runs full length. Bicycles cleaned, trued, ofled and adjusted . SPINNING’S CASH STORE 00 1415-1417 Fourth Av. ‘GERMAN HEAD OF BEATEN BELGIUM | Fleid Marshal Baron Kolmar von der Goltz has been appointed mill- |tary governor of that’ portion of Bejgium ocoupled by German troops. 4 Tre RPP CPE EE as MAEM Ho ‘MOST ANYTH ANSWERED BY MR, CYNTHIA GREY Please aa dg proper way to roast a pig-—-Masie, Why. stand right up, Maste, and) Pure food, pure water, tell him what you think of him. and pure thoughts lose i Pb his job. Ts an egg shampoo good for the hair? Should the egg be fried or poached?—Lora K. An egg shampoo may do the hair | some good, but a pancake sharnpoo |te better. The egg should be hard | dolled. | My baby loves to play with the | nutmeg grater, | ways so rough when they frolic | Should I take the baby away from {the grater?—Mra. @ 0. 3 It would probably be better not to let them play together, | | pure al the jatler eee Co-Operation Father—-What! You want to mar- ry my daughter? Why, sir, you can't support her! I can hardly do it myself.” Sultor (blankly)—C-an't we chip in together? eee Worked Both Ways When he had carefully examined the shoes the physician bad brought in for repairs, the German cobbler handed them back, saying: “Dem Tam an architect and am Graw-| shoes ain't_worth mending, dootor.” ling plans for a house for « lawyer. “Very wiM!, Hans,” said the doo Can you suggest some novel treat-|tor; “then, of course, I won't have | ment for the walla of his library?—| q; ing done to them.” | H.C. B. Vell, ou 60 | Yes, cover them with court : watt eer. 2 “—_ | plaster. \® ee "Vy, ven I came to see you, de udder day, you me for tell ing me dot dere ain't noddings der aeg mit me.” What can I do with a phonograph that will not play?—Hortense. Sell it to a deaf man. ee eee Mr. Cynthla Grey's Household Hints | She was making a tour of Inapeo- |tlon through one of the women's | wards in the Walla Walla pent'on-/ tlary. In one of the rooms were! Do not throw away your old cel- | three women sewing. lnloid cuffs. They make excellent | As® she turned to leave, the vis. holders for hot trons. lttor sald If sauerkraut swells too much aft. tures! What are they fn for?” |clothes wringer, “Well,” replied =the perin-| A small piece of rubber placed on tendent, “you see they no the kitchen stove or range will kil! home. That is my private ing | the odor of cooking onions. room, and they are my wife and two daughters.” . | of leaking, it should be turned !n- e side out. A Seattle evening paper which| ‘Spinach, when dry, can be remov- has been whintng about map-makers | ed from the sand by using a vacuum for the San Francisco fair, putting | cleaner. | Seattle in the heart of the Cascade | mountains and shutting off the Pa-| A Good Workman jeific ocean at the northern Califon| “So you worked your way through |nia boundary, transported the At-| college? Your father mast be proad jlantic ocean to Japan fn & map pub-| of you!” lished on the first page the other! “Not much! He's the day. werked.”—Boston Transcript. WHEN WORLD WAS AT WAR THE CRUSADES (1096-1272)—Great military . taken by the Christian nations of Brag 6 ped ipeaeh Palestine from the Mohammedans. THE THIRTY YEARS’ of Germany finally were de man 1 They were eight in number. feated by an alliance composed of the Pro’ estant states and cities of the empire and France and Sweden. By the| famous Peace of Westphalia, France got Mets, Toul and Verdun, tn Lorraine, and & great part of Alsace. ‘4 THE WAR OF THE SPANISH NETHERLANDS—(1667. — Holland, England and Sweden aided the Spanish Notherlantey or Rak «ium, al France, THE WAR WITH HOLLAND (1672-1678)—Lo XIV. emerged from the stru with Holland and her allies, England, Sweden and some of the G an princes, with a large increase of territory. THE WAR OF THE PALATINATE (1689-1 7)—~The members of the Grand Allfanoe, Mngland, Holland, Sweden, Bpain, the German Emperor, the Wiector Palatine, Bavaria and Saxon finally compelled Iauis XIV, to surrender places in Southern Germany which he had seized. THE WAR OF THE SPANIBH SUCCESSION (1701-1712)—So- called because of the attempt to seat a grandson of Louis XIV. of France on the throne of Spain, England got Gibraltar and the Island of Minorea, Newfoundland, Nova Seotia and the Hudson B aples, Sardinia and the Spanish Austria was given Milan, (Belgium) THE SWEDISH WARS Saxony, Poland and Russia, Baltic lands. hc ios aiy i gu 4 opposed Denmark, usela acquired all Sweden's Southern THE WAR OF THE AUSTRIAN SUCCESSION (1740-1748)—Frod. erick the Great of Prussia, seized Silesia from the Austrian Hapsburgs and held it against Austria, Hungary, France, England and Sardinia. THE SEVEN YEARS’ t struggle, siding first with the allies. Prusel he allies, then with Pri , fought Austria-Hungary, France, England was a temporizing ally ame exalted as the foremost German state, shouldering aside Austria, and from thence on was @ rallying point for the other lerees Recs and principalities, Ww. WITH FRANCE (1793)-—~I0ngland and her allies o} Alliance defeated by the French. Becsbeeaye: EONIC WARS (1796-1815)—Napoleon brought under subjec- rms almost the whole of continental Burope. For twenty years war ook the nations. Finally England and Prussia and their smaller allies defeated him at Waterloo, CRIMEAN WAR (1853-1856)—Great B: Sardinia and Turkey, defeated Russia. THE BALKAN-TURKEY WAR (1912-1918)—-Bulgaria, Servia, Mon- tenegro and Greece fought Turkey because of atrocities upon the Chris- tian population within the Ottoman borders. Turkey was defeated, and © lost all her Muropean possessions except for the interven- powers. LKAN WAR (1913)—-Greece, Servia and Montenegro fell upon their former ally, Bulgaria. Bulgaria was defeated and another adjustment of frontiers was made, ritain and her allies, France, “Ugh, what vicious looking crea-|er being botied, run it through a} When « tea kettle shows signs! Burope to rescue the holy places of | WAR (1618-1548)—The Catholic princes | WAR (1756-1763)—-Russia vacillated in this | sia, and then with | | | | | | { An All-Star Cast IN THE BIG EASTERN MusicalComedySuccess THE SOCIAL WHIRL PRETTY CHORUS HANDSOME COSTUMES CATCHY MUSIC A Dollar Attraction FO 15c and 25c MATINEE DAILY 2:30 Any Seat in the House 15c EVENINGS 7:30 and 9:00 Tivoli Theatre MADISON ST. AND FIRST AVE.