The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 12, 1914, Page 4

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ISTAR—MONDAY. OCTOBER 12. 1914. PAGE 4. THAT CIGAR STAND, BT I've LalD 4 TRAP FoR THEN! | ‘Dillpickles In A PARROT ASA DICTAPHONE ‘ 4-Reel | ‘Screecher’ | Film WELL, IT’S NICE Y VELL, Am auab we sor bo IN DER HOUSE ADOLPH, EVEN HAF TO Move ar FPURNITU! BIGOLLY DID CHA’ EVER NOTICE DAT SOME RELIGIONS HAS TER BE WOUND UP EVERY B gat ag Eugene Miller and Richard West, convicts at Canon City, escaped tn warden’s automobile, and were cap tured later. HERE’S RECORD OF MILLS. gpeoealey the most ro, 5 =~ present campaign is el o standpat organs to defeat Edgar C. Mills, the in- dependent candidate for supreme court judge. And what is the argument employed by the stand- patters? It’s really very funny. The standpatters are claiming Mills is not a pro- gressive. In other words, the standpatters would have you believe Mills is a standpatter. If Mills is a standpatter, then why are the against him? The truth is that Mills served in the legisla- of Wisconsin, both in the lower house and in senate, and at the end of his terms received hearty endorsement, both of Bob LaFollette, governor, and of the Wisconsin State Fed- eration of Labor. LaFollette issued a statement in which he rec- ommended Mills for re-election, saying Mills was entitled to it on his record in the legislature. TA SURE Tuere's Gan@une ar TO KNOW YOU INSPECTED IT T BALE OF Corton || PERHAPS IT Iss. BUT, BY DER VAY, WAss (F we DIT YOU SURE IT HASS BEEN INSPECTET Re For Bo.k vervist Boi s! Sy GouLy, I FoRaor ABOUT DEM. DEY RUIN COTTON, IS HE PROGRESSIVE? Mills was the recognized champion of labor legislation, having fathered 11 bills indorsed by the State Federation of Labor, and fighting hard for many others of general benefit to the people. Away back in 1893, Mills voted for the right of women to vote. In the legislature he helped secure the fol- laws: employes when not busy; sanitary condi. In laborers in the lumber woods against time check sharks; reg- ulating employment ies; establishing free state employ ment bureaus; abolishing free passes and franks; Increasing taxes on railroads, express cars, sleeping care and freight line companies and also life Insurance companies; discouraging se lobby work; punishing the illegal use of 19 purity and the secrecy of the ballot; la on repairs of railroads; reducing the le of per cent; reducing the of interest on tax cer tiflcates to 10 per cent; publishing applicatio: for franchises; protecting trade and commerce against trusts and combinations. uae aun ghey 8 Dee on ere Dae ‘t want Mills elected. standpatters Fay ¥ THE SEATTLE STAR MEMBER OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS ‘Telegraph News Service of the United Preas Association. PICK UP THAT fHPER “ST *T CAMS FOR THAT | » PARROT I Lepr Here ee? JUST NOW,” “SURE Here > 4s I . * wo Yese. J ATVICR You SEARCH DOT COTTON THOROUGHLY FoR, BOLL VEEVILS, ADOLPH, OR YouR BALE Q5TS NIBRLED 4yAyY TO NQDDINGS. APART INCH BY INCH, UND IT LOOKS ALL RIGHT —BUT How THere's MY witness, cHier Seven! COME ELEVEN: \, RDS BY SCHAEFER—MUSIC BY MACDONALD VILL LEVER GET IT Back Uke iy wace ti? JUDGE TALLMAN HAS PLAN | TO DECREASE DIVORCE: HE'D | REFUSE IF HUBBY CAN WORK Judge Boyd J. Tallman has afof court plan for decreasing divorces. He would employ the lazy husband The remarks by the court were provoked by the case of Delema| |law more frequently than at pres-/Kennedy vs. J. H. Kennedy—| ent. | wherein the wife testified the hus-| Last week, when a score of men| band never worked longer than to and women who had found matri-|earn enough money with which to mony distasteful, presented them-| buy clothes for himself, and that selves to him for divorce decrees.| nearly ever since marriage she the judge announced from the/had had to support herself—and bench that he wished the prosecut-/some of the time, him, too, by | ing attorney and his deputies | working in the Supply laundry at) | would work to have the state log-| $s a week islature pass an amendment to the| Kennedy was law governing divorces for pon-| court room, and support, where personal service | him testify had been made, so he might | reluctance empowered to summon the default He seemed perfectly willing the ing husband, and send the shift-\givorce should be granted. He lens culprit to the stockade, before! said he quit supporting his wife! considering a divorce. |only when she tnsisted on going to If the guards at the stockade! work—much against his will. | found that hubby able-bodied The judge longed to send the and could grub stumps satisfac-|eentioman to the stockade, he tortly, Judge Tallman would refuse| said Hut he granted the divorce, the divorce, and bid the ne'erdo- ag the next best thing. | well henceforth to provide for his a | wife, on pat being in contempt | ee ee | Senator Hide Ww, Whbeler| | married William L. Wheeler, =: | present in the the judge made) Kennedy spoke with told Judge Tallman, trouble began. Mis family, staunch IN FIVE MINUTES |foresaw difficulties, and opposed | | the marriage, but to no avail. | | ig | constantly nted =her for her) Catholics, SPINNING’S SAVINGS shoes, boots, harness, belts, etc. shoes will wear twice can dispense with rubbers if yo: col, U Save 5c. 15¢ 2-Oz. Bottle LePage’s Glue No. 63 Miller’s Falls Hack Saw Gauge cut to depth set for. 150 44-Pt. Fancy Aluminum Cup 15e Oll-Tempered St Blade WON io do ccien’, sick . Made by Cassady-Pairbank. well-made, handy vegetable or knife. A sharp, fast, easy-running sa’ values bis own or his help's time. $1.00 Doz. Gillette Safety Razor We will endeavor to merit dise for less money. | SPINNING’S CASH . STORE Inthe Editor’s Mail WELLS ON EIGHT-HOUR LAW Editor The Star: It is a surpris- ing thing to me that newspapers of even doubtful reputation for ve make the remarkable Clamps on hack saw biade so you only 25c¢ Can Viecol Waterproof Shoe Dressing 20 Softens, preserves and waterproots Your jong and you eo Vis -.-10¢ Depth 2c 9 Paring 106 sty, paring $2.75 4-Ft. Lance Tooth Sheffield One- $222 A profitable investment for any one who age by serving more and better merchan- SAY, ADOLPH, L How REMEMBER ~ Bolt VEEVILS DON'T GET IN DER 1415 Entered at Seattle, Wash. Postoffice as Second-Ciase Matter, You JUST Now misstatements contained in the at- to atx mon.: six mow. $1.80; year $3.25 y, 250 & month. By mail, out of etty, $$ per mon. up. By carrier. o Pr Star Publishing Co. Phone, Main 9400. Private Vabiianed Dally by The Star Pr we rhe Humphrey, Servant of Special Privilege N ENEMY of labor, Congressman Humphrey of Seattle, during the discredited regime of Speaker Cannon, throttled Senator La Follette’s bill to give American seamen a square deal. Humphrey was a member of the rivers and harbors committee. Here is what Senator La Follette of Wisconsin, progressive republican, says about Humphrey, standpat republican: 4 “To prevent action on this bill, the house committee on) merchant marine and fisheries shut up shop and went out of business for the rest of the session. =f “To the appeal of Andrew Furuseth of the Seamen’s/| Union of America that the bill be acted upon in the com- ' mittee, either favorably or adversely, that the house might act upon it according to the will of the majority, it was Hum- pl who answered: ‘NEVER AS LONG AS I CAN HELP IT: LET THERE BE NO MISUNDERSTANDING ABOUT THAT.” Further, Senator La Follette says: “So when a congressman is a representative for an in- terest he becomes, by exchange of courtesies, through the log- rolling that obtains in legislation through the influence of the organization, the representative for all the interests, for the system. THUS, WHILE HUMPHREY IS PRI- MARILY CHAMPION OF THE SUBSIDIES FOR THE SHIPPING INTERESTS, HE IS SECONDARILY, BUT NO LESS FAITHFULLY, THE CHAMPION OF ALL} THE INTERESTS. THE RECORD SHOWS HIM THROUGHOUT HIS. CONGRESSIONAL SERVICE, WHEN NOT GIVING HIMSELF ENTIRELY TO HIS SPECIALTY OF SHIPPING SUBSIDIES, VOTING GEN- ERALLY THE SYSTEM PROGRAM. HIS RECORD SHOWS HIM A REGULAR OF THE CANNON MA- CHINE. “In the 60th congress the ‘Record’ shows Humphrey vot-| ing to maintain system control through the Cannon rules;/| voting for Cannon, arch champion of privilege, for speaker; | voting for the consolidation of coal entries in Alaska for the| Morganheims; voting for the Aldrich-Vreeland currency bill| to tighten the grip of the ysstem’s financial interests upon the country’s currency; opposing and voting against the con-| servation of natural resources as embodied in the Pinchot- Roosevelt measure for the creation of forest reserves in the Appalachian and White mountains. “Humphrey served the system with his votes for the amendments to the commerce bill to promote railroad consoli- | dations and monopoly; for the Dalzell gag rule to put through | A POSTAL BANK BILL ACCEPTABLE TO WALL STREET FINANCE, AND IN THE INSURGENT UP- RISING HUMPHREY VOTED ON EVERY ROLL CALL WITH EMINENT SERVILITY FOR CANNON, CANNONISM AND THE SYSTEM.” To get rid of Humphrey, voters of Seattle and King county must unite on Austin E. Griffiths. KOVNO—A first-class fortress, capital of the Russian government of the same name, situated at the confluence of the Villa with the Niemen or Memel, It is about 120 miles due east of Koenigsberg, in Kast Prussia, and 45 miles east of the Russian-Prussian frontier. The distance to St. Petersburg ts 606 miles, In the present campatgn it is important chiefly because of its powerful fortifications. The city ‘s @ prosperous manufacturing place in times of peace. Popula- tion, over 78,000, VARENNES—A amall town in the valley of the Aire, 8 miles northeast THREW INTO THE STREET. Jot Vienne and 15 miles northwest | of Verdun | TROYON—A strong fortress in the valley of the Meuse, about 18 miles south of Verdun GRAND JUNCTION, Colo., Oct. 12.—A 22-ton boulder crashed down @ mountain side 18 miles east of here yesterday and demolished a smoking car and day coach of the |train, killing three persons and in |Juring 14, including Falcon Joslin, Fairbanks, Alaska, capitalist and promoter. Joslin sustained an tn. Jury of the hip. He continued his Journey west. Golden Opportunities are of- fered in Star Want Ads. “on PRS POL Sike: PLE JOSLIN INJURED Denver and Rio Grande passenger | * INDIGESTION, GAS | If what you just ate is sourtng on | your stomach or Hes like a lump of lead, refusing to digest, or you belch gas and eructate sour, undi gested food, or have a feeling of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and }stomach headache, you can surely |get relief in five minutes. Ask your pharmacist to show you the formula, plainly printed on these fifty-cent cases of Pape's| Diapepsin, then you will under-| stand why dyspeptic troubles of all/ kinds must qo, and why it relieves sour, out-oforder stomachs or in-| digestion in five minutes. “Pape's Diapepsin” {8 harmless; tastes| like candy, though each dose will] digest and prepare for assimila | tion {nto the blood all the food! | you eat; besides, it makes you go |to the table with a healthy appe | tite; but what will please you most }is that you will feel that your |stomach and intestines are clean and fresh, and you will not need to |resort to laxatives or liver pills | for billousness or constipation. This city will have many “Pape's Diapepain” cranks, as some people will call them, but you will be en-| thusiastic about this splendid | stomach preparation, too, if you jever take it for indigestion, gases, |heartburn, sourness, dyspepsia, or any stomach misery | Get some now, this minute, and | rid yourself of stomach misery and | indigestion in five minutes | ‘SAVEYOURMONEY ANDEYES | wo ag, ROW esr WORLD. you, IN THE 1 lento ao Inve my INVIS | ‘- Double Vision | in BESTIN THE | WORLD | joww than. $18, | ie the world’s lens perfection, 705 Wirst Ave., Washington Bidg. | Dr. Edwin J. Brown Main 86 OPTICAL DEPARTMENT cated for walk Protestant beliefs, she said yester-|Tacity will a ¥, after they were wed in Los Angeles, in 1907, At times he) choked her, and cursed her. “He called me a heretic,” said) the woman, “and, of course, I re | sented it. Then he put a pillow on my face, and sat on the pillow.” such a palpable misrepresentation | tacks now being made upon the pro- posed eight-hour law by two news papers of this city. It is rather hard to imagine that & newspaper would care to publish | Kague; | Wellen; “He showed consideration, there,|as that contained in the morning at least,” said the court. “Divorce | paper of a recent date, and endorsed granted.” by Mayor Gill see | Mr. Gill is a lawyer, Has he been Josephine Utley was forbearing | misquoted, or has he not read the for a while. She didn't object to|elght-hour initiative measure? supporting Arthur P, Utley with| A repeated attempt has been made money left from a former husband. |to create an impresion that if the But when he was arrested with | eight-hour bill passes it will necess!- another woman, she decided she |tate additional nurses, firemen and had enough of him. Divorced. lother city employes. Not until thet! morning paper article, however, had any legal authority been quoted, and cee F. Warren Kelly didn't pay the hotel bille at Prince Rupert, so Helen Z. Kelly came back to mother in Seattle, and yesterday | charged that hubby falled to sup port. But {t didn’t get by. Said the court, as long as bubby was/ providing for her, it didn't matter | 2’)? 1 if he paid his bills or not. It the| BMPLOYE. hotel didn't throw ther out, she| The law makes the working of em couldn't charge truthfully "non. | Ployes more than 48 hours per week, support |with certain exceptions, unlawful The judge refused to grant a di-| for any “person, corporation, com vores. The young wife wilted Mke|P@ny or joint stock association.” a flower, So did her mother, See-| After the law is passed city em-| ing this, the girl put her arm | Dloyes might be worked 16 hours a around her mother, and patted her | 44y, if not prevented by other legis. encouragingly on the shoulder. lation. The eight-hour law will be passed | k | by the state to regulate private bus-| It's getting pretty fierce when | inogs, There can be no supposition feller can’t go to lodge without his/that it applies to the state itself wife tearing all his clothes off, a8 | iinloss that wore aia th punishment, fsn't it? Alex AM | the law HULET M. WELLS. asked, Rilla Graham did it to him, | : he said, Also, she was jealous Whenever he got a job she feared he was meeting another woman, so she would tell damag ing stories to his boss, Alex. would then get canned. She used to leave home and be gone for a week. Also, says Alex she swore like a pirate. Divorced eee mayor {s not familiar with his sub- ject Now, the truth of the matter ts, that the proposed law has ABS LUTELY NO APPLICATION TO} Y CITY, COUNTY OR STATE I Yorks Giants. RECKLESS HUNTERS Editor The Star: How can a far |mer protect himself from reckless hunters? If I put up signs, the hunters tear them down, and if T tell them to get off my place, the they have a hunter's » and Jean go any place and shoot any thing they have a mind to Iam no hunter, never having shot ja bird in my life, and don’t care for |the sport, because I am able to make an honest living. All I want 1s pro. jtection for myself and family and stock. Some other products of the di vorece mill Cc M vs. Elsie Warrant; Kagenji vs, Shijen Mitant; Carrie o. va. Albert C. Bast; Alice vs. G W. Blvoy; Lida ve. Charles Gun. die; Estelle M. vs. Bernard H. Lemming; Rachael J, H. vs. John Montgomery; Ada vs, George Me. Allie L. vs. Alex, P. Pusey; May vs. Samuel Mikkleson; Dan jel vs, Carrie Hopkins; Myrle vs. Roy L. Ogden; Anna vs. Joseph ¥, Agnes vs. Charles A ~ Hayes; Minerva J. vs, George F. 9 Coburn; Jeasio vs. Robert crapin; RAW JUDGE'S WIF Eva L. ve, John C. Tetherapie; —_— Signe vs. Charles Freeman; Mae| Mrs. Estella Humphries, wife vs. John T. McKin; Tranquilla J. Judge John EB. Humphries, w ve. George J. Winstrum. drawn to serve as a juror, | I came near getting shot at my |own front gate the other day, and my children hardly dare to go to school for fear of getting struck by bullets A. W. PETERSON, Novelty, Wash. I am inclined to belleve that the) of tine. deal, non. My tmby fs very puny. Cam tell m¢ of something make him strong?— GREY Garlt has often been good siccess. Whith side of the bed most ¢omfortable?—Amos G p on either lds. Do sot si he top, My clock strikes an hour It annoys What shall I do? Strike it back. Cay you tell me who vonnie, ~ tal frould Ik toh farding the condi (Our conmult! song beginning hearts that are weary ee apect Fyears of experience, and of your condition will be *eWwith the ald of fret clase sa od ulpment we “ ati and you our ability to AN wor electrical INVESTIGA’ ouR r PLA Prebably a member of . ‘ion of yout 4 alte hae SaNsweneD BY MR. CYNI as ; What shall I take to reliem counterpane?’—Mrs. A. Bo” Why not try @ physician? [9aa2>

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