The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 11, 1914, Page 4

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STAR—WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 1914. PAGE 4 "COMS WITH MS, AND Te Stow You. SHE BOILe ey ir—* ALL RIGHT, MAMMA, rm SHoviNG IT! 7A (0-INCH RECORD bo SOrr-BoiLeo ayo a ‘wheres (9 IT I2-INCH RECORD WHORG'? THE Music Box f* “Ma HAS (TW THS KITCHEN? WERE A DISAPPOINTMENT |THE. WOLVES WORDS BY SCHAEFER—-MUSIC BY MACDONALD y GOOD NicHT! _ ms — 7 HE MAY KAF MONEY “aoa 1 HOPE You PREEZE!! AT LAST 1 HAF REACHED DER | ” By Diss TIME DER SIBERIAN VILLAGE Gare, BUT |/ HOWLING Pack HASS EATEN ALONE. 1AM SORRY I HAT HIM, 1 GUESS UND SLUNK TO PITCH POOR ADOLPH 4. INTO DER FOREST. IT ISS OVERBOARD To DER BUT ge DoT 160 OLFSs! BACK IN DEM. Besires, (Tiss * A SVEET UND MELANCHOLY DUTY | OWE A FAITHFUL OLT COMRADE. FIND tiSs = CLOTHES. BRE SO IPORTAUT THAT kY REQUIAL 2 TEN ACRE ALLO TO SCRATCH A POBTCA! Combination Jumbo or Regular Gas Tip and Pilot The Jumbo gives more than three times the light of an ordinary Up and saves the expense of gas mantles, You can take the Jumbo off and use the regular, or use both together, without using any more gas. 100 2¥y-In. Wheel Dover &; They Ought to Put a Muzzle on Reuben Secretary Reuben W. Jones of the school board thinks football is a bad thing. Jones would do away with football, baseball and similar games now played in the schools. Jones says the brand of athletics indulged in by the grammar school boys of Seattle “is making gamblers and tinhorn sports” of them. He says that, mind you, of the hundreds of boys in Seattle schools who have taken up foot- bail and baseball for their direct physical better- ment, and of the splendid work done by the square, {THE SEATTLE STAR| _|MEMBER OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS || “Felegraph News Service of the United Prees Assectation | Entered at Seattle, Wash. Postoffice as Second-Ciass Matter. ‘mail, out of city, 35¢ per month up to 6 mos.; @ mos. $1.80; year $8.36. ae By carrier, city 28¢ @ month. Published Daily by The Star Publishing Co. C achange connecting all Phone Main 9400. Private mt. _ Just Look at It Again! _ of promoting good cheer, the basis of good times. AYBE you saw it in the figures of the telegraphic re- port, but we want to again show it to you, as a matter Comparing last September with September, 1913, we sent abroad twice as much wheat, 17 times as much sugar, | twice as much corn, three times as much oats, four times high-minded, intelligent men who are conducting these sports, many of them without any pay. © Jones is putting every conceivable obstacle in the way of the grade school coaches who are per- forming their thankless tasks, unaided and unre- warded. His interference is putting athletics on the decline in the elementary schools. Jones should wake up! We wonder if he ever thought of the danger the boys would be in if they kept away from out- door sports and provided no wholesome outlet for | were burned to death off the Vir. jxinia coast yesterday aboard the| While he was campaigning for the mahip Rembrandt. Capt | office of county treasurer as a pro | Elin thinks the fire was started by| Sre*stve. Shortly before he died he jasked the nurse the result of the He was told he had won, |then he lapsed {nto unconscious. ness and died. He was the low man | Britten st | German spies, TRAE eR oa Believe Me, I Sage Eat Everything KEEPING UP SPIRIT the bubbling spirits of youth. A swat in the shins, a punch in the Jaw, even a broken bone, is an injury that will easily heal, leaving no ill effects. Indeed, a certain amount of mauling seems to be rather good for growing boys. The greater danger by far, dear Mr. Jones, is that the youngsters, being denied the chance to join with their pals in open play, may learn to be tricky and sneaky and mean, There’s no escaping risks in this world. Better a bruised anatomy than a dislocated soul. 800 HORSES BURNED THOUGHT HE'D WON . Nov. 11.—Elght| DAVENPORT, Nov. 11.—Gus W Wilke died at a hospital here yes- terday of pneumonia, contracted | election. in the race. PETROGRAD, Nov. 11.—The Russians charge that to keep up the spirits of the people, the Austrians pack trains with thelr own soldiers, dressed in Rue sian uniforms, and make the public believe they are Russian For | Know @ Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet Will Digest Any Meal At Any Time. do we see men who and how often do we) wr men boasting of their) This should keep the-5c lever on our cash register working. to the Economies Here. {inthe Editor’s Mail WEAVER WRITES Editor The Star: In The Star there appeared an account of the debate by Dr. Theresa McMahon jand C. F. Patton, president of the Atlas Lamber Co., on the eight-hour initiative measure. Patton made the statement that to reduce the hours of labor in the mills would mean a corresponding reduction in wages of the poorly paid workingman, and mentions the |shingle weavers as the ones who will suffer most, It was Preston himself who last | July tried to force a 10 per cent re | duction {n wages upon his employes \at MoMurray, and was also hand-in- \slove with B. R. Lewis of Clear Lake in trying to get other shingle mill owners to do the same. When the union weavers refused to accept the reduction the other mill owners failed to join him in the crusade. SPINNING’S CASH STORE The Lowered Prices on Our Latest Price Sheet Merit a Beaten Path Gilad to Mail You One. 1415 Fourth 1417 Ave. eight-hour day. AS8 ‘WBA’ | EXTENT OF PRAYER? PR raged oa Star: Here is some worth printing: | “Karly in October the president | called upon the Christians to pray for peace in The prayers once said, the American Christians hurriedly arose, brushed the dust from their knees and proceeded to act upon the president's stirring calle to trade activity while the harvest is ripe. “One ammunition factory at Ak ton, IIL, received enough orders to keep it on the jump for six months, day and night, making lies for Buropean Christians to kill each other with. Other mills have orders for an immense amount of barbed wire from the allied Christians. “Stull other firms report large orders In blankets, cavalry saddles and other army supplies for the soldiers who are eagerly killing each other, but who do not know why, if you ask them.” R. E. BENSON. The mail carrier has not been in for nearly a week now, and it is feared he had to deliver some lett- ters at the Hog Ford still house.— abilities to eat, The secret of all health is diges | | tlon. The secret of digestion is the| juices which are suppiled by the| body to separate the {Ingredients needed from those that are of no ase to the system, - as much oat meal, ten times as much rice, ten times as much barley, 68 million dollars’ worth of foodstuffs as against 38 millions worth. This, notwithstanding that none of the plans for im-| provement of transportation facilities were in fair operation. | = OLD scHoocmarea! ~~ || Cheer up! Beat your hammer into a horn! Everybody You've PASSED Me POR Yese : : 4 : AD NEVER SD MUCH AX S4ID “GooD else is beating his plowshare into a bayonet. MORNING! BUT NOW YOU'RE RUNNING FOR Potiricas Ormoa! SHAKG, On Man $ SHAKE! __Prisoners. __The shingle weave: ire for the Hogwallow Kentuckian. | The Thing That Saves HEROKEE, in Iowa, in the heart of the “corn belt”—| though, as a matter of fact, it's wheat that makes that| Tegion boom—is a typical village of 4,000 souls; spick, span| and growing. | Not a great while ago a circus came to Cherokee—not a one-horse show, but a six-ring affair; the biggest circus| there is. | And, say, would you believe it? That day more than| 6,000 autos—get the number?—SIX THOUSAND whizzed into that 4,000 town, every one the property of a prosperous farmer. | Yet New York persists in its war funk and simply can’t believe that there’s a bit of business anywhere There's salvation in the soil. Transportation Schedules and Time Tables The Pessimist—“Your appetite | dinguets me. You eat like @ giant| sloth.” | The Optimist—“Belleve me, *! give my body what It tells me to give it, and whether It be mid. night or noon | always obey ap-| petite and then | eat a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet.” | When a hoavy meal has been : NW] eaten the entire body ts called upon A Faworite Son —_e—e80————_ | to furnish the digestive organs with HE completed returns show that, if all the fellows in| the strain, the weaker become the a . », ‘ ‘ forces to take care of the next meal Pennsylvania who didn t want Penrose in the esonta H's TOO NUMEROUS “You will find them on the same| ay well | had pooled their opposition, he’d have been licked. He—I'm going to leave this|shelf with the fluted table knives| A Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet alds , ther be fooled tha ; i yhy | hotel. They don’t give me enough | for peas.” Nature in Nature's own way. These : But they'd rather b Rng cs han pooled; which is why/hotel. Jimmy's Bad Luck little tablets are filled with the very feform gets so many set-backs She—Well, “Jimmy {8 such an unfortunate] ingredients and essences so need However, a state which in two years can swing all the| accustomed boy,” remarked old Mrs, Stimson.| ful to every normal and perfect way from T. R. to Penrose ought to be elastic enough to stand parties. |“He joined an athletic club, and| stomach, most anything. IMPROVED CUTLERY the first time he went there he If she can stand Penrose, the rest of us will have to “We have an order for noiseless | Toke one of the best records they perhaps they're not to cater to large A New Feature in the Telephone Directory Look in the PINK Section (Classified) under “TRANSPORTATION,” Pages 144-152. Boat Time Tables Steamer Time Tables Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet will di Kest 3,000 times Its weight in food Think {f you can what a big help this means to a depleted digestion Other Ingredients ald in building up One quality or ingredient of a ou joons. Where are they?’ | had.” fete soup pope nid Getting ‘Round It Lincoln Steffens, in a recent ad-| | dress, said Street Car Data Interurban Time Tables THERE 18 a market for broken glass. Some of It Is ground in fine, r-like particles and used for various purposes. At other times It is elted and made Into new glass objects, ‘MOOSE TO HOLD REJU VENATION MEET With a view to stiffening up the backbone of the county progressive Organization, precinct committeemen of the party will hold a meeting st the Good Eats cafeteria Friday evening, at 6 o'clock, to which all! | interested in its welfare are invited. The principal speakers will be Dan Landon, Al Lundin, Tom Murphine, W. D. Lane, Bob Hodge and Byron The defeated progressive candidates will also be present Phelps. HEADACHE STOPS, NEURALGIA GONE Nerve-racking, splitting or dull, throbbing headaches yield in just | a few moments to Dr. James’ Head ache Powders, which cost only 10 cents a package at any drug store. | It's the quickest, surest headache relief in the whole world. Don't suffer! Relieve the agony end dis- tress now! You can, Millions of men and women have found that headache or neuralgia misery is needless, Get wpat you ask for, “The wife of a child labor mill-| fonaire once asked him in some lt- tle disgust: “‘George, suppose you'd been born in the days when everybody had to live by the sweat of their brow. What would you do the: ‘I'd open a stand,’ George ai jswered, ‘for the sale of handker-| | chiefs.’ ” At the Bazar Hl Helper—We're going to have a big crowd here, and it'll be some Job to keep ‘em moving. Manager—That'll be easy, Take down that rear exit sign, post up the word “Free,” and they'll all bolt for it | Tablets have done for them, the digestive juices and blood. The stomach and intestines have thelr duties Ughtened and thus frritation, soreness and raw linings are per. mitted to be cured by the system naturally, quickly, harmlessly, * Thousands of dyspeptics and stomach sufferers would be glad to tell you what Stuart's: Dyspepsta This 1a what makes these tablets sold in every drug store in this country, price 50 cents. To anyone wishing a free trial of | these tablets please address F. A, | Stuart Co., 150 Stuart Bldg, Mar- shall, Mich, and a small sample package will be mailed free, ® Ferry Time Tables Location of Docks and Wharves Become Familiar With This Section for Future Reference Stage Time Tables The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company

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