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STAR—SATURDAY, DEC. 12, 1914. PAGE 5. ' UNIVERSITY IN DIRE NEED OF GIRL VICTIM OF ATROCIOUS MURDER AND MAN WHO CONFESSED TO SMUGGLING HER WANT KITCHENS 'LUMBER MILLS SET UP TO FEED SOON TO RESUME CITY'S JOBLESS, OPERATIONS MOORE | Tonight 8:30 A plan for feeding the unem- A general improvement tn the ployed of Seattle this winter | lumber industry, which probably cheaply and with a minimum of | will enable a number of mills forced ie has been proposed by T. | to shut down from lack of business $. Cassidy and C. Kelgard, | to resume operations about the mid which meets with the cautious | dle of January is looked for by sev approval of Mayor Gill, eral Seattle lumbermen Or, M. A. Matthews, to whom | President W. M. Bolcom of the the plan has been outlined, | Boloom Mills Co. declared Saturday says he believes it would wor }he ts expecting large orders from }the interior. Rolcom anticipates the business In years. The prospects also look bright to President John 8, Brace of the Brace & Hergert mill Brace stated Saturday indications point to quite an improvement in the local lumber market. If euch an improvement comes, Brace hopes to mill In Seattle operating me daily REPRIEVES ’EM Dee Gov. Hunt the six murderers to hang at Dec. 19. The pian is thie: The establishment on vacant lots | of kitchens which could be open, say, from 6 to 9 tn the morning and from 5 to 7 at night, thus giv ing the people resorting to them time to search for work between meals. Bach kitchen would be equipped with a gas plate for cooking Unemployed men would n up the food about the city, as th are doing now, with wagons, but be no waste. Cassidy told 3 GIN yesterday, “organized spends 20 per cent of its money on relief and 80 per cent on th ministration of relief 1 b that we can reverse that ratio » that the cost of maintaining kitchens would be 20 per cent leas.” Cassidy, in whose mind the ide Ofiginated, hopes to persuade the ety or private individu o fur nish the necessary capital for t or three experimental kitcher abont $100 “I have figured it ont nourishing meal can at & cost of two cents, sidy “I suggest that books of tickets be printed and sold to the public at & cost of two cents a ticket. Then when a man strikes you for the price of a meal you could give him & ticket. As it is now, when you give him a nickel, he spends {t at Ope of the cheapest restaurants, where he gets two cents’ worth of food and the restaurant men get & profit of three cents—a big source of waste in indiscriminate charity “1 believe that these kitchens should be established tn all the cities of size on the coast, in order that no one city may have to bear ,more than its share of the burden of caring for the unemployed “Bach city could then take care of its own poor.” Kelgard, who is associated with Cassidy, was at the head of the As sociation of Enforced Idle Unem- ployed at Vancouver, and he was the author of the municipal em- ployment bureau {dea there. But for the bureaus the anthort | tles admit there would have been rioting in Vancouve: PHOENIX reprieved today who were condemned the Florence state prison leve school socle to all sob Pitt ties will diers in Second Church of Christ, Scientist, Of Seattle, Washington Announces a Free Lecture on George Shaw Ck, C.S.B. Member of the Board of Lee tureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Set entist, In Bostbn, Massachusetts. and cordially invites the public to be present at Junction Hall, Rallard, Monday, December 14, 1914, at 8 o'clock p. m. weg Sunday send Bibles nropean war that a provided says Cas. SALMON Guarantend to arrive Im perfect com dition. Shipped in lee and re-toet Gaily by express company untt) dest Cigar kaleer dale sells for $72.50 at Red Cross) @uction in London. | In Seattle in House Heating Furnaces OKE is light, clean, smokeless and highly ef- ficient. It is easily handled, requires little attenfion and is a cheap fuel We now have two grades of coke, Oven Coke, which is sold for $6.00 per ton, and Bench Coke at $5.50 per ton at the yards. For Metallurgical Purposes Use Oven Coke This coke is unexcelled where a hard fuel is lesirable for high heats and a lasting fire. The SACRAMENTO, Cal, Deo, 12 One of the most atrocious murder ever perpetrated has been commit. | ted here tn the killing of Margaret | Milling, @ 10-year-old child, tn the basement of the German Lutheran church. Dear Cynthia Grey: to express my opinion to plexed.” | 1 would suggest to you that you| get acquainted with the other part lof the man you Intend to marry, plexed.” Do not satisfied | with what you see stalking around on two lege, His mode of thinking | will make or break your happiness, with his | thinker. / The soul or character of one per-| | eon becomes visible to another by; hie thoughts, utterances and ac- tions. A man so narrow minded that he will turn you away for a/ cause of which the fault is not your own and has positively no ef-| fect on you mentally or physically, | can hardiy be the man you think | you are marrying. You must get) tid of all doubts or your happiness will be blunted to the extent of these doubts, in other words, you will be living In fear. You need not teil your fiance of your birth, but by using a little cleverness you can bring up the subject In a casual way and find out where he Is, not only on this subject, but all other subjects that may affect your future happl ness. If he is not interested and refuses to discuss subjects of this nature, then beware, for he is a self-centered man and thinks only of matters which are of importance to hie own happiness and welfare. | f you are a person of ordinary Intellect, which, by your letter to Cynthia Grey, | have reasons to believe you are, should you find! your flance very narrow minded, | |to you, hie looks will change im-| mediately and you will wonder how | you could ever have thought him! even fair looking. MENTAL SCIENTIST. Q—Where are jumping beans rown, and what es them fomp? Where can | obtain some? SERIOUS. A.—Various large seeds of euphorbiaceous plants are some times infested with the larvae of certain moths, which, by thetr movements, make the seeds roll, and even jump, as if alive, hence, | they recetved the name of “jump- ing beans.” The larvae spin co- coons in the seeds, a large part of |the interior of which they have de-| voured, and when ready to emerge as adults, push open a previously jeut circular door which has been |kept shut by silken threads, Both species are found In Central Amer- | }and confessed under the merciless ehild David Fountain, Confessed Murderer, in Custody of Detective David Fountain, janitor of the church, was arrested op suspicion, lash it» the fi was of police examination. who reported tiny body and it} who identified the| Upon —_exa fully broken the sacred cbains| of matrimony and robbed little chil dren of thelr own? Certainly you would not. Then the one honorable thing for you to do ts to stay completely away from married men and make them stay away from you. Q.—! have a youn working and who doesn't care much how she inconveniences other peo- ple for her own comfort. 6he ran @ bill at one of the department stores in my married sist me, who knew nothing of it until she re ceived a bill. Pienee tell me if my married eleter will be compelied to pay for It. A. A—Certainly not. If the girl posed as her married sister, she must pay for the Dill. If the store allowed her to charge things tn her Sater’s name, without first gaining | the consent of the sister, they did #o at thelr own risk Q—We were Invited to dinner on the night of our arrival her: the person who enterta’ ue sup- posed to call on us or do we owe her a call? MRS. T. A.—Etiquette requires that the guests shall call upon the hostess during the week foMowing the din-| ner party. The call should never be delayed longer than a fortnight This rule applies to all who re- celved invitations, whether they were accepted or not Q—Can you give a short toast to be offered at a stork shower? Also, what would be a suitable gift f the guest of honor? MR A Here's to the stranger, about to appear; Laughing and chubby, dimpled and dear. Here's to the father and mother| to be; May they all live long and right happtly.” A hand-painted china stork plate! will be a suitable gift from the! hontess to the honor guest Police raid Powell Social club in| in Francisco and arrest 70 members. First | ately ination, the delinquent by uperiority of coke over other forms of hard fuel is well known to all who have used it for any length of time Shop and factory owners may now secure this vigh-grade coke right here at hore. All coke orders are given prompt attention. SEATTLE LIGHTING COMPANY PHONE: MAIN 6767. CAN, BE CURED Free Proof To You 8 free trial treat- J.C. Mutesll, RP, te onveersr jour name and address #o I can send yo AIT want is your na Spek wel os T want you just to try this treatment — that Ya my only argument. I've been in the drug busines: : every one knows me, and kno ond fifty-four people outnl’ Statements, been cured t public a short time ago. If you have Kexemn. pad—my treatment | Wayne for treatment ne have, ace since I first ding to their own made this offer ind how ve mem Tetter—never er saw coupon below and The wonders et the tinh trial treatment I wa in your own case will be CUT AXD MAT re J. C. HUTZELL, Druggist, 507 Weat Main St., Fort Wayne, Ind. with TODAY Pleane send. ut cont biieation to me, your Free Proof Treatment Name rostoftice wate. Strest and No Presbyterian Church Cor. Seventh and Spring M. A, Matthews, D, D,, Minister fea, Mexico, and the Southwestern | United States, they are called “broncho beans.” where | | | Q@—Can a person of foreign birth land parents, under any conditions, er become president of the Unit ed States? H. | A ; read article 2, section 1, paragraph 6, of the constitution of| the United States, Children of |American citizens born while par. ents were residing abroad tem porarily are citizens of the United States; thus children of American | diplomats living In foreign lands are United States citizens. Evening Sermon, 7:30 o'clock he Church Ledger.” Eventing Sermon, 7'30 o'clock —“Will Seattie’s Criminals Come Back?” A Church With a Warm Welcome for You, | @—Gome time ago | stored my jault case in a hotel In a near-by leity. Since coming away, the hotel closed, Can you advise me how to beautiful Fur Tur- Can be Neckplec bana Model Millinery Co. remade into uffs and et Milling, ¢ corpse revealed the fact that the girl bad been assaulted and had fought with her assailant desper She had been badly beaten ath was due to strangulation being incarcerated, Foun- tain has been declared mentally tate Medical Super and Since WHY MY HUSBAND LEFT ME’ Are you reading Miss Cynthia Grey's articles on divorce, writ ten from the woman's view: point, “Why My Husband Left Me"? The Star already has printed two of the series. The third will be published Monday. Do you have mieunderstandings with your husband, Mrs. Reader? Or, Mr. Reader, do BRADFORD WILL BREAK UP S. E, COMPANY GAME In reply to « communication from the city council, Corporation Counsel Bradford Saturday declar ed he will stand rendy to prosecute cases in behalf of private citizens who are denied steam hoat service by the Seattle Electric Co, unless they agree to take electric service from the private company instead of the city plant. Bradford gives opinion that the company ts com pelied to furnish heat to appli cants, regardiess of whether they use city or company electric serv- foe. 4, He declares the contract company requires applicants to sign, 80 as to club stean-heat users into taking the company’s lighting service also, is illegal. it as his legal the Andrew Carnegie te against Christmas truce plan for warring Europeans. | Vittucei Importing Co. Place Coffee on Market By placing Sublime Coffee upon the market, the Vittuect Importing Company adds another creditable item to its already well-known line of pure foods. Sublime Baking Powder, Syrap, Extracts and Mincemeat have already become widely used through thelr high quality and the co-operation of deniers and newspapers, and the Subliine name gives promise of ex- tending throughout all the West ern states. In speaking of his progre seph Vittucet, president of tucel Importing Company, “Seattle housewives are showing more and more favor to local prod. Jo- |ucts and are helping much towa: » Seattle payroll Products building a big purchasing home goods. | NEW BUILDINGS, The most phenomenal growth lever experienced by an American university, and perhaps by any unl | versity, has been that of the Unt. | versity of Washington | Fifteen years ago it was a little college, housed in four buildings, on a large tract of land, mostly | uncleared ‘There were then, tn dents enroll with members to instruct th During the present year there will more than students registered in the u exclu sive of the summer sessior The teaching staff now nearly 200 men and womer Bulidings Big Problem But in one regard the university has not been able to keep pace with ite growth, and that is in the matter of buildings to ommodate ite jstudents and house its classes and laboratories. pt for the university ple Alaska-Yhkon-Pa fund, no year of t ween a single new t on the University campus. Not since 1901 has the state erected for the university any build |ing paid for from the general taxa- tion fund The buildings obtained at the time of the A.-Y.-P. have sufficed, at considerable expense, until now The reason they have sufficed is that not only were the permanent buildings obtained at that time in- corporated in the university plant, but many of the exporition build ings, temporary structures, were pressed into service, Money Wasted on Repairs | The temporary exposition build- ings were not suited to university |purposes. They were not intended | to be. exposition 1899, 288 eta 19 faculty be 2,200 includes additions made from to the the has ding erected he Murdered Girl jintendent F. W. Hatch and Dr, C B. Jones. Upon a grilling “Third Degree,” the prisoner admitted that he had |served five prison terms in the East, and also be had been fined for nearly two years tn asylum for the insane in Io con the you sometimes find It diffleult to have patience with your the Perhaps you will find your counterpart In one of these articles. Per: haps It will show you where the trouble ile it will mean your happiness. Read them. been crumbling fast | Bach year since 1909 they have cost the university money for re- pairs and alterations. Recently President Landes had a committee of the faculty make a survey of the university's plant and organization, to determine the pros- pect for handling further growth. That committee reported to the president that 2,600 students w the absolute capacity of the unive sity, The university enrollment will be within 400 of that point this yea: Before the legislayare of 1917 meets, the registration certainly will exceed 2,600. The university will be compelled turn students away from its doors, unle: affords the university relief by ap- propriating for at least a home eco- nomics building and one recitation hall. life’ CITY FATHERS -WRANGLE OVER RENTON OFFER Several packages, of the lin- guistic variety, were handed across the table in the council room Friday afternoon, and several wagers were made and not taken, during another one of those “conferences’ $1,300,000 Pp jon to have the city buy the Renton line. William Crawford, former preat- dent of the Renton line, was de- | nominated a “human hedgehog” by James Tulloch, a Rainier ley citizen. Tulloch also took a crack at Councilman Dale's plan to sell the municipal railways to the Seattle Electric Co. He said it would be “an act of political suicide.” Thereupon Dale fessional “I am not overjoyed with the po- sition of councilman,” h id Counctiman Luo this package | “Dale thinks the city is the jagent of the Seattle Electric com |pany and that ali the city council has to do is to go to Judge Frater and petition him to ask that com- pany to buy the Renton line—and | presto, {it will be immediately bought.” Couneflman Marble got into the festivities by stating the price and conditions demanded by the Ren ton receivers are entirely too ex orbitant and begged to be excused from further “conferences” of the nature so far provided. J, D. Blackwell offered $100 to start a petition for the securing of money to raise the tracks of the Renton line without cost to the company if the receivers will agree {not to hold up street litigation any longer. Scott Calhoun, one of the re celvers, offered to bet Assistant |Corporation Counsel Pierce $100 if HIS WILD NIGHT made his con. .” he y handed Dale “Do you Raj dance the ‘Crazybone Mr. Mufficin Vell, some of my friends tell me I did the other night, but I don’t re- member a thing about it.” They were intended for the} In the last two years they have) the legislature of 1915) the latter can prove the statement ARRAIGN COLLYER Sunday, Monday and Tuesday | Matinees Daily (Except Sunday) ward §. of Washington | | Lower Floor 50c ” Balcony 25¢ | Matinees All Seate 25¢ All Seats Reserved ‘EX-MAYOR GARDEN OF VANCOUVER DIES VANCOUVER, B. C,, Dec. 12— James Ford Garden, former mayor of Vancouver, and a member of the legislature, died here yesterday, fol- lowing a stroke of apoplexy. He was 67 years old. Garden was an intmiate friend of Sir Richard McBride, the two hav- ia formed acquaintance in the leg- islature. CALIFORNIA ONLY $117.50 Jacksonville and Retum Correspondingly Low Rates| |that are equal or superior to {m-| | ported goods in quality and condi-| that Calhoun told the federal court tion of manufacture now have ev-|the line could not be operated for lery chance for success, This/less than 80% of the receipts. friendly attitude is the greatest aid| It was a very large and interest \in establishing local industry.” ing afternoon, WILL VOTE ON SUFFRAGE AND PROHIBITION WASHINGTON, Dec. house rules committee today re OHIO METHOD IN DENTISTRY are replaced by 12.—The to Other Florida D. ©. Colyer, who shot and killed | 5a | Destinations William Smith on November 23 last on suspicion of robbery, Sat- urday pleaded not guilty by reason of insanit, November 24, 1914 Portland. Mt. Shasta. Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, February 20, 1915. | recover my property? P.M. | A.—Write to the chief of police of that city, explaining your case, and ask him to assist you in recov ering your sult case. If you have a check or anything to prove you! left the suit case at the hotel, e: close it in your letter. Q—1! want to ask your advice on| a very serious subject. | ama young girl of 19 and very much in love with a married man, who has children, Don’t think | am foolish or crazy, | think he likes me pretty well in return; in fact, well enough | to ve hie family; but | don’t want to break up a home, so if you| will please advise me | will thank| you alwa, MARY, A—In the first place, a girl who! |is not foolish or crazy would not de- liberately allow a man whom she | knows to be married and the father of children to make love to her. And the man, why he is not as good ar a cowardly yellow cur, and no self-| respecting girl would love him. Provided this man 8 not making a plaything of you and Is serious in his intention to deser his wife and family for you, could you trust him? And would you be Sth Floor, Second, a ry WHY SCRATCH? RESINOL WILL STOP THATITCH? The moment that Resinol Oint- ment touches itching #kin the itch ing stops and healing begins, That is why doctors have prescribed {t successfully for nineteen years in even the severest cases of ecze- ma, tetter, ringworm, rashes and | other tormenting, disfiguring skin | eruptions, Alded by warm baths | with Resinol Soap, Resinol Oint-| ment makes the skin or sealp per-| fectly healthy, quickly, easily and| at little cost Resinol Ointment containg nothing harsh or injurious and can ‘be used on the tenderest or most frritated surface. Practically every drug. gist sells Resinol Ointment (50c and $1), and Resinol Soap (260). | Missing teeth The Ohio Method by artificial teeth that are natural as your original teeth. Examinations are now be- ing conducted without charge, and We Stand Back of Our Work for 12 Years’ Guarantee. Guaranteed $15 Set of Teeth $5 $10 Solid Gold or Porcelain Crown ...... ridge Work .. Solid Gold Fillings Office hours, 8:30 to 6 Sundays, 9 to 12 207 UNIVERSITY STREET entimates are furnished in all cases $25 Set of Teeth $8 Guaranteed 10 Gold or Porcelain Other Fillings CORNER SECOND AVENUE ported favorably on a rule to bring up the Hobson national prohibition amendment on December 22. It also reported favorably on a tule to bring up the Mondell woman suffrage amendment resojution on a vote immediately thereafter. 'TRIES TO DIE; FAILS; | NOW HE'LL GET HIS Walter Tyler was to have en- |tered a plea Saturday to the erlm- {nal prosecution against him in Judge Taliman's court But he failed to show up, and |the court excused him because he |1s laid up in the county hospital. The charge against ‘Tyler is at-|. We satisfy and please all our pa- Pin Be gp tients—not only by our painless If he recovers, he will have to| Work, but also by our low prices stand trial, jand the excellent quality of work- The law makes {t a penitentiary |™anship which goes into every offense to fail in suicide attempts, |lece of, work that leaves this of- Baoctde sc thoadlaesesssatbae ice, Remember, we positively THIEVES GET AUTO {don’t hurt a bit. W. B, Come, 6314 20th ave. N, B,| Regal Dental Offices reports that thieves stole a four DR. L. R, CLARK, MGR, assenger Hupmobile from his gar- 1405 Third Avenue Friday night, N. W. Corner Third and Union DR. L. R, CLARK, D. D. 8. With Regal Dentistry She says: | “1 had molar teeth extracted by |the Regal Dentists, It was a com- |plicated task, but the work was done very ‘successfully, and I heartily recommend the Regal Dentists to any one needing dental work. “MRS. J. A. MYERS, “1221 41st North.” Mrs. Myers Is Well Satisfied Panama-California Exposition, San Diego, Jan, 1, 1915. Del Monte. Paso Robles. Santa Barbara. Yosemite.) Los Angeles. Riverside. New Orleans Mardi Gras. SOUTHERN PACIFIC c. G. CHISHOLM District Freight and Passenger Agent. Elliott 1256 720 SECOND AVENUE