The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 14, 1915, Page 4

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1915, PAGE 4, ST AR—WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, When You're] WELL Keep Well “*y HEAR SOMEBODY PREPARE FOR SUMMER NOW; SWAT THE FLY “WHAT! AND YOu. eur, mapa» | ME SNO ME Name was” SENT HIM AWAY?” sh MAAN © MNIE MAGOOT, \ #2 LLU HER TLL HER A TRYOUT AovIEs!" FOSS, THE AND=—— rUOYING BIG BOOM SEWARD, April 13.—Seward a town gone mad. It cele- rated again last night its se- lection as the tidewater ter- minal of the new government railroad, District Judge Fred Brown arrived and ad dressed a large gathering. This was followed by another ail- night dance. The town is still enjoying the carnival spirit today A stampede is on for lots here. Sales are frequent, with the same lote being turned is the time epare for when pe should days of A Mttle to one’s he this year haps n ying summer attention alth at when For Instance, a person can prevent a great deal of dis comfort and disease in the hot days by starving the fly in April and May Instead of hav- | ing to “swat” this germ-bear- | ing pest in July and August Starve the flies by keeping the house, particularly the kitchen, scrupulously clean and the gar OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT. ‘TRUE Sage pall taittiy coversh 1 we was if GOT WHAT HS DEIERvVGED, leuffering f vecuTep ' ALL RIGHT. — ie aearaneny WA SHY. is V over two or three times, each time at a big increase. s need Another stampede is under way to the Ship Creek district, from which construction work is to start. Already a couple of hundred men are in waiting for employment to the cit need ¢ om ma ria will toes out ¢ it NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF “NEWSPAPERS Teicgraph News Service of the United Press Aveoeta less MEMBER OF schirrs _—— son “2 hiberr — Then ng pools or we are dried rf too that mosquito Entered at Seattle, Wash. Postoffice as Secona-C' bree yard {grav me Then, and particularly if there|@ Peasy rags rr nd | Aran erday men with cabins on =| hinakn Northern railroad property refused to leave when ordered off. The district judge will investigate thelr cases. The steamship Watson arrived yesterday with all flags flying and | with long blasts of her whistle, tion of a mayor of Sew- in progress Saturday news of the railroad hoice arrived. Nobody re- less and| membered to vote after that. City additions are being platted far out tnto the country. Even |these lots are selling like wildfire. More than a hundred have been disposed of since Saturday. It is necessary to impress on men who contemplate coming here thet they should not come unless they have sufficient money ahead to keep them until railroad con- struction work starts, : In announcing the news to Sew- ard, the Seward Gateway used one word, “Hurrah,” in deep wood type Value of ocean commerce of S$ j clear across its first page. jattle reached $14,892,018 for Marc h, the month of March 1914. | Chane Tahanan Uakhy | @use Printers ‘Stops Tobacco fant 2 1013 THIRD @#AIN 1048 in One Day led in with By mail, out of city, Ihe per month up to 6 m claims of to get in on or « . | | Published Daily by Thc Star Publishing Co. Phone Main 9400. & ie som ‘all departments. 00 a \ a 4 there and “Art” es : A Tabloid History of the American Navy—The Constitution's Victory. F COURSE the finest art isn’t in art galleries or museums The beautiful, graceful woman | breathing, living, and she is herself a work - A picture of the beautiful, graceful woman is a dead ‘thing. It is counterfeit, “art.” Look at a child. Look at a work of ° centerpiece! ‘ The old mare and her awkward colt in Mure. To look at them, to observe how ‘mother watches over her child, is to look uy real art. There you have the real picture, the real grass, brook, ‘eal sunshine, the real fleecy or dark clouds in the sky : Stand in an April shower and look at a picture of 4 April shower! ee Rosa Bonheur’s animal pictures are “art” and very won- *derful—but if you could see the same animals in real life! Too often “art” shows us what, in the artist's mind, is a Ppicture of things as he would have them, as he thinks they Should be.. Women are too voluptuous, and they appear think of men to the exclusion of all other subjects. In ‘art—real life—women have many serious things to think abi rut | besides pleasing men. » Still we must thank “art,” for it teaches us to strive for| “better, higher, more beautiful ideals But ANY MAN may enjoy REAL ‘4 . ‘Entry List UMHE sporting editor contributes this: “Collier's racing sheet is out with the icial list ‘the entries of the ‘Grand Old Plugs’ stables in the Presidential} Derby of 1916. As Si Watkins puts it, ‘this is they’ “Ted Burton of Ohio, “Johnnie Weeks of Massachusetts, “My- Herrick of Ohio, “Billie Smith of Michigan, “Albert B. of Iowa, “*Jimmie, the Mann’ of Illinois, “Lawrence Y. of Illinois, “ ‘Fairbanks’ of Indiana. “A fat crop 6f probable starters, though some may Jeft at the post! Though the form sheets are not out, yet on Ipast performances this would appear to be a field of selling platers, though some may develop into real contenders. ‘Big ‘Bar is being groomed for a try-out, it is said, while ‘Terrible ‘Teddy’ is looking for colors under which to run. With that are children in ure milk to consider the proper feeding of the babi ;Youngeters #0 that later in the hot days there will be as few cases as possible of those so often fatal summer complaints.” Those people who are wise will| consider the proper and mal summer diet for themselves.| more vegetables P| | Perry made|things and lees 1 at j his voyage to Japan He i. pre |¢ruits and best of all, eat pared flor * mission with exce; Pp: cise | onal intelligence, snd he conduct-(*k°, more exercise Jed the negotiations Yeading UP tl mer clothing ‘so that | the opening of the little empire tol ine hot daya with Porter cleared the Weat Indies and|OUr trade with equal success cara is \ en, re wHA ‘ the Gulf of Mexico of Spantsh,| The whole period fronf 1815 te i 2 aie IF Youtp ea touae wo Deseeve! French and American pirates, a| se — me ot a ats nteg. | Perry |ration for the navy t was hard| WOU'Re ‘DOING. YoU WOULDN'T RAM | work in which the Perry brothers, ; Oliver Hazard, the hero of Lake|to get money from congress; fear ‘our woant FINGGR INTo | Erte and Matthew C. who later|slumbered; the president and con opened Japan to the world, took’ &T@s® were apathetic toward the | part. The ve trade also required Davy In the face of unmistakable |rome atte threats of secession | In 1845 When the civil war began brought t United States had only 42 gress the including supply ships a ynel was deteriorating, George | only were under steam. There Bancroft, the historian, was secre-| Was laid upon Gideon Welles, sec |tary of the navy, and he eet about retary of the novy, and GustaVhs | with exceptional tact to secure the {V. Fox, bis very efficient assistant, founding of a school for the train-/ the task of creating a new navy ling of naval officers. Annapolis re-| sufficient to blockade all the 18 | sulted; the naval academy as for-| Southern harbors and rivers; to oc r opened October 10, 1845. jeupy the Potomac; to co-operate The war with Mexico made no| with the army in attacks on the heavy demands upon the navy; our| Southern coasts {n attacks on the ships easily blockaded the eastern |sipp!; and to destroy Confederate ports of Mexico and took troops to! cruisers and privateers Vera Cruz Congress appropriated $43,500, In the Pacific Commodore Sloat |000. During the war 208 ships and later Stockton, acted promptly | Were bullt or begun for the navy of tr - by 1865, the navy had 7,600 officers " = hiatie and 60,000 seamen—five times as! ALBERT HANSEN |) 42),.0",2 180! Joweler and Silversmith a What the federal navy located at ‘ing the Confederacy cut off|lshed a free book » Is Now Located at His New Store ) outside supplies was without | }* of the to 1010 Second Ave, ‘Near Madison the home, is smiling, walking, of art (This ls the seventh Install. ment of “A Short History of the American Navy,” published by “The World's Work” in its series on American defenses.) upon the outbreak of the war and took the ports of Monterey Francisco and Los Angeles with lit-| tle opposition , In 1853 Matthew © was the eat 1 C and it is art” that has a BY JOHN M. OSKISON Chapter Vil. Followed a long period activity for the navy In 1824, sensible sums you can f the of in farmer's pas carefully the mare YER, AND Yours some degree m ¢ real the! The public health the foundation on which repo: the happiness of the people and the power of the country. The care of the public health is the first duty of a statesman. | —tLord Beaconsfield. } an the vessels i tenders; to mutiny of con fact that the navy's per | GAIN iN COMMERCE to \ Ma * ] } 7 /L- real ART, for it is FREE Sanitarium Publishes Free Book! Showing How Tobacco Habit Can Be Banished in From | One to Five Days at Home. rs Sanitarium 619 M St. Jose 8 } did in jquestion decisive. Had the South | °%, C'can be banished In from one |been able to continue to exchange | wha havo neki cotton for war material, the strag- n fifty years have t gle would bhve been greatly pro- longed it Was a remarkable coincidence | that the same day should have seen the completion of the Confed. | * erate Merrimac and of the Federal | Monitor—but to naval men it is rather one of the incidents of pre-| paredness. These two vessels marked the end of the wooden fighting ship “TIL FOR ACHING, ‘SORE, TIRED FEET get | As this boc free, 2 a ga cop send their name Advertisemen: tributed should and address at once |“T1Z" for tender, puffed-up, burn-| ing, calloused feet and corns. An Emergency (The next instaliment of this +good old stake horse ‘Billy Bryan’ reported wind-broken, the {Thomas Jefferson stables will likely pin their faith on the last| Derby winner, Woodrow W. The bookies have not yet posted athe odds.” | ea | Deserved to Be Fined HIRTEEN jitney bus drivers were fined in | Tuesday for failing to get out licenses ‘for hire. | The punishment was richly earned by them. Only lic ensed| idrivers are entitled to the privilege of charging fares to passen-| jgers, and those who attempt to evade the payment of this ‘nominal fee are only contributing toward greater hardships for ‘hus drivers who are trying to be fair | ; Reasonable regulations should be courted by jitney bus idrivers. It is the unreasonableness of the legislative act in im posing conditions practically impossible of fulfillment in se euring bonds that is objec tionable, and, as long as the legality of the bill is undecided by the supreme court, jitney bus men should be held accountable for it. But as to the question of} _licenses, there is no question of legality involved. Those who| have failed to get out licenses merely attentpted to evade a| reasonable obligation. Let’s hope there will be no further ‘attempts of this kind. police court to drive autos bso Sam i “YOU OUGHT to be a good boy by the time you finish this jot”! said a Texas judge to a young negro, as he sentenced him to 50 years in the penitentiary. “Yessir, Boss, thank you sah,” replied the negro. “Judge, kin | start right erway?” | A PITTSBURG MAN left a gas cock open and went to a picttire| show. Returning home, he was almast overcome upon entering his apartment, and to locate the open jet struck a match, They expect | him down soon. LET THE black hopes cheer up! Lil Artha has been knocked out but Chicago has elected to her council a black hope named Oscar dei Priest. A darky was out fishing with a little about 3 years old and, while at play on the bank of the stream, the youngster fell into the water. Immediately the colored man waded in, and, catching him by the s@at of the pantaloons, pulled him onto dry ground. A minister who hap pened to have seen the occur rence complimented him, for the stream was a swift one. Well,” said the darky, to sabe dat kid's life, boss, he had de bait in his pocket arg boy “T had fo Tempus Fugit I want @ warrant for the ar- rest of Father Time. What's the charge?” Outrageous and violation of the speed A Sure Remedy Doctor—You must go away for a long rest Overworked People are forced all day sweaty They use “TIZ, lcures their feet right up |feet in perfect condition. the only remed draws out all the poisonous exuda tions which puff up the feet an cause tender, sore, tired, feet. It instantly stops the pain in corns, callouses and bunions. It's jsimply glorious. Ah! how comfort Jable your feet feel after "T1Z.” You'll never Ump or draw lup your in pain, Your shoes | won't tigh and burt your feet | Get a 25-cent box of “TIZ" now om any druggist, department eral store, Jung think! year's foot comfort for cents « STAR WANT ADS who their feet tender to stand know burning continuous lawa! on | sore Merchant — But, doctor, I'm too busy to go away Doctor—Well, then, must stop advertising you Stung “It's wonderful what some in sects can do. A grasshopper can jump 100 times its length “That's nothing: I saw a raise & 200-pound man three off the ground 0 {95 0 Turning on the Heat I say, janitor, | want more hot air in this office All right, sir: there conple of book agents on next floor, I'll send them once be if or & whole only 25 some are a the in. what |4 using | Pack BRING RESULTS 30 DAYS CUT PRICES FREE EXAMINATION 25c Per Cent Reduction from these regular ‘prices. 22K Gold Crowns... Bridgework ...... Full Set of Teeth.... Porcelain Crowo Gold Fillings . We do exactly as advertised. Lady Attendant. Terms to suit. All work guaranteed 15 years. ELECTRO in the world that i 1st and Pike, Opp. Public Market Laboring " We guarancen ty the Lundberg Truss, « trial to prove St A. LUNDBERG co. Trusi Deformity ‘Artificial 1107 tabloid history of the American navy will be told in this paper to- morrow.) Doc CAUSES ACCIDENT F. KE. Skrivanic, salesman for the American Paper Co., was severely bruised and his auto wrecked at Fourth ave. and Blanchard st. Tues. day, when a dog darted under the wheels, The dog was killed WOMEN ONLY What every safe and sure periment A ‘i for all Female Troubles and Irregularitios-a friend Inn DOCTOR Call at the Right Drug Co., 169 Washington st. near Second ave, and have the ex-government physi: | clun diagnoge your ease and prescribe for you, absolutely without charge We want your patron nd of. fer you the doctor's serv as an) inducement | Look the Yellow Fr: Scorn Sevr To REG, Parcel Pos © nav 20 Cor ar Wiese EE CO. #TALL 58 Pike Pince Market Here is a real opportunity that] you can’t afford to miss, Regular Regular $15.00 Set Regular $10.00 Set. Crown and Bridgework +8 50 to $5. Gold ‘Crowns (28 1418; 20 Second Ave. oxite Hon Marche, Seattle Sanderson’s Pills are all thin and more. as thou stified. Try San s and you will not Take ne SPINNING’S Be Doz. $1.25 Child's Silver $2.00 Chicago or Takes Bommer doors 1% to 2 inches. Black Finish Sash Lifts, doz Plated Knife, Floor SPECIALS Fork and Spoon... Hinge $5.00 Recovered Ford Auto Cushion $1.50 8!,x1!4 3-Cell Tubular $20.00 38-Cal. Colt's Automatic $2.00 Single Sliding Door Sets $3.50 Boy's Hand Car $7.50 Dudley Adjustable’ Bicycle Stand Kvery motor each week @ Bhira and Columb Secrets . Women and and fifty plans to and quick!y, Revenend Remedy Co. Nodm 28, 217% Pike Street, yele and sold bieyele ay unt Flashlight Revolver $12.50 75¢ $3.00 Truing or Motorcycle Wheel hop Red 1eed needs one This Ad and 20c Will Pay for Sharpening 1 Doz. Razor Blades During April, 1915, 1415-1417 ‘mene and ‘MIKD ru TLE, WASH. SPINNING’S CASH STORE Fourth Av.

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