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AS HE STOOD —— MY EYE, SEE Di! SHE’S GOT TO KNOW THE GU | —Win——1 See THe STENOGRAPHER HAS A Ler's Sea— ORE LORD MONTAGUE HAD LOVED NGR WITH ALL THE ARDOR AND PASSION OF HIS NORMAN BLOOD. BT Now HIS GLORIOUSLY HANDSOME FACE TURNED GNASTLY waite STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1915. PAGE 4. | “MR. FOGG, I'VE BEEN HERE weet Yer.” By Herbert Quick We are trembling on the | edge of a or KS AND | HAVEN'T SEEN YOUR SCENARIO BDITOR SECLUDE ER -HUM- HAW- AH, VES. BUT WE MAKE IT A RULE ‘TO KEEP HIM D.” “BUT I WANT If we are drawn into this war, we a ade a member of the t group of nations which play world politica, and we become a nothing In this eri which calls upon him to still the The = sinking ry member forever. | voice of factionism, or keep the of the Guiflight, Up to the time of this writing clear of mud jan — American the people have shown an unex. hae been interviewed on vessel flying the pected calm the Lusitania horror. |American flag, & | In the main they have looked | not anticipate, he says, the loss of the to the lonely man in the White change in the ad life of the cap House with sympathy and confi. | ministration’s policy, Then he tain of the Guif light and some | of her crew, th lkilling of an jAmerican — cith zen, Thrasher, merchant on a | aeize on this momentous occa sunk by | to make a selfish appeal to | the national danger, Borah rolls a German submarine, and now | partisan politi the difficulties of the government the sinking of the Lusitania and There Is at least one UNDER Hi8 TONGUE AS A | the drowning of more than a | His name ie WILLIAM E. | SWEET MORSEL, and seems to hundred American citizens—ali | BORAH, a senator from Idaho, | exult In the chance to convert these things wshed ua to | who denies that he is a candi- | the dge oF th abys date for the presidency, but | dren into VOTES FOR BORAH | Never since the nation was | whose friends are working for | in 1916. | founded was there a more ter rible crisis. When we found ourselves di- vided Into warring sections the situation was not so strange and fearful; for that was a purely American matter. dence for they know that on the awful task of mak which may not be decided | for ages to come And yet there are those who hia nomination everywhere: 1 am one of those who have |} sometimes regarded Borah as a ure. HE 1S SMALL. | | launches forth in a lurid attack | on the Wilson policy in Mexico. | why we should adop' In regard to policy Germany.” | While others are agonized at the deaths of women and chil In such times the souls of men are weighed. Mr. Borah's chance for the idency is forever gone—be- he has shown himself un. fitted for the great place sought | for him Y WHO WRITES THE THINGS SHE PLAYS IN; EV SPIES; GETS WISE AT LAST TO HOW HIS YOUNG TYPEWRITER PUTS HER DAYS IN ‘Telegraph % Entered at Seattle, W: - MEXICO CITY TO BE BURNED BY HEALTH OFFICERS But What Are the Two Thousand Persons Who Live There to Do? Mall, out of city, 350 8: try grove, the city park or to somebody's big back yard PICNIC ALL DAY LONG Of course there is much to be said against picnicking, d not the least of the objections are these | Tt always rains just about the time Ma gets the dinner One of the Shacks In “Mexico City.” It Will Be Destroyed by the Health Department, Sunday d out on the white tablecloth stretched out on the grass. | Some stray pup always gets into the lunch basket and ces away with the best piece of the fried chicken. | Twenty billion ants and other lunch-eating insects crawl; o the sandwiches and go to sleep | Brother Willie always gets his best Sunday pants torn.| Sister Susie gets her prety white dress daubed up with a d assortment of jams and jellies and such like But the fact remains that there isn’t any other amuse- in which the great American public indulges that gets same whole-hearted glad-hand as does this picnic idea en Ma arinounces on the evening before the day: “WELL, PA, I'VE GOT EVERYTHING READY FOR PICNIC TOMORROW!” There isn't anything else that will make a fellow carry great big lunch basket all the way to the park and two py, tired kiddies all the way back home again; but he will| ® it for a picnic, not only once in his lifetime, but every! Louls Peterson and His New Home on Ha rbor Island “Mexico City” is doomed to per-Jcupants. Some of them are }ish in flames heat—plastered inside and papered,| building smali boats at his home.| By order of the city health de-|with pretty pictures on the walls|His place also ix spotlessly cleen, | partment, its inhabitants must find) and clean carpets on the floors. Clyde Thatcher, watchman for the! other shelter before Sunday, when | pin-[a cripple, but works when be can 4 n | And the occupants are poor work-| Washington Tug & Barge Co., and| mmer as long as Ma is here to fix up a nice lunch, and} its stench i its ig will be de jing people, who pay a small month-| hie wife, occupy a small house ven 0 by the torch. 1 tal for the ground they live few doors from Shelby You! the ies are here to be taken | stroyed the y renta grour y a} a kiddie |. “Mexico City” ts located on the|on. The landlord is the O-W. R. &| Would be surprised at the cleantt| nae lower end of Harbor Island N. railroad #8 of the place | hou Shalt Not Ste It has been the rendezvous for crooks and idlers for several years. It is Insanitary. It is good that it must go. It’s Hardship on Many Without discrimination, ita in spectors have pla the yellow | .., |tag of condemnation upon every | little home on the island, along the [beach line on the West waterway} jand South First ave, Some of these homes represent all the worldly wealth of their oc-| Sailor's Home is Neat | C. Willis, formerly of the na Louls Peterson is one of these.| paints scows for a living. He lives in a@ little house of two|is on the island. It 1s rooms on the eastern edge of the/and papered within | islend, Where Will They Go? | He pays $1 a month to the rail; “I guess I learned to be clean in| ad and has paid $18 cash for ma-|the navy,” he declared. “Show me terial which he built with is own @ room I can get downtown for the hands into his present home, money. It can't be done. I can’t! His honse {# spotless inside, for,| afford to live anywhere else. If my| like most of his neighbors, he is a| place is insanitary, I'll show you! sailor, trained to be neat a hundred lodging houses that ought The tides afford him natural) to be burned down, sewerage. He gets his fresh water| He pays $2.50 a month rent for for drinking purposes and for bath-| his place. jing across the waterway at the| There are many others like these, ~ | | Standard Ol dock Where will these 2,000 people go That was the word Cummins used! } Next to him are Fred Boyer and| when driven out? |his wife. They have lived on the It's a Bad Place island three years and their home| erson, Fred Boyer, C.| \is far neater inside than many lodg-| Willis and other good citiezns ad- psig Bhd IN house rooms downtown, [mit thelr neighborhood should be a S THE STAR goes to press today, Sen, A His home| plastered B. Cum- mins of Iowa, a presidential possibility, is addressing the Young Men's Republican club at the Butler. We have no advance copy of his speech and have no idea | what he will say. - But if he knew the record and inclinations of some of ) the leaders of the club, we have no doubt he would find a “Thou convenient theme in the - Steal.” In 1912, Sen. Cummins, while remaining republican, never- | theless repudiated Taft's nomination at Chicago and openly | charged the delegates from the state of Washington, among ' others, were “stolen.” _we"“stolen.” Who did the stealing? Some of the men, Sen. Cummins, who are today your hosts at the Republican club. What's more, Senator, they are planning to steal the commandment, Shalt Not They paid $ swho| “It's a bad they place,” say. delegates again in 1916. htteishe : built their house, made| “Some of the men who live nearby d teeth are replaced by a 5" ar T NOT STEAL!” W a ang orto i “ : many improvements lately never work, yet seem to have plenty Be seit ane foo ist ™ What @ speech Sen.) ‘The Ohio Method by artificial teeth | "rH, ratirond exempts John Shelby |ot whisky and plenty of Gone to |that are natural as your original) ¢,, m pay : teeth. Examinations are now being | {OM Paying rent He is hopelessly | drink it ¥ Whitney of the republican co Vote in the matter! Why, he might even extract a promise from Chairman uinty committee not to “hand- pick” the delegates in 1916, but to let the people have a direct Bt $15 Set of Teeth, |heve the chance and are glad to F. was gone. He hasn't been seen| 4 ; |Now Is the Time to Get Rid of| ave employment. We are poor, Guaranteed ..... os of | since. BI LEE These Ugly Spots however, and if we are driven from ; JOKE ANY MOR A negro woman on the planta-| $10 Set of Teeth, There's no longer the slightest {Met the city will have to take care yt tion owned by the doctor is raising| Guaranteed .......... need of feeling ashamed of yore, Of US until we can find some other ee) : the child for a yearly fee. | Solid Gold freckles, as the prescription othine | Place fit to Hve in, and which will | _WAYNESBORO, Ga, June 4 ie se Piskees vi $4 double strength—Is guaranteed |P@ Cheap at the same time,” i , ’ orcelain Crown ..., to, remove these homel ' For the first time in the history of Oorcels n, Femove homely spots. | 7 fhe wiae's plckaniony veo teen MURDERER 1S DYING $10 (old or Porcelain tout afnan cance, ot ote SALESMEN’S CLUB used Were as currency, A Burke) FE: | Bridge Work ........ double strength—from any drug-| county negro who owed a bill to ed Be poe called to iS why) wit concede him no hope, Frank Mare socks hate bor |J. Lewis, who murdered Mra, Kate | “Can't you pay it anyhow?” asked|Anderson at the Portland hotel the doctor. | Wednesday night, was making a| oe eh ite |hard fight for life Friday. The| Ly ou leave ie . |lower part of Lewis’ face is gone cane Pn come a geet e| *8 Tesult of a charge of buckshot | iat debt am settled,” sald the) ne fired at his head in « suictde | ; Resro. He placed the child in a| attempt, _ Chair near the physician's desk and Altho the city hospital doctors boy,” 4 conducted without charge, and esti- | mates are furnished in all casos. | WE STAND BACK OF OUR WoRK FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE Solid Gold Fillings Other Fillings . sore BOG Office Hours, 8:30 to 6. Sunday: $ to 12, Cut ~ Rate | te skin and gain a beautiful clear! Members of the club have been busy Dentists | complexion. | the past week rehearsing their parts ; Be sure to ask for the double|and getting ready to surprise their 207 UNIVERSITY ST. CORNER SECOND AVE, FRECKLES ‘Ther® are a good many crooks among the lot. Some of them have tried to break into our houses at night “But some of us work when we + $1 Up} and morning and you should soon | gist and apply a little of it night WILL GIVE PROGRAM see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the| Ladies’ night will be celebrated lighter ones have vanished entirely,| Friday night by the Y. M. C. A It is seldom that more than an|Salesmanship club with satires on ounce is needed to completely clear| the work and methods of salesmen strength othine as this ts sold un der guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles, lady friends. | Refreshments and music will con- clude the program. “DONT EVER BREATHE A HINT TO ANYONE WHERE WE KEEP “6H~H! LOOK HE'S SOBBED HIMSELF TO SLEEP OVER THE MORNING'G MAIL” \ —1 The young man was eating pea | we've got our nuts and feeding them to the gtr! | Guides three at a time one In the crush he mistook his While as you say, even thal | neighbor's pocket for his own chiropodist works to get ahead,” | And when I bad finished my| sayy Dr. A. W. Kline, “remember taffy and was ready to start In 09 | that he has to begin at the foot, | my peanuts, there was nothing | put the barber begins at the bead, left in my pocket but the empty | But the barber begins at the head.” bag.” reports Mr. Gifford gins at the top and works his way | > x; down Something Like It Pr ee Educated Egyptian—You have no wonderful hieroglyphics in you: The Idle Son | Young Mr. Curtis Gifford bought | countr sir; no mysterious in-| She was singing, “I Didn't Raise 4 bak of peanuts and a bag of taffy | scriptions, no undecipherable rel-| My Boy to Be a Soldie |to eat on the way home from the in ancient Hterature whose| “That is quite evident,” growled cirous secrets th 6 men of the world|dad, as he eyed his lounging offs |. Hi@ nat in a crowded car beside a » tried for ages to discover, | spring. “The question {s, What young man who was accompanied| Tourist—No, we haven't any of|did you raise him for?”—Kansag [by a girl those things; but"—~brightening up| City Journal Fine Place for Trees and Flowers AT SUQUAMISH 67 t BUILT OF CEDAR SHAKES AT SUQUAMISH Suquamish is a fine place for trees and flowers and ferns. pure and full of that piney smell that charms every visitor. STREETS GRADED FREE graded and the watersystem starts today. We feel if you only having a small place in the with good pure spring water to drink and nice neighborly neighbors around you, with the climbing vines covering your porch and really own it, that you would go at once with us to Suquamish and see our fine offering of 800 Parcels at $37.50 to $50 Each $2.50 cash, $2 month graded homes now building at Suquamish. Over sixty al- ready completed. Come in andslook at our photos or just take the boat. Boats make four round trips daily, schedule so arranged you can live at Suquamish and work in Seattle We Make Two Trips Daily Take boat foot of Madison street at Pier No. 3 at 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. every day except Saturday and Sunday. Saturday and Sunday boats leave at 9 a. m. and 2 p. m. Salesmen on Boats wearing our Nice picnic The air is sweet and The the streets joys « knew woods, Terms Streets free. Fifteen grounds for your use, with free brick oven and coffee pots, ete. Land Company OLE HANSON, Pres. 709-710 New York Block Suquamis Phone Elliott 2 IMMIGRANT GIRL | FLOUR DUST is said to be the highest power explosive jknown. The way to use it is to have a choleric gentleman ‘U’ STUDENTS LEADS i jask the grocer the price of it and then blow up the store. —_—. DENVER, June 4.—A little Rus. | sian girl, set down In Denver uni versity, knowing &earcely a word) of English, has outstripped the, other students in the race for scholarship by finishing the acad-| emie course in three years. Miss Sophie Ginsburg, the girl who has! achieved this feat, stands a little in advance of the majority of her fel low students in the scholarship records of the university. She has made these grades im three years, while the others have taken four years to complete the same studies. | “When IT am thru School,” said Miss Ginsburg, “I should like to go to New York and get work in the immigration office. I'd like to be able to help the immigrant girls who come over here. They are so lonely and confused, Many of them} come alone, instead of with their family, as I did.” $1.75 Gal. Stiletto Red House Paint ...........93¢ Good paint, good color, good price, 180 Horse, Wool or Animal Card .......... owe Bo Your cow or dog will appreciate a combing. 15¢ Jar Furniture Wax Polish .. soe Be Cleans and polishes pianos, tables, furn: ture, ete, 25e Ball Seine Twine ............ +200 Used for fishing, chalk lines, hand bags, ete. 10¢ Pint Tin Coffee Pot tseveenve oo diandy for tea or to make hot water. 50¢ Goodrich Irish Standard Hand Ball ..... 33c A lively game or two of hand ball each day will soon take the kinks out of you, 25¢ Solld-Back Gray Fiber Scrub Brush .......18¢ A staple at a big reduction. 5c Black Bristle Marking Brush deve woe Wholesale quotation today is 40¢ dozen, $3.00 Hot Water Bottle ............. eeeee es 81,88 This Ad and 15c Will Sharpen 10 Durham Duplex or One Dozen Other Safety Razor Blades Now SPINNING’S CASH STORE 2425;2427 Fourth Av. sees SO Let Star Want Ads rent your vacant rooms, f