The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 3, 1915, Page 4

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Member of the Scripps Northwest League of Newspapers by The Star Publishing Oo me Main 0400 Pablished Dat ¥ WASHINGTON, WHAT ABOUT THIS Department of Commerce, CHICAGO, ILL, June 22, 1914 \ A Washington, D. C. R, EDWIN F, SWEET, Assistant Secretary, Dear Sin—Probably you recall some time ago we wrote you Only a part of the Eastiand dead as they lay row upon row in the temporary morgue in the Second Regiment armory, Chicago. " ALASKA TEMPERATURE 103 BEE LINE | + SEWARD, Alaska, July 27.—The temperature rose to 90 degrees tn} the shade here yesterday, and it} ‘Was 108 at Kenai Lake. There have | been only four rainy days In two) months. Several fires are burning in the Sugah forest east of Anchor: | age.—News item in Oregonian | If this can be true, don’t be surprised any day to see a dis- patch to this effect: $T. LOUIS, Aug. 3—"The temperature fell to 20 below zero in the sunlight here to /day, and the Mississippi river was frozen solid. Thousands | 4 enjoyed ice skating. The sun What | in do we iearn from has been seen here only one | the little ? day this month. Not to get ing! SUFFICIENT TABLE DO’ HOTE—15 Cents® Bridget Foley applied for a place Noodle Soup as cook. She presented the follow-| Pea Soup Turtle Soup ing letter of recommendation: “To| White Fish Mackere) whom it may concern Bridget | Crab Meat Foley has worked for us one week) Fi vay Bay, es as cook and we are satisfied. nc Pigeon Pie Kaiser Wilhelm {s reported’ to Roast Duckling have spent $20,000,000 since the ‘war started. A large part of this has been for correspondence with Butter ue President Wilson. Spinach BILLY HAS MADE IT Sherbet lee Cream PAY HIM, ALL RIGHT SAN FRANCISCO, July 30.— “What's the matter with San Francisco? I'll tell you what's the matter. The people of this “ town don’t realize that religion “ta business investment that churches and Christianity pay,” said Billy Sunday today. Excerpt from Friday Star. French Pastry Dem! Tasse Roquefort Cheese *We guarantee to eat lunch in this place every day except Sunday, when we lie abed until long after lunch. . The pin money of lots of women has got to be of the diamond pin variety! WHEN I HEARD THERE WAS A “TRUE” IN TowN, 1 HUNTED ™ we YOU UP, I HAVE. A FIRST COUSIN NAME TRUE?” AND T THOUGHT PossiBLy YOU AND L MIGHT BE RELATIVES We, I'm PRETTY BUSY JUST NOW — How MUCH DO YOU THINK SPINNING’S QUITTING SALE IS ON IN FULL BLAST All Kinds of Safety Hasor Binden Sharpened, 15¢ doz. 1415 FOURTH AVENUE | fA LITTLE BIT OF MOST ANYTHING i [Outbursts of Everett True | STAR—TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, of violation of law permitted on Steamboate by Inspection service and replying thereto you e uld be Investigated, You also requested Information In’ reference to ment in our first communication where U. 8. inspectors were taking orders from the shiponwers, to all of which reply was made. But we have received no answer to our last communication and inasmych as the steamboat excursion season is now in full blast, our committee is anxious to report to our organization what the situation is pertaining to excursion boats of this city We believe the CONDITION OF THE EXCURSION PAS. SENGER STEAMERS ARE ALTOGETHER TOO UNSAFE to be permitted to continue without a most vigorous protest from this federation as a matter of record, in the event of any accident In the future, that we, at least, had registered a protest For Instance, we claim it Is a crime to permit the Christopher Columbus 3,800 pasesngers with the excuse that she runs but five miles from shore. With that crowded condition, regardiess of sufficient life boats or able n the event of an accident to the vessel thousands been sacrifi , EVEN IF TIED TO ‘¢ to the rest of the boats which are permitted to go out of here overcrowded, The solutely no comfort and half the number of passenge allotted to each boat n safety and nothing else but the cutting down of the nger list will le the danger, We notice in p Melien of the New Ha Inder boxes.” T here because, our com. mittee has said, it se Inspectors are more con cerned over the vesse! owners’ interest and support than the protest of the public, Thanking you In advance for the Information, If possible to do #0, and awaiting reply at your earliest convenience, we remain, Most respectfully, CHICAGO FEDERATION OF LABOR, &. N. NOCKELS, Secretary The above is a letter which is printed here for the first time. ‘ Note the date on it. the government at Washington OVER AGO. It forecasted the Eastland calamity. It was a timely warning. A solemn warning. A patriotic warning. rhe government's officials at Washington had amers Note that it was sent to A YEAR A Married Man’s Trou yo STROLL DOWN PAGE 1915. 4. this warning a y go, but they heeded it not. How about it, Washington? SPEAK UP AS LOUDLY AS YOU CAN? LEGITIMATE, FOR SURE csIHE lecture platform,” Mr. Bryan has said, “is a legitimate field, affording an oppor- tunity for a man with a message.” It sure is, and the bigger the admission fee the more legitimate the field. Same thing is true of the publication field. We understand that Mr. Bryan's “Commoner” is prosperous. It is a capacious, not to say energetic man who can successfully cover both of these fields. Evidently, Mr. Bryan's message is not only an important one but a corking good profitable one. OUR DEADENED SENSES AR has deadened our senses. We no longer can feel keenly as before sorrow, horror, sym- pathy, pain. Even death seems less fearful. One year ago the world would have gasped with horror at the drowning of over 1,000 human beings like rats ina trap. After one year of w gasp of horror is subdued, Fatalism, blunted sen- sibilities, a cheapening of human life the world over is the result of the senseless struggle. The world has “gone back" far toward savagery. r’s horrors our MAYBE THE Russians are slow in moving out of arsaw. But you ought to hear Al Lundin tell how it takes some landladies to move out of certain houses NOW KATMAL up in Alask Must be getting jealous of La ported in erup- & ‘These Row COLLARS CERTAINLY | ARw COMFORTABLE NOU ABOUT GOING Down BY THE WATER? NORMAN, WHAT DID TELL month otter we THE BUSY LITTLE PRESIDENTIAL BEE HE list of possible republican growing large and juicy. To date 15 erstwhile leaders have declared their readiness to list to the call of the people, yet a care. ful inspection of the entry list leads us to the con. clusion that the populace will not call any of them very loudly or unanimously. THEY’RE AFTER VERNIE ERNON CASTLE, famous expounder of the terpisichorean art, has been twice arrested in New York for exceeding the speed lin A jury of women will probably acquit him, but if he draws 12 mere men whose wives have been bunny-hugged and grizzly-beared sa safe bet he andidates is eC will get 99 years on the rock pile. ils deli y in Seattle base. JUST BECAUS 1 ate he learned to ball is fast and classy joes not ind pitch in a correspondence school NOW THAT the cx has purchased voting ma- ines, it is t to get f ical machines by a n-partisar nd ele n law Tut tiacectoa Zaerzr2fro !#*2t=t2s> BsaTse ent, is going to tell ‘em at the t ut “the ¢ ic purchase a we , is to feed the ret show. s at a cafeteria instead of a « WILLIAM J. BRYAN, in one of his Seattle speeches, bunched nine “f gods” and gave 'em a collective ast. He's proba reserving a tenth place all alone for T. R JAMAICA IS planning to send 5,900 men to help Britain. That ought to put some ginger into the allies, 3 F925 F223 _= SSFrsks Fas |BFeSzS _ ‘Slick Dick’s Comeback—(Or, in Pursuit of the Gonedind—A, Movie a Twe Parte—Saxt 2. DELIA THE LADY "DICK OuT FORT TOoTULESS SAM REACHES THE OTHER SIDE OF THE RIVER: av ER Now PROCEED WITH THE STory BECOMING WIND sToRM! coneaastarensssias THINK THIS Grace—I hear that those dainty muslins advertised in The Star by Frederick & Nelson's are made of the fiber of the banana tree, Lulu--They ought to be easy to slip on ALL KINDS OF DIPS Dancing has taken the place of| | bathing on the beaches of Kastern| summer resorts. | HINTS TO HOUSEWIVES | Why not use K. C. baking powder this week in honor of our guests? WHY NOT? | Little Laura was saying her |prayers before going to bed the! lother night. She ‘sald | | —And forgive us our | as we forgive our dentists.” body's. debts| Every WARRANTED SUSPICION “My wife was arrested yagter- day. , “What for?” “She got on a street car the right way, and a policeman thought she was a man in disguise!"”—Puck, | L ¥00D —— “DREAM DOPE” Fone sorry isn very) IT FITS YOU LIKE AN AWNING Workers generally do not pay OF MATERIAL AND im BURGLING much attention to their health until they find it is im- YoU WHEN | Ask %75.00 FoR IT paired, THEY {LET ME SHOW You one oo NEL: eae oF VR Sb. . ’ | WHNOUGH AT. \ ° 6.28 sorTs! Aly PENTION TO PREVENTION. - Dr. Henry B | Favill, in an ad- | dress recently before a Chamber of Commerce tn | |a large Western city, said “Any one of you men has a hun-| dred friends in society that you are moving along with sido by side, | A STROLL! = ENV BY AHERN You MR DUSTYDOMeE! INA ITS A CHEAP PIECE doing your work, associating back | and forth, and, so far as you know, | all of them are well, “Along somewhere between 20 and 30 some of those hundred will drop out. There will be others | dropping out between 80 and 40/ and between 40 and 50 and be-| tween 60 and 60, and, by the time| you have gof along to 60 years of age, you will find that the men who are left in that original group of 100, who are me of strength and capable are very few. | “Along from 40 to 50 and 55 you will find that a very large number of men are falling by the way by reason of things | that are easily understood— | AFTER IT IS TOO LATE, Men who develop heart disease, kid. “When You're Well, Keep Well” Another article in The Star’s health campaign being conducted __with co-operation of American Medical Associa Change Often Necessary for Health i |time those degenerations es been so established that anybodr: knows they are there and they 8 be given a name and treated a5 ® | disease, by that time the jig is 1 7 | It is too late. “Oh, yes, you can pateh it along, you can temporize, you can you can do all sorts of Ii things, but it is too late to do about that class of diseases 828 that is the class of diseases which we as physicians are a ing with all the time, and in i& = creasing numbers along in thew two decades of life } “The question of maintainisg health is very largely a question ot WHAT YOU WON'T DO, not & question of what you do, It i purely a question of self-discipliné — Purely a question of first seeing — at to do and then having the — sand to do it.” i} THE RIGHT DR. BROWN — The Dentist 627 First Ave. foot of Cherry (Over Pioneer Drug Store) Telephone Main S778, NOBODY HOME but the tooth, and that's solld tvory, or would be if it didn’t have a hole and an ache tn ft. THE RIGHT DR. BROWN will stop the ache, fill the hole, re store the tooth and send you home happy. Call tn and let me look your te over—Iit coats gou not! DONT WATT Le THEY Act THE RIGHT DR. BROWN The Dentist 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. 27 FIRST A (Over Pioneer Drug er disease, blood se and things of that kind, “We find that we have at that time of life what are called degen- erative diseases, diseases in which the vital organs have gone to pieces one way or the other from various causes “The point I want to make about those diseases {s this: By the St. Store)

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