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Now here, for instance, are some of the things the silly fellow got off his chest in Saturday’s issue. SPARKS FROM THE RADIO OVERHEARD ON THE E. MADISON CAR DRYERNELL! OUR WIFE'S LITTLE DICTIONARY Wireless Station, Seattle Harbor Dept Oscar I Heddo, Bid, Whad's wrog Oh, dam the Cedar river! Hloneymoon: That portion of a woman's life when she Oscar 11—Oscar II! O, nodding, thig I god the grib We can't get a drop to drink has enough clothes—and the last (No answer.) D ike aus here’s no bourbon for our liver Supper: Something that must invariably wait Capt Paysse: “Whassamatter there, operat Why fhe tab oan hte ale Vhere’s no water in the sink! Pheatre: A place a man sees frequently BEFORE don’t vou get the Oscar II 1 hope they do, ad my node runs all the tibe ae + 4 marriage . Operator gat get ‘em, cap Aid id fierce WHERE'S THAT POLICEMAN? . © d Capt. P Mt did you se my message You bed id id. I never fed dab bad id my | Jensen & Von Herberg are said to be having plenty of PRESENT COMPANY, O'COURSE ELIMINATED Operator: “Yep, And then | called ‘em again and Howds the fably Liberty at the Alhambra, but they better not let Coliseum! “De Witt Mann,” writes the divorce reporter, “knew answe Oh, they hab id, too hed . his wife, Ethel, as a child.’ P Oh, well at's all t. Prob'ly tl rad We » log WEATHER FORECAST That's our .wife “says about the limit of any 4 order, but I daresay Emil Hurj So log Rain or snow, Well whaddadyA éxpect'in a dry state man’s knowledge of his wife we RRA AAAI AR AAA AR AAA ARAN AR AARAR AAA AAR AARAAAAAAAARAAAA AAA AAA ARARAR ADA ARADAAR DAD. AAA RAR AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAAI Seeing Europe With the Ford Flivvers Girl reporter with the party writes and draws for The Star. Why the pacificists ran out of camera films in Christiania. See editorial page. : THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT ‘DARES_ TO PRINT VOLUME 18 SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JANUARY 10, 1916 fe) Wilson and T.R. in the Ring for Bitterest Feud in History? | Roosevelt Believes President Hit Him Below Belt in Linking Him With the Steel Trust; Real’ Hatred a Factor in Impending Fight Between Two of Nation’s Greatest Leaders. Tamifications will be traced Hl to read these comtributto ! By Gilson Gardner WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 8—The greatest per political feud in the history of this nation! Has the stage already for sw a drama, and the curtain rung up before an audience of 1! Americans they declare President Woadtiw "Wilson and The odore Roosevelt already have begun the first act in a political “thriller” that, for bitter personal feeling, will exceed any ever enacted on our national platform. And they foresee thar the wa! fe political quar: rels that will cluster about suclf’a Pesounding@feud the split between Wilson and Bryan, the cleavage be- t DO YOU READ WHAT THE TOWN IN REVIEW” MAN SAYS IN THE STAR “PINK”? You ought to get acquainted with him. The Pink is out at 4:15 p. m. The Seattle Star Lenn HI TELLS CHIEF | Will Veto Ordinance Provid- SAYS FORD FILLS BILL |‘truction, some damaged, and thousands of yards e AS” EDITION ‘THE NEWS : } E NEWS : } NE CENT 2%, Police Find List of | White Slave Prices } OS ANGELES, Jan. 10. : —A white slave price list was turned over by the police to the federa ret service today. It was selzed in araid on the rooms of a woman suspect ed of being an agent for a white slave ring. The list gave the values of girls wanted in districts of Mexican cities. Blondes weighing 120 pounds or over are quoted at $1,000 te $1,500, accord ing to looks, Brunettes range from $1,000 to $1,250. ROLLERS WASH | Houses Torn to Bits, Lawns Destroyed, Trees Uprooted, and City Property De- © stroyed by Unusually High Tide Strong Wind; Waves Pound Over Boai Walk. Snatched from their frail foundations by huge fa ers driven in from the sea at the head of a 30-mile gale, |the homes of A. K. Bell, 3021 Alki ave., and G, _ Johnson, his neighbor, were dashed against the at high tide Monday and crushed like egg-shells. Scores of other homes were threatened H { TO USE ‘LIZZIES’ - : ; } ifs Expensive Autos for r Police. earth fill in the Alki ave. regrade were washed awa twee R ne 1 ft A th ostili " | Recause Hi Gill's ideas of econ — < 2shhy sitio’ a care ey abl tility be Jomy don't jibe with those of Chiet| the most furious aquatic disturbance Seattle has suffe tween Lily 1 and ( “i Cla will only serve to in | Lang, the police auto purchase or-! from in years. crease the din of the greater | dinance will be vetoed by Mayor 9 o'clock ‘ettle [Gil Monday afternoon Tugs Rush to Aid Atk - at Alki Bandstand Smashed Thad.’ Hest: entiudes: - altha | Lang wrote adetter to the fi-; The $20,000 dredge being used] Tress were uprooted, 98 geri riggs ae Ae casi | nance committer in December, list-|by the Puget Sound Bridge &| scooped awar and the board atk talte: aie . es Ree ta a retans | Dredaing Co, in filling Alki ave.,| that skirted the municipal ne fallen into a dramati nted in bo 1 pr fo already have been |e one $2,400. patrol. and-alx five.| a8 swept off ite pfiing, which beg gs eds or blocks and car stonalsia indedd | baanenger autos to cost $1,000 | snapped like match sticks with the TON te oe the ; ’ . | eac force of the water. pavilion was lift fi 2 many Americans have been | y ihe mayor says the chief wanted | Two tugs were sent t0 the aid of teed gy ed a AP an ee x openly surprised ) 1 i v 5 le thi a oO i penly surprised by the ani relies, and the whole thing was (0! 11.4 drifting dredge, but on account ree pag n- itself battered “tg = why ened personality of When the mayor first heard |of the shallowness of the water, | Thousands of yards of new earthy vosevelt’s recent attac ks on about the chief's ideas he got busy | could not make fast. It was feared| fill along Alki ave. were Wilson jquietly investigating the little) the dredge would be pounded to/out, the rollers breaking over the Why is Roosevelt so bitter, so i k autos a by H. Ford, | pieces unless some ald could be se-| bulkheads and gouging the Py je peace magnate. cured out clean behind them. Me Lect Sate k. deacionban: bens In the meantime the counctl | Pontoons Broken Up Beach Is Damaged p passed an ordinance authorizing The sand along the entire beach take of the character of a deep- | seated political feud? Well, the answer goes back to a little chapter of unwritten political Words That May Make Wilson and Roose- velt Opponents in Great Political Feud | WATER SHUT OFF dashed ashore and of then municipal bathi °C A iste > tet Algo ager she rence cee eset alLenat eo gail ines. hem teach by the shifting of sanded am = ule of something other Junk on the bay and purchase | , It will cost that much, it is said, By Woodrow Wilson more than political opposition to Fords,” said the mayor Monday.| It was estimated by City Bogl-| 4, "refill the beach In his fourth paper on “The New Freedom,” published Wilson's politica! program Instead of stx machines at $1,000 | ner Dimox righ ae a to| People Move to Hills " 4 ry : In March, 1913—a couple of oh, six Fords for 100 is a bet-jthe contracting compa be Scores of families, seeing the id . ,J The World’s Work,” for April, 1913. adi: attae Wien. as seaman ter deal. Instead of n $2,400 patrol,|feach near $5,000 in case the) wie So aroaching, early Monday Pathe decttine shat mehopely fe nevitabte * © found a) ated—there appeared in World's |why not a $1,500 machine and use | Sredee peek ete jmorning removed their furniture champion during the campaign of 1912 in the new party, or branch | Work an article over Woodrow jthe top of the patrol we have| High rollers breaking over the/trom their houses and carried a= a of the republican party, founded under the leadership of Mr. Roose- | Wilson's signature, bitterly attack ac jbulkheads along the west end of/ back onto higher land. For tam a volt, with the conspicuous aid—! mention him with no satirical In- | "0 Roosevelt | The Star editorially pointed ont|the city’s marginal boulevard im-| miles chairs, tables, trunks and qi t, but merely to set the facts down accurately—of Mr. Geo: w. As the date sho the presiden several weeks ago that Fords would | provement at Alki point, tore out/even stoves and ranges are strewn Porkine, pated den tha Wibak te4ks 4nd the onaeine ‘ums 7 iehl cekingalan wae ever. Wilson ad Just So eftic bent oe a lot!quantities of earth fill, and halted! along the hillside out of reach of eee 8 © had been inaugurated apse Sunday night of the wooden pipe line| “enper, for general city use work temporarily the water. A second cc “If you have read the trust plank in that (the progressive) pla’ supplying Seattle with water from the Cedar river dam intensi A Punch Below the Beit The pontoons on which the water | main bad been laid while the re-| Was shifted about and carried far © | grade improvement is under way |out. It was estimated by the efty were broken up and the pontoons! engineer that $1,000 damage war that} done to the purchase and exchange of autos the police, and set the limit at 145 “A little figuring will show th The mayor's investigation proved| ‘7 e high bulkheads further west; Both Bell and Johnson saved all lot of things were not injured by the waves. their furniture by moving it out form se often te} have read it, you have found it very long but }| Roosevelt and his close friends) req the possibilities of a general water fami Councilmen Agree With Him Not a little damage was done tolearly, before the high tide was ery tolerant. it did not anywhere condemn monopoly except in) regarded that article as a thrust - . He found out that they had tried ; ch rds.” below the belt Parts of the city are already without water There is} small boats, which were forced | reached ¥ a ‘iimaes By aA me ae below the be t , h a»: thieuda eu kinds of cars in the street de-|trom their moorings and battered,| The tide was up 14.5 feet at 9 ‘i Nor wan this all of Wilson's of. 10 chance of repairs being completed now before Uesday| partment, and that Ford cars cost/pbut no reports of any damage to/ o'clock, and, held in by the wind, “They (the adherents of ‘big business’) have put the govern-) fending. Those who remember the; noon, Officials fear further cave-ins | 40 per cent less than the others for | shipping were made. remained the same height thruout ment into the hands of trustees, and Mr. Taft and Mr. Roos velt ) campaign of 1912-13 will recall th Four hours after the 150-foot collapse had been repaired, | maintenance | The tide registered 14.5 feet at! the day. were the rival candidates to preside ow the board of truste fact that Roosevelt did not in fac mad | My ideas and those of Mr. Lang! “ee ee athe attack Wilson or aim hia cam-,#t 7:30 Sunday night, the second break occurred. About 70) are different on this thing,” sald “Those who supported the third party supported, | believe, @( oaign againat his feet of the pipe, le than a mile below the first break,| the mayor. But I think I'm right PP A paign against | pir “1 challenge the Roosevelt program in its fundamentals as not || i oweseit galinwot tie denne rhe water.had been tured on. and waa-sshéduled to Teach | gay 1 do. Thate the .ceason rm! } a progressive program at all. Why did Mr. Gary suggest this very (| pediting Wilnon with good inten Seattle at 3 a. m. Monday morning. It was turned off imme-| going to veto the ordinance.” method when he was head of the Stee! trust?” tlon®, but calling attention to the! diately The crew that had been working day and night since} ai as Bourbon” and reactionary charac-| ‘Thursday was quickly reassembled’ under the direction of | “He (Roosevelt) got his idea with regard to the regulation of |i. 00" Nii tenes Cty nano lc tendent L. B. Youn ARE monopoly from the gentlemen who form the United States Stee! cor. 3 uperintenc * aw | 1 pe tion.” t 5 he districts south of Yesler way and east of Rainier| TThe fight for heated street cars poration counsel in presenting the PO nnn nr nr (Continued on page 5.) : ah ast : | san tothe. stabencc ene tarthe Gis cituation to the public servile aia 3 ~ ——lave, Madrona Height Beacon Hill, Capitol Hill and the} . = t mission.” a° Rainier valley are without water and will not be supplied] alle jeounci! chambers Monday after)” if the other councilmen feel the : o a hie hihue | noon |way Hesketh does about the roll- before Tuesday noon at the earlic | Makeshift emergency service was rushed Stinday 1 o-—- The resolution to be submitted |ing ice houses, Corporation Coun- aRegrs Sota deal TWICE WES CUSED HRY See WASHINGTON, Jan, 10.— |» Counctiman Hesketh was receiv. |8¢! Bradford will be ordered to im- Re Monday The public service commission | mediately get busy with the com- Say ed from Corporation Counsel Brad Seven big auto trucks carried loads of empty barrels thru the dry| of Washington state today | | mission © districts. Seventy of them had been distributed Sunday, One hun | asked the interstate commerce |ford's office at noon The petition to be submitted to dred more were taken out Monday morning. commission for decreased fares | It points out thot climatic con-| the public service commission ts al- for almost four hours, bet ; aa a oe They ced on street corners and filled with water from six| from Chicago to Seattle, Ta- a Seattle de: heat |Te4dy prepared,” said Corporation 4 jefore the day is over, May eet WP, en ert ee et FORIOADO, 38h, Trauma ‘Preble. free been pressed into service. comin ahd’ dthiee’ Washington Sealant ss ee saan said | ‘ounsel Bradford Monday, “Just ‘ or Gill will file his candidacy sae sh Svs acoga a = ag dad ieee pic pbengptierno phot: vote phil The according to officials, is from the lack of| points. Councilman Hesketh Monday. “And | ®* S00n as the council takes action, for re-election. Monday scarcely varied a fraction, | Tepubllonn ay tn the minds of nee. | water in hospitals and other institutions that need large quantities for} This marke the opening of a they call for action from the cor [Ht will be gent out of this offic, Another filing expected dur ecording to th DUFEAU, | Ve aaives here, awaiting the arrival the boilers of their heating apparatus | campaign to get lower North. yh it “The resolution, which is the ing the day is that of Reginald emaining at 27 de sero, (een, W. Perkine for the b Officials in the water department said Monday that there was no| west tourist rates to equalize first step in the fight, points out H. Thomson, former city engi e reury tt lower |v eoone national committee meeting anger of a lack of water in low district», or in the extra high dis-| charges on the Southern route BATTLESHIP HITS the ultimate facts of conditions, neer, for the council vey one or two days this win. | moose tutions ( {riets, where water is pumped, for at least ten days to the coast. | “It states that there is need for " Thomson's filing was indicat. ter, but It never was ax low at |tomorr std tina enrtnn aiht In case of further breaks auxi lary pumping stations, now con The state body complained MINE: DESTROYED »".: the gare, but that only 3h od Bauréay a She time that .;noos ve the ninn ae the key note of nected up, are ready to start pum ping Lake Washington water into| that the rate to San Francisco 9 ver ; that of tie ‘cars are oquippes Judge William Hickman Moore, Because of the cold, and the lack | spring the om as nr ey —— a tne taninn via Ogden or El Paso Is $17.50 |and that they are not all given ad- former mayor of Seattle, filed |of water to furnish adequate heat-| his speech tonight at the banqu This, however, would necesnit ate health precautions, such as boll: | less than the rate via Wash- LONDON, Jan. 10.—The 16,230- COURLe DEFVECO. nt will b acne orien ey eons Feat ae te een | It te udderstood he wants the bull| ing the water MAPReDs ton battleship King Edward VIL Wes! matter of evidence before the pubs Others who are considering en-|miss classes. At the Harrison care to convene at the same| About half of Seattle was beingjother than cooking and sanitation, Ponte eae a wreck today, the victim of a mine, | 10 service commission.” tering the couneilmanic rac pjschool, lack of water for the boll: | iene that the republicans do, and to| supplied on the street corners Mon-|even in the reservoir district, wili| G, A. Lee, former assistant at-| but her crew is safe, according tc | U° iy wwe A. Case, secretary of the fe-jere was the cause for early dis-|time that tne renee he GO Pside” svented the {be stopped, according to announce-|torney general of Washington, / official announcement, Tho loca- o fal Club: ¢ ze F. anal ait quietly awaiting the G. O. P.'s| day Had roads prevented = th ph bd 200 railrog b res eee a te th able annexes to the |action water department from supplying [ment made by the water depart-/Apoke before 200 railroad trainment tion of the disaster was withheld t uasell, former postmaster ‘0 n_ the portab’ nnexes to the | acto ; ’ The | me at Foresters’ hall Sunday It was thought, tho, that {t oc| Dayane r hool, an attempt w Then if the republicans nominate | the dry Rainier valley district, ‘The | ment ight | Peon A. A. Peyace , PO = er agnnenn hon Uy so leon agreeable to the pro-|central distributing point in at 14th| That means that boats will have curred in the English channel or the | eather Forecast ounciiman Lundy and Counctl.| made to keep the class rooms heat-|a Mo saraeable to. thie -Dtpr| central. dleteput Fe Tecterautan cnaldeaeace'l : Fran’ Skaitk, ot Gletwits, discov-| North Bea Ganereity. fate, sanlauk cae man Marble have not yet indicated |ed, but the temperature couldn't b A hak imide they will! If there are more breaks in the |city and that hydraulic freight ele-|erer of spy’s bomb plot, has been! A trainload of survivors arrived|} Tuesday; colder tonight. whether they will ron again. Coun-| raised above 54 degrees. So, final-|dorse him, but otherwise they wi . a os | Va ill be stopped, | iven the iron cross, Itoday at Chatham, : ¢ilman Fitzgerald bas already filed \ly, school was dismissed, |name @ separate ticket, pipe, use of water for purposes |vators w pped, nd RED Ra Ss cs