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STAR—FRIDAY, JAN. 1916. PAGE 4 scuamanaammmaneemaiaaee amen ee = eae e “ TOU FOLK WHO HAVE A WARM =c| THE SEATTLE STAR | ~ FIRESIDE, DID YOU EVER THINK PAGE : OF THIS OTHER SIDE OF LIFE? pike at | | Rotered at Beactia Wash, Postoffice as second-class watter | My mail, out of efty, one year, $4.50, 6m onthe, $1.98) Bho per month up te # mos By carrier, elty, the a month Aber The Hyphenated Voter LAST COLUMN, €6T)NOWN with the hyphenated American” is the slogan hea n ev han BY THE OFFICE KNUTT Aye, and let us be thorough while we are at it. Let us also frown on the hyphenated citizen, the one who is a republican before he is an American, the one who is a democrat before he is a good ag SPEAKING OF HEAT iti i all } er; ask for heat Citizen. F said ‘The Star Tuesday One of the state editors attending the newspaper institute at the university said: “ll vote for Lister {And Kempster probably answers be . ’ ” f you ant heat, go to you hnow- for governor because I’m a democrat. If | were a republican, I'd vote for W. H. Pauthamus. Sb This editor is typical of those who have lost the true perspective—good citizenship regardless of OME Ee. BS id party affiliations. It is time we got rid of the hyphenated-partisan voter , TO SOME FOLKS THA , ATER ISN'T MADE MERELY TO PUT UNDER BRIDGE ASSOCIATED PRESS MISSES AGAIN PAN-AMERICA wi. wove BY (ie eee Frus’’ how some folks are content to let the VHE remarkable figures wired to The Star from that Ed Terry, city treasurer, x4 moribund Associated Press furnish them their Washington Tuesday show that the new world pesine te 7 ch law tapaie Thai's war news. power, “Pan-Ameri ranks SECOND now | Congratulation 5 : : Witness the statement displayed under glar among the naval forces of the earth, and is about IDAH MeOLONS Gibson Sane it comt for his honey- moon, Probably marked down from 19 rn . ing headlines in a Seattle afternoon paper Thurs tied with Italy for FIFTH place among the world's day to the effect that the kaiser’s relatives had armies Sok By ge oe ee a OP | been summoned hurriedly to his bedside in Berlin. The Pan-American navy ranks just ahed ad of Ten o'clock at night at the “Open Door,” with hundreds of men sleeping on the floor. The Star pho: | PG IS Pe “A wireless dispatch from Rome” gave the — Germany, having 51 capital ships to Germany's 48, ff] t98r#Pner snapped & scene In one corne , ‘ E dadihee’. Remasounition: ike aa information, which appeared under a London Accurate figures cannot be obtained from Germany he, by plc g pe iuet 8 5 iss jus Neipiee Sate giggb oBhgar Prange nin Moosers with the G, O, P. Can't “date.” since the war began, so it is possible the figures for ff}. pie ee irate cracking hearth | enough money for a few nights’ | night! religio aNd prcmyd mecagpfpctbsitesidpi g's) In its editions which were on the street at the — tonnage would make Germany's sea power about [f|fismes these wintry evenings—you | lodging It's nearch for @ position) terwmnmatia re held tiller to |n the cold. He dropped out of the who have homes, comforts, friends, in 1910 to help some His mone he was com same time The Star published an account, sent equal to that of the Pan-American federation. and three square meals « day, do} mn t t feilo In 191 lga- > wi sc direc erli rille . - P you ever give the other fellow a | Pelled to et t Open Door 4 platform still remains w. In 1914 he ama by wireless direct from Berlin to Sayville, L. 1. by The Pan-American fleet is little more than 5 rl i Pe Ahr Here he volunteered bis services at| Here the downand-outers up | ma th Olt and bee ne ™ q re corre 4 ; stain! | the plano at the evening meetings |in t blankets at the clone of | but look now! Gill is runni o ght Aemerman, United Press salt respond teat half the size of Great Britain's. The United States Conscience pointed an accusing | (he Plano at the evening meetings |i thelr sng Compose them | mayor again, aad Austy has to pal in the German capital, of how the kaiser attendec fleet alone ranks third, being weaker than Ger- finger at me as nhe plied me with ee ene ee wok he jeft le his own canoe ’ ec met d, being v er than Ge te conta aaa Bigs os a the spring i ; on that very day, the opening session of the Prus- — myany’s but stronger than France's. The other n Door” at billy King at lig Stas aie Mee toms the wets turalture, | o be --« sian Landtag. ‘ nations rank Fifth, Japan; sixth, Russia; sev- a jes Rivas zn steht sedge ters of Puget round ee ee ae ae KEEPING IT QUIET bon! e \ - rove e ay hado’ ee mea ere for a He apparently was much improved from — enth, Italy; eighth, Austria-Hungary, jonas of their discomforts—but nev-| Another fellow was a wireless| Above is the balcony, which is|| A lively young fisher named his illness,” Ackerman wired. Pie foliswing. teble’shows the: strength er did I realize Just what these | telegrapher strewn with a sea of cote (51 in Pischer The United Press has live-wire American ne TOUOWwNg tabic SHOWS the rength of jmen are up against unt J stood) ‘Thru Superintendent Lowry’s as-|all). For another nickel, a manj|) Fished for fish at the edge of newspapermen “covering” the war. The Associated WAR: those of Europe h heen: aveatio in Don't mistake me portion. He has proved one of the | the night A fish, with a grin, | a 7 j aig j “hes i : woe Me ser hayre 009 Biealry ble ae not pointing them out a best telegra on the Coast Reyond this is the reading room Pulled the fisherman in; Press depends for its foreign dispatches upon its creased since then sinatote, Sutlnet Gain. Thar Mal 186 Bs nese ape “abate! Now they're fishing the flesure connections with European news services, many of of us These are two cases Altho the place has been render for Fischer _The only difference ts that while) The “Open Door,” better known ed as « 1. Russia * AR 2 ‘ ; mayor, he won't pass the buck to ED, A STRANGER, IN THIS CITY |the council on sanitary, police or | WITH JUST 10 CENTS? ' tigations, Wonder whom The Brotherhood League makes ther investifations. . ace can EESUESSD ET NTUT ea NAT The Junior Office Boy 5) pstic ire mis iit Tore be meme - <_< | dicament to get a square meal and | “AMBITION AND INDUSTRY | hn. y. saterdy—tuff lack fellera;west all summer, for they have a | night's lodging, and in the WOT | casas» mane Some mat On top,” on the catte! pullmans headed for| big mess of stones what shood be|'%% B¢W Prospect « said the speaker to the Y. M. C. A, which are controlled by the governments under A RUSSIA eee eee e ees : 962,06 Gpon ws, ake hea|now as the Brotherhood Leaguelthe funds permit, it te .rether|® - - -¢@ Which they operate. GerMaNy vere se reeeeeeneees 4,000,000 ; club, houses on an average of 309 | gloomy at best. The men must do Pye, Le 8 f, “re ve Inite . : “he 3 r e 3.878 r I might be reduced to the |r a night—men, young and old,/ their wash 2 & small roor 4 3 You can get United Press war dispatches FRANC vies e scene eee ee ee ees 0878, od same any time f all nationalities and religions hang tt Short wharerer note * eee The Hooster club of Seattle met daily in The Star, which receives this leased wire 1. Austria... ssc ceeenees +. 1,820,000 It was a queer meeting, under None are barred there acan at the University undertaking pare a rhe 5 { queer circumstances, that 1 had! The spirit of Christ js truty with Perhaps you will recall when the |lors and made arrangements for am Service exclusively in Seattle. PAN. AMERICA chs 800.0 ve Ty | with these men cast together by the | in, ever ready to beckon to # less | Protherhood League club was or-|indoor picnic to be held soon. ~ 6. Italy -. 16¢ 0,348 f Fate from four corners of |fortunate brother thru the “Open | ganized, leas than five years ago,| On the dead, can you beat it? INCIDENTALLY, this railroad rate differential af- r Peat TR ee aaa pane a Oe 633.000 rth Door by a pember of ministers, physt-| oe & fair suggests another whacking fine argument why, if erintendent Lowry has taken RR clans and charitably inclined cit NEXT THING YOU KNOW, Seattle's commercial bodies unite, they should unite on ’ eg warp and woot of severs! of) Time works peculiar changes revs Gaby de Lys will be rehearsing & a sac et vill enable the Konsetidated organiza JUDGE GARY says that 75 per cent of the steel ee ee drifted to the; In the old —— tbo : For some months the Prother-|saiome dance in Billy Sand tab vi door wae & wideopen town, the Arcade hood League b ran smooth Pi e being turned out is for domestic consumption. Bully! ever ® I forget the story of dence ball afforded entertainment scsdind teams te ernacl ages tion to work conscientiously for the good of Seattle, and & P ) ee i PH ; malt : it drifted from the pub for the good of Seattle alone Beats war orders all hollow ne young man who came there for wicked women and brutish men Today its financial founds-| WITH MOORE IN THE COUN Smullin. a sol er the oor ot what was once! MR. CITIZEN, 1 PUT THs |" ows "a 2 men were hard tn the it . yar room hangs the sign of QUESTION TO YOU WHAT! Grir S$ SAYS” TI AS America Needs a Cecil Rhodes tome" way lured by te rere the “Onen oo QuETDFou'bo Ie vor Tass | OMPOTHS SAYS* THAT. ILL Montevideo or Rio Janeiro or some other Latin-American center furnish this continent a man big enough to vision this continent's proper future? Our poor idea is something like this: A great international congress of all the Pan-American nations—a congress of representative delegates of all the American republics—and enlargement of the present Pan-American union that IN. y., tuff tuck fo what | say e! maide Itteler & riker's Mand has a/ in pay YOU to keep tne cane seed al should have an official standing, and should unify the various nations, as our government at Wash- hope ‘you all get a look at this here lot of land which it wants cleared| The buyers, heads of departments |,,,Te%! % does baldness. Look at paper befour it ts too Init by a buntch of huskey stiffs float-| . employes of of the but don't aay that Johnny never Ing tn and other employes ne of thi Otto, the secretary, etc. oe ington unifies the various states. ne Let this congress meet, say, every two years—first in Rio Janerio, then in Mexico City, next in Santiago de Chile, then in W ashington, and finally in Buenos Aires—and let its acts be binding on the biggest. downtown department tryed to put you hep, you otter kept) cops ip keeping there eyen peeled! «tores have taken up a collection your pearyscopes up on the fraite & ferries for you,/and are going to provide bread for| BEGINS TO LOOK AS IF does, gaycate, wiffs & other nite® boea so drop off in Jersey & look|the club for two months. That is | Woody will soon ask Carranza, too, v . ine 4 a nat of the road—here's a tp off sp time tabels to Ma. an other gullif| their part to salute the flag. Those Mexicans, American republics just as the acts of our Washington congress are binding on the North American keep away from this big town \oast states where ite warmer and| WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO|by gosh, can monkey with Woody states. this winter where mr woods aint johny |007 _|no much, but no further, on the level, its going to be no -— _ a Sh ST desent plase for a Kent what's look ing for 3 squares & a flop at nite without a hassel for em by rites there ought to be put lup clear akross jersey a sine of the axe which meens work for that's going to be the rool = in n. y. from now on - —— . " a s | this aint no jowh feller, take it ltrom me strait, it eure ix the goode CYNTHIA GREY’S LETTERS AND ANSWERS [aes ran co This certainly isn’t asking too much of the continent that could produce a union of the discordant states that overthrew the British yoke—or unions of the scattered Spanish colonies Perhaps in the far future our children’s children will speak of the “21 original republics” just as we speak of the ‘13 original states!” IBBBG0r what he ways goes in this It! ol barg ir Cynthia Grey: A few words chances of others dealing kindly|this or not, we cannot deny that) Crucifixion? If no eternal life, why var nag town used to be purty to answer F. B. Circum-| with you, F. B. Were you develop: pride is the foundation of every evil the Resurrection? soft for a bo, but no moar, the new r io alter cases. F. 8.’s ing a cancer, we would all can you in the world today. God had given| MRS. T. J. TRAYNOR. [rool i pick and shovul, or slege an unknown to me, and per- good and brave to hide the fact |the gift of free will to man, He! axe, take your choise but do it tn a 2 .| from your ailing husband, and in was not confirmed in Grace, and) Q—t1 applied for a divorce one|hurres i this matter also you would do bet-| would not be til! his term of proba. month, the court took up the o \" the dept. of korrekshun says rite y ter to leave it with your God |tlon was over, Chiefly in his intel-|the next month, and then the next\now that It cood tse 200 atrome z murder, he said in his prayer to 1, D, |lect he was like God; having will, month my dee was given m rmed gay cata who have been lead- © God, “Against Thee and Thee only slants memory and understanding, with-/When will my six monthe be up?|jne 9 healthful open air Ife out have | sinned, and done this evil in| Dear Miss Grey: Wiii R. H. E. E./out which he would be equal only to | From which month do you start to| ~ Thy sight.” consider with me, as a brother, just Nata Ge deus ca ~ rr ~~ Marge ; eines 8. | Jesus said: “Neither do! condemn ie. | 5 . when he time is counted from the F yan goto ul tain he were. ike nage Arty Mg Megat elie [ET had succeeded in causing date your decree was granted yo ‘AN NTERVIEW we read: “If we confess | eden, that a Spirit of Pride entered | i2",°0 (nault God, thereby losing his right to eter he Miss Grey: | know a fellow iron! — also had man will. the South who is in Seattle, and i God in His mercy and love did not|who can't get work. His spirit and| (Never Ve bo i all spk de abandon man, tho He condemned his body are about starved out. || him to suffer and die. Can we deny can't help him. But somebody ougnt lam a very p it? He, man, realized then what he to be able to. He ia honest and) son. had ldst, and in the promise of a eager to work. He is not strong | Il wasn't born in a small | Redeemer, they, man and woman, enough to handle a shovel, but | rs 1 knew they never could gain what |don't know of a better man for some} '°* | they had lost. auch work as collecting. He is too| . My father wasn't poor and I full of prid rding to my way| ‘idn’t have to earn my own of thinking, because he hates to teli| Ving our ole He is faithful and just to the reaim of Innocence and Happi- ee us our sins, and to cleanse negs, advocated by the once beauti- rom all unrighteousness. ful Lucifer, who with his many com These passages give us the atti- 5anions had lost thelr right and tude of God. eternal happine Man was cre 4 We well know the attitude of ated to fill the place made vacant man, both in and out of the by those unhappy spirits. Unhappy, | 7 churches. Very few, if any, have || say, because their influence on us | © God’s forgiving spirit. The woman at this far distant day is unhappl. | who has “sinned,” altho she may ness when we yield to it, viz., temp-| ) confess to men, and God, can hardly tation. They were jealous, so to| T° Me that Redeemer (is) was D find 2 place in any so-called Chris-| speak, of man, and determined that | God Himself, in human form. Know. eccie of the fix he im In + dies on ot Cho laws hae he should not inherit what they had ling man as an intellectual being. ee oe : T nae — — a example: “Unless you take up your| A.—This letter is printed In hope 1 didn't work to support my Our great Semi-Annual Dollar Down Sale ends Saturday, January 22. This allows you just one more week to take advantage ‘of our big liberal offer—any garment in our store during the remainder of this sale for only $1.00 down and $1.00 a week. This includes all our Clothing, Hats, Shoes and Furnishings. You get your choice when you pay the first dollar. Take the garment home and wear it while paying the bal- ance at $1.00 a week, or $5.00 a month. lain sort of per - Women’s and Misses’ Coats $7.50 cross and follow me, you are not that some one will read of the man’s mother and brothers, and there worthy of me, etc. | am the Way, | predicament who can help him.| was not the slightest early in the Truth, the Life He proved! Persons wishing to get in touch} ication that I had any talent what he sald by supernatural meth-| with him may do so by calling Miss | ods, proving that He was greater |(Grey, Main 9400 . een than natural elements. The reason! Dear Miss Grey: What would) UT town. He didn't take any to me that churches seem to be|“F, B.” gain by confiding her mis notice of me and didn’t pat J Once David Belasco came to SPECIAL VALUES 4 . more social than religious ie that| fortune to her husband? She would) 0°”, the head and ask me ff I i s : In Suits, Overcoats men have injected and instilled| only bring extra worry upon him, | didn't want to come to New And up to'$29.50. All the new heavy Winter garments to select from. their own personal opinions into! which, in hie broadmindedness, he| York and join his company he 4 $9.00 €95 00 fate hive (Cahcate. aie ° pure Christianity. What they like! would possibly forgive, but woula| MY mother wasn't shocked Ladies’ Suits, $9.00 to $25.00. Waists, Skirts, Corsets, etc. an aincoats they teach and practice regardiess| never forget, and it would not ben-| when I went on the stage. My of what the Redeemer taught, which! efit either of them in the slight proves that we are still cultivating!1 would gladly give all | pos: I never read Shakespeare pride instead of humility, Doesn't had | never committed a greater! and never locked myself up t seem as if an eternal warfare is|wrong In the eyes of society and| alone and rehearsed Jullet be being carried on in the seul of man? my family than she has been gullty| fore a mirror Science makes discoveries in nature of, yet the fact that one has made I haven't got 50 gowns and a the elements of which always ex- one or two mistakes should not dis-| $50,000 wardrobe, You could t,| father didn’t rage and storm For Men and Young Men $9.40, $11.25, $13.50, $15.00, $18.75, $22.50, $26.25, $30.00 Men’s Suits and Coats $15.00 isted. We wonder at these discov. courage or dishearten them beyond! buy all my personal funk for eries because of our dullness of in-/all recovery; but, remembering| twenty-eight fifty ll 3’ Suits and tellect, and for the same reason and profiting by their former er It doesn't take any nerve to | think there is no God an is cre: rors, strive to d db , » me {4 Wi 3 5 i A Boy: ’ ‘ ieee Oe cree mani one | (re, ely jo and be better in act the melodrama atuft in the To $30.00, Hats, Shoes and Furnishings. Open Saturdays until 10 p. m. Overcoa sa lions and millions of centuries, con. If she must confide her troubles) o's’, | sequently our chief business while to any one, let it be to her Savior,| yn) ea ea ‘ SPECIAL PRICES $3.00, $3.75, $4.50, $5.65, $6.40, $7.50, $9.40, $11.25 time or probation Is ours, is not to after her own manner, and by her enjoy illicit pleasures, stealing, fight: | self. Sin is nothing more nor les: ing, gambling in human life, etc.,/ than the absence of righteousn | but to find what the will of God Is| and when righteousness comes in, in our particular case, and then! sin ceases to exist. It cannot be have the courage of our convictions. | light and dark at the same time, ao| ‘hOUsht anything about it Why doesn’t the Spirit of Christmas let her remember that she is not B SHey See a See nee ae prevail all the year round? ff living her past over, but is begin.| S#¥ing up to buy a second Christianity was carried out as the ning the present, which presents a/_ hand Ford Redeemer willed, would we need:clean page, and that it is within banks, and cafes, lawyers and her power to keep it free from judges, jails and prisons? Were His blotches \ BULL BROS, plain cold cream I have no advice to give to other girls with movie ambt- tions, because I have never GATELYS 1119-1121 THIRD AVENUE m3 SENECA AND SPRING STREETS ieee ac ater nennisimeeeeiimaial lessons for one class only Not at That she shali live an honorable | all. None is exempt. Do we think and upright life in the future in an P FIRST & COWMBIA W.H.FISHER, MGR, that tare ino eternal punishment /andeavor te make up for er aot ust rintere : = 2 for breaking the Divine Law or Ten | of the past is the sincerest wish of THIRD @AIN 1 | X33 D353"! = Commandments? If so, why the BILLY MOORE, we ss = 4