The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 2, 1916, Page 4

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4 ‘whereabouts of know in school renew the acquaintance. Would it if you may do so. be proper to cal! phone? to call upon her, or is it her place invitation to aycard party? to invite me? M. R. telephone. In careful what you use and prepared too much alkali, which is Surions, a6 it dries the scalp and makes the plain this is less the most expensiy i thing elre all to pisces. ‘get thin at few family for months water and rub {t In, about a tea spoonful is all that is required makes creamy ly, and hair dries quickly and {1s soft, fresh Jooking, \ fy, side, it every dandruff.—Advertisenent, THE SEATTLE STAR Batered at Grattian Wash, Postotticn as second-clace matter BY Mall, oUt of otty, one year, $5.60; Cm oOLA $1.98) Fhe Per month up tee mos By carrier, ofty, Thee month Where We Mixed In ; BOUT eight months ago, President Wilson received popular endorsement for his declaration that the And every Ame an affairs pronounced that “if “if” that ever confronted a people. The trouble with the Mexican people is that they’ve never enjoyed a real self-government and are not capable of it. Diaz government was never nearer real self-government than is the government of Abyssinia. Diaz government was simply monarchial tyranny wearing a flimsy mask of republicanism, and that is the form that has been finally aimed at by every so-called revolutionary leader since the heyday of Diaz, with the exception of the robber,, ravisher and murderer, Villa. Mexico has no hope of self-government save thru awful sacrifice for and unwavering loyalty to Villa’s policy of arbitrarily partitioning the lands and unceasingly combatting the foreign looter, What would be the actual condition of Mexico, were peace to come to her tomorrow, with “De Facto” Carranza solidly established in the presidency Carranza and his family and their relations would soon be fat with spoils, and they would termine the election results. Wall st. would dictate the value of Mexican money and property. Foreigners would be owning the best ranches, and pretty much all the best stores, mines, fac- tories and transportation facilities. The great bulk of the populace would be just what they were under Diaz's club and as far from self government as they were under the Spanish conquerors. Their portion of self-government would be the self-restraint and self-debasement of slaves, and only by some such thing as intervention, by the United States, for instance, can they be aroused to unite and suffer and fight for real self-government. In Mexico the matter of self-government is and has been an issue between the masses and the Classes, the latter represented by a Diaz, a Madero or a Carranza, Attempts at. constitution-making are stirred up and constitutions cook fat and comfortable in their holdings or corrupted by foreign interests. The alternative for the masses is to stand in with a villain like Villa, who has given bloody earnest of his sincerity by hanging many representatives of his domestic classes and by perpetrating such slaughters of i as the recent one in Chihuahua. When President Wilson recognized Carranza, he went back, positively, on his polic) Mexican people settle their own troubles. He recognized the classes. He deservedly won the hatred of all Mexicans honestly and patriotically Struggling for self-government The latter were justified in looking upon recognition of the ornamental, non-belligerent Carranza as “playing politics,” and the massacre of Americans on Mexican soil is legitimate fruit of Washington's mistaken policy. The concensus of American public opinion holds Washington accountable, no matter how strong its explanation, or how reasonable its excuse. It threw overboard its policy of letting the Mexicans settle their own troubles themselves, and took _ Sides. : It upheld a de facto government that does not govern and one in which the Mexican masses can P not see the smallest seed of self-government. Put the American masses in the place of the Mexican Masses and they, too, would massacre hostile foreigners and follow a Villa, if no other leader appeared with the courage to fight and the inclination to divide the legitimate spoils. Taft came mighty near forcing Mexico to make-a first attempt toward self-government when he lined the border with United States troops and made a bluff toward a raid. ‘ Wilson might have done it had he, instead of merely complimenting ‘de Facto” Carranza on hold- ing something that he hadn’t got, thrown the states wide open to the purchase of war tools by all Mexi- can people of be “permitted to settle an familiar with Mexi the biggest de- up by the classes that are of letting the The latter course would have been letting the Mexicans settle their own troubles themselves, in the shortest time and with the least damage to their neighbors. We have taken sides—and bleed, A Three-Mile Hike in the Snow D»? you walk to work this morning? So did we. THREE MILES! Down near the foot of Queen Anne hill we happened across two or three street cars, idly shifting back and forth. We asked a motorman if he was going downtown. He threw back his head and laughed long and loud. We had already walked a mile in snow up to our knees, and we were right on the edge of a mighty big peeve. The motorman said: “We've been right here all night, trying to go back and forth in this one block to keep it open.” ad We met a lot of other conductors and motormen in the same fix. We saw scores of men, with Shovels, trying to keep the tracks clear. They had been working all night. But they laughed and joked back at us as we grumbled, in passing, that it was beastly weather. We met a Ford delivery wagon coming up the street car track, which was the only partially cleared Space in the street. We were making use of this space ourselves. The driver honked his horn. Snow banks were hip-high at the sides of the track. “Get out of the way,” shouted the man in the Ford. “Do you think you own this street?” angrily retorted a man at our side. “Why don’t you walk on the sidewalk, where you belong?” the driver came back. "We laughed again, and floundered into the snowbank with all the abandon of a small boy as he passed. Our grouch was fast disappearing. We reached the office, finally, in a rosy, tingling glow. We're feeling better, right now, than we have felt in weeks. A popular thing to do, of course, when the sireet cars fail and thousands of people walk weary miles, is to find fault with the street car company. The street car company deserves nothing like that, however, today. It deserves, instead, the thanks of the community for its prompt and heroic efforts to give service. It failed, we know. But it made a beautiful fight out of it. There isn’t any moral in all this except that one is always better off for looking at the bright side of disagreeable things. To Crmthin. as the which results, if the young woman;form, nor the girl | used tordoes not invite you to call upon|bread and potatoes. Avoid fats, | and would like to{her, it will be right for you to ask/|butter, oils and milk. Take coid| baths daily, Walk three mi es | |daily. Weight will decrease in pro-| Q—Is it necessary to answer an portion to severity of the regimen, | but will doubtless return when the| « . Re. SETH, [individual becomes careless and| up by} A,—Invitations to a card party|#bondons the dietary } conversation |require an immediate and definite| answer, because the hostess must —Can you explain how the| provide for a definite number of Custom of throwing old shoes and | guests and see that all her tables|rice at a newly married ave filled. | originated, and oblige Q—Recently learned on the tele-| Should | ask permission real stomach regulator known. “Really does couple |in order—"really does” E. T. |indigestion, dyspepsia, A.—Once upon a time the seller plece of property gave the er his shoe when a sale was |made, in token that the bargain |@ch reg was completed, Since daughtera| What ye were then transferred to husbands | born Jumps, were the fath the custom of throw is proper to call her Ae i the Don’t Let Soap Spoil Your Hair When you gas, Q—Please print a real good|of that—just that—makes your hair, be |recipe for Welsh rarebit. Most soaps RAREBIT FIEND. fonacoueraads EEO three slices of butter-| very io and cut each slice in two| were 0 Moisten slightly with hot Shakers they water, and set in the oven on a hot|), Pronarty pot cng he platter. Pour % cupful of milk 10-l way inaugurated, aud it pthc to & double holler, and when it/ag an indication that the parents reaches the boiling point tWlace giving up all elai ” rl cupfuls of grated cheese and stir] grugtter my seaN il agg ntil smooth. Stir in the yolks of| The fashion of throwing rice | {ess vanishes two eges beaten with i teaspoon ps the | 2 Imont ve sr a bride orininates *jing—almost marvelous, ful of salt and add a touch of red| ae ee Hindor Rice 1s the emb "joy ix its harmlessness pepper. When the mixture thick ndoos. Rice is the emblem prosperity, and when showe ens, pour it over the toast upon @ bride, it represents an in finite n of good er fi| @——1 am short and much too! witness ati ing stout for my height. Can you tell! LAND CONVENTIONS me how to reduce my weight? DETROIT, Mich Feb. PEG troit will entertain more than Superfluous flesh is for the bright, finf-|most part the result of partaking sweet | conventions during 1916, according | atomach during the di Reduce | to figures announced today b Wavy and easy to handle. Be-|too freely of starchy and loosens and takes out | foods, and lack of exercise ken at each| Detroit tourist and convention bu Do not eat sweets in any reau, wash ‘or In the world shampoos Make ed toast you belch pieces: acid; head ts breath font dizzy tongue coated; hair brittle. best thing to use Is just mulsified cocoanut oil, for pure and entirely grease: It's very ch and beats saps or an You can any drug store, and «| will last the whole The shoe ible waste, and ounces hair with Simply moisten the dollars’ worth of |your druggist | money back satiafaction hands you an abundance of rich, lather, cleanses thorough rinses out ally The evenly, and| A men and women who can't |stomachs regulated, It De-| your home particle of dust, dirt and |the amount of food t jmeal. world, should always be k 200 | handy in case of a sick, sour, upset or at night the | It's the quickest, surest and most Giroy NOSTOMACHPAIN, =... » AS, INDIGESTION: IN FIVE MINUTES Pape's Diapepsin” is the only put bad stomachs overcome heart - burn and sourness in five minutes Pape's | pores are closed, thus forcing the cyte acces Sc ata eae ae Diapepsin the largest selling stom-| kidneys to do double work, they be. LETTER FROM M’GILL } it}come weak and sluggish and fail = ferments into stub. |eliminate this urie acid, which! PAS gas and| keeps accumulating and circulating | Jeruetate sour, undigested food and |through the system, eventually set: | and aches; |ting In the your | Causing stiffness, soreness and pain ten by Mr f insides filled with bile and indigest.| called rheumatism remember the moment) Pope's Diapepsin” comes in con-|tiam, get from any pharmacy about tact with the stomach all such dis-| four ounces It's truly astonish-| bleapoonful in a glass of water and | the |drink before breakfast each morn: | | A large fitty-cent case of Pape's|eliminate uric acid by stimulating | 0° ene | Diapepsin will give you a hundred |the kidneys to normal action, thus |!oW8, Who are putting ten long, hard or|Mdding the blood of these impurt your | tes. It's worth ite weight in gold to|less and is made from the acid of et their| rapes and lemon julce, combined |the state, in ongs in| with lithia and is used with excel-|tles and among the tilent results by thousand: harmless stomach regulator jn the| overcomes uric acid and is benefi-|crease FEB. 2, 1916. PAGE 4. ISPEEDING 2 gree aoa WO! TH 800K gg a a ASance AeCLOCK! Rg % LAY MY Mo; Pare oe KADTLL 'm Ho Rum | g| DUM! You a | EVERY TRE | MURDER TH' OLD. HICK 1M ANOT, FORTY MINUTES! your '| ME! GET THAT ! CANT SYUFE {WANT THAT? WITH THE CARR’S | DECLARE, THID 15 Awpull VT DONTE (GOTTA WHOLE | You FATHER. HBOOK OF BLAC K Coury PLASTER, BA.) INCLINED! NEVER WAS MECHANICALLY LAMBERT, MAYBE = THOSE GOOD — ) MEN YouDER-. KHOW someTHin ABOUT TH’ NO. 7—THE FIRST BLOWOUT FITZGERALD OWNS ONLY A FORD, | BUT HE KNOWS CITY | | | in only “CT a waid commonly should ride around in a Packard to know a good deal about finances, An expert accountant by profes. ision, Fitagerald knows the ft up to Saute, or rather, from Hi to Oliver T. Erickson and |back again to Austin. B. Griffiths He's Expert Accountant | He knows why the bankers kicked one year because the cat | nances of the city of Seattle “al i i jdida’t pay its $200,000 installment on a bond issue, and why they kept etill the next year. He was ehairman of the finance commit for a year in the city council, and he could figure com pound Interest with his eyes shut He can talk to serial bonds tll you're dizay And Fite was born in Oshkosh. too—-Oshkosh, Wis. He quickly overcame this handicap, however, for he reached Seattle when quite a youngster, soon becoming one of the best known natives of Ballard Baseball Player In the suburb of shingle mills, Fitegerald acquired various claims to fame. He was champion ama teur boxer of the 1903, and captained ship baseball team, of the Puget Sound Am in 1905 and 1906, I sprinter and ie now r 7 second term in the council. Fitz used to manage Harry Treat's Loyal Heights line and consequently knows a thing or two about car line finances, too, Be “ sides, he ix married and has four children, and therefore knows something about domestic fi nances Ballard Wanted Him Fitzgerald had little or no po litical ambitions until one day the people of Ballard decided they ought to ha some one in the MANY GASES OF RHEUMATISMNOW you about Northwest in! the champion Ballard in ur league quite a for a n. y¥., fridy-—-some lawydérs & some ot runners ‘tell en are good re are drummer which is which, a | Says We Must Keep Feet Dry,| other day while he was giving the oo to new spring & summer goods in a holesale house exposure, keep feet dry, eat less! is that so mr hanley, replyed the meat, drink lots of water, and,|other man above all, take a spoonful of salts |” yey anidthe drummer, { PP tegaee to keep down urle/that out last summer 1 day when | |was out in kansas Rheumatism is caused by potson- | . ; Jous toxin, called uric acid, which in|, te” Was having a big siklone generated in the bowels and ab.|*here the day befour { reeched the |forbed into the blood It te the (town & the town was all blowed |function of the kidneys to filter this |"W8Y, that is the most of It, sot acid from the blood and cast it out |S#¥8 to my self f cant sell no goods in the urine, The pores of the skin | here & there aint no trane out un jare also a means of freeing the |!!! tomorrer so { will get a eyeful blood of this impurity. In damp |of What the siklone done and chilly, cold weather the skin |~ 2 Stay off the di » ground, avoid Editor The Star Recently you published a series of articles writ joints and muacles. Jack Jungmeyer, relative | to the ‘ative shingle co-0M twinge of rheuma- | ent move At the first and mentioned my name and |published my picture in a very com put A ta | mentary way in that connection I desire to thank you for the {boost for practical co-operation and the encouragement afforded our fel of Jad Salts; ing for a week. This ts said to hours a day in the mills, producing jan honest and necessary commod Jad Salts is inexpensive, harm. |!ty I need not tell you that all over our Industrial localt workers, The of folks | Star ts led a paper of the matism, |ereat Con 2 effer Ma? your vision, and your leader drink whieh |ship, and your genuine success, in continuously Sincerely OSCAR H. McGILL, who are subject to rhe Here you have a pleasant, vescent Ithia-water clal to your kidneys as well, yours, > | Fitzgerald con 7 led found) FINANCES ALL WAY FROM SOUP TO NUTS Griffiths 1913 ayor, and ycouncl| Austin & had renigned in the fall of the council to for 1 there was theref a ancy to filled by the other city dads, 8 ard citizens called a meeting, y fussed around a while and couldn't agree on whom they want- ed. Finally some one suggested | Fitzgerald. That settled tt. And jso Ballard pulled for Fitz, and | Fitz landed, | The following March he jelected by the people's vote, jnow he’s up for reelection. |bas generally supported the nicipal ownership program, ing it, however, in a calm and un- impassioned manner. In the re \eont. tax squabbie on the budget, ently voted for w levy” until he opportunity to end the compromise, and voted of the three disputed thus presenting a Mayor Gill, which he was and He mu saw fight by for two items and budget to signed | ROWS from | PAGEW Aw & ANNOUNCEMENT the ourmalletic outside of when ¢ lace nan greatent yished far Laurance had § ufactured for killing purposes and then grabbed off Tommy, the Ar- | tint ving Scotch Tea-bonghead and Tom Dillpicles to bite their fingernails, has » accom piished by e Knutty Edi He bas se cu the services of the world nowned Flossie Flim Flam, moy pieture critic extraordinary answer the questions of the 65,74 849,321,452 readers this kolum it any one who a ‘ed in the ex, from Hi Gill t WATCH FOR IT IN ISSUF TOMOR- CRACK THIS NUT (From the Deer Park Journal.) ‘The killing of Birdeen Peterson, aged 24, by Mins Olga Aagevedt, age 21, at Stanwood last week was accidental, a coroner's jury found, She shot herself and took poison | and has recove Wash., WHAT ‘This game of pol Krent. ie employ, o third term. — . PEARLS OF WISDOM BY THE K. E. Insomnia is contagious when ary Gisorder is frequently an bpper berth in a Pull In a dry state, do not despise the cellar as too lowly. It is uppermost in some people's homes. eee SAYS EVERETT TRUE’S SISTER | The of Jack makes her heart absence often | grow Jim, fonder for iF YOU CAN'T DEPEND ON YOUR FRIENDS TO TELL YOU, WHADDAYA GONNA DO? (From the Bloomington, 1!) Record.) } When pulling out for Glen Hat with the freight wagon moroing, Norm Watriss was fied by “friends -on-thé street a his nose was frozen. He gave up the trip, after explaining that it bad started to freeze three times that morning. eee THRU WITH HER . 4 1 This is the sixth of a series of artic’ councilm. asking for people. telling about the 13 ic candidates now the votes of the | he Joins some other men who was good jhunting for peeces of there Nouses| which makes it hard tojand stores and things & they trav-| threw an old shoe after her,” jeled about 20 miles when they met from omaha told a man here theja man who lived in the same town! }from where had from | hello, bill, 1 of the men said to him, & he was laying on the ground jlooking purty tired & hungry 2 hello yoursel, bill answered how did you get out here Dill, they inkwired, did the siklone blow you cleer here no, i outrun the blamed thing jobny they just come “When sister got married, mother. “What fer?” | “Dunno. | gues it means | ain't goin’ t’ spank her any more.’ * ee ] THE FRIEND IN NEED | From a letter to the editor by |subseriber: “Sir: Anent the dij jcussion of the milk bill, let us }to the fountain bh x | eee COMING TO FRONT ; Tom Murphine, candidate for co | Poration counsel, held a meeting | the offices ‘of Revelle, Revelle | Revelle the other night. He wi | speaking about the need of gettin | the voters out to register, Who'll volunteer in this work? he asked, and spying a tall yout Jin the rear, he said * “You ought to come to the front without hesitation.” i “I kin hear just as well, bad | here,” replied the young fellow. | eee | Won't somebody kindly sing | beautiful ballad entitled, “The No Place Like Home”? AUB UT AHEUMATIS “WITH "ST. JACOBS” Get a Small Trial Bottle---Rub Pain, Soreness, Stiff: ness Right Out of Joints and Muscles---Instant Relief! Best Liniment, Doesn't Blister Rheumatism ts “pain only." Not One case in fifty requires internal treatment. Stop drugging Rub soothing, penetrating “St. Jacobs Ol" right into your sore, stiff, ach- ing joints and muscles, and relief comes Instantly, “St. Jacoba Oil a harm rheumatism and back ache lintment which never disap bo inte, limber up! Quit complaining? Get @ small trial bottle of old, hom: est “St. Jacobs Ofl” at any store, and in just a moment yo free from rheumatic pain, sore! | stiffness and swelling. Don't suffel Relief awaits you. “St, Jacobs ON has cured millions of rheumatism ufferers in the last half century, nd is just as good for sciatica, neu ralgia, lumbago, backache, sprainay

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