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SS , | i § FI eeRave Beare Po MS? bAe2 5858 é — HE EASIEST TERMS and the LOWEST PRICES JUST YOUR WORD THAT USE $ 50.00 Worth ef Homefurnishings, $ 1.00 Down, $ 75.00 Worth of Homefurnishings, $ 300 Down, $300.00 Worth of Homefurniehings, $15.00 Down, two-inch post Bea, tn th tin finish; hae five filling rode and is to tarnish; 0. ; ; At Special Prices UST recetved a load of Digh-ar Lin m, doth print and inlat@, ¢ we were able to purchase before the ad- Yance In price, All first quality, no seconds, All new patterns and colors. S$c Print Lino! spectal, per squa: $1.00 Inlaid Lino! rf special, square ate miata Li epectal, square yard.. “PARGE comfortable Rattan Ts cRalTs and: Rockers in fumed No Extra Charge for iG eh: te in eretonne; . : j peer, choice of severe! patterns Laying Linoleum to gear $9.85 Your 1 SAVING | MONEY Little by little, is merely lay- S We will help you. ‘UNION LTRUST CO. JAMES D. HOGE, President. N. 8. SOLNER, MY LETTER TO DICK T have been thinking much ovet what you have written me, the foundation of in- gel, while only a I have ness” of a wedded pair clusion. Dick, I’ wonder Interest. 4% feeis quite as hurt as I do. time AVINGS & for the third I do not know whether you wil OF SEATTLE Capital and Surpiue $800,000 read it. I call it: HER IDOL She crowned him with a wreath laurel To see his soul arise. Vice President and Trust Officer. his heart HOGE BUILDING In the Heart of the Financial District smart Of grief in joy's disguise. She held to him her supplian Newspapers Pull | Results for Salada Tea P. C. Larkin, President The Salada Tea Co. Salada tea is 4 notable example of a product that has been distributed, marketed, and standardized, in the United States and Canada, by the use of news- paper advertising. It is also an interesting “account” because it has won its way through newspaper adver- y and its experience tising employed section by section ; gives point to the claim as to the economies entailed in the use of newspaper space. P. C. Larkin, President of Salada Tea Company of Toronto, says this: “T have tried demonstrating, street-car advertising, Street posters, sampling from door to door, electric outside signs, etc., but I do not believe that anything has given methe results, for the “cy expended, as has newspaper advertising “I do not think that I can give you better proof of my belief in newspaper advertising than to tell you that at present we are spending over $75,000 per year in advertising, and yet this is less than three- quarters of a cent per pound on our output, for last year we sold over 8,000,000 pounds of Salada. In 1892 we sold only 12,658 “Results are obtained by quality first, and then the use of the daily newspaper columns.” WE TRUST YOU $100.00 Worth of Homefurnietings, § 5.00 Down, $1.50 Per $150.00 Worth of Homefurniehings, § 7.50 Down, $2.00 Per $200.00 Worth of Homefurnishings, $10.00 Down, $2.50 Per Confessions Dick, and I have come to the conclusion that you are right in one thing. A man tries to make his wife an an- ry human wom an will satisfy his human nature. come to the conclusion also that the theory of the “one-| very beautiful, but that reality can nev- er work it out to @ perfect con- fifa man ever finds the woman that you say a man always adores as his wife has the traditional feet of clay. Some- times he does and then I think he Today after I read your letter my thoughts seemed to resolve themselves into the form of the following rhyme. f Perhaps Eleanor be angry or will laugh when you And gazed into his eyes beneath | She laid her trusting head upon And hoped that It might heal the + to be found anywhere will be found prevailing throughout this complete homefurnishing store. Our credit service is without ANNOYING FEATURES. NO EXTRA CHARGES. NO INTEREST. YOU’LL PAY Week NO Week 94.00 Week SOLID Oak Tadouret tn the got den waxed or fumed finish: 38 fi) Inches high; top measures 12 ff! Inches square: regular | price $1.25, Spectal...... 85c plate price $13.60. Spectal . hands ir} And said: “He always understands That good within me lies,” Blindly she worshiped and adored And brought to him her whol great hoard Of love that never dies. | She never knew his foot wore clay Until one sad heartbreaking day She dropped her eyes And found a laughing little maid | Who unconscious there had strayed, Making mud ples. That is what you made of me, Dick, wasn't it? For me the laurel crowned head in the clouds, the adoration and the trusting heart. For “the other woman” the fun, the frresponsiveness, the childish joy of making “mud pies.” Fairlow was right, Dick—no one woman can be all things to any one man. I am not going to belleve it yet, how- ever. But ff that Is so, don't hug to your heart that any one man can be all things to any one woman If I have disappointed you, Dick | because you found your idol cold and irreaponsive and somewhat hard to reach on the pedestal on which you placed her, your disap- pointment is nothing to mine who found “the feet of clay.” MARGIE. (To be continued) it GRIFFITH QUITS | BOOSTS 6.0.?. RIVAL To help the election of a republi! | can in an election which ts non partisan, Frank 8. Griffith Satur-| || day withdrew from the race of cor- poration counsel. The republicans who rematn tn || the race are E. H. Guie and H. ©. Caldwell, Griffith expresses his preference for Caldwell. || The interesting part of the Grif- |, fith withdrawal is that prior to his || withdrawal, he was most vehement| |; in his denunciation of Caldwell's }| candidacy, which he sald was “fram ed by a newspaper combine.” Councilman Marble is going to! introduce a resolution calling for the construction of a public com fort station at City Hall park, on Fourth ave. Money for stations was included tn the 1916 budget. Best Bridgework Ry Dr. Kawia J. Brown ] ser rs TIS Jat Av, Union Bik, Any real dentiat will u that Sanitary Iact Hridwe f porcelain and solid gold is the beat in the world. Many |, dentists make hollow work, which ts cheap and always dangerous | L have @ perfected san- y which tn », healthy . Union Block Open evenings until [8 and Sundays until 4 people who work. hone Main 8640, | Ribs STAR—MONDAY, FEB. 7, 1916. PAGE 5. 4 APPOINT MENT SUPREME COURT: | 42-CENTIMETER!! \ wwe Dennison Decorated rolls, at Dennison DSSS SSS SSS SSS SS Se TSS ac Dougall - fouthwick Established 1875 Phone Main 6563 Valentine Novelties Dennison Heart and Cupid Stickers, pkg. 10¢ Dennison Cut-outs, Hearts, Cupids, etc., per package Pe ER 10¢ Dennison Decorated ( per pac kage . ag oO ] Valentine dozen Valentine ally and Place Gards, dozen IN GOOD SHAPE Win Fight Over Snow Over Summit of the Cascades TRAINS ARE ON TIME Altho from 10 inches to a foot of snow fell in the Cascades between Saturday night and Monday morn- ing, all raflroads have been able to Over The Star's United Press leased wire today, from Washington, D. C.. came this significant dispate | “Public hearings as to the fitness of Louis D. Brandeis of Boston for the post,‘ of associate supreme court | What manner of man is he, this Brandeis, whose appointment by President Wil- |son is being so bitterly attacked by some of our very best known “statesmen?” Well, | here are a few things about OUTS D. BRANDEIS has held no office, but | during the past ten years he has been one | of the nation's great constructive statesmen. He has criticised freely, but his criticisms were | all aimed at bringing about better eee BARS ago, when he vigorously opposed higher rates for the ratiroads, he transportation rate Increase. The presidents and general managers laughed him to scorn, but when the hard times and the war came, in 1914, the rallroads were compelled to put tmto practice the very efficiencies suggested by Brandeis. Tho result was that scores of them saved mill- fons tn 1915, enabling them to not only weather the storm, but also to declare inereased dividends in many cases, B eee country to call attention to stem. BY GILSON GARDNER WASHINGTON, Feb. 7.—Like a bomb from an unseen Zeppelin came the nomination of Louis D. Brandeis to the U. 8, supreme court. On the senate, whose duty and privilege {t is to confirm judictal appointments, such was the effect. How could it happen? Men have been made supreme court judges to maintain the instl- tution of chattel slavery; ae 4 re- ward for delivering needed votes in the electoral college; to make the court safe against laws like the Income tax act; and because railroad and other big business tn- terests approved thelr legal and judicial record. But to name a man because he knows economics and has had a practical experience with Industrial problems, and har- bors convictions as to methods for dealing with such problems is so unprecedented as to be stunning Further, to choose a man who has openly and stubbornly opposed cquepeiiaepettanneneneniaapesiatcennssianneasteittelt LONG WEIGHT AND SHORT WAITS FRY E’S QUALITY MARKETS TUESDAY SPECIALS Fancy April 30c Eggs (storage)... Pork Back Bone: 10 Ibs. for . Choice Spare Choice Steer Shoulder Steak... Choice Mutton Chops Choice Steer Round Steak. . Choice Shoulder Pork Steak Choice Pork . PI amp It Signifles Purity and Quality Shope Open Until 6:20 P. M. companies would put practice reasonable efficiencies, they would need no RANDEIS was one of tho first persona in the yement of the New York, New Haven & enounced by railway presidents and attorneys as the wildest type of demagogue. BRANDEIS’ APPOINTMENT SHOCK TO SENATE h: justice will open Wednesday.” | him: After the things he declared were true of the New Haven had been proved, THE STOCKHOLD- ERS OF THE ROAD BESOUGHT HIM TO | COME ONE OF THE TRUSTEES INTRUST! | WITH THE WORK OF RECREATING THE SYS- | TEM. things | RANDEIS has been prominent In the efforts } to wipe out child labor, procure better hours of employment for working men and: wom- en, obtain better sanitary conditions in all lines of employment and to insure the workingman’s standard of living. waid that if the into RANDEIS testified, a year ago, before the U. 8. commission on industrial relations. He said he believed the great corporations tended to degenerate the type of iabor. For their refusal to treat with organized labor, he likened the directors of the United States Stee! corporation to the emperor of Russia, “who also declines to deal directly with the rank and file.” The fundamental cause of industrial unrest, sald Brandeis, was the conflict between political liberty and Industrial absolutism. HE THOUGHT A LIMIT SHOULD BE PLACED* UPON THE SIZE OF THE INDUSTRIAL UNITS OF THE COUNTRY, the terrible mis- {erookedness in high finance— etealing in terms of milllons—whe | has disapproved of the underpay- ment and overworking of labor, Is |contrary to the most hallowed tra- ditions of a long-established order. So there is opposition and talk| Co-operative commonwealth. of refusal by the senate to con-| I nominating Brandeis to the firm him. i! court, Wilson has, after | three years, recognized the pro- e a ee F natin ig wr, ni gressive element whose support he say that Brandeis is “not of a judi. |@rfoyed in bis campaign. celal temperament”; he is Brinn ino ton and it og “theorist,” he { comes late, but it ts none the less teal he ts prejudiced,” he is a/commendable for its tardiness. |v cottemplotter,’ and that be has} 2 rag li gd ng Oi Pe ia * : -) |greasive group in all parties. randeis ts ‘iadviser of La Follette. At one clalist tendencies by the socialists time he supported Roosevelt themselves. He was finally won to the tn- clusive proof that Mr. Brandets, in hia social philosophy, is an “indi- vidualist” in favor of maintaining regulated competition, instead of a socialist in favor of abolishing competition and substituting the The federal trade commission, | dorsement of Wilson by his belle the fair trade bill, the arbitration |that Wilson had become a convert devices for adjusting labor trou-/to popular government and the es- ble: 11 regarded by the so-|sentials of the progressive articles clalis makeshifts and as con-|of faith. SAYS HE’S FALSELY ACCUSED WASHINGTON, Feb. 7.—Jos. Teal, Portland attorney, indicated today he expects to refute charges of misconduct, slated to be made against Louis D. Brandeis, President Wil- to the railways” at President Wilson’s instance. | tee hearings open Wednesd: Teal will attempt to discredit the reported claim of Clifford Thorne, Iowa railroad commis: sioner, that Brandeis “threw the Western railway rate case to the railways” at President Wilson’s nstance. “Brandeis’ letter of employment from the interstate com- merce commission shows that they retained him as an expert,| and not to advocate either side,” said Teal today. | Another charge against Brandeis will be that in a Bos-| ton case he “played both sides.” Again he will be accused of | drawing legal documents for the United Shoe Machinery Co.,| and then taking a case against the company for a St. Louis firm, 5 The senate party lineup is 56 dem- cerats and 40 republicans Eight or nine of the republicans, jat least, will be for the confirmation | of the “people's lawyer,” as Brand-| els is known. Neuralgia ? x “First Aid at Home.” Starting really with 91 or 32 Bo votes, the republicans must align 16 Neuralgia Pain is mos or 17 democrats to make a tie. To sing yet you eas nh Lintment, |Win, Brandeis must have a clear ma-| Think of Sloan's Liniment chen. MM (Jority-—49—and Vice President Mar |shall has no vote. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb, 7.—The backbone of the drug ring, extend- |ing along the Coast from Vancouver | \to Tia Juana, {8 broken, federal of- fictals declare, With confessions said to have been given by Mike Na- hill, George Coulin and Jerry Des- Keep a le in your home."* P Mimond, alias Walton, authorities ben need Mi have the names of all the agents of ON SU UA the gang, ever you have a pain of any kind. It is a fine Pain Killer. No need to rub it in—you just lay it on and the pain flies away at once. ; Sloan’s : Liniment KILLS PAIN | ‘ cope with the situation, and prac- tieally all transcontinental trains are arriving and leaving on time on is division, The Northern Pacific has annul- led Kansas City trains Nos. 41 and 42 and the Spokane-Seattle local trains Nos. 317 and 318 for a few days, to enable their freight to move, All other trains on this line are reported on time, as well as those on the Milwaukee and Great North- ern. Malls Now on Schedule Mails are being handled accord ing to usual schedule, altho some Eastern mails are iikely to be delay- ed somewhat for several days. Nineteen trains, all told, were stalled in the Cascades thru the re- cent storm, Passengers were well provided for and arrived here feeling in high spirits. Eugene V. Davis, N. P. agent at Martin, gave an informal dance to sengers of a train blockaded at that point. A tow small slides have been re- In divisions, tho to tle up traffie for more than a few hours, at most. Sidetracks and switches are be- ing opened Monday in order to dis- patch freight as rapidly as possible. St. Mark's Is Unsafe St. Mark's Episcopal church ts in an unsafe condition from heavy snow pressure on {ta roof Monday. Early morning service and Sun- day school were held Sunday, when the roof was discovered sagging and the walls bulging. No more services were held. A fund was started to finance re- building. For a short time Sunday night, city Nght wires to West Seattle and Hillman City were down. Repairs were soon made, however. Little other wire trouble was reported lo- cally. WILL GO ON NEW RUN The S, 8S. Northern Pacific, built for coastwise service between Portland and San Francisco, will run to the Hawattan islands, start- ing Feb: POLICE PLAN BALL Seattle police are getting ready for their 22nd annual ball, It will be held at the Hippodrome on the eve of Washington's birthday, Feb- ruary 21, Backache, Bheumanem, WARM SESSION | Men Who Want to Be Corpor- ation Counsel Talk BRADFORD IS SWATTED There were several hot moments |in the session of the King County Democratic club Saturday noon when the five candidates for cor- poration counsel loosened up a bit. When J. E. Bradford got thru with a tirade against a morning newspaper, ignoring charges against himself, and H. C. Caldwell had dis \claimed being a tool of any news- ‘paper combine or corporation, | Thomas F. Murphine placed a new |bomb under Bradford, and incident- ally drew a chuckle or two at the expense of Caldwell. Murphine briefly told of his legis- lative record of support for the mothers’ pension, minimum wage, labor union measures, non-partisan = election laws and other advanced legtslation. He then called attention to the practice of the corporation of hiring a jot of professional ap- praisers at $7.50 a day, ae them steadily on the city pay and thus building up a political ma- chine out of keeping with progres sive, independent ideals. He cited a supreme court decision. .| which rapped this practice. praisers to collect for work at $7.50 a day. The owners had to pay. ‘ While Bradford's system of al- lowing his assistants to engage in private practice has been shown up before, Murphine'’s charges on the subject of appraisers has net been publicly aired. Murphine referred to the way Caldwell buflt up man of hag 3 to) labeled him Yandell,” and then proceeded to “kick him all pleces. Nicholas Schmidt sald he was @ socialist and was proud of it. LOOK AT CHILD'S © TONGUE IF SICK CROSS,FEVERISH — When Constipated or Bilious Give “California Syrup of Figs.” Twook at the tongue, mother! If coated, it is A sure sign that your little one’s stomach, liver and bow- ela*need a gentle, thorough cleans- — ing at once. When peevish, cross, listless, pale, doesn't sleep, doesn't eat or act naturally, or is feverish, stom- ach sour, breath bad; has stomach. ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of “Callfor- |nia Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of its little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again, You needn't coax sick children to take this harmless “fruit laxative”; they love {ts delicious taste, and it always makes them feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which has directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown- }ups plainly on the bottle. Beware j}of counterfeits sold here. sure you get the genuin see that it is made by “ , Fig Syrup Company.” Re! \other kind with contempt. fimpress SULLIVAN # GONSIDI CIRCUIT “THE HOUSE OF EXITS” BEST VAUDEVILLE AMERICA "rane 10:20 Sundays Dail TWICH 7130 and 9:00 p. m. Eight Ne Features Ranous-Ne! leon SCL Gray and Graham “At the Fort” De Kerr Lily Lenora & Co, Ortental Hyman Meyer Plauvlogue The Aerial Melis Hearst-Vitagraph Weekly Worls's Events