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same cheap peanut politicians w in the past, Guy Kelly for speaker? MAKE ’EM TELL Call ud your representatives in the house at Olympia and make ‘em tell you why they want to vote for the What is there in it for You're entitled to know, INSIDE S TOLD ho controlled legislation them to vote for + TOURIST ADFUND | DEA LOOKS GOOD . 0 GOV. LISTER Gov. Ernest Lister wi recommendation to the legi appropriation to ington. This was indicated him to The Star Saturday. attract tourists to the ill probabl make a fotdial| slature for a publicity fund state of Wash- { in an interview given by} “The tourist rate decision is one of the greatest boosts the Northwest has had and we are happily in fine condition to care for increas time,” said the governor. “Our road construction is in good; shape. Our system of roads will be & splendid attraction in itself for those who want to ‘See Ar ca First.’ 1 heartily believe in the value of advertising our state in the East and the board of finance, of which T am a member, is inclined to the same view. We are no® engaged $n making up the budget. ~nd if we feel that the financial ituation ‘Warrants !t, we will be glad to ree ommend an appropriation for a Publicity fund. Worth While Now | re has been no time where publicity was as worth while now.” In 1918, Gov. Lister signed en ap- |S Lplawtag of $25,000-for pubtictty | sage more King county legis- Iators have come out in favor of a publicity appropriation Saturday They are Frank H. Renick and John R. Wilson Renick made the following state ment \ ed tourist travel here at this I favor the eppropriation by the legislature of the 250,000, which | am informed will be asked by the Pacific Northwest Tourist associa tion, to be used in connection with similar ap; ations by Oregon and British Cot a two-year Kn to direct rist trafti Pacitic Northw Cai tornia and demonstrated that a large tourist travel means the expenditure of millions annually by tourists as well as investments by them, which has much to do with the prosperity to th st. Colorado have and development those states. The Pacific North *t needs tour ist money and ments, to de velop our resources, and money properly expended io that direction should bring large returns on hot | | investment “As all the people of will benefit from t development resu ° state | rity and tourist traffic, I deem | te proper to appropriate publ for the purpose of securis business. “MILLION DOLLAR” IDEA A “BIRD,” SAYS COUNCIL Councilman Cecil Fitzgerald. | chairman of the finance committee gays The Star's “Million Dollar” idea is a “bird.” “The Northwest ought to take ad. vantage of this tourist rate de-| Cultivate that of reading it's a good MORE THAN 60,000 COPIES DAILY MAN FITZGERALD = what most of us tell ‘em about this country, and they don't believe cir culars and booklets. If a man read all the circulars and listened to all the burean arguments, he wouldn't Dobie ha success. He was a many, not in that fact alone. The for men Spot out of bed to form a It’s human petition tha thru fraternity houses and on to the home of Coach Gilmour Doble, as testimony of their that he’s not to return as foot ball coach next year. ymbe winner ndation of his The Seattle Sta THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TC SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS \ VOLUME 19. TTLE Gov. Ernest Lister, who looks with faver upon the idea of a con- “certed state publicity campaign. CHEER DOBIE 1 think.” easy to hundred university [Pall that Doble hates no have been hin the years here—and » that he doesn't » with faculty com ° 0-50 proposition ays, with to leave th friends thru Friday, | want to wrane regret | mit rpentined near midnight It was a tribute to the foot on for politicians, lized more than mere but hi ilue was uccess has | WASH., SATURDAY We fear President Suzzallo has been unduly bitter with his bare statement that Dobie failed to LAST EDITION Ah! Weather Director Salisbury has a conscience. He wished a bit of slush on us night before last, and follow. ed it up with a drizzle, But for Sunday he is behaving real well. He says: “Fair tonight and Sunday.” § DE 9, 1916 STORY OF WAR CRISIS STAR BY LORD NORTHCLIFFE Describes Part Played in ~ It by David Lloyd-Georsge, “| Britain’s‘Man of the Hour’ the t ! remarkable story that ha c hanged th predicts that the me out of the great crisis in British politics—an inside analysis vernme written by the man who made it possible— will direct the the war; settle the crisis and n official statement.—Editor.) J of the ama | Lord Nort ation which ha u In it Northcliffe xl will between Great Brits lenly whole ge United State winning of maintain ¢ n and It is something more than a By Lord Northcliffe (Written for the United Press) (Copyright, 1916, by the United Press) (Copyrighted at the Department of Agriculture in Ottawa) | LONDON, Dec. 9.—As a personality, David Lloyd-George is for many reasons in- teresting and important to the United States. He is one of the few British statesmen understanding that difficult and intangible psychology of the American temperament. He is important to America for another reason. He is now the head of the five 'British nations engaged in war—Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South |Africa, together with India. Winning of the war primarily devolves on these nations. If they and the allies are beaten, it will be America’s turn next, for Germany’s plans in South America and Ger- many’s hatred of the United States should be known to every American who reads the anti-American propaganda of the German government. HIS LIFE LIKE THAT OF MANY AMERICANS } Lloyd-George is also interesting to your hundred millions because his life has been i very similar to that of many of you. He began simply, without other assets of life than a good father and mother. He had the same kind of education that an American boy gets. There are millions of American homes like the little home in Wales, wherein he spent his early childhood. Hoe! oo was teacher of a school in Liverpool, managed by a committee of Unitarians, including Dr. Harriet Martineau. His mother was a daughter of a Baptist minister in the Welsh village of Llanystumdwy. I do not know Lloyd-George in private life; I am not in agreement with him on many political affairs. We have been publicly antagonistic on many matters during 20 years. | He adopted a line in the Boer war that was not mine, incurring the hatred, even con- tempt, of millions of his fellow subjects. It was a brave line, for it demanded more courage to be on the side of the minority opposing the war, than to shout with the major- know-whether to go to Baltimore or » faculty and student mem-/ity supporting it. ” ys, ar’s| P ball coach who has established n nt mew Hen shout advertising this country | “Dut tig amen tanner 4 | a record of nine years of un tr of ALWAYS SHOWS SAME FINE COURAGE “bird.” RNY ance Maar yr bagels broken gridiron victory. and have bee P 4 ; Swern Trend it, 1 thought it| ret amments in big daily papers.| ‘Tm willing to quit football now Some say he is not a Since then Lloyd-George has led all sorts of movements at variance with the tenets x nor 1 live ones read back there ‘oact ot ‘ . og: . . . ded better than anything 1'd/ would smash hom rapes sorte sgt: 1 | wan on Of the political party to which I belong. Sometimes he has been right—and proved r heard of along that line. The this ix a fine place to be y lornemes m an on lire T ilsk’ of it; the better it|can' sicey: bercnss ve” "eo ra cH bey ‘o turn pight; sometimes he has been wrong—and proved wrong— but in all he has undertaken Pee ente 6 ty Rg REM ST bay a Nh ; cach Doble had broken with| chines on 4 vA bo he has evinced the same courage shown thruout this one momentous week’s history. 7 . m certainly in favor of joint sident Bt 0, whd backed. up| bie explained. “T have tried not to Bee lation from Oregon, Wash-| 1 er een ee oe Grimm from foot, of ‘be: entirel ‘co peed fe —————) The British people's fear of help ington and British Columbia, pro lanksgiving game. Doble| hands of faculty men. Of course CLIMBS uP LADDER } ing German propaganda in the viding the money is iny 4 1D! stood Pr of the t mbers of a fac- | | Bs nited States prevented English some smashing way that will eet thar‘ yoted | ‘ “ho don't know! GME CLIMBED DOWN | | fed the: Hieltian pensio lane aa lea I saw in The) Oniy a Doble hadjanything about’ my work—they | Mite Star of taking page advertisements , friend us to only c Raatiatio (Chaney .itane with the politicians who have man- 70,000 TROOPS telling the temperature here, is the.) Ay paee Siicke ts \Ghinta aie oes ee | Oe YEARS AGO aged our share in the war since only thing I've seen that looks like for him. Alumni, business men| Faculty t Capt. Sea - i ete) a winner 1 students were bewalling- the | grave jed to, CHICAGO, Dec, 9.—Pretty Ittle F WAR . “se sp Hee si ae of the ta cot in| fin « ed team Irs. R Mayne Lather 20, has WASHINGTON, Dec. 9.—Spe- sloyd-George was the only mem- —sreredidaedgsa debigde othe |SCHOOLMARMS MUST *: t athletic embers to the recent € sited hack up the ladder she cial grand jury probes into high |ber of the government with the sore Rumaniane ‘are in full hin ident Suzzallo has After answering about 300 ques- climbed down in her el ent tw cost of living will be begun in |couras to exhibit discontent over retreat before the advancing G ‘ot been open-minded enongt tions,” Doble said, “Seagraves t years ago, and today is back with Detroit, Chicago and New York |our feeble and vacillating conduct Danube and right German army FOR ET DAN CUPID: eard all angles of the|them one wer would do for all mo waiting for the trial of her ether nigee Pec to alnbees the middie of next week, Spe- of the wat One sionally in partie. "s offi- RACINE, Wis,, Dec. 9.—M ( » affair,” said Dobfe, “and | questions—the coach had nothing divorce suit, some day within the | cial Assistant Attorney General j|ment and on the platform, he at» Sore «= Sialboepotelbro i Chee en school teachers we in ant I rn iui lorst nat im cle et.|tto do with their move but o next two week ways of reducing the cost of Anderson, in charge of the | tempted to tell the people a little of Dec. the Rumaniane leet demand here today because of For nine years I have felt as they did about the situa Ever since the then Miss Dorothy! !lving at the Hippodrome ald | Probe, announced today. | the truth, but on these occasions he over 70,000 men taken prisoner the matrimonial proclivities of or less trouble with some tion Klewer climbed out of her bedroom day, at 2 p.m, because they | Attorney General Gregory gave | was always howled down by mem- by these two armies with 184 their predecessors and the sit. members, some of whom 4 t be iraduate Manager Younger, Do- window into the arms of her 22 didn’t get a sannee ip ide on |offictal approval of this plan. It is| bers of his party, and their newspa ¢annon and 120 machine guns. uation has become so serious | lieve in intercollegiate letics./ ble says, has been hard to get | year-old lover it has been stipulated Aan lei eg ternoon. | highly probable that yerand juries pers, » tnpatriotia and as eiving « al b " t 1 or like onte > ju also will be called in the immediate | comfort to the enemy. The rest did veral thousands of these in that Attorney Geo. W. Waller, Others opposed the salaried coach | along with, and would like to see by her parents that she could re x 8 ‘ dates a force of Rumanians which of the training school board, system. Factions have grown up. I the doleful mentor go—and a lower turn only by climbing back up the mnivarey Stusate, geting future at Cleveland, Kansas City | their best to hide the truth. endeavored to make their way from has suggested that hereafter ap mad man enemies. This sadaried man come in his place ladder and bese ing forgiveness from ready for thelr annua y and Minneapolis The hide-the-truth tactics in com: the passes northeast of Sinaya to-| plicants for schoolmarm jobs | last ist one in mat But the nen on the team under: |the ¥ ball, went thru a spasm of ham- Following the “go ahead” orders|mons of smaller politicians were Ward the southeast. Many cannon, be forced to sign a contract | feel pretty good that I've been | stand,” smiled Dobie, “and 300 of ge HERE'S NEW ONE rgory, telegrams were dis.|shown at the tlme they were ene were also captured from them binding them not to marry able to stay with it for nine years|the students do, And that, to me, and honeymoon 1 An eggiess, butterless and po 1 to those points where grand deavoring to cover up their blun- within the period covered by nd not be run over very much—|is worth more than anything 1. war she finally gave up and tatoless cent luncheon for s will be summe 1, ordering ve and Sir Edward Carson left ch contracts I'll step out now, and forget foot- could want.” did it ‘ Feet ae 1 Str aepait ame use Okie (ato the work to be started at once the governinent last Year ae | ers’ club and all women inte with tie Gan asm e rE > ADVERTISING MANAGER'S d in that organization A Delmar, N. Y., church Provides| , jar would have DAILY TALK fight on the high cost of living | |ear trumpets for deaf attendants (Continued on page 8) @ will be given at noon in the — — —— a & Ron Marche tea room Monday we i ae 4” a a7 OBI a a “7 Mrs. E. M. Higgins, secretary | | | of the Homekeepers’ ciub, an HOW WOULD YOU FEEL nounced the luncheon, and 2 ' aid that it would precede the Full particulars of P i H pnd lide elon a ty . iia! ; th ey program Gilmour Dobie, symbol of success, and the | millions and the bank clearings may break all records, but | ; Me J ae sohls ais If you crawled into a friend’s home thru the window, e / 4 S) . . the country remains poor if the people as 3 1ole are dipetncas alee pike | ; ing ing y at {Seattle's best University of Washington have parted company. |. the country “remains poor e people as a wh oA to ae —_ dieeatting ae dering we wea hours, p Sez e A / 00 ° ° and sudden ard the clang of a burglar ? Beatie’ will be In all football history, there is no record equal F Dot ‘s sds ailesnmuh ena enlen continual mering at 3:40 p. m. which put y & urglar alarm P j to Dobie’ He never lost a game, either in his ; “heel : | the kibosh on the mage meeting. found in toda 4 é ' ” because it was founded on the fundamental principle that They had rented the Hippo. Star nine years at the University of Washington or pre- the COMMUNITY interest must be served. What a les drome, and decided the women e at’ S at appene egal vious to his coming here. economists, and commerce! were keeping them from putting up their decorations. The resolutions prepared by a |committee of the Homekeepers’ club | recommended a boycott on potatoes | selling for more than $40 a ton, by| to na Rosalind Chalmers—good looking, vivacious, young woman, who had traveled all the way to Witherbee's island, in the St. Lawrence. ity function of “train- been much more valuable to this community | contribute toward the unive ie ge ae a =| Dobie gave vitality and the breath of life to the idea | ing character.” Until there should be more definite arate eelatte Og pea, rae pan uae pb of the opening action in a clever story team work. Himself a man of unostentatious deport proof of this failure, hitherto unsuspected, Presi- tion but constant tn price, the y E. J. Rath— it, Dobie built teams, not individual stars. ‘The facult dent Suzzallo, who has been here but one year, | jouiry, and eves and. butter trom! ¢ ” pluck @ Grimm from the line--but the Dobie TEAM remains unconvincing against Dobie’s nine years! ti smal iroducing eveam ONE-CYLINDER SAM YW dal Chae’ th Abatlontin ran udm RU a top | Of satisfaction. ; : | were to be obtained trom the post and think if prosperity is real unle hared by the | The parting with Dobie, at any rate, could [ Dr. satihows tailea to show vp Of course you'll read it, starting Monday, if you enjoy whole team—by the community. Individuals may make | have been much happier. (Continued on page 8) interesting modern novels.