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The Seattle Star Entered at Reattia Wash. Postoftios By mash, out of city, ome year, $3.00; € mont By carrier, elty MORE THAN 60,000 COPIES SOLD DAILY second-class mai 90; 160 per month up © month Under False Colors A” The question involved in Senate Bill 89, fathered by Jesse J i one of regulating the jitneys. It is one of eliminating competition for : benefit of a public service corporation. 5 Stripped of its mask of “regulation” at the public hearing the « ® night, the Jones bill to put jitneys under the control of the public ser commission, stands today a reembodiment of Referendum No. the tificate of necessities bill the last election—+BY MEANS OF AN EMERGENCY CLAUSI It is but another attempt to have the state say that a private corp tion shall have an EXCLUSIVE MONOPOLY in the public utility field. the matter. 4 Exactly the same bunch of corporation controlled men that sponsored the certificate of necessities bill is now behind this measure. The public utilities committee, which introduced it as a committee bill, is jammed to the ™ muzzle with them. Sate Bill 89 cannot be passed under any guise of regulation in name of public safety. Jitney regulation is not an issue in the bill. It is nothing more than a ruse to fool the voter The issue is: state back of private capital and GUARANT ITS PROFITS — GU ANTEE IT AGAINST LOSS FOREVER? Shall they be given the power to ELIMINATE FAIR COMPETITION Shall they be given the power to tell local communities how they n tun their institutions which are purely local in character? Sudents in the salesmanship class at Broadway high f school are, it is reported, instructed by George Keith hen to talk and when to keep still. Why not send Keith _ to Olympia to dally with our “statesmen”? on for “Bone Dry” Law HE passage of a “bone dry” law by the ture is now a toreg r The success of limited prohibit \ ing so marked that the la ker ul 1 ir On top of that, comes the rt decision sustain-| longingly at the nice th the Webb-Kenyon law and virtually offering the assist-| for’, marked-down sale of the United States government in the proper enforce-| stopped to inquire if he Were it not taking place before our very eyes, the growth aI When the dry law was before the people's vote in|—Ladies’ Home Journal 14, business men in Seattle and in the other big cities, pre-| le, indeed, voted 11,000 against prohibition—in 1914. In 1916, after prohibition was tried out for 10 months an attempt was made to weaken its pro ms, Seatt sed itself- 1 voted 13,000 majority Be Why? Simply because’ every bu borer, knew that prohibition helped him considerably. Every idit house knew that collections were better. The grocer, baker, the butcher sold more, andgot paid more promptly, in in the days of the saloon. Children were better clothed fed in many families. Prohibition was a Godsend t my a poor man’s home. Bar ew; thousands of Savings accounts were opened The number of arrests dwindled; the number of crimes less. The taxpayers were saved money in the cos penitentiaries—and insane asylums, even in the shor tod prohibition has prevailed here Just as a law against burg! fieves, so the prohibition law hasn't stopped all bootlegging At least, not yet. But their manipulations have dwindled now © insignificance. At the very most, their ope led distribute as much liquor in months as Seattle saloonmer iness 1 leposits ¢ k deposits g itoriais on the beauties of work Did it ever oceur to you, tho, that Edison's work has been CON ne yt the It is nothing more than a bold attempt of the Stone & Webster interest and their sponsors in the legislature to shove down the throats of the voter the very same sort of a measure the voters snowed under by a 5 to 1 vote An it is an attempt to gag the right of the voters to have the deciding voice in th Shall the public service commission be ee the power to place the E AR- 1 ing t siavion | COLYUM - ONLY ONE THING FOR HIM they jail to see the “bandwriting on the wa A 300-pound man stood gazing fate played in a haberdasher'’s window A triend| 0 think nt of prohibition. |ing of buying shirts or pyjamas | “Gosh, no!” replied the fat man county for their entire time—why| . é , rir a | witsfully. “The only thing that fits|should they be allowed to take a/ Sentiment in favor of prohibition would scarcely be believ-| me ready-made is a handkerchief bd ruin and disaster would follow in its wake. And, | WHAT HAS BECOME . a ba THE WEATHER MAN WHO] |the medicine would really do wha ROBERT BACON middle-n gentleman who gave MUSTEROLE QuIcK old in one day over the bars : : GUESSED IT wouLD claimed of it Bacon, former ambassador to| er @ shy, limp hand as he pans A “bone dry” law in this state? In the name of common |RAIN ANDO iT DID ? J not stand In (he) eee ore eee sor nia |'T was just going to you. Sabra | | pase, why not? And that is why the legislature will pass health, If a me") country. What in France,|"@nt You these papers ' ! ,. . eee nt to t é ft “Oh, thank you. Kind of her to it by practically a unanimous vote jhe says, mo to urge the 0} i neato he ‘ ic Pa Seneca DID YOU KNOW— States "to wake up and pre-\T*™m mber ft Shag all ® got on |It Soothes and Relieves Like @ aioe : pend That when practicing on a plan : par ’ ¢ seemed to mean “ The race for position as fifth city in the country [for three or four hours the hands Anictel Himb, «new. ro Ze mt what he sald simply page ey hme ny seems to be an annexing contest. That city has the ad- become tired. This be over. |Of bet B oe fo? Te 2 | “Sabra’'s pretty busy with the un urn or Sting vantage that is situated in the largest state aoene by: bonding. aged hands rigid !iie government, and private med f To Remove Dandruff Hb sob tpg — eae mother MISS LUCHLLE MILLER Musterole is a clean, white ointment sore someone lifts the plano up| in Alou get ie ast aah scr bie ee | fa arkable = womar made with the oil of mustard. It does and down » y 5 Ch all the work of the old-fashioned most docto ant the peor 2-cent bottle of Danderine ME ear , i ie old-fa Man Seeks Welfare, Not Work : reap it cers ; iy ig pen Arve nt Tent het" Chloe aprke tm.| | Bicycle riding hae become a fad mustard plaster—does it better and NEW YORK minister wrote to Thomas A. Bdison, among other| A true diplomat w aiwey® cure them or ‘ and and rub well in ne ove! She does too much for) ea iiter Ad 20h hore on 2 bike | oes not blister, You do not have to prominent men, asking him what are the greatest eafeguards |!4ugh at the gray haired jokes Misr ae alp with the fir os hae ee ie ane of Montana's bepular bitte bother with a cloth. You simply rub | against temptation. Edison replied boss springs and say, “they're new! 1 just came from there. if a per-| morning most, if not oe je ase a: tell |e eee karte tae Pp 9 it on—and usually the pain is gone “If | were to hazard a guess as to what young people should on a son walks ne treet and| fil scurt will have disappeared, | Di * je wants to get a ate fo for| endeying t ca Many doctors and nurses use Mus do to avoid temptation, it would be to get a job and work at The viii verre iq |00k# sick police pick him up Two or three eae way” “m ih “he ry —, from a d give it to their patients, it so hard that temptation would not exist for them.” if oa ea Buy ‘se wil wn “land take him to the hospital, where ery bit : ne aratt stop a. mrad 0 re pinseid of hey will gladly tell you what Te- From which answer wise editors have since been printing learned | oe ee eee a ane ieee ren {he Kets the best treatment possible a ee tee thee motional ef it gives from Sore throat, brone street car and flirted with a wrer hanging in front of him on a strap cesta: that it has been the KIND of work that Edison wanted todo?! you CAN'T KICK ON THIS The truth is that there are two kinds of work—one kind » Pand desirable, and another kind plentiful and not so desirable. The Sis a@ kind of work that produces pleasure to the worker as well as to SS © the man who consumes the produce of that worker; and there Is an-|@ to produce the good things required for consumption ° ee en A gink, by th aking It From the Children Pees tia tioee: Bie across with NCLE SAM seems to be mighty particular, not to say captious,||imerick in the great KE. I about his prohibition. Congress indicates its willingness toltest for the best bit of n have the District of Columbia, Hawali and Alaska “bone dry,’ @nd may later cet around to Porto Rico, the Danish Weat Indies and the | tomobile, for which the wi Philippines have the pleasure of sitt Sort of taking the stuff away from the children. And did you ever | plush Notice that when father becomes convinced that a certain stuff fa bad) his best tf at the Alhan busy eee “How do New York men distinguish between grand- | mothers and granddaughters?” inquires Gilda Darthy, “Preventive steps have cut down the number smaller fires,” we read. Why not cut down the big ones? No forcible feeding will be necessary in Belgium or | the head in the Poland. the same time chureh jtown 10 years ago. Britannia sure is finding the waves unruly. | “Yes, he was poor, bu Thrifty be, but not covetous.—George Herbert. est."—N, Y. World eal 8 Bld relating to anything about irl, or some one : : tatha . Rez i btmapys : The urine g . of se “ for the children, he finally gets to thinking that it isn’t good for father? on, Horace, get the Underwood! NEEDS PURE BLOOD mene, te channets often got sore Sabra. And you've all had Bury THE EXPLANATION The price of ammunition ha gone up on account of the war Pother kind of work that produces something far from pleasure in the| A fellow who always would Worker, altho it may still be Worth while, since it produces pleasure] | _. barter, others. | | Thought in saving cash he was When the world understands that work ought to be merely | smarter ne | DP pretiminary to PLAY—that the real end which man seeks is |) eatin ite at tae aioe oe WARE and not work—then it may begin to organize the world’s ac-|| ang now he has bought a self | timjties so that everybody shall have his share of PLAYTIME and that! | gtarter .: 4 the amount of WORKTIME shall be cut down to that barely necessary | | ALE ° : Lead | meat forms uric acid which almost he me of Alex, Chloe ‘@ name of Alex, KING COUNTY paralyzes the kidneys in their ef ad vigitly aeittens Bei ue 1 com 17 |forts to expel it from the blood. yo ke * ahe salt . a elteen| HOSPITAL | They become sluggish and weaken, |x reuse, tom he Bald, after K. con-| Editor The Star: Thru your|then you suffer with a dull misery) “yes 1 guess Har ut verse, | Yaluable paper, I tender my humble |in the kidney region, sharp pains! paw hen diggin an au-|opinion of the King County hog-|in the back or sick headache, diz. RAwley nervous. Alex was shin \ mS |ziness, your stomach sours, tongue 3 Pe eps pee Sabet RI ing on a THE WHOLE BODY Is coated and when the weather {9 {'28t time. Lot's see, who put Ral bra with |bad you e rheumatic twinges ton thru coll old Miss Bow Come HELPFUL HOUSE HINTS : Another way to save the wean|their strength and tone and healthy | acids, to cleanse the kidneys and{dren that people have #rench tragedienne. We suppose they ask ‘em and tear on the handle of a tooth|action on pure blood ce i ve eeare Sor iaeee tons Beare. ay | K been glad | ar | | f the body's urinous waste,|to do things for us,” brush is to hold the brush perfect If the blood is very impure, the| get four ounces of Jad Salts from! “Oh, yes,” he ‘admitted but of ly still, than move the head from|bones become diseased the y here; tak tuble one side to the other. With prac-| muscles becon tice, it will be found the face and| loses its elasticity, and tnere 18 in-| breakfast for a mouth can be made to move ne direction at|of labor. The skin loses its clear. | famous salts is made from the acid with Labor for labor's sake is against nature-—Locke. Where did Van Scadds get all|tlood. It is positivel ualeg | Stimy aluggish Kidneys also to ee ane nl ° 2k h noney? le was pe jin the treatment. of sero’ q | Heutra us G8 In MMe, 60 It ‘ama Ball ike is money? 1 poor as alin th atments of scrofuin and | Oo" tonger irritates, thus ending |make ‘em believe he was just like use when he came to this|other humors, catarrh, rheumatism, | 2° hon STAR—MONDAY, FEB. 5, 1917, PAGE 4 anne seccccese e “The Seed of the Righteous” By Juliet W. Tompkine~—~———— > OOornrrr?™” 1 ‘ | Outbursts of Everett True] L $Ce@ THEYRE STLL AT (YT TOT PEIN EUROPE. SLAUGHTERING bot LEACH OTHER: ¢ yy] 7 - ¢ Preyer errr iii oe CHAPTER I Jarm, walked wit for a few 1 ents, then forced a him in silence Billy with joy, | § anant Mary assured er any trouble. MAHA closed the door soft fam gind Alex 1 will come back for him at The Family Shrine vee tittle \* hy 7 Ie ¢ Awa 4 LE ty Hoan AA lable eg Rogar You twe en't © St) (Continued in Our Next Issue) © | |manner a) we are perf trier quite Imper se tho | were) must run home, Uncle Ha Chloe wa It had been « stupid break between ther = |p autumn, the kind Van Du nene You kNOb TERRIECG — — gy | TERRIBLE! WANT To TELL YOu | 7 : day IM POR (— | Ralston had tarted from bis! had asked Chloe to go abroad wit | | chair, then dropped back again.| them, It had seemed such unmitt Hang it, Sabra, 1 can’t talk before good fortune. But Alex gave r to understand, without quite . |! go to wor ‘© protested. “TI felt ly creative this morning. Oh, a/*@ying It, that if she went she Roe pp alien ohn é tonal lost something out of his friend. ; ’ hip. Chic nq| Look, Mother! If Tongue Is Zz oak re | nad ¢t gloric time Coated Give “California , 10 we won't| a! 8 point © nF, Syrup of Figs” [ wonder there ia anylon ry bond between them. I Every mother realizes, after giv- did not even read Italian with jing her childrea “California Syrup any more 4 jot Figs,” that this is their ideal Chloe found Mrs. Gage pulling|jaxative, because they love its nilent a © young for sass imped up to walt on her.) on her gloves with the vigor of a| ant taste, and it thoroughly ) IM FOR Peace Ake herd faut sey gen nan turning up his sleeves to| ses the der little oma Too! So Let's o mosthered that only right |liver and bowels without griping. z ‘ A gy ted peor aggtall aaa Ralston quite right; he bas| When cross, irritable, feverish or at HAVE Some"! eee | a sone ties oking. ,|never had proper chance «|breath 1s bad, stomach sour, look Iioueesinetsontoen gunees talnton, ouldr be much] declared. “Tl have er thought|at the tongte, mother! If coated to for. FOU! ts stake of Ms Sothern to come give a teaspoonful of this harmle: Chile ear to taking t " nd then | “fruit laxative,” and in a few hours " t up t take it. He must bave a better |all the foul, constipated waste, sour trouble Chloe Ralston work. There's Mrs. Carta | bile and undigested food passes 1 She does enough for that bie oc: house. [ {out of the bowels, and you have a me, looking after my child. Pilly won't alwa Chloe,” he a rn well, playful child again, When f . little system {8 full of cold, throat be | ore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, |indigestion, colic—remember, a@ Ralston could morning and ha to work in. He'd t go burden to you. with a a ad pa of good “inside cleansing” should al- j™ gettin do ) 1 - ~ Stal te ia iat fas rh winced bodily. | “But *4>- | ways be the first treatment given. jit yet foes not want some One| Millions of mothers keep “Call- i 8 » tr fornia Syrup of Figs” handy; th o7 aaa dae se ot ‘pelts pancl tha we had it?” the mother|gick child tomorrow. Ask your = [ayy , a ; 4 If you want to go|druggist for a 60-cent bottle of - y oe ~ ersons Billy over to play with | “California Syrup of Figs,” which ft ma , Murra 1.|has directions for babies, children Their nurse mi jof all ages and grown-ups printed k after four as thr jon the bottle. Beware of counter- + Chloe did want to go out. When | feita sold here, so don't be fooled. |Get the genuine, made by “Callfor- nia Fig p Company” e and, at one side, a walle an un- garden that should have grown REAL P LESS plants of solid gold to balance its | ely private | value in feet and inches. Th —| yught to £1Ve)the morning's work ™ put on her street thi up Bi The Murrays had a fine « won't think | ho: 8 done * and loo) MARRYING JUSTICES »ital |ter by one styling himself “Friend in Friday's insue of The Star, re garding the marry ustices judges, and the e had pn daughter tnere months, and, thru my many ts to see her, I can speak of care, kindne 4 thought for welfare of the pai by the house doctors, matron and| th nts given plicttore in t courthouse. 1 wonder why t spirited ae opposed tc rhic r —— county commissioners and Gher rs in any pho pi re nen rord Sabra explained He gave —— e » ‘ake courthouse and) ‘enelve travels. saugnter 1 ja Saat te ¥ LIKES SOCIETY'S . . Calls on Nation to ([fy0y),) 2225," rr Bee const judge get per yea Awake and Prepare! i If you fee! that in eugenica work and the justices $2 They are) Sabra, we'll find a way,” Mrs. Gage high-salaried men, paid by the, declared. “The children of Sereno Gage are not going to be kept back as he was “But, Si won't the anything? #0 I have to realize Sabra raised a hand for silenee “Not today, little «ls she said kindly. “I must not think of any thing but my address. But will you run over to Uncle Harry's with } | ] | | jin order to introduce our |(whalebone) plate, which is | Nghtest and strongest plate known, |\does not cover the roof ef the | mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaranteed 15 years. $15 set of teeth (whalebone) $00 $10 set of teoth ... $5.00 Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00 | White crowns .. | Gold fillings .. rt of their time to build up a pri-| © business in marriages and {n-| ontally maintain a public nut-| sance in their solicitors or who take the couples up to t rried? It seems to me as ¥ ought to be compelte Chioe broke tn. nics people pay you I pay t tis. make a ret money they rages some papers’? He wants them this Silver fillings i the morning. You can easily catch him would before he leaves the house.” Platina fillings i to All work guaranteed for Have impression taken m6, porn ing and get teeth sam: Exam. {nation and advice free. 4 See ples of Our Plate Bridge Work. We Stand thy Test TNme Most of ouw present patronage ts ommended our early cust whose work is still giving The morning was fresh and ‘ove lly. As Chloe passed her father's |statue, bis kind quiet seemed to fall benigniy on her, She paused |to lean on the fron fence, forget |ting her errand You didn’t bother about Mitle alaries,” she admitted. “That's why we have been #0 poor, of to go to the court house to Ket without be ing annoyed by icltors AN INTERESTED READER U. S. TO AID HEAL tor The Sta We are spend woman to ots of tim and money on pre « and education, and very t to our office, be sure you are tn th: ourre But you chose right—ob tote | he moat important of al F f there isn't any question about | rene place, Bring this ad with you government of ours was that!” Her eyes dimmed. “I'll try | Cut - fate, {t would take care of its my dear,” she promised ; . th a ich as th “Well, Chloe—burning a little in | Dentists ine should enee at the family shrine?” asked hout the a dry v% * 0. K. on it, and eaid| © | “On, t PAR ied Bi rete ee UNG W000 + UnORE Onn | 207 UNIVERSITY ST. | @pgeatte Fraser-Patersen Ca, | ernme oO. K Harry'” Chloe had ctionately to a small ed his croup, stiff neck, asthma, nette gia, congestion, pletirisy, rheuma- This country has gut a whole lot to and roared ard on learn yet, regardless of how «mart Ralatos i , t " alstos ism, lumbaget we think we are, MEAT CAUSE OF OF Chloe had to laugh Well, it Is — a he fact that four ont of five are cha inalated back or joints, sprains, sore muscles red down at the recrutting of-| y R 1 eet ne ee nd 40,000 ac ad ct en aleton’s never hal a rea colds (it often prevents pneumonia), vow ‘York wot getting encuatt to KIDNEY TROUBLE etek ight We ells. eee ‘ eat, does not « m exactly right, When r Alex De you know “m to open our — Wants a chance to work out » eyes, and 1 hone ¥ ‘ ea tmina a ly believe if the t health of the Germanic was on thal Tals Coen of Balte If your Back thing, h it till Saturday spay bea id Aes hurts or Bladder bothere—Meat | "icht, when he gets home from the eae Mente ae A oats ferme uric acid office fifteen minutes earlier. He's @2t FIRST AVE. I nt v ’ : apie got up rather a clever invention. Directly foot of Cherry Street. me aoe A SUBSCRIBER, If you must have your meat ev. something to do with electricity —1 pele cen acdtnt A Bordeaux, Wash ry day, eat It, but flush your kid-|don't know. But it goes. He can't| — neys With salts occasionally, says ajbe a real gentus, tho; he'll wort PRAISES WORK — OF neted authority who tells us that /anywhore.” has to we ts cloudy, full of sedi. fitch? And the Mortons educated and irritated, obliging you to°seek|#nd violin lessons and the Grand rellef two or three times during )Canon of the Colorado a The bones, the muscles, and all the night | Chloe laughed again. “It is be he organs of the body depend for| ‘To neutralize these irritating cause we are Sereno Ga chil-| 3 any pharmacy “\they urightn’t have known just how spoonful In a glass of wat before plac were wv Ou yo * oy w days and your | mother. ‘he's a wonder hat ton |S MONEY FURNISHED FOR BUILDING act fing, This an, Queer,” he added, looking up AT LOWEST INTEREST RATES PLANS DRAWN FREE enfee! d, the ster unt | kidneys will the )/ability to perform the usual ar at the statue; “we all supposed Reno was crazy, 1 spent twenty years explaining to people that he nes and pimples, blotches and|of grapes and lemon juice, com other eruptions appear bined with lithia, and has * been | Hood's Sarsaparilia) makes pure, "sed for generations to flush and bladder weakness. & real brother. Most of my best a repel lo: 0 ype ‘ {tired fee! ng. Be fae B F ot ti ods | Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot |deals have gone thru because my lant wih Utada. sak doce ind ¢, and makes a delightful ef |mother ma his father,” me nee tese fervescent lithia-water drink, Chloe slipped a hand under SMALE BROS. 601-2 Northern Bank Bldg, Elliott 686 ° Dis | eoweccccccvcccccccccccccces