The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 9, 1919, Page 15

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE ltched Till __ Almost Crazy are my hands were al all hopes SMATTLE STAR—-TUES. owvereery A Panama treaty, President bold step toward the of the was s when the folowing letters It was charged that Fado, at about ume compared Theodore Roosevelt to Mahomet; Joseph Smith, the Mormon leader, and Dows claring he had an ox-| Alted notion of his own powers and importance, The president wan} nt had interfered tn be | making enemies—and friends—by Panama in its secession | the wholesale,—The Exiitor. umbla, Bitter yrords were} | against him in congress. Root and Taft | © Patterson of Colo-| White House, Feb, 6, 1904 Secretary Root left on Monday | have missed and shall mins fon canal, Dear Ted: I am glad to hear that! MAIN you were to be confirmed. | ‘ 222 and Governor Taft took his place. | ! Root dreadfully, He has been the ableet, generous and most diatnte friend and adviser that president could hope to have, and immediately after leav ing he rendered me a great serv feo by @ speech at the Union League club, in which he sald in most effective fashion the things I should have liked most ested NIGHTS Ue, Me, Se ‘Te, $1.00 MATS. 15e, 25e, 50_ ALL WEEK m very | him YAUDENI other man a such an audience Taft is a splend and time addressing could have done. 4 fellow and wil) comfort in every . a8 mother says, he ts too much like me to be able to give me as good advice as Mr. Root was |able to do Because of the very dif ferences of character between us. | If after fully thinking the mat-| ter over you remain firmly con. | vineed that you want to go into the army, well and good. I all ty | be rather sorry for your decision, | MABEL DORA because I have great confidence | in you and 1 believe that tn etvil | life you could probably win tn the end a greater prize than will be} open to you if you go Into the Presenting “Frolics of 1920” do well tn the army. 1 know per With Their Own Orchestra Another Big Selection of Vaudeville’s Best—Just Five Weeks Out of New York GET YOUR SEATS fectly well that you will have hard times tn civil life Probably moet when they have ollege, or from we, tf they graduat thetr post-er take any, feel pretty diemal for the firm few years In ordinary cane it at first seems an tf their efforts were not leading anywhere, as If the Pressure around the foot of the Ind fer was too great to permit of get ting up to the top fut T have faith {n your energy, your perseverance your ability, and power to} force yourself to the front when | you have ones found out and taken | | your line. Flowever, you and Tf and | mother will talk the whole matter over when you come back here on| | Paster Frawley and Edna In “7 A. M.,” by Jack Lait wou The Eternal Feminine Presented by GRACE DE MAR Barber and Jackson | Sterling & Marguerite “Nothing Serious” In “Originalities” Senator Hanna's Death White Flouse, Feb Dear Ted: Poor Hanna's death wae a tragedy At the end he wrote me a note, ‘the Inet he ever wrote which showed him at his best. and! which I much apres Fin death | was very mad for hin family and} clone friends. for he had many lares| and generous traits, and had made & Great success in life by his| enercy. perseverance and berty | etreneth Ruffalo BM was at tunch the other day, together with John Witte. | my olf hynter. Ruffalo Pitt hae al ways been a erent friend of mine T/ remember when I was running for | vice president 1 k a Kanens/ FAVORITE SINGING COMEDIAN pocinerk. ‘a. wan there. Ie mMatform of my « speech on my bt the statement th the west had rate hunted 1 went show | pon the rear made a brief ending with | relone from | wonder the | cenNare”* Toples of the Day cir | cee | As for you, I think the West Potnt| m te, of course, good for any | go ent at Roldts—uptown. 1414 3d Ave.; downtown, 913 2d Ave it | TRUSS TORTURE | il Can be eliminated by weartng the! | Londberg Rupture Support. We ee free trial to prove its superior- ty. | A. LUNDBERG Co, | 1101 Third Ave. Seattia YOUNG BUSINESS MAN does not realize just how this strong National Bank is able and willing to help him in expanding his business legitimately by timely assistance ~ AMUSEMENTS TONIGHT Officers of this Bank are always ready to give customers the benefit of their expert advice in the matter of investments and other business ques- tions. You are cordially invited to talk over your financial problems with the of ficers of the Howard's Spectacle; Parber and || Jackson; Frawley and Louise; Sterling and” Marguerite, | the time I get to & o'clock im the! 19, 1904 hee man, but I still think that you have too much ou for me to be glad to nee you into the army, where | in time of » progress t# #0 much | & matter ¢ atine Irritating Remark by Quentin White House, Feb, 27, 1904 Dear Kermit: Mother went off for | three days to New York and Mame | and Quentin took instant advantage of her absence to fall sick. Quentin's sickness was surely due to a riot mn candy and ice cream with choo olate sauce, He was a very sad bunny next morning and spent a couple of days tn bed. Ethel, as always, was as good an gold both to him and to Archie, and XH relieved me of my duties as vice mother, I got up each morning tn to breakfast with Mthel and before they started for and I read a certain amount but this was about all hie en 4 with @ mint of washing the three days One day | asked him before Quentin how often he washed his face, where: upon Quentin interpolated, “very sel. | dom, I fear," which eaturally pro duced frem Archie violent recrimin. | ns of @ strongly personal type. | Mother came back yesterday, having thoroly enjoyed Parsifal. All the| borses continue sick, | dapanese Wrestling | White House, March 6, 1904 Dear Kermit: 1 am wrestling with two Japanese wrestlers three Umes a week. I am not the age or the! build one would think to be whirled | ly nan opponent's head and on & mattress without amage. But they are so akiliful that I have not been hurt at all My throat is @ little sere, because once when one of them bad @ strangte| 1 1 also got hold of hin wind © and thought I could perhaps | »ke him off before he could choke However, he got ahead. White House, April 9, 1904 Dear Ted: [ am very glad I have been doing this Japanese wrestling, but when Iam thru with !t this time 1 am not at all sure I shall ever try t again while’ I am so busy with other work as I am now. Often by afternoon I wil be feeling like « owl, after an elght hourw grapple with senators, congressmen, ete; then 1 find the wrestling « trifle too vehement for mere reat. My right ankle and my left wrist nd one thumb and both great toos| © swollen sufficient to more or lene impair thetr osefulness and I » well mottled with bruises else | where, Still I have made good progress, and since you left they have taught me three new throws that are perfect corkers | stowed Love for the White Hoon White House, May 28, 1904 | Dear Ted: 1 am having a reason} able amount of work and rather! more than a reasonable amount of | worry, But, after all, life in lovely | here The country t# beautiful, and 1 do not think that any two people ever got more enjoyment out of the White House than mother and 1.| We love the house itself, without and within, for ite associations, for itm atiliness and its simplicity, Wel love the garden. And we like Wash ington. We almort always take our breakfast on the seuth portico now, mother looking very pretty and| dainty in her summer dresses, Then we stroll about the garden for 15 or 20 minutes, looking at the flow. ers and the fountain and admiring| the trees, Then I works until be} een 4 and 5, « y having some | people lunch—now a ft senators, now a couple of | rm, now a literary man, | capitalist or a labor leader, | or a scientist, or a biggame hunter. | If mother wanta to ride we then spend a couple of hours on horse back. We had a lovely ride up on the Virginia shore since I came back and yesterday went up Rock creck and swung back home by the roads where the locust trees were most numerous—for they are now white! with blossoms. It is the last great burst ef bloom which we shall see this year, except the lacrels. But | | there are plonty of flowers tn bloom | Darwin or just coming out, the honeysuckle | ~ most conspicuousty. The south por tico Is fPagrant with that now. The jarmine wil be out later. If we don't ride I walk or play tennin But I am afraid Tod has gotten out of his father’s clase in tennis! (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1919, Chartes Scrfbner’s Sons) Visits Blind Pig; | Wounded in Fight Carl Frederickson ts held tn the) city jafl on an open charge, as the result of the story he told police of a quarrel] with Joe Ahao, 717 Eighth ave. §.. in a “blind pig” on Jeffer son st Monday night. Frederickson appeared at central station with a| badly cut hand, and asked that it be if DAY, DECEMBER 9, 1919. oosevelt's * * * exports of finished goods HisChildren | will more than treble 1914 trade Exports of finished manufactures from the United States in the first year of peace will aggregate four times as much as in the year before the war. An analysis of the foreign trade during the first eight months of the current calen- dar year shows that the exports of fin- ished manufactures continued to ex- pand, though that of “manufactures for further use in manufacturing” shows @ slight decline. The total value of finished manufac- tures exported in the eight months end- © ing with August, 1919, was $1,690,000,- © 000, against $1,361,000,000 in the cor- — responding months of 1918, and $422,- 000,000 in the same month of 1914, the total for the first eight months of the _ current year being thus four times as much as in the same months preceding the war. Basing an estimate for the remaining months of the calendar year 1919 upon the known figures of the cal- culated eight months ending with Aug- ust, the indications are that our exports of finished manufactures will be slightly over $2,500,000,000, as against $630,- 000,000 in the. full calendar year 1914, while those of “manufactures for fur- ther use in manufacturing” will be about $900,000,000, as against : 000,000 in 1914, bringing the grand total of manufactures exported in the calendar year 1919 up to approximately $3,500,000,000, as against $975,000,000° fii in 1914, a NAL BANK Member Federal Reserve Bank Ly > EAT LT [+f Mike —\} —A\ Aww UNION ac ngs @ Trust Co. JAMES D Chairmel Bos _ L. E EYMAN J. D. LOWMAN and Mgr Bond De Vice-Presice v JAMES D. FARMER CHAS. A. SCRUBY A . Asst Cashier Ce HOGE JO> A SWALWEL G. F. CLARK E. J. WHITTY A Cashier oP FORKEST |. GILL EB. ANSLEY O. W. TUPPER ees Branch at Ballard C. W. CASLER Charge Branch at Georgetown MAX G SCHMIDT Saving A C Flog Second tee. at Cherry Departments at Main Bank and Branches Open Saturday evenings 6 to & o'clock DON’T CATCH SALMON AT ENTRANCE TO LAKE NOT GREAT, REPORT Salmon Oshing i» (legal at the en LONDON, Dec. %—Alr ministry trance of Lake Washington eanal.|reporte show that of 62,000 passen beginning Tuesday morning, accord| gers carried in civil planes since ing to State Fish Commissioner L. BL | May 1, ten have been killed. To fy tm ant fy. Millions Suffer from It “Makes the Body Sour” } : LIKE A SATURDAY BATH i . Lots of Folks Wait Until the Liver and Bowels Stop Acting—Take “Cascarets” Tonight Won't stay bilious or constipated! But don’t think of the nasty cathar. ties, sicken ofl, upsetting malts and & regular laxativetreat, act withou griping and insure gentle cleansing | P&88 ON @ Sour, fermenting of the liver, stomach and bowels of | Mase. sends vince excess bile, waste and poisons which | germs and harmful acids ariping pills of the old days! They're First National Dank ESTABLISHED 1682 dressed. He maid he was wounded during the fight ing for Ahno are removed without inconvenience | . jback numbers—tike candles andjto you. Cascarets work while you | niooariei 5 |horso cars! ‘Take Cascarets oceaston.|sleep—and their cost is so {ittle. | oigeeorencinneisies |ally—feel splendid always. They are|Switch to Cascarets! In Paris there are a great number | — mia of “dog” barbers. Some of the shaved animals are fantastically shorn, leaving rings of hair adorn- ing their bodies, alternating with de nuded strips. fi ORPHEUM Lew White » ate Mata, 2:30 Painless Dentistry. Y THBP USE of our improved methods we extract teeth absolutely without pain. This is a most welcome feature over the body, instead of strength and life, Over seventy non-organic diseases can be traced to Acid- Stomach. It is excess acid, not the food you eat, that starts this trouble, Day and night it goes on, doing ceaseless dam- No matter what you have Farst Ave at James St. REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the Hghtest 4 strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; te corn off the cob; guaran. FIPTH-PIN} ELLIOTT 2625 Here Thin Week—Mat WATCH THE BIG 4 to all who are sensitive about their teeth, No charge for ex- traction where other work is ordered. , ID YOU EVER stop to think how little {t will cost you to have yc teeth put in firstclass condition? Come in and have your mouth examined, This will cost you nothing. We cater especially to union men and their families. For the benefit ef ¢ age, breeding millions of germs. If you belch, if your food re- peats, if you have heartburn, a miserable, tight puffed-up feel- ing after eating, sour stomach, headache, if you are losing weight, if you don’t feel tried—don't give up hope, Call on your di and geta big box of EATONIC, It costs but a trifle, * Give it a fair, honest trial © for five days—let your own stomach be the judge. te PANTAGES a Mats, 2:30—Nights, 7 and 9, EXAMINATION FREE Stom ach-Kidneys-Heart-Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by “peppy,” sleep badly—in fact, $15.00 Set of Terth $2.00 Amal; ’ 4 for 15 years, Ha h seme day. taken in the 6 free, We Stand the ended by our om. Awk our tients, whose work |x ente, ur office, be sure When coming to are in the right piace. Bring thie ad with you Open Sundays From ® to 12 for Working Feople OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS UBIVERSITY ST. Oppectte Wraser-Paterson Co Now Playing regularly taking the world's standardremedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles - ————!| GOLDMEDAL | IP) ARLEN Oy PALACE HIP! | The National Remedy of Holland for ATRE tenturies and endorsed by Queen! Withelmina. All druggists, three sizes. | avi for the name Geld Medal om every bos and accent ov imitation | ethcararinnn RRO BETTER DENTISTRY FOR LESS MONEY y, Pike Street Over The Owl Drug Store 305% Cor titra Phone Main 1691 t ailing in any way— Get rid of your Acid-Stom- ach, 2t’s the first step to good health. Eminent chemists,afteryears of+work, have found a way to easily and naturally take up this excess acid and carry it out of the body. Itisa tabletcalled EATONIC, easy toremember. Within two yeara, oves half a million people

Other pages from this issue: