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By men, 6, 8 Sy) ment and operation. — now than before, or i feature. It was im sults for Mayor Caldwell. UCH is LIFE! Today's Rest Het: It's the nolgh Bor’s children that always make the Most noise. eee PISCATORL SEATTLEITES Finn, Charles C., 106 West Mo Graw st Fish, Alonzo D., 607 N. 68th st Salmon, Agnes, 1421 7th ave. Trout, Bernie, 4960 13th ave. eee s Now that the county grand jury ts thru, the federal grand jury is Just Deginning. How would tt be to have them both running at the same time ‘and investigating each other? oe . Personal liberty has reached the Wanishing point. A Seattle man has een arrested for stealing an um brella. S iges ‘Another Seattle man was so un fortunate as to be killed by a Green Lake car, but he proved one thing Phere is a car running on the Green - Lake line Folks who buy their evening paper ‘at First and Pike were puszled for Weeks over the strange appearance @f the young newyboy Finally « lady asked Little boy, what makes your hair ‘ai stiff and matted, Hike that” “Well, ma'am,” said the boy, *t have soap at our house.” “But what has that to do with t we | they have soap, I rub a lot of Mim my hair and let it dry, *0 ma it to wash her face.” ean have it erat men who used to say: 2 "s place is in the home.’ Thousands of homes will be wrecked if women are allowed to teen can’t find time to vote.” will be neglected if suf- ia given to women.” will become of the poor should not go to such as voting booths.” fomen Will be defiled by contact pe Lasteiner, say the newspa- ‘will leave the hospital in a But not alone. E eee man who announced a few ago that he could make auto a out of cornstalks and yeast has Jocked up. The people who be him are still at large eee CHANCES ARE IT WAS NOT AN ARM “Miss Edith Magee had the mistor- morning to fall off . Yadder and break a limb below > knee—Cullom (ll) Chronicle. eee YE CHIEF WORKETH AN ANCIENT BLUFF “The police clock was taken from be pole back of the Odd Fellows’ ‘hell last night. The party who took ‘ft is known and is requested to re i it to the Fire Hall. If this is one promptly no questions will be York (Neb.) ewer. ° a H. J. Brown, chief of police. A New York paper asked a mar fied woman and an unmarried wom gn, “Should women propose?” One woman answered yes and the other answered no. See if you can guess . SAID TOO MUCH “Oh, auntie, I heard uncle tell Mra Jones that there wasn't an er woman like you in the world.” the dear man! Did he, % a mand he said ft was a g00d thing, too."—Boxton eee COINCIDENT the Clinton, Ia., Herald.) y “A large white tom cat with tail and two gray spots on Return to 1906 So, 3d st. and Topsy,” black Persian cat. having seen her kindly call eee Cedar Rapids merchant tnforma ‘Harding: “We are shoulder to with you to make and keep Rapids and the United States two best places in the world to ‘in ' eee _ ©. A. Twiss spent one of the long, this week in his base- cracking up big lumps of coal @ hammer so they would fit his He whacked one until his arm ached, and couldn’t crack it his wife came down and told he was trying to break a cobble- stone which had fallen out of the The Seattle Sta eet of aity, Ble per month; . tn the State of Washing: 60 for € montha er $9.08 per year The important thing is to give the street ¢ that being done? it doing better? The investigation of the or ont a as a political issue. Y . per mor tie por week, months, $1.6 Ovtatds of My carrier, etty, r line the best possible manage- Is the car line losing more money Is it progressing or going behind? inal car deal is, comparatively, an incidental It accomplished election re- It will probably But it has done nothing more. never do any more for the simple reason that, tho the purchase price may ..jhave been high, the amount agreed upon was no secret. The former mayor knew it, and the present mayor knew it, at the time the price was named. The people knew it, and they voted. approval two months later. There was no protest at that time from the present mayor, not the slightest. counsel he gz | approval. “Oh, every time I get in a place} fe remember a lot of olé-fashion- | all of Germany's surplus pre It is very late to begin the work of aanessing Germany's capacity to pay. But, France has opposed all previous efforts to start the inquiry going. The French government has hoped against hope that jthe treaty pledge to Germany could be evaded. For ft has been France's desire to ass no final indemnity amount, but to claim tion No other power supports France's desire to crush Germany eco nomically. If, therefore, the French government can be held to its agreement, less than six months will elapse before Germany known | the worst. By May Ist, Germany will have paid the allies In money, | service The city may have been in error in taking-over the lines. That is, of course, entirely debatable, It is all a question of whether there was any hope of improving the service under the private company or not. The people at that time didn’t think there was. What they think now, no one knows, and for practical purposes is not material. For the city now owns the city railway and will continue to own it) Any idea that the railway may be forced | for a long time. back on the old confpany is pure buncombe. It is doubtful whether the people would approve that course even if it could be legally done. We may as well face the facts as they are. The city owns the line—and the city must operate it. of importance, then, is to give the people the best possible and the most economical. The mayor, the superintendent of the street railway, and the city council have work—plenty of it—cut out for them in that direction. The future management of the railway will be of far more importance to the people than its past history. : Reparation The peace treaty provides that the allies shall notify Germany by May 1 1 oft total aration claims against her. ‘The treaty also says that before the claims are fixed, Germany shall be given ny just opportunity to be heard.” France has now consented to recognize this part of the treaty to which the signatures of her representatives re tr" | were affixed. shipping, animals, coal and otherwise, fre billion dollars, In accordance wth the peace treaty terms. Thereafter, for 20 years, she must con tinue paying the new assessments which the allies are now to levy It will be a gigantic sum. But, whatever it is, it will be known to the Germans in advance. Germany will have the axsurance that whatever she produces above the stipulated amount will There is reason to believe the German people have purposely refrained from making an effective effort at economic reconstruction to baffle the estimates of the allied experts concerning Germany's future capacity for production. But, once the Indemnity is fixed, Germany can begin her real recovery. Next sutmmer, therefore, shoukl reveal Germany's true economic strength. Blood Will Tell Another “International marriage” has gone the way of many spec tacular predecessors—thru the divorce mill, In this it is hardly noteworthy. indicate that such unions rarely can be successful. The base allure: ments of a British title on one side and American gold on the other, are not the sources in which wholesome happiness finds Its tnepiration. But in quite another way there is something worth noting in the divorce proceedings thru which Consuelo Vanderbilt haa freed horvelf, at last, from the disreputable ninth Duke of Marfborough. It is the revelation, thru her simple letters, of the true nobility of birth which does not rest upon a “Burke's Peerage” or an “Almanach de Gotha.” Miss Vanderbilt married this highlydecorated fortune bunter in 1 Two children were born to them. For their sakes the American wife, with womanly reserve, suffered much indignity, during many years. Eventually driven to a separation, she still endured in silence, without resort to the unsavory publicity of divorce, reflecting upon her growing sons. ‘These children came of age last winter. The wife then made a last brave effort toward reconciliation. There was a brief reunion—ending im a disgraceful visit of the 4i-yearold duke to Paria, with a 25-year. old female companion. Blood will tell—-the plain American kind and likewise, the tainted blue sort that trickles thru “noble” veins. ° Refuting a Slander About this time of year begin to look out for jokes and gibes about the typical boy and the coming of Christmas. He is pictured as an expert grafter, family, particularly father, and assuming an unwonted virtue for the weeks preceding Christmas in order that emoluments may ensue. Now as a matter of fact, the American boy early begins to fret at his financial dependence and yearns for the time when he can come home with a pay envelope and help relie the “cid man” (@ loving appellation) of the family burden. It is more or lens of a struggle to keep the average American boy in school. He wants to be doing things and dotng them in some way which will express itself in monetary returns. Nine times out of ten, given half a chance, he will find some way of making money out of school and hang to his job with a persistence which is the distress of his mother and the secret admiration of hervelf and everybody else who notices. It is a proud day with him when he tells the family with an as sumed and embarrassed roughness that he doesn't want any more interference with his clothes, because he’s pickin’ ‘em out and payin’ for ‘em himself. And as for Christmas, it takes the united pleas, protests and per- turbations of the entire family to keep him from busting himself worse than Ponzi. Prosecutor Brown met rudencas with courtesy, says the grand fury. That puts another Hugh to the story. ‘The mail train robbers who made the seven million dollar haul are prob- ably only practicing a bit before opening up cafeterias. Robber holds up shoe store and gets $275. Why didn’t he take a pair of shoes instead? The most for your money, the best for |your mouth, lnafest for y |henith, f# the guar jantee given by | DR. EDWIN % BROW Eat Dinner at the Nanking Cafe Eye Strain Lavoptik For QUICK benefit in casos of eye strain there is nothing equal to sim ple witch hazel, camphor, hydrastis, ete., as mixed in Lavopttk eye wash, The witch hazel and camphor soothe and relieve the inflammation; the |hydrastis and other ingredients have jtonic and antiseptic propertie One ‘man reports that TWO applications helped greatly when hia eyes were #o bad he could not read without pain We guarantee a small bottle Lavop: tik to-help ANY CASE weak, strain: 4 or inflamed eyes, Aluminum cup FREE. Swift Drug company and leading druggists, DANCING FREE Evenings, 9:30 to 12:30 Best maple floor in the city. COLORED JAZZ ORCHESTRA Come everybody—a good time is assured, = — 1511 FOURTH AVE. Upstairs—Bet. Pike and Pine sts As corporation | ve out interviews tending to show} The problem) be ber own. | Experience and common sense altke| extracting cotn from all the) THE SEA EVERETT TRUE— Tt CAW'T DZ A | | In the Ed Write briefly. Long letiors will not de published, | Write on one side of the paper, Use typewriter, f possible; ether wher, pen and ink Do not indulge in personalities, Sign your name and address: they wild not be published, if you say 40. | eee | SAYS ALLEN | WAS WRONG Editor T Star. May I call your attention to the fact that the Ameri can flag has been kept flying night and day on one of the pubtic bulid Ings of this elty—by none other than one of the newspapers of this city? Would Capt. Allen dare take that fag because M flew “after eun down"? There are constituted authorities whose duty it is to administer the law. It will be a aad day, indeed, if individuals take things into thelr own hands I notice that Capt. Allen says the flag pole which he cut down in the Kubey yard belonged to him. May Evidently he made no plained of. If its ownership was in dispute, it seems to me the proper Method of petting it is hardly the one that relies upon main force. In Any event, it does not excuse his ar | bitrary appropriation of the fag it self, to which, to date, he does not lay claim, ‘The least he could hare done tn the Kubey case was to inform the Kubeys that custom requires the | fag be lowered at sundown. If they had deliberately failed to heed the requirement—which, by the way, in [not generally known—Capt Allen should have resorted to the proper tribunals for redress. But T do not understand that to have been the case. The Kubeya, it seems, nought to fly the flag as a xymbo!l of patriot iam; their intent more than offset any technical error they may have been guilty of. And, to my mind, Capt. Allen's assumption of dictator ial powern and taking the law Into his own hands was a thousand times worse than fying the flag after sun down, FAIR PLAY, eee SAYS ALLEN WAS WITHIN RIGHTS Editor The Star: to The Star, I An a subscriber desire to reginter a treatment of the Allen-Kubey flag pole controversy, which you present day's insue, was clearly within his rights, as the pole in question was erected up on what was supposed to be his prop. lerty at the time he bullt his Queen | Anne home, a rerunning of the lines er on, showing that the pole pro Jected a few inches on the Kubey property, and, furthermore (and this |needs to be emphasized and explain ed), your reporter was advised Qupt Allen of the facts as stated but without result, other than the scurrilous article above mentioned. Capt. Allen's wervice during the Spanish-American war tn the Philip. High Class Dentistry At most reasonable prices, Extraction absolutely with- out pain pr bad after ef- fects. All work guaranteed 15 years, Take care of your health. X-RAY FREE 9 to 10:30 A. M. United _ Painless Dentists Phone Elliott 3633 Third and James Street. i} | mont emphatic protest against your | led as a front-page feature in yenter- In the first place, Captain Afen by | TTLE STAR By CONDO Yes, 1 KNOW I PROMISED YOU, BUT WE 'RG'S0 Busy, AND MY Men ARE ALL OUT ON OTHER NYTHING FOR WOU Gog itor’s Mail | pines, a9 well as during the World | War in the Philippines and tn Rus sia, speaks for Itself, while among his friends he is known as a square jshovter, & man who seeks every op lportunity to do a goed turn to his |fellows, but, at the same time, am a jman who ¢ ot be bulldozed by |thone who attempt to put something jover on him. Your reporter's remarks as to the |Prussianizing of Seattle, as well as the reference to the imperiousness and castiron discipline of the Amer jean army officer, are liso to be writ ten down as Simon-pure rot. The writer has werved over 40 yrars in the military mervice, aa an enlisted |man, a commimioned officer and a jcivil employe, and he Gonires to go on record with the statement that man for man, the comminsioned per jsonnel of the U. &. army is made up. an a whole, of the finest and highest type of the genuine American, CHAS ©. PIERSON, Auditor, Washington Alaska M. C. 4& T. System. WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 can Commissioner Young at Mga has advined the stale department that be & mailing what he claims Is complete proof of his recent dispatch | that Washington D. Vanderlip had secured vast concessions in Siberia while posing as the representative of President Jed at the | $1.00 WEEK UNIVERSAL ELECTRIC HOME NEEDS. Percolatora, Chafing Dishes, Heating Pads, Water Boilers, Blectric Irons, Raby Milk Warm ers, Immersion Heaters, Grills, Toasters, Curling Irona Tea Pots, Samovars, Waffie Irons and Disc Stovea A complete assortment of table and floor lamps, $5.00 down, $5.00 a month, Seattle Electrical Supply Co. 509 Pine St Malin 5331. Resinol does wonders for sick skins ‘That itching, burning skin-trouble which keeps you scratching and digging, is a source of embarrass- ment, as well as of torment to you, Why don't you get rid of it by using Resinol Ointment? Physicians pre- scribe it constantly, In most cases, it stops itching instantly and heals eruptions promptly, It is very easy and economical to use, Sold by all drugelets, Resinot Ointment should unvally be aded by Resinal Soap, THURSDAY, |Inqulring’ Reporter 'S QUESTION mothers of the prev. have @ better time than those of today? ANSWERS MES. G. W. PHILLAPS, 1423 4m | Ww “Grandmothers of today | ve @ better time merely in differ that's all. 4 suppose the ndimother has mo due to greater ave he ent wayn, modern gr lability, fenc oO. B. conven RUPP, 729 35th sts knowing the grandmothers of the p lous generation, 1 don’t know. | Thorne of today seem to have « pret | ty good time.” MES, MARY M. THOMPSON, 217 17th N.: “I lived with my grand mother when I was « girl and now I'm a grandmother taynelf. I'm quite I'm having @ Leber time than aa.” “Not ave i | | RAYMOND G, WRIGHT, 1512 160 | N. “Having had no experience om that, I couldn't may.” GPRORGE OLSON, Arctic Ctot: ‘I'll way not, The grandmother of teiay acta and looks Uke sweet six teen.” ave SHE NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT Mra. Speedup — Hello, We're a bit late, but we had to stop on the road to change a tire, mother? Her Mother—You should have come just as you were and changed your attire in your room here in- stead of out on the open road. Mayor Gives New Stadium Once Over Mayor Caldwell and members of | the Chamber of Commerce stadium committee inspected the new Univer. sity of Washington bowl Included in the party were John T. Condon. acting president of the university; W. Le Rhodes, W. C. Mores, William T. Raton and Nathan Eckstein. Tho stadium is rapidly nearing completion for the Dartmouth Wash ington game, | In bottles in eac Bryts 5 Let us a ree serve Jiffy-Jefl ina So with all fruit flavors. Each is dainty way Thanksgiving. Get these the essence of much ripe fruit. free molds now. At littl Jiffy-Jell is a quick real-frnit dessert. t little cost The Havors are condensed fruit juice Jiffy-Jell comes ready-sweetened. Tt in liquid form in glass. comes acidulated with lemon or ope There's a wealth of fruit, We woe, $id gSumPly Bl bovine water a8 for instance, half a Pog oped to flavor sence from’ the yial, and let cool. one dessert. The fruit is crushed in A package serves six in mold fot Style @ Hawaii—fruit too ripe to ship, Exquisite Dessert Spoons A new pattern of Wm. Rogers & No advertising on spoons, Send 2 spoons, plus 60 cents for postage, ete. - | denomination 14 Gifts for Thanksgiving Free to women who serve Jiffy-Jell Desserts Abundant Fruit for postage and packing. Get balance later, Dessert Helps Fre e Check Gifts Jiffy Dessert Co, = Buy Jiffy-Jell from your grocer. Cut out Wanted Waukesha, Wis § the (G trade-marks in circle on front of __atyte—m package. Send us 6 for any pint mold or the ——strie—c Enclosed find @ trade-marks ' set o x Individual Molds, Send 2 for — styte—p for which send gifts I check. « jJiffy-Cup or 2 and 10 cents for the spoon. _ styler Hl he Pint Molds are as follows: ~—Stylent f seicPorers ter ayaa s em ttre j . BascBope cee see ———e H Style—H—Star-shaped—see Geevert at top bewcecencn conees: NOVEMTER 18, 1978, — a ‘We men are but erude neraps of Inmber, We are strewn tn the Yard without nu: ‘And we owe all we are to the schooling Of dressing and trimming and tooling. ‘The maw peizes on un and rips ua, The biting adz scars us and chips tm, Maul, mallet and hammer, in caveus, Belabor and beat us and knock ua, ‘The brace and the bit join to bore um, ‘The knife and the chisel to score ua, The vise has the virtue to grasp ua, ‘The file has the fortune to rasp um ‘The plane seizes on un to smooth us, ‘The veneer and the varnish to soothe um We are grooved, we are matched, we are beveled, We are squared, we are gauged, we are leveled, And if, after all of the labor, We are made of some une to our neighbon Well, then, by one Carpenter's ruling, We ought to be glad of our tooling. ~ WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT SEATTLE? QUESTIONS 1. What were Seattle's savings bank deposits for 19197 2. How jong will Washington's | coal supply lawt at the present rate of consumption? | 2. Do you know how many 400-/ foot vessels can be simultaneously berthed at Seattle piers? | (Answers Friday) PREVIOUS QUESTIONS The campus of the University | Washington spreads over 600) acres. i 2. ‘The First Prestytertan church | has the largest congregation of its in the world—6,500 adult communicants and @ congrega- tion of oyer 10,000 3. Seattle has over 1,200 tndus trial establishments with an annual payroll of more than $190,000,000, WHAT'S IN A NAME? Charles Slowinski, 20, was arrenta@l Sunday night He and a com were stealing down a fire escape the Right hotel on First ave. companion got away. Charies fo swift, Eye Strain And troubles due to Bye- strain can most always be relieved by Hy WEGNER OPTICAL CO. 227 UNION STREET Between Second and Third Aves, One per cent, or about 70,000,000 pounds, of the Cuban sugar crop is destroyed annually by bacteria, The Original Food: Drink Fer Alvages | Ne Coakl h Jiffy-Jell Dessert or 12 if you whip the jell. All for 18 cents—less than the fruit alone might cost. wa This is the new-type quick gelatin dessert. It has brought to millions a multiplied delight. t an assortment—have these fruity daint on call. Then send us the trade-marks for attractive ways of serving. Do this now. Get the molds in time for your Thanksgiving dinner. Dessert Molds All in pure aluminum, * These Individual Molds come in sets of six; assorted: styles as above, or all pag pal TT yin ell a ckage of Ji Send'e a the set of six. For Pint Molds see of. fers below. They are valu at 60 cents ok ‘ Lime-fruit favor makes a tart green lad jell. Serve with the salad or make a salad loaf, Or mix in meat left-overs for a meat loaf. Mint flavor makes a mint jell to serve with roast meats, hot or cold. Jiffy-Cup Half-pint aluminum me suring cup. Use to d solve Jiffy-Jell rightly, as a standard cup in anj recipe. Send 2 trad ks for i Son AA silverplate, guaranteed 20 years. trade-marks for one spoon, plus 10 cents Or send 12 @ trade-marks for six