OCR Interpretation


The Seattle star. [volume] (Seattle, Wash.) 1899-1947, February 02, 1914, Image 2

Image and text provided by Washington State Library; Olympia, WA

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87093407/1914-02-02/ed-1/seq-2/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for 2

2
Auk for Circular on Third Floor
i A v«mi r Hetv\ fr i 91" i ' 1 ' ' ' 1
A Sale of Lace Collars
Tuesday
That Will Plea*e and Surprise You
Wmdow jA Q/»l < he
Disploy\~Ti/ C E P,Kt
There arc about 1,000 of them, con«i«ting of
Venetian Point Collars.
Real Irish and Armenian Collars.
Point De Venite Collar*.
Point De Alencon Collar*.
Fancy Embroidered Collar*.
Macrarae Collar*, etc.
We could take these collar* and sort them out
and Ret much more money out of them, but we want
to divide these good thins- with our patrons.
Values Up to $7.50
All go at 4D<'—no reservations. On sale Tuesday.
See window display. Enough said.
Amusements
MAADr TONIGHT
And All W««k
4—MATINEES—4
Wa4. Tliara . Frl. *•»
William A B—4j rmii
t>ll— M- Akatl'a Immortal Ktry
Little Women
Blllilhil bjr M»rl«a 4* Fmml
Vfel plmf that laapa ta j raaf h»art and
BMilti fhara
■a • Btaataga aa<t Mat VaitM*
ITMB ,a# »• w-*
■ ~%W WaC. n«n. frl Matteaaa
tie la 91 M
Kr rtiar«4ay m 4 FrMay Mat
ißaaa at S r m
PANTAGES
CWaptM BMrfcla* ft»all*fi*rr
TOMMY MURPHY
Fmoui Mfhivrlfhl, In H"Hn|
KihlWtlM
Otfcar Bt| fralnraa
lie mh! Ma
SUSPECT PLOT
The Open Porum. at It* meeting
Sunday, panned resolutions urging
Immediate acquisition of the Cuah-
Rtan power site.
"The enemies of the Seattle light
department." the resolution aald.
"have. through several organlza
tlon» and iierson*. evinced their In
tent to crippl« the plant In the Inter
est* of prlirateljr owned Corpora
tion*.
AT THE THEATRES
THIS WEEK
Moor*—"Kittle Women "
Metropolitan — May Irwin In
"Widow by Proxy."
Seattle Hal ley * Mitchell
•took In "The Crime of the
Uw."
Tlvoll —Keating * Flood com
pany In "In Poppyland "
REFUSES POST
WASHINGTON. F.-h, 2—Henry
M. Plndell of Peoria, 111., today de
clined the St. Petersburg smbaasa
dor ship.
There ha* been much controversy
over his appointment.
SAILOR KILLED
BREMERTON, Feb. 2.—Because
he would not. tske a dare. F F
Brandt. IS, a bluejacket from the
Milwaukee climbed a lofty tower,
carrying high-tension wires, and
wa* electrocuted.
A NEW SYSTEM
The new presiding Judge system
for King county was Inaugurate 1
this morning. Judge Prater assign
ed cases.
A large and appreciative audience
beard Ople Head, the humorist, spin
comical yarns In the Y. M C. A
auditorium Sunday afternoon. Head
will appear again at. the y. m. C. A
on February 11.
I HOT TEA BREAKS
A COLD—TRY THIS
■ ■
Oet a small package of Hamburg
Breast Teg, or, s* the Oermati
folk* call It, "Hamburger Ilrust
Thee," at any pharmacy. Take a
tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup
of boiling xtater upon It, pour
through a sieve and drink a teacup,
ful at any time If 1* the most ef
fective way to break a cold and
cure grip, as It opens the pore*, re
lieving congestion Also loosens
the bowels, thus breaking s cold
• I once.
It Is Inexpensive and entirely
Vegetable, therefore harmless.—
iAd-trtlsemeD^
METROPOLITAN I
Miilrm U*«ln#ad«r tfld iKttMav
J S» V IRWIN
Id M« t.a'««t *n4 H«al Com« 4?
■■nmow at rwii
r-.»» •; in s«. uiu. i» 11 »•
IVOLII
Df T««»f ll»lm 6 Cm.
.Vina Hwlmmara and
Dtrara In
m«at mytUHoui aquatic
ft>«rUcfa
C«1 II Allan A In ,
musical ivmialr
•n* roprY
lle aa«i *ft#
Mat t It Klcht r II aa4 I
SEATTLE THEATRE
n»aaa Mala 41
%*rmm4 lUf Vlaah
BULKY A MtTf MKLI. I'IME>T
The Crime of the Law
mi— Ml. Mc Mr
lUrfila Mfhl Keedey. Atf «*•( tJla
WORK FOR BONDS
To provide bridge* Hero** I*ke
Washington. the tt'nl ti(«r*iv
and the Duwamlih nilnroir. *
campaign for |mu|« of the bond
l*sue h»» he»n started by the
bridge bond committee, organized
Samrdav at HOT American Hank
building.
BURIED IN SAND
PLYMOUTH, Eng.. Feb 2 —Phlft
Ing sands are dally burying deeper
the loat submarine, A-7. The ve»
•el, with II dead, has been under
water two week*.
HAVE A HEART
OA STOMA, N C . Jan. SO.—When
a hog. butchered by L. E Turner,
wa* dreased. It wa* discovered that
the animal had two hearts, both per
fectly formed, although one was a
sort of auxiliary to the other Al
though the porker waa stabbed
through the Jugular vein. It did not
die for several minute*
CITY NEWS
Edward C. Griffiths, veteran
member of the Seattle detective de
| partment. Is dead at the age of 51
year*.
• • •
Regular monthly meeting was
held by the Seattle chapter. Hon*
of the American Revolution, at
Oood Eats cafeteria at noon todaj.
• • •
J. H. McPherson, of ths Chamber
of Commerce, has returned to
Washington, I) C , where he ha*
charge of the Alaska exh'blt.
• • *
Mi*s Louisa Nelson, newly *p
pointed home economic adviser of
the Red Cross domestic science
committee, began her work today.
• • •
Extensive plan* have been made
for the Seattle Press chili's fifth
annual masquerade hall st the
Hippodrome Wednesday night,
• • •
A well-acted sketch, entitled
Tin Jews," was given by-the I'n
:on of ItMSNlan Workers at Wash
ington hall Saturday night.
•• • •
The first of a series of lectures
From Nebula to Mun" was Rlvon
by Prof. Msynnrd Hhlpley In Hml
Mob's hall Hunday aft«rnoon.
• • •
Rev. Ira M Qrey, the new pastor
of th»* h« kon Mill ( loruil
ehurch, 16th «v. H and Forest sf ,
be Kin hh new duties Sunday,
Albert SchencW, an engineer, who
1 escaped from th» pol|c«* l»y fatrnlv
out of th»- City hospital.
I whewi h<i was* taken, has been
caught.
MAY IRWIN SETS
MANY HUGHS AT
METROPOLITAN
We read In the pnp»-r«i that "J<*l
ly Mi»i" Irwln'a private cur hnd
been at ailed Nomew here 111 those
'California flood*
Ami how she'd caught • deuc« of
It rol<l
Ami couldn't talk —
Ami had fc> cancel Inwt week'*
Kiiixrmtlill!
Ami we thought ahe mu*t tic In
the very dlcken* of * ft*
Hilt wo went to the Metropolitan
'theatre la*t nlßlit. where (he open
.'i| a week * Seattle vldlt In "Widow
b\ Pro**," and wa laughed our
| Ik ad* off
She blew her no«e twlc* durlnK
the evening That * all the evl
ilenre of her rold we *aw And
nhe wa* the *»me It win, a little fat
ter. may be. than when ahe wa*
here a few year* hark Hut fun
nler than ever.
She pose* aa a widow, for her
vlrl friend and ki>c» to collect on
dead hubby'* estate. Hubby'*
folk* had heen horrified at hi* mar
rlage. Very »tandoffl*h May
j flower iieople. Hadn't even Men
ht* wife Into thl* atmosphere
com** fat and funnv May, and alalia
beautifully until hubby, who hadn't
been dead at all. cinm-t home un
•apectedly.
Mnny rompllcatlona Many
laugh*. t.overs all to each other a
urma at the curtain l-lne ahow
BIRDMEN WILL
RACE AROUND
WORLD IN 1915
SAN FRANCISCO. Feb 2 Hun
dred* of cablegram* and telegram*
aaklng fur additional information
concerning the aeroplane race
around the world, to b» »tarted
from the Panama Pacific axpoattlon
ground* In May, 1916. we re recolved
by the exposition manager*
The querle* Indicated world wide
Intcrent In the affair
Wiring from Sew York. Captain
| Thoman llaldwln. the flrat entrant,
announced hla Intention of partlcl
pat In* In the rare.
Full particular* of the event were
announced her* yeaterdav by the
•x position director* Plan* aulv
1 mltte.l to the ParWc Aero club,
provide that the raca muat be flu
lahed In W day*.
Tha entrant* will he awarded
prliea aggregating |1«0 ono The
flrat blrdtnan to complete tha trip
will receive 1100,000
Tha tentative rtiute for tha pro
posed world girdling rare I* aa fol
io wa:
E i 1 t*«i (re»«4a aan FV»
*«e*tr4 U CbtfWM •• cat
-Ifn CklfM ll '• N*« T»ek. Hmm T**fc
i. n.iu lata <-.na<W lull. t*ia la f*»»
f»r«*«lL fJrMAiana i Atlantic M«a<
fap» la *•»*!•.l*. Icalaa* <•*•»
lAUaatte n»rkj**ia (• atnmn
■it llaftrltM Msni«*«r ta Uftlm. »la
, Kaintxjrah I.oa4<M> la fan*. fane la
IWrlls ll«rtln la *»!«■ Wniaaa Is
*l. I'»t«r*t>wr« «l rtieiHrf U> ktoaroa .
to Ti»iMh attain Tnmva !•
trkutvk. trkiatak la Harbla. Markia |«
vugivaetek vi«4i<r«»i»* ia T»kl«. Japan
Toklo to W(-"M«»il»» Oae*
Cmv la Kaei-hatkn K»m<t>atka In Ktal
>•«!>• n««r R«rl»t *lrall» Kaal Cape la
e«l* rnn'a <*1 Walee. ('ip« r»i#r« el
I'waina *t«ka. Alaeka. auk* m Van
Mo .a# n C . i« e*attta. aa
till* Is *nn Krnnr Un
THINKING IT OVER
The public service cnmmt**ton
ha* taken under adviaement, fol
lowing a hearing here, the row
plaint of Benjamin K Deßojr
again*! the Seattle IJghtlng ('«
for falling tn Inatall gas In hi*
home In West Seattle, although the
gat mains are within one block of
hla hou*e
The commission alao required
the petitioner* for a rerouting of
the 23rd a*, line to file brief* with
In 15 day* The Electric company
la given 10 day« in which to file a
reply.
ARREST 'EM AGAIN
SOt'TH RENO. With . Feb 2
Acquitted of the a**auit charge, the
11 North river settler* were agnln
arrested on the complaint of Mr*
Margaret M Kn*« on an ar*on
charge The hearing waa *et for
February 21
BUYS NEWPAPER
WOODLAND. Ws*h . Feb 2 Mr
R. M Andru**. president of the
Commercial Club, ha* acquired the
owner*hlp of the Woodland Chron
trie
To r»r« m < la Hay
T*fc» T.AXATtVR Vlfl'iftlO Qui tfte Ts*Ma
r#fofvl !f ft falls ta c\ir«
K. W. drovo'O •Ignatura la Off Mch boa Mr
(Paid AdffUlaliif )
GODDARD'S REVIEW
I.«avlng out of account entirely
the merits or demerits of a pro
posed commission Kin eminent for
the city, I* would be far better to
havo peso* than war over the mat
ter Turning things municipal up
side down at a time when we can
leant afford It seems moat unwise
There la no evident Justification
for It from the standpoint of the
city, so the agitation would seem
to be called In for the purpose only
of gratifying some |>ersonal |>ollt
leal ambition. There Is demand,
however, for a more business like
h 'lulling of some of the depart
ments »pd ii saving can be effected
at once. If relatlonahlpa and friend
ships give place to methods of em
ployment ordinarily adopted In prl
vate business enterprises.
It must be understood, however,
that the *avltiK In this respect at
be*t under any form of governmmit
will be small as compared with the
total.cost of caring for actiial needs
■ind already debt.
The council would have done
well not to have precipitated this
tumult pext summer, as thure aie
already 'too many elections which
riyilali politician* an opportunlt>
to play the devastating game of
personal politics.
GODDARD HEADQUARTERS
301 2 3 Bailsy Bids
• lliott 1335 and 1331
THE STAR—MONDAY. FEBRUARY 2. 1914
"Forward to the Farm"
Reaping Riches from the Soil
While You Stay on the City Job
There'* Profit in Every Line of Thia Announcement! Read It Carefully!
rjTII'PI.YING the highly efficient, mod-
I/\I ern methyls of the silo, the feed
MflM lot, and the hog house on a colos .i!
scale, W. \V Robinson, largest
wholesale hay and grain dealer on the Pa
cific coast and sole owner of 2,'rfiO acres of
the richest improved farm land in the
famous Kittitas Valley, at Kllensburg, is
going into stockraising and dairying on the
large-.! si ale yet attempted in the North
« est.
Mr. Robin son. himself a practical farmer
of many years' experience and a successful
business man of large and independent
means, will share his vast enterprise with
a limited number of the more thrifty wage
earners, salaried men. professional and
business men of Seattle and the state, who
He-ire to participate in the profit* of the
soil along assured, absolutely permanent
lines, vet who for various reasons are not
ready to leave their prevent employment
or busines*
• • • •
l'rider the plan adopted by Mr Robinson
the «inall investor ha* the option of own
ing shares in the entire 2/iOO or of
receiving a deed to as many acre* a* his
or her means will allow It is the best and
fairest plan yet proposed for the person
who ha* heart) with longing desire the new
rrv of "Forward to the harm" the hope
ful. optimistic substitute for "Ba«k to the
Soil"
Best of all is the splendid business rec
ord of and financial success of the "man
behind" a man who «tarted at the bottom
round many years ago. first as a farmer,
then by successive upward steps through
individual effort to ownership of the largest
business of the kind on the coast, and now
he can refer to every mercantile agency,
every bank and business house, and to the
highest federal gjArninent official* as to
hi* busiryss irwiPity itid financial, re
sponsibility.
• • • •
Furthermore. Mr Robinson is carrying
forward this enterprise latgelv as a method
for giving to jteople of moderate means as
well as to those of larger capital an oppor
tunity for safe, conservative investment
with assurance of liberal profits from the
great elemental agricultural industries of
stockraising and diversified farming, the
expansion of which is the crying need of
the country. All may ha\c a share in
bringing down the cost of li\ing if the
consumer will co-operate in making the soil
produce more abundantly of the world's
necessities.
The greater part of Mr Robinson's land
—approximately 2.000 acres i* already tin
der a high *tate of cultivation, lie having
ikpent upward* of $100,000 in registered live
stock and farm implement*
One hundred and twenty acre*-
are in 4 year-old winter apple
tree*, and the balance in liay
and grain. All of it i* sus
ceptible to highest develop
ment and ideally adapted to
stock raising, dairying, hog
raising, bee culture and horti
culture. the nio»t profitable
branches of agriculture, par
ticularly in Washington. Most
important. too, i* the fact that
there are no stumps to clear,
the relatively small portion of
the land awaiting improvement
being what i* known a* *age
brush soil, almost ready for
the plow
On the magnificent farm
now arc 125' head of horse*, largely reg
istered Percherons, 125 head of cattle,
mostly Holsteim* for the dairy and reg
istered Shorthorns for heef, and something
like 250 head of hogs, 150 of which arc
brood sows. * * * *
Fur tbe purpose of developing tlii* great
property to its utmost capacity, Mr. Rob
inson has incorporated bis holdings under
the title of tlie Kittitas I-and & Live Stock
Company. This company purposes to
stock this great ranch with 500 beef cows,
500 dairy cows, 300 brood sows and enough
big mares, which will raise a colt each year,
to supply the needs of tlie farming opera
tions.
Clans provide for the employment <>f
the best brains procurable in the farming
world scientific farmers, traired ind ex
perienced in modern methods- to head
each branch of the huge farm: a dairying
specialist, a breeding expert, horticultural
expert, marketing specialist, etc. In other
words the Kittitas Land & Live Stock
Company will be operated like a great de
partment store, efficient and competent in
every detail; a high-power m< dcrn busi
ness machine
OUT-OF-TOWN INQUIRIES WILL BE ANSWERED PERSONALLY BY MR. ROBINSON
The company will raise alfalfa, c im for
silage, and some grain all of whi< h will
l»r manufactured or converted on the
ground, citlicr in tlir w.iv of meat*. Imrv
or poultry products, or finished, marketable
produce, {'".very avenue of watte will he
eliminated- all by-products made to yield
a revenue.
This company will rut out the present 55
per icnt waste entailed in local freights,
express charge* and middlemen's profits by
going direct to the consumer where pos
sible, and by shipping in carload lots.
Shareholders will be Riven many special
highly profitable privileges: F.ggs. butter,
honey, by parcel post; live or dressed poul
try, fruits, vegetables, etc all at whole
sale prices This one feature alone will
mean big dividends on your investment,
through reducing the cost of so many
daily necessities
• • • •
The company expects to sell the greater
[>er cent of its cattle, hogs and horses for
breeding purposes, l-'.ach year there are
hundreds of thousands of dollar* sent out
of the state for breeding st'»ck on account
of an insufficient number of high-grade
animals being raised in this state
Mr Robinson recently sold from this
great farm a numl>er of registered Sho't
liorn spring calves at weaning time at $150
fier head, and has just made a shipment
of spring pigs to Honolulu that netted $2.1
per head on the farm
An ordinary good crw will pro'u<:; *1(0
per year in butter fat. her calf »: a y'
old will easily bring $50. and the skim mi'*
is worth $25 a year for pig feed. An acre
of ground will easily *upply feed for one
cow the entire year by railing alfalfa and
corn ensilage
An acre of alfalfa, according to govern
ment reports, will pasture fifteen head of
shoats. and an acre of wheat will furnish
sufficient grain to fatten th<*m You will
tpu* see that fifteen head o f pigs can be
raised to maturity on two acres of ground,
and at price* prevailing the h«t few years
they would bring from $200 io ? : 00
Thus, it does not take a mrsthcmntician
to see that there are enormous profits in
scientific farming. And, as stated at the
beginning, if we do not help decrease the
high cost of living we certainly can share
in some of the profit*
• • • «
F.verv patriotic citizen of Washington
should blush with shame at the fact that
we are sending over thirty million dollars
a year out of the state, the most of which
never returns, for meats, dairy and poultry
products while all these supplies can be
raised at enormous profits in the irrigated
valleys of the state It should ' e the de
sire of every business man who has the
welfare of '.lie state at heart to lend some
a-Mstance to those who wish to get on the
A Safe Investment
ON EASY TERMS
$10000 SHARES $10 DOWN. $5 A MONTH
$200.00 SHARES $20 DOWN. $10 A MONTH
$300 00 SHARES $30 DOWN. $15 A MONTHr
$40000 SHARES $40 DOWN. $20 A MONTH
$500 00 SHARES $50 DOWN. $25 A MONTH
$1,000 00 SHARES $100 DOWN. $50 A MONTH
$2,000.00 SHARES $200 DOWN. $100 A MONTH
SUBSCRIPTIONS OPEN NOW
Ti.»r. • no.urliy hii<-k of »vnry dollar'* worth of <h«rw " dnn
nf 111- rl. h»»! fitrin land In America. I noo of which 1« nnd« cuttlvallnn now
And Mockad with r» Ki t.eof and dairy rattle re|tt»t»ri-d ho«a unit fln.--
hionded IVrrharnn hora«« 120 *. r<-« nf < ymr-oM aelerte.l winter appl* tre»»
The Improvement* alrendv triage Include alx residence*. nM of which la Mr Moh
Inunn • modern farm homo, mod*! farm building* and modern machinery. etc.
k reference* helnw J
Office* Open Evenings
Applications made at the company's of
fice* or l>y mail will t>e given careful at
tention in tlie order in which they are re
ceived, and fully-paid, non-assessable
shares will be issued accordingly. Offices
will remain open evenings and Sundays for
the convenience of those who cannot call
during business hours.
References: Dun's, Bradstreet's, and
every hank and business house in the state
of Washington.
W. W. ROBINSON
Kittitas Land and Live
Stock Company
Rooms 708-709 Hoge Building
Phone Elliott 418 SEATTLE, WN.
land, and nt only better his own condi
tion. hut every < iti/en of 11»<- Mate, by keep
ing tlu« vast amount of money at home.
In or<ler to hel|> furnish .sufficient breed
ing stock on this farm we arc offering to
fell a portion of the company'* shares on
terms that will allow anyone who desires
to become interested with us
Remember, in investing with this com
pany you are not putting your money in
stump laud that will t. ke a vast amount
of money ami time before it will produce
you anything, nor in desert land where
there are no improvements, but you are
becoming interested in an established live
stock and dairy business.
* • • •
As previously stated, there are 120 acres
of this land in four-year-old winter apple
trees that will shortly be bearing A large
portion of the balance of the land is under
i ultivation, and with the present number
of cows we should be aide to raise at least
2.')") hogs a year, and we now have a milk
check coming in every month. When we
increase our present dairy herd to S*JO cows
this milk check should amount to at least
$5,000 a month during ten months of the
year, and the increase from 500 beef cows
'hould at the least calculation be $35,000
per year if sold at fifteen months old for
babv beef, but, as a large per cent of this
increase will probably be sold for breeding
purposes the returns undoubtedly will be
considerably more
In addition to this we should sell from
$40.fKD to $50,000 worth of hogs, to say
nothing of the young horses that could be
sold each year.
Practically all of the hay and grain re
quired for the above amount of stock c?n
be raised on the land.
• • • •
The land referred to is close to F.llens
burg, a large amount of it within one and
one-half miles of the city limits and the
State Normal College. The farthest of it
is about seven miles from town but within
three miles of a railroad station. As both
the Northern Pacific and Milwaukee pass
through Ellensburg our shipping facilities
are the best, and freight rates the lowest
of any irrigated valley in the state. In
addition to these railroad facilities there
will be a good automobile and wagon road
completed between Seattle and Kllensburg
within the next year.
Cream meets with a ready sale at any
one of the various creameries in Kllensburg
or there is a big demand for it for ship
ment to Seattle, but the company would
probably establish their own creamery or
a milk condenser. Beef cattle and hogs
command a ready sale either for shipment
to the cities of the Sound, Portland, Ha
waiian Islands or Alaska
An account of the altitude, the dry
weather, sunshiny days, and close prox
imity to the mountains, the
Kittitas Valley i« fast becom
ing one of the health resorts
of the United States, and
whether one is an office man
or laborer, after returning
from a few days spent in that
invigorating climate you feel
much improved in both body
and mind.
» • * •
In evolving: the plan for
handling his farm land hold
ing*, Mr. Robinson is apply
ing on a broad scale the meth
ods followed in his enormous
hay ami grain business. lie
believes that an employe who
has given faithful service and
the best years of his life in
helping a business to a suc
cess should share in the profits of that
business. The \Y. \Y. Robinson Company
numbers many men in its employ who
were given shares in the company on easy
payments, and who now draw handsome
dividends as a result of Mr. Robinson's
fairness.
It is this spirit that is going to carry
the Kittitas Land & Live Stock Company
and its 2,(>(X) wonderfully rich and produc
tive acres to splendid success; to give the
state of Washington the model business
farm of the United States.
The opportunity is open to a limited
number of investors to become associates
of Mr. 'Kohinson in this ideal project—to
share in the profits and pleasures of doing
something worth while. The wage earner,
the salaried man, the professional and busi
ness man whose applications are registered
early enough, conic in on exactly the same
terms, according to the extent of their in
dividual means.
An easy payment plan lias hern arranged
so tliat you can figure out how much of
your income you can spare each month.
•thanu * rnoascit
3
*r

xml | txt