The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 8, 1909, Page 4

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 SEATTLE STAR ’ BY STAR PUBLISHING Co. Ref 1907-1309 Seventh Ave. EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. Ret ere of wt he Postoftion at @eattien Ween an weoond i In announcing himself to be opposed to the principle of} poptlar primaries as applied to the choice of United States 3 Senators, the new senator from New York, Mr i Ro q said: “You cannot take power away from public bodies without j having the character of those bodies deteriorate a Which is quite true. Rut the other end of the proposition is equally true, namely: A public body like the state legislature cannot de teriorate without eventually having power taken from tt The New York legislature is responsible for Platt and Depew. That is an evidence that the New York legislature did a deteriorate. ; Any “public body” which could be responsible for two! ; } such men as Depew and Platt ought to be stripped of all its ;: 2 ) powers The powers of all legislatures came originally from the The plan What the people give they can take away the legislature by a primary is a plan to take away The trust placed in the state Hamilton might think or do if he lived today might not be what is in the Mr. it that there was a period of reaction about the time of Hamilton believed that the nd of Root. Besides, it is retiably reported and his name was associated wth those who Declaration of Independence had gone too far his friends were looking for methods to place the people. A hundred years’ experience with those checks has ‘leone! that the senate of the United States is a little Hamilton and “checks” dependence, and to the ideas of people's wisdom as taught by Lincoln. Thank you, —<— Elihu, but you belong to the other school Se , “Fat, Schmitty, old man, Mins ithe | Smith did pot telt me she was) jyour sister, I did mot dream that lall the Smiths In Indiana could be related. And ts she the slip of a liso | eri Sho came to one us grade. ate?” “The very same. That ‘slip of a air!’ in the only brilliant one of the family. Everybody ts wander ing who the author of ‘Puebles’/ really is, and few besides our BY F. R. PETERS. To have a deautiful gh intellectual and my menti fe bad ever met—actnally pro him Smad more than md. To realize that latended - offer bis heart, had | net forestalied him by offering came to Wilson Bow | infu! end of a : ae "re recalled each day, al | Most each moment, of the months from the time he had first) a presented to Miss Ernestine at the little summer resort Preee could not help thinking | re hfulty of the almost} ad " gabien in which he bad fore bites Smith after her strange | ‘and incomprehensible proposal “What would any man do if | whom he likel should sudden: | flatly and avowedly, to him her husband?” er. to} himeelf. With himself be} that no man would be pre to parry and weigh an offer) & woman would | it the woman whe could pro. unwomanly, Se Lig ere Miss Smith had been ear. in aa teil we veedd for | SALNAD ACTUALLY PROPOSED TOXIN as she had left Rownd/ selves and her publishers know two days after. She naa not! that Ernestine ts actually the cele less cordial he told himeelf.| brated story writer Lactle De Lan he thought he had detected ajcey. it has delighted us ot) that tone of pique in her conver | Ernestine has made good her [threat wot to live a life ot ease, "4 reverie might have con i to do something in the world, | much longer under the in-) Her stories are all written to en. of his pipe and the early | courage the troest womantiness in breeze, had not @ strange| American women. Why, do you » Which a moment later be-| know it, old man, that graduation | familiar one, came swing! «piel of yours in which you Inct ip to the veranda of Preen's|dentally advocated that women log bungalow. The greeting | should te allowed to pop the quea- \ of two college men who had not) tion seemed to have first set Er geen cach other since graduation, nestine to thinking on that line. Beven years before, shvuld be cor | She has often spoken of it and said ial, a:4 thie one was. | she would refute it some day in a “My sister told me you were|novel. I have forgotten just what ” the meweomer hastened to| you did say, but it certainly im . “And as I came east to see| pressed Ernestine her safely off for Barope | thought) Very shortly Schmitty began to 1 would run up and renew old| wonder why his old cortege chum ) had grown sitent AN OSGAR-UND-ADOLF PLEASANTRY Adolt; Diss chicken raising fad {s contagious, aind id? ; Osgar: Yess. By der way, bow are you making ouvid mit ' your chichens? chicken raising fad wass contagious from the legislative power fature has been abused. The people have been betrayed, It is right for the people to discharge the “misrepresentative” the} @ishonest agent—the unjust steward—the corrupted or the foot ish legislature Lincoln held that the people could be trusted hat do trine is good doctrine today A practical application of it wil do good to many of our troubles politic It isa ght for Mr. Root to tell us that he is a statesman of the Hamiltonian school. But that is not the question. What upon | t3 bit too much so. | § There is a disposition to return again to the Declaration of In-} a Adolf; Fine. 1 got a case of exgs from dem, Vot dit you} get from yours’ | Ongar: Oh, 1 got @ cane, too Adolf: A case of eggs’? Ongar: No. A case of chickenpox. Dot iss bow I learned dot AND HE | | INTERESTING, NOT SPECTACULAR. BY G. 8, CONTRLLO officials tolne by mment at Y | forme of sharp an Had a Rig Jom tor i & anne Tage tigure head 2 are tempered by department were told Thoer | tated by & mone ven tal aiep taken | involved two A weaker | | general would ply thrown 5 iF by the light @undsys found & front a amining Inepect ing Carved he wade: ipping wher breathin his way by the ight stern through the Stygian gloom. where none pene livated but monstrous whart rats He never asked & man Jthing that he wouldnt }do himacit } He Cleaned « CMF A detatled statemer what [Meath Commissioner Crichton hes A couldn't | A BARK FOR BArK fon. | the editor eat tn bis easy chelr | Baltors aware have ener claire ry | fhetion, corre ke recom ¢; | | the eavelopes. Another perm the waste paper inp Letters the ned disappointed. It was prow. [A man named Barker had & dew j that varkes called it Harker | sald be. reaching | barket wae amrerebly te ten for because Ht barked and beonwse \° n eame He the ¥ | wae Barker od wes Par bark, although his game was Hark Parker and Barker went for « “and Harker barked in, Fark se. fot man note ine pend check for inciored to Narite T have received your joke Will nend check when my bark Judge's Library | Do not throw the water from boiled beans ia the sink. It leaves ja bad odor / ie | If there ts a smal! hole or crack | In the inside of the range, it can be| filled with a mixture of equal parts | of wood ashes and common salt, | moistened with water, This paste will harden and last « long tin. Preit cake may be kept an in- [definite length of: time if it ie packed away in granulated sugar. A Hubbard squash in more eaatly handled with a stronk can opener than with «a batehet or butcher knife Brash the fringe of doiites or towels with a nail brush, instead of going at the snarls with a comb: All canned vegetables should be set out doors for half an hour after | opening if possible, The oxygen re } moved the canning process te re- stored and ate freshened Pierce sausages with a fork be fore frying and they will not burst. The crevices of at should be carefully 4: the breeding of microbes, An ordl- nary dust cloth will not do the work. A brash with a long curved handle should be used. Ham Was THIRSTY. 6b Who Was talk the other m radiators ing night when he asked, “do you out bis handkerchief mouth 1 don't care ne,” he replied. took Barn land wiped bt lit I do have | nee L Morte: ov A BACHELOR has to do to din a man is to be his All a wen cover brains uer } © thing @ man Hikes about waah- | }day dinners iw thet in the day he | dowan't e home to hin Thore’s hardly apything seems so wonderful to a woman a# how cun DR. CRICHTON’S JOB Is| @ reply that ed to avoid) rs the baby could tale if it knew how | A woinan oan thrill ae deeply over | her pr utions for secloan tag an a man over getting ready to go Cahing. f 4 woman can't marty a man herself use she niroady hus a] husband, #he'll murry him to some body eine, anyway—New York Proas THE Brat DAY. FEBRUARY. 4, 1008. |\SEATTLE MAN FINDS A WORK ow DOING IT WELL tur ISN ia | OR. 4. £. CRICHTON, Commissioner of Health. [ln whieh to pla therds in a sar if they hadn't he hae hee Fdere commer predecessors com wii on the @roui had a health dinonse; Sowerloes moat part without water, ard » stant menace to the health at -panagiiers wores Ansar, Protos f yrare the health officiate had! Dairymen « in mighty wrath Hh the an tat an indignation meeting held. te . that) Kent. Dr. Crichton walked in 4 Of lsimpiy explained th if he could etary peeve 0 Ke Nee ot wie ‘infant by vempelling the mitk he would ot the | mc oney consumed nd thet the only! ca out to bura | overs to sell pure ny time or in the operation spent--then wath wards manly pete to Dr. Crighten th i | Sibren them feel ashamed of them ken trom the t weather lant ed and re down Optehten's crusade Qquare ett hog! teepection tm te@.jenvea the tives of more than fe riee and restaurants tm ted, | babi t-shope lnvestinated = and) And who w ave enough the remedy was nesesaryito try to sey oe of im applied without 7 ~ unity m™ t 4 bubonic eee ough the moons soured had mpe carried on by sol laws providing for put® billie Ieee Tati. “Sebactment during’ une hie wae almost « joke alll Dr.) past summer when hundr Crichton arvived. He belig fy | thousands a ms which might enforcing tawe He rent ees oarried disease | deities In (he cownty, wave “" pre were killed end doatroyed Lament mm MR. SKYGA CK, FR FROM MARS jo Visite the Earth as a Special ipssiat sibrremmnnisent and Makes Wireless Observations ih His Notebook. RAW LYRTH-BEING OF AONORMAL DEVELOPMENT I CONSULTATION WT SPECIM SST — Cave S/GNS OF MUCH WORRY OVER PHYSICAL CONDITION ~~ SAICIALIST MADE CAREFUL DY- aenens WON LONG COMPAR- 4 “STRING SUDG IMG FROM LARNEST DISCUSTION Lath WAS ONE OF FxTREME qgRravirr. ~AanD 4 wanr Tet PANTS cur wren i THE waraT (Qeeenenenc sce Cem How many biue bass druma@ in the Taft inaugural parade? ‘This question propounded in The Star last week has set them all thinking and figuring. The young and old, bright and would-be bright have been at it —just trying to get the correst Solution to that question. Everybody hunted up thelr pencile, put a good sharp point on them—and you just ought t@ sep the answers that have come in. One anewer was that there would be 5 biue bass drume. How in the world the person figured that puszied not only the puzzie editor but would puzzie a Phijadeiphia lawyer. Well—now just between ourselves | am going to hold you in sus. pense until Tuesday—then the cat will be let out of tiv g- To morrow the anawer will be printed, Hurry in your answer today. PUZZLE EDITOR. Here are a few of the poe recelved: Twenty: two bass drume—Fred Lega y-one drume—Brookiyn. rive blue bass drume—H..&. T. Exposition. Nineteen—E. Z. Mark from Tacoma. Twenty-three—Lord D.. Liverus. Eighty—Mrs, T. M. H. Twentyfive blue bass drume—Figureitout, Eig rs. BL. F. Twenty-seven—Kitty Cough Drop. Thirty-one—Jimmie. Nineteen—Eighth grade. Look at the 22s. Twenty-two—0O. Rydatrom, Twenty-two—John Terry. Twenty-two—Al Morrison. Just a plain case of algebra Oaks. and 22 ie the anewer-—Katharine wenty-two—Austin Mecklem, Twenty-two—6. F, Atwood. Twenty-two—High school t#acher. Twenty-two—South school teacher. Twenty-two-—-tiverett——. T. Twentytwo—Green Lake student of high echool Twenty-two—Real estate agent. Pil pomst th lan | Newer mea: | | | BLUE BASS DRUM PUZZLE... wt his eyes to hide the | At Rector’s, the noted Chicago Restaur- fe she'd shake. nim— ant, 7 some of the grand opera stars ried to him; a e | Brted to walke Mims sang, with piano accompaniment, the diners ant neta sak Scala listened with rapt attention and craned their maith a | necks to get a glimpse of the singers. But {thing 9 | when he begins to | dem FOS COOO OFS OOS OSOSESES OSES ODED HO OH SD OUTBURST OF EVERETT TRUE SO OeSeSCoeSroo one THESE WOMEN MAKE MK TIRED. THEY Don'y KrOw ENOYOH Te VOTE. HAV'N'T THE BRAINS ruddertons | on Ht heme | Marht pin my bow wheels that an That this te the milkeman’s hour bis auto ‘ 16; on “ol ait 1 OvESS Your MoTHER ton wiy tired “of the repat Mer YEARS OP EXPERIENCE, CAN VOTE ERY NEAR INTELUOENT heaven AGA Youss sar On Cain, - amed Hiawatha forent rained up from some great stick of timber the, gtue face congrons od pulp taritt,” Modere Haew the world’s broad (eld of battle, the bi f Wife t Uke dumb, driven cattle, Holler wher n i the kntfet & Simple Knows sue GHEW PRO : ’ soutine ar oe eee id bachelor in Den. | Wome Sie: w how s, of course once a resident of Bhe gtew #0 prowd ahe hile living down there vif tathelor down At a widow. She was printed he w years of age The He's an ol4 bachelor or and per ‘ tted him te spend money on ber He thought his bachelo ~ t ended. | She really ine eet very much for « whi. “- change { came a change. It there \ ter for ‘She Why not? fe) a wonderful ¥ beautiful Tessie—-I know that, but wi Then he went |bullt like her has just simply York end forgot her. to wear « lot of clothes. | Use Your Credit many j Oh, about two} ie wealth, but not for the ain S Maesres el Spring Outht—open an quentiy hear a man boa account with us and pay a little down and a little at a time. We are headquarters for famous service that « good beginning | a makes a bad ending in fluences some people never to begin | anor the Gere. fool the newd hearty on8 LO tom. | “Bradbury Sys- The man who is looking for an a nas :. 12h woman dowen't take Inte con-/f tem”-—the best Men's Clothes made yet. Spring sideration that may also be Ms 7, looking for teal, inan Models now being shown—we want you to see them. jan ts made of dust,” quoted the Guy “And when be falls off the water wacen Wie name te Mud,” added the} Himple Mug GA To make the punishment fit the crime « Kensington barber says at men whe share themselves mumht to be compelled to cut their own hair Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. 1332-34 Second Av. 209 Union St. “Seattle's Relioble Credit Howse” Biobbe—1 don't imagine that Got rox was bern with « silver spoon in bie mouth. fy No. 1 dined with hive the other evening, and, if anything, | think it must have been a sliver knife. ‘The Maticiwia Brother, 1 The Hallelula brother —that was all ever hem ¥ time o” meetin'—jewt palleiuia word! up & collec they'd shake him, they'd wake him in’ to forsake him; But to pay they couldn't make him Haliciuia! —Hallelutat An’ The Victor—the Fireside Theatr When Lightnte’ hit the steeple— The > aon o the e liga IO eo rately You think you can tell the difference be- iis’ iniciaith. ahdah tate, hearing their beautiful voices on the Victor. Aw they'd wake him, } Hut they knowed not how to take him An’ to pay they “Halletuie! But can you? In the Opera House corridor scene in “The Pit,” at Ye Liberty Theatre, Oakland, Cal., the famous quartet from Rigoletto was sung by Caruso, Abbott, Homer and Scotti on the Helietuta wake him At iaat they wi bie tin n’ totd him that come to go Where the weather was «-siasin’, an’ . . : Cer Serer AS. ere ictor, and the delighted audience thought mentin’ daye? they were listening to the singers themselves. huroh steepie | it was a Victor. In the rotunda of Wanamaker’s. famous Philadelphia store the great pipe organ ac- Constitution. POINTRD PARAGRATHS. And some people se derive a lot of satisfaction trom underat : : it's y hard for a woman to companied Melba on the Victor, and the peo- manage her house to the eatistac “ ; tion of the hired girl ple rushed from all directions to see the rans wife is never as proud of a ti him a bis mother was the day he singer. wore his first short drow f good make-up was the only ary tO muccess, nearly an would be a great ac Even in the Victor laboratory employes often imagine they are listening to a singer making a record while they really hear the Victor. You owe it to yourself to investigate the possibilities of this wonderful musical in- strument. writer says that poy sing in disguixe, Well the disguise is #o perfect that but few of Us are able to see thro A wise man ¢ st of his wis liow could the users be expected to harmful? e fina has of clwarettes know they were tal failure of the girl's esuited In heart failure young man.—-Chicago All passenger steamers leave Col- | man docks. for Puget Sound “Navy | Yards. Pacific Coast Distributors. of Victor Talking Machines. | 1406 Second Av. Suit Cases Traveling Bags MEEK TRUNK @ BAG CO, O19 Firet Ave.

Other pages from this issue: