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) ] / | ¢ aaeatittthienae ( sess THE SEATTLE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE isi. | Se oe INSULTING THE UNIFORM ially, but none the Ie eriously, is at out wv avy partment over the retusal @f the manager of | da V Sa sin Miform to attend hi® public dances | \ Mt vnager frankly admits that he has no,social prejudice aga he naval uniform, but at the same time proves cone atrons have The box office gives thi € wet Mt ybishness. ( k and contemptible discrimination on the party of a ain e dancing public there is no need to ex} is one of those irritating inconsistencies of he he very men and women who feel that pat-| ri vast silors swing down the streets in marching | order ate the oned who tilt their noses upward when the lone| aman, without bands or banner, presents himself | fact. No crash or blare of “America” or the “Star Spangled Banner® can disguise the existence of this feeling of civilian con tempt for the uniforms of entisted sailors and soldiers: The fault for this condition lies in the navy—not with the enlisted man, but with the officers who hold commissions, public unconsciously adopts the attitude of the officer toward the enlisted man In the army or navy the enlisted man is a social cipher; he and in all places must overtly display his inferiority The exigencies of discipline are supposed to compel this official humiliation of the enlisted man, ‘The business of war fare is controlled by a tightly bound corporation, which never | thankfully r ives st estions from the outside, so that there is little hope for any den change There is growing, however, a widespread belief that all this fuss and feathers is not dictated entirely for the good of the service, but in a measure by the social instinct of the grad- uate from West Point and Annapolis. In this connection not strange how a circus canvas or deferential butler-like services Phe astonishment is all the it is understood that the canvas boss has nothing He has no oath of enlistment, greater when but dollars and cents as his club. of routine he brings about results dependent upon co-operative d soldiers of the world labors that would tax the best dri But however this may be, the trouble arises from the fact land considers himself the equal of every man who sails the sea, be he The officer has decreed that the enlisted man is below that every man who inhabits dry fficer or enlisted nan him socially and keeps him so ‘That is why the patrons of the Seattle dance hall decline to dance with sailors in uniform. Just as soon as the officers of the navy show their respect for the uniform of the enlisted man, so soon will the public do likewise. Even last June's graduates have; Every little bit added to what you to grit their teeth when they try to | pay, makes It cost just a little bit contemplate the regents giving | more, with particular reference to property awsy for $5,000,000 less | Mr. Aldrich’s ideas of “downward.” than nothing. aaa Evelyn on an allowance of $500 a An helr has been born to the month doesn’t seem to think she Prince and de Sagan. Among the felicitations not received death ne from the impecunious Boni. | a si | Owing to an earthquake the war against the Turks, advertived by the Aside from a couple of deaths and Greeks, has been indefinitely post & couple of score wounded there | poned were no developments in the Pitts» burg strike yesterday The result of the promised war between Turkey and Greece prom: | {aes to be indigestible at the very! least. Princess Spokane promises to make the business of acquiring @& pennant « source of continual worry Policemen who do impromptu work with thetr revolvers should at least be chided. Mr. Olson and Mr. Yousiff wil! wrestle this evening, and the we It ian't Uke as If we weren't ner, Mr. Olson, will meet Dr. Keller. | pretty well acquainted with Tacoma | already The title of the ruler of Persia sounds a great deal like a disap | “We” pointment anyhow [elty POINTED PARAGRAPHS. REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR. ‘The early shopper catches the bar- gain. The faster you run into debt the more you get behind are welcome to our fair a] A college education te uneful to show how beys can get it without brains A man who ean play the plano te lucky to be able to do anything #0 useful as rocking the baby. The reason girls are so much rter than their brothers is every~ y in the family thinks It's the ther way round Every circus performer ts anxious fo become a ringleader. There is probably nothing worth while than exclusivencas. A wise man knows Just how far) to go in an argument with a woman lous Few of the golden opportunities) we hear about world stand the acid) ly thing about thelr personal ap eat pearance that can't please them Is a bald head. If 2 man has no secrets from hia} ® D8! wife, the chances ‘art that he has| The great advantage a widow has no wife in pretend so much better othe « she evel A spinster says that the capttat} OO" OUMF women: that she never with mon. Yellow Journaliem. - 1 do mise Mra She told me all the news of the pariah.” } O, Uat waa only goasip-—no truth jin it had any experience prize in the matrimonial lottery re mains undrawn Jones HIS TRADE, “This is a big undertaking,” re marked the man in tne black clothes| "Well, there, I itked to ‘ear it and white tie, as he prepared aj Truth or les, ‘twas all news to me four-bundred-pounder for burial Puneh - A Woman's Recompense, JUST ON HIS WAY, And I'll give you a ponr I sup Sambo--Hello, Rastus! Whar is| yng ip rong enough to carry you gwine great | ” t Tne jeat been whar I'se wine. tathen whe wank” Scrape ssp “vot you dink, Osgar! 1 hat brain fefer der odder day.’ So? Vere dit you get 14?” “Der feter?’ “Nav Aor brain! The | might as well be killed as starved to} Men are so self-satisfied that the! INEW NATIONAL (PARTY SEEMS A PROBABILITY SENATOR LA FOLLETTE. BY GILSON GARDNER WASHINGTON, DC, July 16. A now party to bear the name “Pro gressive” ja taking shape. Every day soos the old “Demoeratle” and Republican” lines more faint Every day sees the lee rore sharply drawn between bi-partisan self-interest, on the one hand, and |the people's Interests on the other The tariff bill ta tre mendously significant vote on the hat 10 re sixth of the publicans a party strength (nth should have voted agalnat the ame as a shock even to Aldrich. A few wooks Aldrich turned with a aneer on Senator Beveridge jand asked moekingly What is it that and your progressive’ friends would like? He waed the term tn ridicule On the evening of July 8, when the 10 “progressive republicans lvoted against the passage of the tariff bill, and used the name of j President Taft as their justification, ttone. He wonate party measure, Party of Majoriti “The republican party fe a party lof majoritie The senator from In }diana does not speak for the re publican party. He has no right to call here the name of the president of the United States In support of any of the suggestions he has made Those of us who are here represent jing states and voting as ® majority in this chamber represent the re publican party,” and so on The Rhode nd senator had come down to an apologetic and ab most whining tone, He was sert oualy disturbed Another thing that disturbed the senator from Rhode Island was the jrumor that President Taft bad at | last voiced a sympathy for the “Pro- jsresaives.” He Is quoted as saying “1 hope all the progrésaive mom bers of the senate will vote against the bill, The moral effect of such 4 vote will be tremendous. [t will | ip to get @ better bill from the conference. It will help the mem: bors of the house in fighting sor the reductions of the house bili The report apread rapidly and was taken to mean that Taft had quit) his bardand-fast alliance with Ald- tich, Those senators who had) helped to make up Aldrich’s 38 They had supposed that Taft wan on their side to etay Words of Beveridge. The words of Beveridge reviring He Visite the Earth as a Specie lose Observations JUST A FEW CONUNDRUMS, What headlines prove the most sensational to women? Wrinkles If one goat ate two low-cut shoes | what would be the telephone num |ber? 182 Oxford (one ato two ox ford shoes) When {ts baseball first mentioned Jin the bible? When the prodigal | made a home run What ta the difference between one yard and two yards? A fence | Why do the Russian soldiers wear | brane buttons on thelr coats, and the Japa wear allver buttons? To keep their coats butte Why ta it diffientt to flirt on the P, O. steamers? Because all the mails (males) are tied up in bags Why ought women to | ploy e4 in a postoffice? Because they know how to manage the mails (inalen) There is a girl that works in a votes, heard the news with sorrow, | MR. SKYGACK, FROM MARS to Aldrich in the emo sound That pledge (for revision down ward) he sald was voleed by our party's candidate and leader, in the party's name. That promiae and she people's faith that it would be kept, was one of the three principal reasons why the people made our candidate their president. To keep that pledge has been the effort of those republican senators who have battiod against increasing rate Our votes shall be cast to har with our party's pledge as voiced by hata sol our party's leader—the nation’s president So 10 republicans broke over party lines, The states from whieh they come are the states which hold) the balance of politieal power. The “Progressive” members of the sen ate—a group very Ikely destined t | BENATOR BEVERIDGE. | be the nucleus of a “Progressive party” are; La Folk Wiscon sin; Beveridge, Indiana} Dolliver and Cummins, lowa; Burkett and | Brows, Nebraska; Nebe and Clapp, Minnesota; Craw Ted Sout! Dakota; and Bristow, Katage | Progressives” on the d peratic | « side of the chamber who he 4 with the repablican “Progrewtiy « Gore and Owen, Oklahoma; Newlands, Nevada; and Saivély, Ip diana. Progre: In sympa sive” movement, but not strong enough to be witp iiin the tariff fight, are several -repoblic members of the senate he Borah, of Idaho; Dison, batana: | Bourke, of Oregon sea ot} North Dakota; and Jones of Wash: | ington, For these there ia still hope. In the house of representatives) the “Progrosmves” are the “anth Cannon Ineurgent Vietor Mur dock, of Kanans, Cooper and Lan rott, of Wisconsin, and others who made the good fight againat the Cannon rules—these are the “Pro aressives” in the lower house. ‘t will be well for the people to h these men. They are coming right slong, all of them. Shaking his finger In the face of | Aldrich, La Follette uttered a pro \phetic warning, when he sal | “The clock has struck for the old ean in this senate bin time 2 SO : | Cor-eapondent and Makes Wire in Hit Notebook. DAW MAK MARTH BLING ASIOAR ZRECT POTTURE IN FLOAT, CAVE iq Fioart ve MIERNATELY oP FROM &6/Df 10 8/DE, WHARKAT FEMME OCCUPANTS WANED AUTRE ELY thh MATURED em PROBABLY LARTN MRTNOD OF YERTING BOUYANCY OF merge CONVEYANCES. a “ge ee eandy store in Boston wh {6 6 feet 6 inches tall, has a waint’ hieasure of 42 inches and wears'd@ No. 9 shoe What do you think she} weighs? She weighs candy | What ia wetter than a woman with waves in her hair, a cataract over each eye, and high-tied shoes?4 A woman with a notion In her head (an ocean In her head) } A Variation, | ite are uodentably small} 1 the steak In really Ike | eather | never had a meal like } young husband } | asks the " e why we can't keey }@ cook ike mother used to kooy Complicated Sywtem. “Bo you have decided to econo next year? rd |. "¥en," anawered young Mra. Tor kina. “Charley has promised to give me all hin winnings at poker, wo that won't have to une. any of my | housekeeping allowance to play | bridwe.”—Washington Star | | interests. | torneyw itee rooms with paid lobbyists and | ¥ tiation plows delivering speeches written for | reaps. —Iriwh | them by attorneys for interests! . Free ORN Al seoking special legislation And the | . Walter (in expensive restauran | bill raising rates and increasing the |): 2 | | ost of Lving, when reduced rates!” Wattor—Thore’s no charge for] | were the promise caer taedaen | Nurich—No, thank you. jis predicted that there will be a STAR DUST Wine hayet | | “When a med diesome man fol lore his nose, he gin'rally folle It inter someb dy | elee'n busines: | | } see neratulate Jack on bie golden weddir Golden wedding? Why, he's only f iat married \} 1 know, but his bride is worth a) Hilion.” Boston Transoript SENATOR ALGHIOM. A man might as well be roaat beef wking in an oven as t engaaed | gone by when one man can hold up ; fd ait aoe on | his finger and have his will The)? ee ee ir iH time t# here when the people's ‘ rd and when it will vatee will b Mike id Plodding jure become effective in the formulation | yics tings dan gold brick of our laws What's happened | Aldrich Organization nae Wnty Ep de mad em baat ale What La Follette had in mind |)" Slee an | Aldrich tariff act the organization. | Win | «Yep st was the Speaking of the consin senator ‘aid a Waal On that day Inst i | | when 4:3 fr. Aldrich waa permitted to name) = fie sieth the broken in heart all the committees of this senate, | and bindeth up their wounds—-fibte, | this bill became a law = = | | Today the public pretty well un-| He—1 wish to gracious, dear, youl] derstand this fact. The people have| would take those bairpir at ot lt on the Aldrich organtxation owt | Your uth while you are talking.” 1 from under cover. They neon) Bie - mpering) | Bn x i} how It reaches acroms the aisle |"R0 | 2 sy ey NG aces denian i which is supposed to divide repub-|) Hiean from democrat, and takes “ee | democratic and republican votes! ‘The kind of a man who acts lkelf impartially for some special legin|a pear at home may act ike @ pix | ation desired by some spectally fa | down t s News. vored financial interest, They have | “*e seen senator ring as paid at-| 1 have ¢ fault you men ited man, self consum: | tor 1 have and ite a torneys a that the mall one | You.” replied Knox, “Just lke al ff They bave seen such at asserts that the “consum y fault er is a myth,” and that “these/ on hole that makes & plugged) tructs are ghoste They have 860 | nickel no good Catholic Btandard no s openly defy the people, | and Times while consulting In thelr commit Ee. and = rivatry Weat Up in Arms. Buch things cannot happen with “ee out consequences ationce i# a virtue that the fel- {i Representative Stevens has just | iow who owes us money seems to | F returned from Minnesota, He re|think we should cultivate abnor porte all the middie west up in| mally | arms. He says the people are tn oe ae dignant. Their resentment ts Hone An actor always has two imed at everything republican, | are" a lo you fi that From all sides eimilar reports Ha ow fe yee Fone | jare coming in. A political revolw Hoax—T me he talke about and tion is apparently Impending, and| ine one he gota following an overthrow of the re ee publican majority in the house, it Mobbe—You are well posted in ali the popular #uperstitions, When a fellow eteals your umbrella what te |i it a sign of? | Siobbe—That's « sure sign of rain . . A baseball game ts played upon The diamond; still the umpires there wor is to be named to Prem |p see that It te really played _Upon the square breaking up of party Mines and the development of an independent party. The begtnaings of this party Will be seen when candidates ap- Dear for congress, and ite further development will work out when a suce ident Taft gr Bartell 1 To reduce the price you have to pay—to maintain and improve the quality and the service—is the policy of the 3 Bartell Drug Stores. For Friday and Saturday 20 Mule Team Borax 8 C 8c 68c « 19¢ 14c 83c . d3C 3 Bartell Drug Stores No.1—~Old Store | \No, 2—Main Store | No.3—NewStore 610 Second | Gomes rier Se ve and { he Avenue Nene the Clty Washing Ammonia Full pints and full atrength D. D. D. Eczema Cure Gives quick and permanent relief Tasteless Castor Oil the medicinal virtues and without the taste. 6 bottle Woodbury’s Facial Soap apocial ly m Venus Rubber Gloves Regular price $1.00 ....... Bellwood Rubber Gloves Thorowghly well made | || $1.00 wine . for the face ... A guaranteed article Regularly 600 HOM Seeond Avenne Near Vouter Wry j ed yokes. 2 pair BAILLARGI ON'’sS 63 Saturday Specials on End of the Week Supplies That Help in the Household Economy Ladies’ Hosiery (our lu in Hi ire greater than this line Onyx ack i otton doub anid toes, full fa black or black v It ill size ut $5¢ ale aturday cial he “3 Pairs for $1.00," not equalled anywhere. | On le kin n black, tan, white, ¢ et competitors and imitat y man acturer { lines shown tomorro™ er pair 0e Children’ 8 Hosiery Girls’ very fine dressy liale Stockings; pure elastic long no seams, double knees, heels and toes; all sizes, black or tans ° cial 2he Medium weight best qual ity Egyptian cotton, black, ribbed long wiry triple knees, s, heels and toes; Saturday, my all size cial ; 25¢ Children’s ion Stock- ings, medinm weight, blacks or t all sizes; 6 pairs for 75, of, per pair... ABE Ladies’ Vests $1.50 sleeve in white, cream Saturday spe- cial D0¢ Fine $1.25 lisle thread Vests, hand crochet- Saturday spe ns; Ladies’ less Silk Vests, and pink Swiss spe- cial .. We Real Swiss Vests in lisle; regular 90c and $1.00. Sat- urday, special .. 40¢ Ladies’ 35e Vests, long or short sleeves. Saturday, special 25¢ Ladies’ 20c Vests, 15e, or Knickerbocker White All Linen Waists Two new styles in today, special ., . $2.50 New styles in the famous Christy make, $1.25 to each. Boy. 8” Suits and Extves| fet Play Trousers ..45¢ $1.25 Knickerbocker Pants . Soft Negligee Shirts. ..50¢ All Suits worth to $17.50, special price ....$10.00 All Suits to $8.50, spe cial .. All Suits to $5. spe- OO $3.45 For Summer Reading All our 50c values at ..10¢ All our $1 values at... .35¢ Post Card Albums, 25¢, B5e¢ and .... .50¢ All our stock of Pictures at one-third to one-half off to close the lines. Our Tea Room serves the choicest delicacies in season at moderate reach, excellent servic e Millinery Specials for Saturday well-trimmed Sailors ; regular $3.00 values. Satur day prices; easy to 75 Keat megeanine Moot your friends ja our Room, on floor For a € na Mewage $1.00 | $5.45 | ‘| Linen € Cluny © SECOND Ave & SrrinaSt dies aad Gentlomem. We oF ee arene TOURIST BAT wa Men's Vea < -Best Value Quick | SATURDAY SPECIAL ! grade of brigigam “a r the Matta Gg i Ts, finished all’ tyle; drawen ‘A th straps, and 4 ® a 7% tar all first-clag re Saturday, k Lisle Sta eat . pers ri ‘bbe pure tisk 4 er weight Unde Or wear Cooper will always: usual tomorrow. , nese 2-piece | now Men's pure linen | els, per dow , New assortment of | Fancy Vests. | A large variety a } Negligee Shirts, soft cg | Toilet Articles | Hurdnut Marvelous © Cream, tubes 25e, jars ie gets size jars atte Pinaud's Hair ag or T5¢ bottle, Bath Soap —B Glycerine, Pinaud@ | box of 3 cakes v.45 4 astile So P its purity; pereal House Fu M size Grey pair, special ..,.sem ' 11-4 full size, in or white, special 11-4 Scotch | Plaids .. | 114 Plaids soft light i wool finish, sp c | 124 extra ai or white cottons ket; special ... New Indian suitable for slumber robes, | | | | = Marie Ani tains, 42 in. | yards long; @ cell and pre-shrunk br cial | | | | bees | either Arabian Of | in. wide, 2% | thread net and edges; special } Pall ...espes : All-wool Burma] becomjng very B bedrooms? hi , lie well, and’p lar to the more, styles 9x 10-6 special tomer | 9x12 special | re ow 3x72 Axminster, Cial .,.+see8 | 36x73 Axminster; 93 ue; special »« | Post oft First Floor reer ree