The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 20, 1910, 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)

ane.) Member of the United Pros. Published dally by The Star Publishing Co. King County Interests FROM DIANA’S DIA a Mins Diliplckles Succeeds as a Consus Enumeratrose— Vet Bhe is Per. Baffled The ery that you will hear most frequently during the com | | ing senatorial campaign will be some variation of this sistently by « Mysterious Mr, Hoofitt, “We must have a King county man in the senate to look after our interests.” The first time you hear this assertion, pause long enough to ask yourself “What interests of mine do United States senators look | THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1910, STAR DUST Special Values From the Handkerchief Sect Ten Big Items on Sale Tomorrow, Friday, Saty after?” | AT 10¢—Pure Linen In-| AT 10¢ — Pure linen,| AT 15¢ — Fine If the answer does not at once st itself, ponder over | itial Handkerchiefs, en with Y% and Y-inch hem emstitehed ~ with what interests of your neighbor they safeguard in Washington circled vee dainty floral Very song and very good tely embroidered cor. f ewig ‘or the money | ner forge S You will find, gentle reader, that “our interests” is a mis | design, fl initials, All} n rh clme-not, bap : nti washed AT 20¢ — High - Grade y and bow knot del nomer as applied to you and your neighbor. ‘The interests that | “pbs Shear gga tease sles United States senators have looked after heretofore with partic } AT 12%4¢—All pure lin-| jms with nent for Sosa ae ular care have been the interests of the corporation “Even of we sould reap Wout ed isis abe “ler | DOtder. Very dainty and edge, neat! es . . leowin’, some people ‘ud be too lazy broidered corners in eyelet " sual. Th case 9 / y Your interests are not inextricably involved with the ap ter harves’ s crop.” sad blind effect unusual hree for 50« j ed it tial. Soft and with a pointment of a postmaster or a United States marshal; as a mat tock at that mba. tettien vb bliall | AT 25¢—Strong value | good finish, rme head and wniffiing, He muat belteve |}i| AT 25¢ — Medium | of medium weight linen.| AT 35¢ —v ter of fact, it only concerns you remotely when the government b 4 Very — ss Siidat faders i taking in the pure Weight Serviceable Linen | A special purchase makes en linen with ree ention shed or some other loc sera prove ee hun or an automo builds a large detention shed or some ner a! federal improve pola ating for an i" 1 Handkerchiefs, All pure | this quality possible, | made Armenian ment. The interests that own the real estate that will be sold, Pr : | linen daintily trimmed | White initials or blue cor- | edge Very da lace ntereat Last eat veterans and! || " ; ndsome the interests that will get a profitable contract, the interests that videos el sommes ot Apeeleonll with floral embroidery. | ner embroidery | and durable.” 3 for $1.09) will eventually get the dollars from the federal treasury are the ware received $160,003,000 in pen-|))) ” sions i ones who may properly and correctly speak of “our interests, | ‘ . . Dent you think suggested If this is not clear to you, take stock with yourself and your Ss f ot the family, “that 1 would i rou oO oO en’s e 4 : s etermine how much they have increased by | == © well to keep @ wateh on your!) m ara possessions and determine how 1 Laie A. I . > \f " i reason of anything that Senator Piles has done 1] , impose thle aragtiet young Get HH is BS . ‘ “4 oy's father od exchange it for Have your wages increased one cent by anything he has wr « Yulee tenet ualeee ake Une eee at Special Prices done? Has your rent decreased? Has your property increased pe ver \ in value? Have you one ten-cent piece that you can trace back r The funeral sermon wan full of |!) Vv | 6 Vv { 50 V ‘s ‘ast {it ct lyme he’ eta!) Values to $6.75 | Valuesto$17.50 | Valuesto$18, to the efforts of Samuel H. Piles i) or a “ 2 Mra Malaprog i be 1 - Sa. Par * my dear,” corrected |] And Mr. Piles, please remember, has been in an ideal posi 4 “ aie neerrics, m eoreone | at $4.75 at $7.00 at $1 O- i torially joo fter “our interests.” He stood arm el iy “OR. Weil, the words are anonymous,” |i Ss rete : P tion senatorially to look afte . bio “This Inquisitive Old Pappy-Guy Had woman « Garvesity Looking Mild |retorted> Mex M it Brown, navy, black and| Stylish checks and stripes, | 1.01 Voite Skirts, an in arm with the powers that controlled the destinies of “our in-| as Milk, | oka ia a also plain navy, brown, ; * . benefited ¥ y rest assured The United States sends pension | || small checks in Fanam®! biack; in Panama, serge | cellent — quality, terests,” and if he has not benefited you, you may rest a } ut quisitive old pappyeuy had| checks regularly te 6,000 veterans| | and worsteds. Almost all a wal 7 that there is not a word of truth in all this King county interest) 1 lost money to woman's curiosity looking mild as| whe now five in foreign lands. i} ot ga worsteds. | with full length plaits Blac goatee seenrmea|milk. After I had got under his {it show plaited skirts, and in | Splendidly tailored skirts t 4 with talk. O Pisces and earne’ | cuard and found out what I wanted|, Mistress (to gook, aa debt eol- }ij) the line ar girls’ | of all wool a rimmed with bands” nar a Per ; serially benefit-(3est § conte. Malt the day I was cua nd an : pound out What x eee 4) rector goes): That te my brother, | he line are a few in girls’ | o Ht in dark and : Ou the other hand, you might have been materially trying to track down that myxtert-| paralyzed wife tn the Rouse, and| "tnt. y " t iii pane ee many Se > : CHNG its m th paralyze ie how ne Cook os ie wae my laet mis ed if a just tariff law had been passed. You c se wagon OF ous lodger at the Hatch block, Mr.|theo | had to agar with him again] trees’ brother, also. ant rm I rest” in the smaller grocery bill and the better and cheaper | Hoofitt, and the rest of the time 1) to fod out afl about hor. He finally interes » oe ; pi |was extracting vital statistics let me go, or rather {| took it away| Mise Wanta Makeahit (to great |i shoes on the children’s feet. That is where “our interest” lies,| 7" “thccne ‘oid geeser: who| from there on the run. ‘Then ftried|tence): You sang that last ‘song |i Pri Ww. to F fd ' bP ‘ : to find Hoofitt, but he still eludes | >eautifully, Iwas in the supper |i rincess orth not in the appointment of district attorneys. |anked po ne outs: my one. . d Hott, but he still qudes| room, but heard. You have tm ii s old fellow said hie name was, me he people aro the Ratch z proved wonderfully : * ot : Th When any man talks to you about “our interests,” pin him | pump Good name for b He right down to a specification of these interests, Don't tolerate — pe | = bis tre at pore 7a in a ” (i roeke ay the most garre any generalities about sharing in the general good to the Com | jens old cuss | ever ran ac He ‘i lan shew wher ‘cing to get some-|*#nted to know all about every munity. Make him sy sah diag hg pha & |body I had investigated. how many ls pultic thing definite and concrete by reason of there being a King | cniidren they had, what they had to| i'm sick « county man in the senate that you would not get otherwise. and everythieg. This te-! bam. block now think I'm an affinity of his, bent on throwing cayenné pep per In his eyes, and are getting s« they me whether he's This fellow Hoofttt | me back in my work it (Contineed.) rome }live om Will Public Ownership Be Next| Evolution of All Business? And always remember that patriotism is the bait they put} on the political hook when they want to catch them in a hurry but n Maybe Haile is not a coward Robody ever accused the old it would be just like Milwaukee now to forget the original article tleman of being shy on good judg that made tt famous. ‘The trusts have scanded the death knell of the ment. ai a small merchant and manufacturer in this country ' ys Charles Edward Russell, writing in the May of Succem Magazine. Hin article shows how combinations, notably the Standard Oll Co., ‘o. and J, Plerpont Morgan, of business, ranging from railroad lines down to rants in the large aod small ber the gr the American Toba have taken over the areat buteher shope cities of the country Here is a fairly safe prediction — The things Gifford Pinchot learne Unelo Joe will not be down at the in Ireland won't add any to the| depot to welcome the new congress | peace and comfort of Mr. Ballinger man from New York when Gifford gets home —_— = tr > ‘The mik trust, Russell shows, te controlled by the : Ha 2 Standard Ol! Co.; the American Tobacoo Co. has re cently acquired the Ow! Drag Co, operating some PATH |= SB" thing tke 200 stores in the south and west: the Mor gan intcrests have formed a $500,000,000 autemobile trust, and the chain stores are driving out the independent merchant, who finds it imponsibie to meet their price-cutting competition Public ownership of all buatnega Is Russell's notation of the prot Jem he presents. “Under the conditions produced by business in its present stage of evolution,” he writes, “the chief and almost the only rrespondence April 14, 1910 Washington, i j cam put this down aa the best bet Tenor Put—I have not yet sung Sir Samuel Bvans president of Mngiand'’s diverce court, asked « an who und oat uenced his decinion most A plain chap, and a reasenin oh nevernl furter what tr Tm me,” replied the man. “And I'm not nfiven by anything the lawyers | *ay, OO, Bor what the Judge sage 1/ just look at the man in the do and | ask mywelf, If he haan't dc hing. why te be there™ and | bring im in gullty Dear Ded: Forgive me for pot| Taft will speak in Indianapolia.| proapect bef young man in America today Ia the prospect of writing, but I've been too “het up” | T* Aldrich crowd has decreed it} spending his life as somebody's hired 1 ; . Fred ecessary for the president t “Ie it not that the next Inevitable stage of business will be over these invurgings and © appear against} business conducted for the communal profit, tr of business Ings. As the country papers say Beveridge |} conducted for the profit of Mr. Morgan and the Standard O11 Co.? events hav Beveridge’s own More and more in the cities and towns the Independent bu been transpirine city, And Ald-| man tx being overwhelmed by the ad « of the department st with great rapid rich, you know, In the country and the small towns looma op the mail order house. ity." is one who says . tural impulse is to think that these changes must be due he uprising ‘to this man,| tn some way to the ovil ways and inordinate greed of certain men, and vwainst Cannon Go, and he! that our first duty is to restrain ench mon. As a matter of fact Ce ee en in the house was 4 goeth; and to meelvable power can stop there changes, and they have nothin The bill introduced in congress mly a start. You | 7S another, Come, | with the greed of any man, They are simply business in the |Tecently raising the pension of have no idea J and he cometh present stage of evolution every union veteran of the clvil| what a shindy ai This Indian ‘Greater economies, greater efficiency, greater profits, tie In com- | War to $1 a day has no more en as been kicked apolis affair is| bination, concentration, organization, the simplification of processes, | ustastic worker for it than Mrw. | ~p here by the! the rawest show! ‘That is all-—and enough. Human power could not check any such |John A. Logan, widow of famous} ecent elections, | of Taft's putty will the public has} development any more than It cc uld reverse the neu tides.” Black Jack, idol of the unton which were|s reas sennene com | men during and after the civil war straws which showed the stand pat-| Of course, later Taft announced period ters that a strong west wind was|he had never ch 1 his mind Mre. Logan has always been blowing. It's a rout, a panic. Old-| about going to Indianapolis, Put) | prominent tn soldier matters, an time leaders have lost their heads. | that was the first of finesse he \o . | he > a large extent won the ad Everybody hates everybody else] got into the game | miration once bestowed by the! and blames everybody else. Eret-| After this exhibition, imagine} union boys upon her gallant bus | while aftable patriots are testy and| how ft must have been with aT FRONT &DGE OF VAST THRONE } | band peevish. Pr bly no administra! pointments and messages: T S Saw CULIA TR: Nor have her efforts and sympa tion was ever vo demoralized as the | tinually hypnotized by men who ~~ Pecu ae TRIBE OF MMe |thy been alone for the vorthern Taft administration | stand for the Intervats! FARTH~ BEINGS TOPS OF HEADS men. This was well lilustrated by Doubtless this panic ia only tem I have found the heartiest hatred| 5 42, WERE Wi POL. ‘dilate her glorious tribute to (he memory porary The real leaders seem to|of Taft not among democrats and} condlnypinagap asl 4OUED SHOWED) | ot" the widow of the confederate We formed a pian which is to be | insurgents, but stand-pat congress 4 president when Mré Jefferson 8 attack, not a defense. They seem|men. These same congressmen SING-JUMP FEMALE FARTH- SPRITES Davis died to expect to go down in defeat, but | danced whenever Aldrich or Cannon 7 Mra. Logan ts now in her seven they're determined to sink with| whistled. They didn’t fear the tn APPEARED ON ELEVATED FLOOR —~~-~—— ty 4 year “— uying. | surgents then Hut now they se el. S#ENED OTMER WISE SQUND MENTALLY. | aft’s announcement that their mistake—also sure defeat. It] AS) ric DO would visit Indianapolis, ¢ |relleves them to blame it all on| ‘ THE EPT IC LLAR) by his reconsideration of thi | Taft bc | nouncement (after Beveridge's The panic is apparent at the Ral-| It le the Cartwheel Kind, but Pe tack on the tariff), followed by his | linger-Pinchot Investigation The per Money Hae Germs and | reconsideration of his reconsidera-| hearings are in bad; and they know| Germs and Germs. | tion (after Senator Cran: Vice | that nothing they can do at the } President Sherman ct al. bad con-| hearing will put t n in good, It's | ferred with him), followed by his| just a dreary, dragging, hopeless | reconsideration of his reconsidera-| proceeding, and the gladdest men | m of his reconsideration (after|in Washington will be those men rane et al. were out of hearing),| when the hearing i# over and the| | followed by his re-re-ete., is Just a} people have had time to forget. The} | sample of the way it’s gone since we] other day one of the senators be j elected Taft | an ner ly pounding the table The man seems to have no. will| with bis fist. He made so much WASHING N, bp, 6 wil 20.] of his own at all. By the time this | noise that finally another called After ail i le Uke Lise. ho reaches you he may be announcing | him, It illustrates the general state | ent to your bosom to stow away | another reconsideration, but you}of mind » bundle of unsteriticed paper | _ on - 2 money, "Deed it Por a micro oe | opie examination conduct at HEARD IN A SALESROOM , request of Representatiy iid > iley, of New Jersey, shows that Inquirer—Have you any second-hand car B 193,000,000 germs of several doson Dealer (curtly)—No. breeds were found on on $i bill Inquirer—-Well, have you any used cara That seems to show it ts prudent Agent (mollified)—Sure. Lots of them o burn all the old currency taken bs i n at the treasury and to issue new | —"" ened ® paper for it, which wh h | St rying to have done | Hig Yellow fever, smallpox, diphthe | Zy ia, typhold, tuberculosis and many | GE r vigorously pesky germs w un | ie + but b t t h ff" ney? ‘ } ih Nothing doing. Clean an a whis-| 1 le No gern ho malaria, no mos e | Healthy and salubrious PRED §CHALFER A RULE WITH FAULTS [discourage the germs.» ‘trom nest / nechepctcatinnarnras | | _— | Ach, O I hat a fight yust ow, Bungbauer bit me right on | In thi remember, you must give and tak Now Washington, D. C. lays! der dop of ad ¥ my teats ian beloe | tacemy siete tee it tine : at Pi t what 1 [Sisims te the Panama exposition of | “L eee bth sau Feat alee noddtas Pe go Bo ae ; » 4 \ at wht 1915, Why not have it at Nome, | | Alaska Fashioned ings and chevi trimmings; but the newest. Of broac worste $15, $18.75 Just. What We are closin goods—chairs, and shapes, mad woven and some hay are upholstered genuine leather iceable color; pieces, 1 lhis sale affords you a splendid opportunity to money bungalow, camp save oO The Prices Here Quoted Are Exceptionally Low Considering the Qué ROCKER—Like $37.50—Special $12.50 of broadcloth, ials, the best of tailoring, the best of Desirable Short Jackets black finished accepted are priced at $7.50, 810, $12.50, styles Summer Furniture fo Your Summer Home or Porch finished tailor suit Wen bast of aabes new arrivals in two beautiful of American China. One isg border effect copied from a fists Swedish design. The other is a 6 ventional pattern copied from an pensive Haviland pattern. Both gilt over edge, gilt knobs and handles COMPLETE 100 - PIECE $14.50 : Four other rich patterns at $6.50 for) and $12.50 for 100 pieces. ONC@ : io St ts. the styles are not of icloth, serge and un ds, also coverts in the Noteworthy values AND UP TO $20.00, Secon Ave & Senin You Will Want for | g out an entire line of reed Lt rockers, - settees—all styles “es ¢ of best selected reed, hand (ta) in a rich, dark brown ¢ cane or reed seats, others in cretonnes, tapestries or These are well made, serv n very comfortable shapes n your summer or porch furniture tor the above picture; dark | ARM CHAIR—Fine reed, finished brown reed, with light figured cretonne | seat upholstered in brown leathery cushions, strongly made and comfortable; | price $20.00. Special ........+5 . regular price $14.50. Special $9.50 ' ‘ SETTEE—To match above Arm Chili ARM CHAIR—To match the Rocker pic-| teather seat. lace and roomy? tured; wide seat and very comfortable; reg $35.00. ial had... ilar price $13.50. Special $8. : ; ‘i it re ne oe apo th am a srown reed, with seat and back 0 4 se aia? tte a | a el ope a $20.00 1 eee ROCKER—A very pretty low-back Rocker, | ah finishel in brown reed; cane seat; regular ¢ | ARM CHAIR—Made of fine reed, 7 $12.50. Special $8.50 | brow! t upholstered in gree } ARM CHAIR—High back, wide, roomy seat | Tesular price $18.00, Special +++ f closely woven reed, dark brown finish -E—'! itch above Chair; ge regular price $14.00, Special $9.50 red seat; regulat ARM CHAIR—A very pretty pattern, in a : dark brown reed, leather upholstered seat; | THREE-PIECE SUITE—Extea fine Bam regular price $23.00. Special $15.5 woven reed Rocker, Arm Chait Asam SETTER—Same design as above chai ‘ at and back; eis brown leather seat; regular price $40,00 ut , ular price $125.0 Remember All the Credit Our Ne You Want Our 1910 Exchange Department Are Better nen Fitting Guy ee ive Pay Later ens!" Up Your st Union St Exp Home All Speciats Are for Cast | ene eee 8

Other pages from this issue: