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Published Co. Press, Publishing United The Star Member of Daily by > THE STAR—SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1910. Here Lies a Great and Just Judge|Debs No Red Fire Eater, But Kindly Man Who The Denver Express says of the late Robert W. Steele, chief justice of the supreme court of Colorado: “HUMANITY ALONE INTERESTED HIM. UPON THE BENCH HE SAW ONLY HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE WOE AND MISERY THAT COME FROM DENIAL OF EQUAL JUSTICE TO ALL.” Such was Judge Steele, as even his enemies admit. His death does not mean loss to Colorado, to the state judiciary, to even the nation alone. It is that awful loss—A LOSS TO HUMANITY. A supreme court judge who was “For Men!" A Colorado judge who dared to take the Beast that organized money holds in leash by the throat! A jurist who, in behalf of human rights alone, defied his craven conferees and turned degenerate prece dent to the wall that there might be less denial of equal justice to all. We often pass over such losses too lightly, We look on it as a mere Colorado affair, The vacancy will be filled and Colo- rado will go ahead. We make much more fuss, nationally, over Rockefeller’s sore throat or Carnegie’s asthma than over the passing away forever of a Stecle. Yes, all humanity has lost a champion and an unswerving friend in Judge Steele. We will go right on mussing about the tariff, struggling over party measures, gnawing each other over Ballinger and Taft, wrestling with each other over Roosevelt, roaring and working for this, that and the other law from which we hope for relief. But finally, fellow progressives and standpatters, fellow republicans, democrats, socialists and all, the rights, the lives, the destinies of all of us, and of our nation, ARE IN THE HANDS OF THE MAN ON THE BENCH! Humanity alone interested Judge Robert W. St le. Upon denying equal justice to all, Higher encomium than this can be spoken of no mortal man e Well may men everywhere bow their heads in grief over] the passing of this chief justice. He was not Colorado's only. | HE WAS ALL HUMANITY’S. OBSERVATIONS ANYHOW, Wellman got the record for fying with a dirigibie cat. j o 0 0 | WAPPY AND BALLINGER ought to organize a "Can't Let Go” | club. ps, Ae 3 SIGN YOUR NAME to the recall, and a special election will do the rest. °o ° ° THE REST of the country is now willing to Grow—Indignant. Watch Tacoma a ee | UNMASKING the supreme court fs not a pleasant, but it is a necessary duty. ° | be lives up ° °o HI GILL will have to be given credit for one thing to all the predictions made about him 8 = OWING TO circumstances over which an indignant public had no control, White & er Bowman got away ° ° THE COUNCIL Investigating committee 8 noise like a bunch of men who are getting the goods. ° is beginning to make | 4 Be | LINCOLN and Roosevelt differ in another respect--Abe never | ran any abolitionists for governor or pro-slavery platforms. | o 50s DEFENDING the “hand picked” supreme court requires all the | ingenuity of a high priced corporation lawyer and then some | | ° | ° ° ACCORDING to witnesses, Mrs. Dr. Crippen disappeared after a game of “bridge” lasting til! 1:30 4. m. And the police haven't even | thought of arresting her partner! o 0 © OREGON'S official ballot is to be from six to eight feet long. But she'd better vote with a whole roll of wall paper rather than with her eyes shut, as the gang dictates. o © 0 JUST to cheer ‘em up, Omaha News man tells that sugar-cured ham could be bought for 12% cents 30 years ago. It tickles oldest inhabitants, who are trying to gum the 22%-cent ham of today. o 0 6 COLLECTOR LOEB claims to have seen the footprints of a @iplodocus in Montana. We don't know what a diplodocus fs, bat Joe Cannon's been wandering around loose for some time, and he's got an awful foot. In the Editor’s Mail Short letters from Star readers will be printed in this column when they are of sufficient gen interest. You may write about anything or anybody so long as personal m e is mot your motive. no matter who it affects Many) Editor Seattle Star: | times. we hare geen ‘women who| ave been obliged to open the win-| Dear Sir—I have been a reader | dow as Bae be, ane cate cl of your paper for nearly five years! few days ago one of our professors and have found it to take the lead/in one of our high schools was im any and all reform movements} obliged to le Seattle, Oct 22, 1910. Looks Like a Good Husband and ja Good Neighbor Eleanor Addams Goes to j last night | potnted ners and red shirts, anarchism. weren't any of these exciting things meoting the beginning. Dreamland at § o'clock there crowd In front that the final rally of th paign clear across the street. tt door muscles like tron workers. got one ticket and had his seat coupon | torn the bench he saw only human rights and the awful crime of | nad thetr o doorkeeper ull they so & handful of men with red ban Big Socialist Meeting and Is Surprised and Pleased to Find Every- thing So Quiet and Or- derly. BY ELEANOR ADDAMS. 1 went to hear Eugene V 1 was surprised, disap pleased—all three. because | expected to Surprised talking about Disappointed. because there Pleased, but it was an interesting So here's what happened—from at When we ot to the hall almost as big as Poindexter meeting in natorial cam crowd was scattered At the door was a struggling mob. Three husky men stood at the They were picked men, with No one he had contributed at the past until off. A lot of people ts torn off, too iterally held you had done thelr work Hall Was Crowded Nothing of the red-ahirted nearly | The} up| mob I had expected about the gathering though lead you to your seat at Just pretty little giris to Men stood the opening to each le and OH, | SAW YOU # YOU OLD a] oe ve the car and go to, MAKES KIDNEYS ACT FINE, ENDING | LAME BACK AND BLADDER MISERY.| for the betterment of our city. {a drug store for medicine to re There is one thing to which I| eve him from sickness caused by think you could well afford to give|thé smoke inhaled while on the| — & little space in your paper, and/|street car, and th was no way! No man or woman whose kidneys that is the great indignity which | to get out of it but to get off. This! are disor 4, or who suffers from the ladies and many men are com-|gentleman spoke to the conductor | backache or bladder misery. can af pelled to suffer on the street cars| about it, and he replied: “T ford to leave Pape's Diurétlc un every day from a great cloud of|ia no way out of it but to get off) try The time to cure kidney trow. the most filthy tobacco and cig-| ahd make your complaint to Jacob| hie ja while It la only trouble-be arette smoke in their faces while| Furth.” What more right has any | fo, settles into Dropay, Gravel riding to and from their work. man to polute the air we breathe! Diabetes or Bright's Disease. . As you know, smoking is allowed | by filling it with potsonous smoke on the three rear seats and on niost| than by spitting on the f s of| The moment ou suapect t of the cars, especially the “pay-as-|the same cars or on the streets? Slightest kidr yy bladder disorder you-enter” cars, there is nothing| But it is well known that such an| 0 el a tant aching in the to shut this part of the car off from} offense is punishable by fine and | back, side # or the urine is the other department. Again and | imprisonme . | thick, cloud snaive or full of again we have been obliged to} are aware that there in no| Sedimer irregular of wnage or stand on or near the rear platform/law to prohibit this nuisance, but ensation scald and take the filthy fumes of some|if it were brought to the attention n Diuretic as cigar, pipe or cigarette, and t wt « »ple who are so off ive with th hk ed that was no way to avoid it. 1 j jeve that many of them » no other e at any are men o seem to think that mt respectfully | price, made anyy in the ¥ should enjoy their filthy habit| H. ALBERTS,| World, which will t so thor Pap iretic acts dire ap-| on the kidn bladder ar The Steel Twin Screw Steamships PRINCE RUPERT Ww DAYS k it t “S. 5. PIENG Charlotte f a 1 Queer Daylight RidetoVictoria Lenve Vancouver MEALS AND BM MMALS SERVED For Tacoma «~~ FLY on tne FLYER SEATS VAME TACOMA ROUTE 1 Your Lea Landings tle I 4 i oa ee—Sunset. Ma oes, ind 14 | orderly, Mon brought thelr fam ies, their wives and children re was no shouting, just the usual applause. Orator With Vandyke. An orator with Vandyke beard was speaking when we got in Imagine a socialist orator with a ‘andyke, He was lauding Debs and Fred Warner, the editor of a socialist paper, Warner was thrown into jail, it seema, after he had de nounced the kidnapping of Moyer and Haywood, and had offered a re ward for the similar kidnapping of Caleb Powers, acoused of killing Gov. Goebel, of Kentucky The orator broke off from his oulogios, however, to offer yearly subscriptions to the sgelalist paper Also be was willing to sell copies of the lives of Warner and Debs. Then Debs entered from the side, and a cheer went up. The lights were switched off and on, just like at the Dreamland dances Debs ia tall, gaunt, gentle looking, scholarly & lot like Bugene Meld on the platform were ¢' reading “Waltz,” and jand “Three-step, by Kequest.” 1 knew that he was 66 years old, and had been a leader of a big ratt road sirike in Chicago in 1894, and j had been thrown Into jal! during the pertod, He didn't look tt He Lauded Buff Eugene V. 4 would have made a bit with our friend, ery bald, He looks Under him ‘tric signa wortep,” EUGENE V, DEB only let through the people who had | seat coupons | There were a lot of women at Mra. Smith, of the Alki Point Suf the meeting. Three women sold ¢ poe lh wegpee yy ONcngy sag There frage club. For the first thing he tickota at the box office, There aad was to endorse the fight for uf / women distributed Hterature and |*ffrage in Washington Men look on women often as sold books In front of the building their chatte The crowd inside was quiet and eattele and masters some of y |the wor always as their lords And when I look at i lords | feel sorry for n,” he sald Debs didn’t think very bighly of | T. Roosevelt. Of course, Roosevelt jhas sald several times what he thought of Debs. “Oh, if the work ingmen knew Roosevelt as woll ax Roosevelt knows them!” he cried And the crowd laughed Ho's not #trong for » insurgent Whatever makes the present dustrial system more endurable, argued, “makes it that much longer til the time when people will rise up and demand complete industrial | freedom Debs surprised me because didn't burn more red fire, He was ip Teasonable. He talked quietly. His jaddress was full of epigrams. But joo violent Urades against society or capital earnest he | When he gete real j leans forward, shakes his flet sev oral times, then gives an opigram He has a kind face, has Debs, the face of @ martyr, a gentle, kindly prophet. I would imagine that he j Was good to his family and his neighbors. Ayer's Hair Vigor Youth |Discovery of | the Age Consumptoin can be cured by TUBERCLECIDE Forms of Tuberculosis yield to Tuberclecid All ai urinary system; cleanses, vitalizes See Tuberclecide Co and regula organs, ducts and glands and completes the cure|| Roms 308-9 Crary Blk. Union, Near Fifth. within a few days After the first few doses there| will be no lame, aching back or ecmeseciomanin houmiatic twinge ostatic trou dealin ble, nervousness, headache, sleep “FILL YOUR OWN TEETH” essnes r amed or ffy eyelids dizzine a8 ach, tired | worn-out feeling or other miserable symptoms caused by clogged, slug = gish kidneys. Uncontrollable uri nation (¢ cially at night), smart If you have s ing, dis 1 water and all blad-|| $4, cannot attor der misery vani 4 t buy & package Your physician, pharmacist, bagk-| ae aching 6 r any mercantile agency will a If your for the responsibility ot || Kem 1% mall sho t Pape, ennene & : pe Cs Pare'e|| Fill-o Manufacturing Co., Dietetiocbeuent j motel tata || 1 Kepire 1 Seattle, Wash. by every druggist in the world | — Souvenir Day One of the officers of our company at Dresden some souvenirs that ed him that he It then from the suggested itself manufact Although a business man high duty on these articles use crying over spilt milk we started a SOUVENIR DAY Each souvenir Thursday what was our loss ts bought some Why irer and Instite he they as Uncle Sam made us pay the tariff— evening each lady your gain FRANZ ADELMANN with his full orchestra every evening for dinner and supper—Latest hits from Broadway | HOTEL SAVOY CAFE Samples of Souvenirs in Our Window when abroad rec were hand painted ently, saw they so im not buy a big quantity direct ite a Souvenir Day at the Savoy? Phone Ballard 1277, did not take were bought the was no futo account and there will be presented with a i —t— -_ bn] ROLLERS SAVE LIFTING, ata movement, either, is this mad Debs. Ballard Music House Exclusive Representatives in Ballard of EDISON, VICTOR and COLUMBIA (disc) TALKING MACHINES and RECORDS 5411 20th Ave. N. W. washer, is Nght and JOHN PEACOCK General THE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE # STAR DUST ALWAYS TROUBLE, Eva~There goes Van Albert in his airship. He s he ia at home in an airship and yet he ts always falling out. Jack—Well, thats the way he ts at home. AMBITIONG REALIZED, weet Singer—That chorus girl appears to be in a happy frame of mind Comedian-—-No wonder, She has millionaire dude on the string ly bulldog om the chain a and an ug TOO MUCH TALK, De Hamme—How did that theory for furnishing cold air in the bilazard scene turn out? Rowland—-Ob, there was muoh hot air about it. RURAL GENIUS. Silas—Gosh, Hiram Spruceby has succeeded in making his goose lay golden eggs at last Cyrus—Do telit How did he do it? Bilas paint too Why, he fed them on gold THE CIRCUS PARADE. The Camel—You refused that peanut from the vender on the eurb? The Elephant—Yes, I have been warned to beware of the gifts of the Greeks. AN UNGELIEVER. The Guest—Didn't I tell you the other day that hereafter you should serve me more promptly? Why did you not obey? The Walter—Because I don't Heve in any hereafter, str. THEN IT HAPPENED. be } Zz alll Someone had on prowling around the hencoop. Gaston Gezink prided himself on his poultry; also on bis cunning. He was about as cunning as an angloworm, was Gas ton So In his astuteness he rigged up & spring gun for chicken thieves filling the intruder with a quart of sorap iron. Great idea. Several nights passed and no chicken thieves One baila morning Gaston hur- ried out to get a fresh exe. He had forgotten all about the spring gun He yanked open the door. (The End.) Dennis 1216 W. 67th Seattle, Wash. Get off the Fremont and Bal- lard car at 67th street and walk one block east. Phone: Ballard 1080 ARE YOU TOO FAT? I can remove every pound you have to spare and leave no wrink all of a, lame back, headache, hot jles; and your rheumatism ne flash tion and nervousnes al sor circulation, constipa will go at the Whether you are FAT OR LEAN, you can get all the ben efit the ‘same time. here that you can get at THE MONEY. | CURE those thought to be INCURABLE. You can have board and room with us if you wish CONSULTATION FREE Di 8 Peculiar to Women a Spe- clalty I use the BAKE OVEN and other 'drugiess methods only Near Market St. If you are thinking of buying a have the “Easy” sent to our home ON FREE TRIAL, It to handle, easy to work does it well THE SYRACUSE “EASY” A Vacuum WASHER BOLD ON TRIAL Phone East 2645 O. Box 1142, Seattle Agent for Western Wash. ington springs or at a hospital for HALF| By Mail, out of city month, 2 Wash., r, $3; 6 month, *, Dutered at $1605.45 Postotfice, as necond-class maty 1 ye Beattie, Osgar und Adolf as Aironouts | | “Come on, Adolf, all oferbo o-oart.” “All right, Osgar. By der vot iss our des “Dot remaina to be feit. I vill try to pick ould Pepe» “I vouldt hate to fall far—I haf a dotzen eggs tn digg How vould~we go abouid id to lighten der balloon? toe, “Dunce! Let ould some of der gass.” “Haft you a goot entchine in diss airship?” , I haf dree motors, exch mit 40 horsepower” “Bo? How much does dot ke togedder?” “A whole Ufery stable “Vell, I dink I vill go along. But I hate to leafe tors al out co, “Yous—dot ins vot makes me soar too. Ware near hee Three hours later, after a thr illing flight, they came down ky xclaim, “ad last we haf reached terra firma" It was Terre Haute But it wasn't Women Who Are Unfamiliar With Banking —and want to open a savings account for themselves or their children, are cordially invited to do so in this bank They will receive special at- tention and get any assistance they may need in opening ac counts, making out deposit and withdrawal slips, sending away money, ete. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS THE NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE Second Ave., at Madison St. United States Depositary | ACCONMODATIG preparing for a journey, the telephone i performs a great variety of services. Reservations are made, last directions are give™ good-byes are said, over the wire It D ! e Bell System special value to the traveler etimes the Bell Telephone makes a trip unnecessary; some times it convinces him that a trip would be profit able. Wherever he goes, he the need of mie versal sapvice, and that i The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. PP eeer~screrzewsv3eror ros Every Bell Telephone le the Center Nc of the System. de Bt a. SARE ie oe, Mee 2 ae “y ; to | “IT BEATS ALL.” A GENEROUS AND = | ‘This is quoted from a letter of M TABLE . | Stockw i bal, Mo. I re- CHART wi cently used Honey and Tar] +, wish all might . — ho ae 'y T am) yonotit 1 received f0® ns x s my * feel sarang |? Kidney R fn a fis His ev \ . tr at Be relief 1 I mi cured \ » opin ' Hy Bartel dunker | ¢ 5