The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 6, 1911, Page 4

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OOD AME BSD STAR _ THE SEATTLE ot United Press, Pani NET EARNINGS IN ONE YEAR ad fr Beach to Bal taxpayer < If the Seattle Elec not Councilman turning th y maker F. Blaine people into irth crowd get busy and a lot of money out of it if that line from It will haul} lends fo! | ent for the city allard div instead of a strap. The passage of the $800,000 bond issue for a city owned | street car line will put a scare into the Seattle Electric octopus, | and that scare alone will be worth a million to the great body) of men and women who don’t own autos and who have to ride in street cars. FROHMAN says that women make up 70 per cent of the New York theatregoing public. Now if we get a successful play that's too rich eee eee eee eee eee for our blood, we'll know who is to blame for it, eh? SHALL TEACHERS MARRY? No,” but there's an effort and fighting for to chance it their rights New Lots of teach nt to marry are who op When a teacher marries d to make a living ywr rs w r marr open to othe ed teacher ts sebool she should leave the p Furtherm e ¢ arr hous. id that she ts the the married hold help. She is a t home of her own. Cost of marry unless both cont Who want to marry is a Perhaps the argume considerations weigh heavily ag er As & genera tic answer eacher can afford to employ more sympathetic living is such that ive to ¢ And to deny shar is not the ne house teacher ny marria auary for having a} couples cannot rn. » to those all on one i side, yet severely pra ploying married women would probably not be workable s for the Indies who want to marry and teach school, and can't do both, everybody will feel sorry for them. In an ideal state of society marriage would be purely an affair of the heart—and pocket books go hang! But under existing conditions risky, ladies, to marry 4 man who can't support you. Guess you will have to choose salary! &s teachers. pra between the husband and the SAM WALTER FOSS, the New B ; sang the songs of the plain people, whom he loved, and, while most widely known for the homely humor which smacked of his Yankee | soil, he wrote some noble verse, which breathed the loftiest spirit of human brotherhood. His voice was stilled while he was yet In his prime and doing his finest work gland poet, is dead at 62. He AN AWFUL CHOICE | Poison or the rope—which? A ghastly, grisly question, surely will be put to Nevada prisoners under sentence of death, if the plan of the code commission is approved by the legislature. The prisoner will be handed a bottle with this inscription: “There is contained herein a sufficient quantity of bydrocyanic acid to cause instantaneous death. You are authorized to take the | same for the purpose of carrying into execution the sentence of death heretofore legally pronounced against you.” The code also provides “If the defendant, after having shall fail or refuse to take the same, he the neck until dead.” A humane reform, perhaps, yet without a feeling of revulsion agains In this case, the prisoner is asked murder. An awful choice for a civi AND now a Mrs. Alsip claims she’s “Lucky” Baldwin's daugher by an Ohio wife. We'd been wondering how “Lucky” came to over- fook Ohio. but that’s the question which ed tg take hydrocyanie acid,| shall be forthwith hanged by who can read these provisions | the horror of capital punishment? to choose between suicide and d state to put to a human being WHY DON’T THEY EAT CAKE? In 20 years insanity has increased in New York state cent, while population has grown only 49 per cent Dr. Albert Warren Ferris, head of the state lunacy commission, | says the remedy for future generations {s “to give chndren plenty of room to play in, larger sleeping quarters, with pure air by day and) night.” But, doctor, isn’t that cake? ‘Isn't there an economic solved? Who's to pay? 104 per! like telling the breadless peasants to eat as well as a sanitary problem to be A PRESIDENT using federal patronage? THE MEASURE OF TWO MEN Speaker Cannon names the two greatest statesmen he has known. One was Oliver P. Morton. The other? You wouldn't guess in a thousand years. Bailey of Texas! And in pronouncing the judgment, the the measure of two men—himself and Batley OBSERVATIONS HANG on to reciprocity, Mr. Taft! It is a whooping good exhi- bition of hanging, if nothing else. a Se SUFFOLK, Eng., is worrying because her rats are migrating. plague fleas annoy rats, they move on. OF 821 @ CHICAGO'S walls are black with libelous posters about her candl- ates for mayor. And not long ago it was Mary's Salome posters, How that dear town docs hog the enjoyable in art! PATRONAGE of New York's reference libraries shows a tremen- dous falling off in the last year, with corresponding boom in fiction. The people seem to crave entertainment more than knowledge. Horrors gray old speaker reveals When Early Display of Pattern Hats Now Ready for Inapection, and New Blocks Now In. Western Tent & Awning Co. men; lowest whings 2204 Wiest Ave. fev AnVAR KO to order. Ind. 4466 Straws, Milens and Pr | A, blocked and remode UMES—Willowed, dyed d and remade. MODEL MILLINERY 527 People’s Bank Hide. Cor, Becond and Vike, CLEANING TIME IS HERE |for all Seattle, If you are going to do any papering, we can save you money at our Walb Paper Sale. A |good line of remnants is here, too, | cheap. Federal Paint & Wail Paper Go., 1314 Ist Ave., Near University St Aiea i alao os | Ago. | Independence, | Abraham [Star Du cee RR TODAY'S GOOD SHORT ONE Why rm you wearing ferent Uncle Reube body don't know I ain't worryin Louls Post-Dispateh Waal me here by « ERR EERE Ee A Tainted Deal Senator Elkins m three millions aid a} Washington ent, “Hence he had a good deal of contempt for tainted mone ator Elk day in m an r he explat Meeting him on street, the senat | JOSH WISE | SAYS “Ted mush, our consistent tor in gold mine stocks, is goin ter open a little candy store across from th’ school house ter keep from goin’ to thy poor farm.” Fride most inves What's that for For rheuma haven't had a twinge ince I began car Won Yes. is the active, too, for before I tre twinge either does not have sanitary and amoke London Improved A Servian teacher has teaching yet k Each »# of chocolate. As soon ax h to eat it. On an average th invente ident can pu » pupil ARE YOU WEL If you are widely read you may swers Who w What was What ts meant by the mark of Eye witness relates that the Pe Upheaval in Lisbon cheered the Ame They thought that, being a republi first to give them recognition, By annexing 11 more square miles} to its territory, Gary, Ind., ts now a fifth as large as Chicago in area. We are b let's go sw O, you & up two fi Maraschino is pronounced mar-| askee-no, with the accents on the| first and third syila | ‘Two dctogenarians committed sul-| cide in one day at Chicago. | What states today were included in the Louisiana purchase? Dropping, dropping, dropp’ hear the airmen fall! Editor The Star One of the papers fighting Jo Smith, the people's candidate, con cluded its editorial with this sig nificsat statement “Joe Smith as councilman will be a perpetual Fourth of July cel- ebration.’ And that’s the plain truth! An old-fashioned Declaration of Thomas Jefferson, Lincoln, Fourth of July celebration at the city hall every Monday night An “ingurgent” at every pat” council committee 118, | ready to break fn with giant fire crackers of publicity to smash quietly made schemes against the people. A red-fire spotlight at the strat egie point in city government, ready to turn onto the Seattle Electric or | other special privilege deeds in the dark, and warn and protect the peo ple against them Yes! A city councilman who cel ebrates Fourth of July every day will be a goc investment for Seattle. One who takes the Declaration of} Independenc eriously and really believes that “all men are created equal, under our American laws and institutions; who does not rec ognize any special privilege ex ption clause, or make any mental reservation in favor of James J. Hill, Jacob Furth, Henry Crawford or any other “heavy taxpayer,” as against the common people. One who still believes and ts always ready to apply the Dec laration of Independence doctrine, that “government (including city government) derives its just powers from the consent of the governed’ —not fron railroad trusts, stre railway monopolies and contractors’ combines. Thanks to the people's non-par | | | | tand tisan primary, we are bound to get 4 people's council tomorrow, | and ugite jus in electing nine ciean} strong, capable men as councilmef, March | line do the same. fAR—MONDAY ES © SEES ¢ W077 wean he ASK YOU PORT INOW WHAT YOU 20 WANT A WANT A PAPER MARCH ¢ GET Ovr = = YOU WANT SOME HURAN/ITY | POUNOED 10770 OU fi) eee eee ee * * * ARE YOU WELL INFORMED! ® & Who succeeded Ald. * . * ee ON THE SAFE SIDE da prize fighter a a! What @ know—I Toledo Bi CONSOLATION DELAYED. ts allowed d the stem of 8 supplie t his name together he s can read in t days. most »u L INFORMED? come to bat with the corre the sh broad arrow? ortuguerse revolutionists during an flag. Poor, de the United States wor In French ¢ k Is ¥ extra, vening gowns th popular, It cos however. Birdy ome trapeze ttle on down 1 the flying n should ve performers Its safer WI th away pr blotters? postal savings banks give tty little calendars and 25 years Europe has spent 29 b ion de rs on arwnies and navies Think your own thoughts about this Give the meaning of “Hon! Solt Qu! Mal ¥ Pense,” Let's have one real “live wire Fourth of July councilman always on duty at the city hall, ready to} put the “ginger” of popular govern ment into the other eight, when- ever any of them need it. Vote for Joe Smith, the $800,000 6 railway bonds—and for lves—tomorrow. GEORGE F. ‘o the Editor of The Stars Dear Sir: By request of many women voters throughout the city, and especially the “women voters of the Eighth ward,” I desire to ox press our appreciation of your stand taken and the great fight made by The Star for a “cleaner Beattie,” and the enforcement of laws It is the moral duty ‘dt évery pure minded woman votgm of Se. attle to take an earnest, active part in the present issue with , to look after the affairs. of or city and to support our mayor and chief of police in their efforts to make Seattle what we desire it to be We are fully aline to the needs of the hour. We realize the time and opportunity have arrived, and that 00, at a very important time in the history of Seattle, when every wom an must awake and take an active part in the municipal affairs of the cit If our lighting plant and our water system pay for themselves bestdes furnishing employment to the tax payer, 80 can a munictpal street. car Vote for tt We are very earnest in our efforts and are very much encouraged and inspired by your valuable paper We are enthusiastic workers for Joe Smith. Thanking you on behalf of the women of the Eighth ward, I am very respectfully, MRS. EMILY M. PETERS. “THEN IT HAPPENED” | (Our Daily Din No lif Itook kyack t 4 with a als. In the looking for] |briny was whales The aw was a swordfish Afish pale THE thought the kyack] a bab: | END. Rank of E | printed on paper scraps. nd made notes are from linen (PAID ADVERTISEMENT.) ‘TO THE FRIENDS OF MAX WARDALL| | | Mr. Wardall has served as a mem | ber of the city council during the] past three and the that body that he times been actuated by a high sense | of civie duty; has always nm on} the right side of every ition, and in all things has prov |aelt a reltable, honest and trust | worthy public official, a true repre. sentative of the whole people, and| if re-elected he | the people in the broad sense that} the present law electing councilmen | { years, show promises to serv at-large contemplates. He is pledged to lower taxation |and enforcement of law as it stands on the statutes. From his extensiy study of civic problems in lands and his three ence in the pre foreign experi nt council, he will be a valuable member of the new body, which will be called upon to} | solve great and important problems. | FACTS ABOUT MR. WARDALL.| 1. Mr. Wardall recelved 1 | votes at the primary, being fourth! in the race 2. Carried his own ward by splen. | did majority, and his precinct prac- | tleally wi pimously 3. He is a member of the MU: NICIPAL PLANS COMMISSION, being chosen as a representative of the city by the city council. This body has in charge the remodeling of Seattle. 4. He has spent many years in | New Zealand, Austraila and rope, making a close study of etvic and| |munictpal conditions, and this qual-| {fies him in a larger way for hand ling problems confronting Seattle. 5, Has made a splendid record in the city council as a supporter of progressive measures, yet is con servative and of sound business Judgment raduate Washington, of University of Little Daphne Pollard, No Bigger’n a Doll, Is Asking Billiken Tiny Actress at the Lois Is) Breaking Into the Theatre | Business at the Place Where | They Pay Salaries and Take in Ticke The big. te for Help, Now She’s a Manager Biltiken that looks | Jown on little Daphue Pollard from | the top In the of her dressing room glass of it For Billikens bring that, sa bigger cause Little | the Bilt luck. Nothing Daphne, And the ken the greater the more natural in the world. Bo she has the father of all Billikens, big and white, with a Sunny Jim smile Why such a big feller? 8's's’h, Listen, Come close, T day M ard is going & big step out beyond-—tn through which her dainty feet never have trode That's why wants so much luck, Because @ regi ugels fear to tread. It’s} full of ghosts and hobgoblins and a bundred at uperstitions » player fc that's what Mi lard talked it over h Billiken and they have decided they don't care THAT much leap, or s Po to take oa region she it's one chased a half Pollard ¢ dh int 4K MISS DAPHNE POLLARD into the tregoers empty life, I love | and the trip-| ev ing all its ow It’s all up MEALS SERVED. Telegraph, in Seattle all my Pollard keep on seat W in my lit-| ping merrily the footlights © what se od Min ner face in Str City of ond Optometrist ae pig entire time TING GLASSES WE VeoUaL ES HEA WES, MADISON 6B At 12th ekins roof storage at 50c per month—two trunks for month, with fr i5e per access Phonce—Bunset, Main 399% For Women’s RAINCOAT Greatest Sale of Women’s Raincoats Ever S$ 5 Held in Seattle, Worth $20 and $25 at Your choice of any Raincoat in our store, regular prices up to $25.00, on sale at $5.00. Plain: solid colors, moires, checks and broken plaids. All col- ors and sizes. Here’s Another—Lace and Net WAISTS, Worth $5 to $10 at $2.98 Beautiful White, Cream, Ecru and Arabian Net Waists: Black and White ace Waists fitting waists, All also These are made over silk and are beautiful, perfe Lace Curtains | ‘Hair! Hair! 39c r Lace Curtains tomorrow | hat are wo 60c a pai i prt oe | Beautiful, Long, Glossy Other strong specials follow, in both White | Clean, Perfect Goods jrays and any other color. London sells B5« rtains will sell | $1.10 Curtains will sell aN Fi $1.15 | more Hair Goods than any other store on Simflar prices prevail throughout the line, | the Coast, simply because he “scalps” the even in the better grades, where | profits. Price similar quality switches else- $5.00 Arabian Net Curtains are s 3 4 | where if you like, but have a care, or you'll clal tomorrow at $ . 5 pay double London's price, | Men's Muleskin Gloves Canvas Gloves SR, & G.! CORSETS $1.75 Curtains will sell for 6 Hair Nets tary kind; 6 of them for se.. DRESS GOODS SPECIALS Pure Wool ge, hard twilled blue serge and black, warranted every thread wool and full 1% yards wide; get some of | this splendid, wear. re- [aisting serge. 6Qp | Special at, yard Shepherd Worst- the sani shade 25¢ London’s for KID GLOVES Here's a any London's Real Gloves; our own portation from Special, palr . le 8 Gloves for women; guaranteed. Special, 98c pair Auto Scarfs, pink, blue Not or white. Best Grade Rubber Col ars; any style 15¢ | Or two Rk nore that} for 25c Thousands of satisfied promncy” in’ Glnvedcnt | Kant Krack’’ "Rubber! women now use the R Soeion tan tae vaheest Collars; best-known | @ @. exclusively. Your sa and stocks are now at! wach 24c Spring Suit positively | oq Checks, 46 inches thelr very beat avery! Imitation Leather Hand| Will please you if you | wide: assorted checks it sl Bags, larg 25 wear an R.& G. All R, | Special, 32 ildren’s Gowns ceo te | waists or schooi Heavy, Plain Pink or| start ne ** $1.00 popcorn gare Blue Outing Gowns, for oc cial, yard «2.44. 06 girls from 6 to 14 TT! years; 69c value. Sell Hf Cut to — 49c We Hl Ferris onli : t . i Wai The new wash fabrio, in Boys’ “Outing Night ists, Also [| picasing stripes. It will : ao 65e value. 39c Sahlin Corset remind you, doubtless, ut to ete Jot the old-fashioned Boys’ Tbe Night Forms Shirts, Cut to .. C) : oi sersucker; 15¢ Velvet Boots Those neat, trim, Boots are on sale a Velvet is the thing At London's, a palr— | $1.39 Underwear—Hosiery—Men’s Wear Velvet Button ain tomorrow. for Spring, Crockery—Carpets Curtains—Blankets Ss

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