The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 10, 1913, Page 4

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©: No, not under the present system of elections. Bill J Ws condemned to be a partisan in order to get elected has to be a republic i ) weually he can get office only when his the polls. His own individuality counts for li @ county commissioner, law. Now is the time to get busy, Mext election, so that the next leg Which the people have been eager for It prictically d | ate was established Wes carefully designed to be « Wealth and privi! Jong ago. Hast stand of aristoc £ A popularly elécted senate is nothing more than OF representatives elected at large el if apportionment | It becomes a fifth wheel under the wagon. It is M@undant as a second council in a « Its continuance #oken of our respect for forms after the spirit has fled + Ifit will be a good little people may let @an nation toward soci 1 “@hances are it will be treated as our Badal. | cousins have} treated their house of lords or ab does what he shouldn't do and he never f ly proper cog in the big machine t rae. OY (THE SCRIPPS NORTHWieT GOR OF NEWEFARANS, | Tole ph News service af the United Cross Assectntion, & ft the peatattion, Sowttiq, Wrah matter, “Publiahyd by Vie company every evening except Sunday Bill Jones is an honest, square, upright and able man he is not a republican. Or a democrat.. Or a progressive & socialist. bd + Th fact, Bill Jones does not belong to any party > This Jones man may know more about | ing good foads than any other man in the county; he may know mo : ait all phases of the county business, and can conduct it in an able and honest manner. + But would Bill Jones ever be elected county ce er? sive lemocrat, an, progre sill Jones, a mere Be- t even get Why? » being a member of no party, could n ip in the office of County Clerk Sickels. Cause Sickels is a republican, and says none but republicans Ought to be put on the public payroll. | Partisanship in public office is Whateve ) excuse there is for party lines in co presid © tial elections, the same reasons do no ¢ election of cle islature failed to pass a n county The last leg months in ac ure WILL pass it No sou! is bad enough for a fixed “hell” or good enough ‘ for @ fixed “heaven,” however useful the words may be ing to opposite states —Haw Direct Election of Senators provid of United St completes a 30 years ion because kk F It is none the less a revolu For it changes fundamentally away with the an of the g arm purpose for ‘The senate was n might Of the other two, tl Only the supre y if it gets in the way of the onward march of the al ad justice the the} 1 altogeths By Berton Braley He doesn’t smoke and he doesn’t drin he doesn’t chew—for he is a highly m . he doesn’t ral He neve tures the But that is as far as his virtues reach—they’re negative Virtues, one and all; he’s never been kn« by wn, 40 help the fellow who's prone to fal no of fellowship, no love of 1 There is t Warmth in the hands you grip when you ¢ ap on the Good Ship Earth. ) He isn’t tender, or sweet or kind, he isn’t merry or t @f eye; but look him up and you're sure to is very high; but it isn’t by negative acts yunt—for 1} maintain this word is true: It isn’t the zs you DON’T that count; it’s rather the sort of things you DO! | Schricker, convicted banker, called fefuses to talk. Does it den rate tt Waltresses are presented by Fred. W. Green and wife with a 14 room house. Some tip. state’s witness against Furth, Life would be a pretty humdrum sort of existence on the Minne- @ota if there wasn't a little o found every three or four One autcist was to six months In the county Jall by Justice Brown. No, yone. Just tried to sten! the machine. Secretary Daniels doesn't d) nk, smoke, chew or swear. What In @hunder did Woodrow put him at the head of the navy for, anyhow? Dr. A. Mueller, scientist, announces that from a lizard, or a blind worm, he {s now making a tuberculosis cure th ‘ iy gpann’s. Turtles, lizards and worms! Go ahead! We don't care what you pump into us next Smallpox is one of the oldest known diseases. wiped out Iceland's population Two hundred and ninety. fan, an Indian chief came out of the th, Mass., extended his hand men!” What he shouted when, striy — sdlibtatim he returned to the forest, no bis FOR DANDRUFF, FALLING HAIR on ITCHY SCALP—25¢ “DANDERINE” GAVE YOUR HAIR! DANDERINE DESTROYS DANDRUFF AND 8TO?S FALLING HAIR AT ONCE—GROWS HAIR, WE PROVE IT. ‘two years ago, says a remin! * d and routed, ed 1 Welcome, but t nu eported then the hair falls out fart die If you care for heavy hair, that glistens with beauty and is radia If your hair has been neglected with life; has an incomparable|and js thin, faded, dry, scragey or softness and is fluffy and lustrous|too oily, don't hesitate, but get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Dan derine at drug store or toilet counter; @pply a little as directed and ten minutes after you will say you must use Danderine, because nothing else accomplishes so much for the hair. | Just one application of Knowl- "s Danderine will double the|this was the dest investment you uty of your hair, besides it {m-|ewr made. mediately dissolves every part We sincerely believe, texcardioss of everything else advertised that if yo# desire soft, lustrous, beautl ful hair an4# lots of 1t—no dandruff no it@hing scalp and no more falling hatr—you mttst use Knawl you cannot have nic have of dandruff; heavy, healthy hair if you dandruff. This destructive scurf) fobs the hair of its Justre, its strength and its very life, @ndeit mot overcome !t producedon fever-|ton's Danderipe. If eventually {ahness and itching of the scalp; why not now? A 26 cent bottle tbe bair roots famish, loosen and| will truly amaze you But for myself For To sc loud © ruchos nplain, r und and gr dire mood wele !n merry 1 raise my votce to in the enned And when I wateh the work, key fentific ; the streots are the Pre plain to me. clentif! mndrous t! surpassing governme and woody mph of inventive man! verents man may boast ae T 1 be recorded none to beat The ‘selentit way that wise Offictals clean a city str In this clentific way To clean & street, the workman Tho dirt weeps into the He piles it up tr And in the gutter for whore mutter, tt Or two or three Tu affic haa a cl When back. u flies | And then, within a week or two The workman comes again and the gutter, where little h Hi to A we r two or more it Iles Till t has a chance at it. Whe ack upon the street it Again I Tt Hes unt tho workman brings his t And room sweeps {t to the curb, and the traffic has to scatter It aggin » workman brings his A cha ps tt to the curb, and 1 the traffic has ace to scatter it again. for JOSH WISE SAYS: “Beele ysport friends of Con- gresaman Mock hiser are deligh ed to hear that At the Society Until Friday. 4,” of Bloody For A Modern Hi Visit,” “When John sme His Wife.” At the City Until Sunday Face at the Wir The Olympian Tonight \ 1 onway e Cat's ition.” At the Amb uit Until Sunday “The Exposure of the Under . At the Black Cat Until Sunday “The Dare Devil Detective,” three ne At the Melbourne Until Sunday Josephine n two parts; “ Game of Poker F ers Choice ‘ Re ade's Heart At the Home Until Friday J I Virgir two reels i Who Mid Not Care Her New Beau,” “On His Weddin D At the Savoy Until Friday e Terr#lo Tu “Riddler Pete the Curate’s Ald,” “The I Fun Hunting Ex t p At the Alhambra Until Sunday The Li in, three z On the River Rhine,” “The At the Clemmer Until Sunday Queen ¢ "In the f ¢ The Well At the ¢ A Until Sunday ¢ r thet ‘a fan th © Robber, AT THE THEATRES THIS WEEK. Metropolitan » Rachelor’s Moore © Pringe of Pilsen.’ Seattle—t Mite stock in Th T f." Irpheurme—Vandeville Empress— 1 lle. Pantages—\ Mie. GRAND-—-Vauceville and motion CLEMMER — Photoplayn and vanrdevi MELBOURNE—P hotoplays “and vauc Oy ALHAMBRA — Photoplays and vaudeville. | Weodchopper jAt There's no pi women. Here come Chicago club women demand- | ing that divorce be in Boston there while always a cry that mi made easier. 1 seen “Where did you get that hat?” Iun't it a dandy? I can fold it up and carry it in my pocket.” "Why don’t you?” g all the | a crowd of mado eas ‘se | arriage be | The lown house has passed a pill pensloning divorced women. If that : dill becomes a law it will be only & a lot o' bear} question of time when all the wom tracks ‘bout a mile north o' here—/en tn lowa are divorced, big ones, too eek funter—Good! Which way ts Mee. Ponkharit waed't quite south? Pound! pe ian) Possibly p he a Million Dollars ‘ A RRS OF S7T AR FOR You Pe so foolish as you may think she was in Ing as her own lawyer. She saved the fee. A bank In Germany hae just fatied for $7,500,000. You have to take off your hat to the Germans. When they do a thing they do it well. his rugged indi Grammar as a Burglar Alarm. viduatity te al. | Mrs. Hubb--I allow my hurband ready | winnin’ | “What would you do to prove your no latch key. He rings and I ask recognition at th'| love? who's there; then he says, “It's 1,” capital. He has! The maiden asked in blushing! and I open the door. been arrested way Mrs. Kawler—But muppone a thief tw \ce fer spittin’ “What would I dot Then he re| should ring and say the samo thing on th’ sidewalk.” plied you'd be In a fix | "Td buy you beefsteak ev'ry) Mra. Hubb—Oh, a thief wouldn't day.” | answer “It's I,” “It's 6 me. ie he'd say, belleved ex-lof the Atlant! university presidents should be pro-| Harper & If er, as Mterary ad vided for, President Wilson first] —— — |tendered ‘to President Emeritus} |Ellot of Harvard the post of am-|f 2 REDELSHEIMER & CO. aseador to ¢ tain, but the f the fivefoot book ar him World Right he it Is per- tinent to at a son is an aut put hep books for author The president ean, perhaps, remember un Ox or two Ww 1 who know y emulate our greatest fauna nat ialist and publish a dc word via Doubleday, Pago ta me He vated t « hone the pres! He t m interpretatfon next offered to| & publisher, of & Co ditor of nt, & palac and d, talcum pow-| laced unl in keepin re guess didn't refuse doring, mind hat silk k with a t came to} that} de nid Page 5 the of Jefferson- Norfolk Suits For Boys 5 to 18 In all the new mixtures, checks apd stripes. At $4, $5, $6, Up Double-breasted sack style 7 to 18, from $3.50 up. Sizes a hen 24 to 10 Russian and Sailor styles in plain colors and fancy mixtures, At $3.50, $4, $5, Up || FREE | | @ PAUL THOM PEON TE Am A Baseball Outfit, consisting | WALTER H. PAGE. | of Bat, Ball and Glove, given | mn simplictt and that If Page away with every sult or over- | | would go to the court of St. James || coat for boys. | ho could do so without straining RSET Oe J his bank account “So,” sald Page of N TU take luck,” or words convey | eentng. Walter H. Page ta and was k fant Uae) radunte of college, Virggula, years n follow Ra Page at |He turned to newspape jin 1890 was editor of which position he hel¢ resigning to become of Houghton Mifflin a fall out of nt orth Car'lina, he job, for ing the same}§ Complete Unee of Hats, and Furnishings Caps a native of born fn 1858. |} = = and a lite a Redelshefmer & Co. Firgt and Columbia ndolph-Macon was for two] hns Hopkins. work, and The Forum, 1 five years, prary advisor 0, and editor fo 2Y NORMAN NEW YORK, ai 3.—Th a chop house some geographical center of the t rical @ fet in which the x« nen of the playhouse kK after business hours, and And they do tell of #0 yerlences an came out after the firet act of the matinee toda Jeclared the ticket dealer of the Astor, @ few evenings ogo. “and demanded that I change her feat was in the fourth row of the orchestra, and 1 naturally wondered what was the matter | with the seat. So I asked her == Do You Think April Will Be as Rainy March? Marks were discar i after the fourth dance and then ¢ y body dressed and undressed, was wel come to the fl J., Journal, atter oor. “What's the matter ; d@rough. to clothe my show.” Bhe had stated he He—I thi don't agre She-—I'm not never did agree ‘And They Will, All Right, All Rigit| r of the ry u which his wid ly fitted him. near the as th en into a After lunch: a 8x10 Tents. | ture Go. hush: with A Page of History; Facts and Guesses About the Man Who’s Going to Represent U. S. in England In 1898 he jolned|viser of the New Yor! Harper a, one of the mos of Ite aBy n't proposit kind e knowl q Pike, nk you are mists with you surprired ™ office McClure ¢ ndt tr me ge an Best Short STORIES of the Day|| Arthur Tee f commodore 0 the Atlantic Yacht club ms t ave attended a funeral once where, as the services were ¢ fairly under way, an intoxic person w d the and staggered up the ¢ to 2 seat front, says the aturda, the es ther leave him a rites were conclude man proceeded with he reached the passage “And after darkr in Newport a male dat woman suffrage wan a.fact,” the flirt conti be way the avera woman ships man ix amusing. Wh) elf have turned about fifty en's hoads.” “Away from you?” land.—Cinetunatt Inquirer. Blake F said the que manager, who lisped. s thay I'll have peculiar- Asbury Park, N and | tious din 1 fc e can't give the t followtr our word for met him leaving his offt workin hours t other day | “Where are you going at this time of day?” we asked | meet 8 sister, w oming | to make us a visit,” he answered, | not very enthusiastically | “Can to your house with- | out being x ly live tw blocks from the’s ‘6 that's what my sald But I'd rather meet her, Y if I meet her in public I wor tc kiss her."—Cleveland Plain Dealer Pretty Waltrees—What make you look so miserable, sir? Customer—Why, to tell you the , the wife ran away last night. | Waitress—I shouldn't take | that If T were you tomer—I don't; but she came again this morning.—London Telegraph Mies Inca Mitholland, the suffra t sats the male flirt nued wo: TY om said Mise Mil-| “urn wee ‘that I'm right next to &@ t } gh the window, waved headeq fat man, with a red bump|¢ under my ne and on the top of his head 1 wa r ere in . 1 annoying you” I|band! Where did think asked her. wanted it?” [ chould say so!’ she answered, | re t is, he fsn't doing anything, | the other women sltting superiority of me think den P hose they're laugh Britain {# imed by know the m a actors and actresses have a husband with have on to bave thetr nd a red ‘bump on it Ike he's got, | overhat while on this sida.o and if you don’t give me another| It took W Nutt to hang rent I'm going he the real nte, however, I changed her is an English lad of some 18 : 1 mmers who plays in “l got a funny one myself to a Some of his ‘| Du Maupassant’s French ley & Mitchell players areg wels (he was suffering | not in the “Theatricaly man overdose). It tells | Trust,” and instead of% how she was found out— charging from $1.00 as, of course, she had to $2.50, you can get the bests be—and it tells what the | seat in the big theatre for | husband did when he 50e—the balcony seats for} le cold facts. | 30c. So there is no em What would your hus- cuss for yout do: Misi? it. And if you don't feel aN when you come out, tha : What would you do, you've } your money's” Sir, if your wite— worth, just step up to they I part of the tale, | Box Office well ed, well staged | y back | ina that | an inside that nat New Y City | give it to . shed “real tears. | DAS W: that is burned at both end PHONES "enala” wit’ RATES 300 tic rr By malt sho snapped, , rho her is whole ded attention, and L sent to an uptown dentist RLM Had Poor Furnace, Too (others in the company had w.8 Millie turned up for the ev the F perforn with @ count Most teeth wore missing. ine-looking sight, you | the stage manager, | 20.—1 “What the blazes did you let him pull out such @ lot of them for? said they weren't worth * refoined Willle. “And ff bully sport! I ‘ardly knew the r was picking the bally things out. One of our chaps over ‘ome would have dragged me all around the blooming room!” said the treasurer of the Cohan theatre. “A kind of a a fine suburban cot, ought he was in luck, und the cot was stncco, accent on the A Philadelphia woman says that when her husband stays out ail night she doetn’t give him any breakfast. Chances with atuc are that on those occasions he fidgety girl frisked up, pushed a doesn't want any. fivedollar bill across the shelf and said ‘I want a seat.’ It’s the consumer, not the candle, Where do you want ft, I asked her. nking Hours ove a Great Convenience to the Working Man The th steady growth in the number of people who in this bank is due in part to they fact that patrons find it a great convenience to deposit without interfering with their working hours. Savings Department of this bank is open) jay evening from 6 to 8 o'clock. Northern Bank & Trust Company Fourth Ave. and Pike St. ing funds The Go to the Seattle Theatre and See “THE THIEF” “The Thief” Go to see it—tonjght if is a strong | for strong men and | you can get a seator to- en. It tells how a | morrow night—but see wife, in order to keep the “The Thief”—it” is “30 love of her husband, stole strong, so fine, so good, in order to dress in the | that it’s worth ten times, fashion. It tells how she | what it costs—and inci- § duped a poor fool of a boy d lly it costs less thang who had been reading | you'd expect, for the Baile@ Free Book on Modern States : ment Methods Will you give 15 minutes of youtg time to cut your statement cost im] half? Will you let your bookkeeper spend one hour to learn how to cut the figure mistakés and night work and get your statements to your “ahead of the other fel low's statements"? out customers say the word and we'lt send on mod- Just our “Systems ern statement methods in other busi- Bulletin” ness houses. And, if you want it, we'll send a machine for trial—free and without cost or obligation, Burroughs Adding Machine Co. . F. D, WILDE, Sales Manager. 6 vi Henry Bugding. SBATTLY, WASHINGTON. s % e

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