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Sa NNER a a teen emma MEMERE OF TITR SORIPRS LaAoUa, OF wEW NORTHW Ber es Eel hee ao rine Valchine nt the Sith Ess company ev@y evening + MAN COMES TO WOMAN'S AID carcely a day passes that the wire doesn’t carry a story like that of the man Harris, just sent to prison in New York for enticing from Louisville a 17-year-old girl and secreting her in the big city until, with newly developed zeal, the police found the clew This crime is as old as history; but very new and very which and haled him to justice refreshing is the vigor with society at last is setting forth to break it up. Every time sex is abused for money a man pays. Usually a man also gets the tainted money, or most of it. The lowest woman never falls so low but that some man falls lower, We an, We are just have long pursued and harrassed the we | the in men is an. beginning to go for Weakness easily understood. But this wide | spread meanness, this willingness to traffic in women's shame, } to pick hOr has some new demon arisen to bedevil our modern civil } ization The hasty conclusion is that man today is worse than } formerly, But we know, because our reason tells us, that this) cannot be so. We see so many unmistakable proofs that man lis griwing better that we must view this apparent exception fat tolls of pristitution, was man always like that? with care. | Isn't it a proof of man’s improvement that, in this matter | of the sex passion, so long regarded as a fixed fact of life be-! yond reach of correction and therefore best left unnoticed, he is today, under the prompting of the new social conscience, turning upon himself the publicity he once took so much pains to avoid? | The only hope if stopping the pitiful sacrifice of woman- | hood to lust and greed lies in the moral redemption of man. | Just as it is man who drags woman down, so it must be man who will lift her and himself up. That, happily, is beginning to be done. Behind the pros ecution of white slavers are men. Active in the movement for a minimum wage are men. Women, too, praise be. But the key to the problem is Man—necessarily Man Man must be clean and humane before womanhood will be safe. The God, not the Beast in Man has to be enthroned before we shall get far out of this sorry sex mess And that is what is happening widely, encouragingly, fmore and more cach day. The beast is going under; the god in man is getting the whip hand Let the publicity of it increase. Society has no better form of life insurance DELIGHTFUL INNOCENCE. tw the freshness, t kindly It ts in human nature to love the native, expression fn this mundane sphe' We hare a pthose who have escaped the blase atmosphere and the weight sustained by those who have become “world-wise. It is, therefore, with swelling pride that we point to our node pud- pic officials, County Co. issioners Hamilton and Rutherford. They fare certainly naive young things. They nit it themselves For foyr months a picture of the proposed $950,000 courthouse adorned the office of the commissioners, It hung on the wall close to he door which opens into the room. | But mark the unsophisticated, child-like tnnocence of these public b weervants. Never, oh, never! did they know what the picture was do- Ming there. Hamilton didn’t even know !t was a picture of the pro | posed courthouse, for which he submitted a $950,000 bond ts For paught he knew, {t may have been a picture of the Clericus dockalte, or some road machinery, or the crematory Of course, the picture had some printed matter {n large trpe, whien | ytold exactly what it represented. But Hamilton never read that—he [never stopped to look at the picture, It didn't interest him tn coed least. Do you believe him? Why, of course you do. Didn't he take a ysolemn oath before Judges Smith and Albertson to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth? FORTUNATELY “A race question which is unfortunately the Impelling and gov-| erning factor in the proposed land question In California.”—Chicago paper. Call {t a race question, if you ike. It is the same rnaco feeling which makes the people of other states lock up the white ravisher for ® year and burn the black one alive at a sti And there's nothing unfortunate about It. fortunate for the white race that there {s one commonwealth that jdraws the line against vile racial adulteration. It {s fortunate for fman as an animal that there is organized opposition, somewhere, to yhis degenerating as an animal. It is fortunate for the nation, soctally morally and industrially, that California refuses to descend to the level of equal competition with a race that is purely an exploiting race. In California's hatred of the Oriental races there ts nothing un fortunate or unnatural. That hatred is based upon the law of self. preservation, and all the obligations of self-sacrifice stop at that law fin the case of states and communities. Unfortunate! No; blessed is the sentiment which would protect | jthe American workman and the American family from distress and contamination by the spew of the Orient! | On the contrary, It is Isn't Commissioner Hamiiton the cute, tnnocent little thing? Testified he didn’t know {t was a picture of the proposed $950,000 court- | ‘house which was hanging tn his office for four months. It will be Interesting to watch Penrose, Guggenheim, Barnes, et al. | jive up, voluntarily, for the good of the country, the reins of the re-| | tpublican party to Cummins, Hadley, Borah and a few other + won't be rogres Maybe there rehabilitation where? a string attached to the One-armed Chinaman touched Seattle man for a watch. jto hand it to the slanteyed beauty. You've got He's some handy. it | It's easy to see why Counciiman Peirce, who successfully juggled | with the civil service to give a personal friend, who couldn't: pone examination, a fat job, should be against the civil service re for election officials pags the ations Good for Berlin! in jail! She's giving dancers of the bunny hug six months Har and Soft Corns " lotnt”™ Bunions French Hoel Cramp “Knob. Remarkable Home Treat- ment for All Foot Troubles ‘This tnformat Acines you atment which pound tn @ basin of the feet for full fit « the nore par vue. AIL pain ¢ the fect feel simply 4 and callouesp can be poe buntons, aching foot, *» Compound _— feet, got immediate’ relict tae will be m thing of the past. Calocia _ BWRATY = Works through the pores and removes the wiates OVEENSIVR — ¢hUNG, Got _w twonty-five cont box from yah | VEY any Grageiat, usually enourn to oure the niand worst fepe m ba els EET } | EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR| | Kansas City Jou THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1913. PHONES "5.42" 8's sebaaage * . Dy mail, Gally, ohn month RATES we as a Ve Moving Picture Actors and ‘‘Actorines’’ Often Suffer From Stage Fright, She Says; Not Before “By GENE MORGAN WALTZING how to do ft. Don't delay, but do h C. B U S S 1 Si Copyriaht, 191% by the Newspaper in-/ it now while the behe oving 1s good, the amera, ut pon eeing ve ves on ocre e arr Seneca To quit preaching and get down | EDITOR'S NOTE—Linda Griffith, , ¥ Waltzing ts the dreamtest form/|to science, {t must be explained leading woman of the Kinemacolor | of woolal dancing Once upon althat the waltz, {s performed with company at Hollywood, Cal., has! time It was the leading favorite at| three beats to the measure, a hap- | written for The Star her own idea the summer hotels, but now it is|py expression, and, on hot nights, of color pictures. | being elly elbowed off the wax|a wilted rag for a collar. A beautl | BY LINDA A, GRIFFITH | by such popular toe teasers as the! ful partner ts often thought neces It is little more than two are Turkey Trot, the Alligator Crawl,| sary for successful waltaing, but since the Kinemacolor pictures the ‘Possum Prance and the Fire don't you believe tt. The peaches were shown first to the American Hore Wrigele don't always make the best waltz public, These pictures, as we all The waltz will soon be as obso-| erines! |know, were of the coronation of late ag the minuet and the hoedown Look along the row of waiting |King George of England and the If somone dooan't come to the rev-| girls on the Veranda and pick out Durbar fostivities tn India | eve and buy ita now pair of] one of the plain, staple sizes. You How often in the days before this} crutches, However, you can tell) will find her easter to wheel about, wonderful discovery I had said to when waltzing .18 Mkely to rush|and, i¢ it happens that you are al. jmyself: “Oh, If the colors would | back thto style, so It behooves ev-) ways getting tangled up with your only show in the pieture.” But 1} ery summer vacationist to learn] extra feet, she may take you in never dreamed how soon my wishes | | would come true I don't suppose it fs very gener that a moving piet all the steering and then that your Waltzing ts “Just for a beginner! } the | The most difficult fally known move in '2e 2° Fasreocs *uos waltz {s the reverse, or southpaw : di , Friwedshipe coreped up while | ture actor Is ever afflicted with stage| scraping through the waltz are ike-| Some men who can reverse the | fright, not camera fright, for whe ly to make a D impreasion——| speed trigger on a six-cylinder gas-| Working we never think of the | oft w romantic results. Waltz | line gig goin 90 miles an bour and | °*mera | music fs nearly always dreamy and| slow down the car within tt t when we are gathered to- | it takes to sentiment and romantic|/!nches of a basket of soft-bol gether in our own little theatre cooing Hike a duck to a bathtub,|¢&e# aro unable to do the waltz re-|that ts, In ¢ SOROEAS TOC | Thousands of men have proposed| Verse without. skidding. Others| Where pictures are shown to the| marriage in the swaying mazes of} are born to it, and from such are |#°tlng company, the Neh urned the waltz, who would never think | selected the cotillion leaders and | 0Ut, and the pictures to be seen for) of breathing sweet nothings while} umpires at turkey trotterfegts. first time, then t we some sipping to the meter of the Gorilla} Alas, the waltz is almost dead, | {mes have cold chilis | Grab, the Rox Car Lope or the Gar-| But on with the dance, on with the | twit« hes We know th toranake ( ! Tango, the Sea Cow Slide and the |/ocked up in the little be Many thousands have remarked |Pickle Dip! We'll use the waltz |!* there to stay for ke« and we} that they could die waltzing. But/only as a fillerm while tho fire|'ave no way of improving sip) they should worry, for most of| brigade rushes to the orchestra bal. *econd performance | One I was to see myself in KINEMACOLOR for] day last summer them never took the trouble really|cony and puts out a hot-box tn the |to lear snare drum. | [to learn 7 first time. With — | the added fear! and trembling I approached the 1 picture was thrown on| jfesh tinte—tt was almost spooky, MR, CYNTHIA GREY'S ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS | THE ADVENTURES OF ©ven @ little string of pink. be vail Arthur.—The recent rise of Elliott bay was not caused by the fill- NNY MOUSE about my neck, why, there they ing in of the tide flats, All the authorities on chiropody agree that JOH SE were just as pink as could be! — | the rising of the bay was caused by the large number of freighte Now, along with the day's work, | which arrived last month, You know, the water displacement of all |" there is added the study of COLOR} LINDA A. GRIFFITH. SCHEMES. We must each other as to the color of th that particular hat or gown to worn, for those working in the ame scenes must never let colo FIGHT FOR VOTES GOES 0} LONDON these boats to its norm Imply enormous. | level When they leave, the bay will recede | | yr Gambler.—-The passage which you quoted is found In the Gospel, according to St. Luke, xxv.: 3+, . aa * clash. We must ev | May 14.—When the|panies for Scotland, Wales ang James 8.—Many make the same mistake. Sergt. Carr, leader of wall paper and Leia ire ee ene CARTERS | 0886 O86 ee oe 4 the police band, Is not the composer of “Faust,” the opera, “Faust” tapestries that make up the stage| With dis ng the peace re-|sionaries will be mostly wor L was composed by Lucia Sextette, a talented young musician, who comes setting. The days when a man) Samed. physician ' testified | women who will appeal tema to one of the local vaudeville theatres nearly every week. could combine brown shoes with|that “General” Mrs. Flora Drum-|of their class for work for suffi i oo. «5 full evening dress and appear cor-|™0nd had completely collapsed and | — Jessie Smith——-No, Mayor Cotterill hae never been mistaken for rectly dressed on the screen are no, ¥## unable to appear ELLENSBURG,—Beginning William Shakespeare. Few people living remember Bill. more. Ramsay McDonald, a labor mem-|the departure of 4,000 sheep foram ™ | se ¢ es as " = j ber of parliament, announced today | ty the annual migration & J WISE SAYS: |that he was willing to publish the/titas valley sheep from the Youn —v 1 itas valley sheep from oung Lady. ou are perfectly right In refusing. | don't even “A barn would have been totally | Suffraget, the militants’ publica-| ranges of the Columbia river #& fe kiss men who smoke rte ae oe destroyed at a disastrous loss th’ tion, despite the police | Cascades has started. ther night ef two yeggmen workin’) The suffrag lar re 100,-| = Mildred.—Thankagiving always comes after Christmas—near! 4 ; : ene ater ‘The Pautth ae duty ts asneraty ob daly 4%” very. on th’ Beeleysport bank hadn't |000 wo on in| MRS. HANNAH GRIFFITH, By |e qoneralty y stopped and broke th’ lock on th’/ all di ‘Opa-| died at the residence of her engine house door for our fire lad- | gan¢ algar y, 3018 Su Uncertain.—You are wrong about not a day Sarah Bernhardt’s age. She dies.” 8q over 96, “ee ee Mra. W.—No two persons make bread the same way. The best re sults will be obtained, however, If you form the dough first and then bake It in an oven. There's a Reason. _——— [+ eee ree eee o RRieeawen cae A Fish Story KA GLASS OF WATE Fish, Aw A BEAN, PVE GOTTA Wish RE TRENON ene Balt — ete eee eee eee eee ee Stee eee eee eect eens ee ee ee He He’ He He ri He lin Wh He ts t atl He doc But he And wed In baimy June s the dough for the honey From Baby Lips. | Edgar was in the pantry ther called and asked age ae Why, ‘Tis True! ! er than s Man Who Was ng. said the Cold-Blood. the ankets More Important. “No woman know how to drive a nail And ot that? Every woman to drive a man any way she wants him to go."—| al Getting Rich Fast. “How's the sale of inquire 1d 9,000 « courting moe, the two weeks’ ~~: 000 KILLED IN ist, when wo About blow you In taxt's we must ride, Courter-Jou | But now we always go afoot. MEXICAN FIGHT Still you love me ‘ou vo J One British tist says the! “Hecause taxionbe,” said Jobe to fall ther says ey anand the w © your under. S, Ariz, May 14.—Kero CIVIL LAW IN clot y 24 hours. Most old ing shipped today from find the 3 ont mat way ths “ae Nogales, Sonora, to Guaymas, to canter Jil saat, “WAR” ZONE NOW | purn the bodies of 800 Mexican fed. | i and constitutionalist soldiers eral : STON, W. Va, May 14 orted to have been killed 1 The Male of the Species. & written today to the days battle near the latter cis r leaders and strikers |city, Tho federais were beaten, but| [es There’s a Reason. irginia by military court | not decisivel rea ereacaadiass NY an announcement to| Private dispatches today placed| May | oatttiaaetes by Gov. Hatfie The 800 as a conservat imate of Vk . nor declares that hereafter |the dead, ‘The ral were the ea. A Arken ag inst trikers will|/heavier losers. than 1,000! a » turned over to the etvil authort-| were reported wounded, J clato marks the near abolition of {military rule in the Paint Creeb |district, where a state of practical fare between miners and em ‘Art Student te Found Guilty NO FOQD BURNED, | - SAN FRANCISCO, May 14—Mi SAY MERCHANTS Jeaste Cilfton, the young Riverdale it, tod wa This inexpensive pastime is easy to buy, easy to carry,- easy to pass around. The more you chew, the better for you. Can | “You might as well talk to mo/Stllty of burglary in the second de-| “do to the ant, thou slumeard,”|ahont standing nt tho ‘wharf er gree by a sury in Judge Trabuco’ | you say that of anything else? " » uggar answered |throwing $20 a Into the | °% V 98 Kentenced Sat * ‘ win nicN en no went to “tta|U% tt say that wood produce) MER, | The delicious juice of the fresh, crushed mint leaves is a con- a Sid feulte ware. shlpped to the city) (Tim cM erent tite Mtoe mite tinuous benefit. It, refreshes the mouth, soothes the nerves, And got two plunks on it So said D. I Smith, pstern eL blagy men and women burglars. shai F ae appetite, wd iges to and I ies bi “es ay. oramisstoa. man, the 1en the verdict was pronounced, ‘ coma yey THE WAY. coune!l committee "Investigating | the #itl’s mother collapsed and Miss | ! ould ron ¢ er put @ p oP ‘ \ agbage collection charges, He | ©! fton became hysterical | sutton ought to be without having d that Western ¢ f | i ahow? A. Waman can ne 1 that Western av. men feng! post lern outside rooms 1 B.D Re, Adv. v ; foodstuffs to the elty dumps | ceattie to 50c. Stewart House, | Chicairo to keep up an artifle orice. BY n “el| Let Them Do the Fighting. ays 5 ue mt A anaeee 86 West Stewart (near Pike Public It costs less—of any dealer— One thousand families control | lain and W. Mesiter, witnesses for | t’™**Y) die y 8 Sars eee nearly all the soll of Mexico. Ithe defense, testified, Dance at Dreamland tonight. **¢ Look for the spear Avoid imitations °