The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 15, 1913, Page 4

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Ri alba at creel A SINR ecco a TAR-~—THURSDAY, MAY THE 15, 1913, MEERA OF THE SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUR OF NEWSPAPERS, Tolew News ervice of the United Pres Asseotation Batered of the taffion, Seattle, Wash. ae second chase mation "Funtianed by. The. Star Publishing company every evening except Sunday “THE LITTLE BROWN MAN” PRICE COLLIER, NOTED STUDENT OF THE RACES, TELLS US THAT THOSE “IN. NOCENT” JAPS, WHO WANT TO BUY LAND IN AMERICA, ARE REALLY PIL- FERERS OF WOMAN'S VIRTUE AND '\To Make Good in Politics Will the Wilsons Go Wrong in Society? Washington Wonders If Standpatters Will Get ’Em by Teacup Route WASHINGTON, D. C. May 16.—(Spl)-—Is the Wilsdén administration going to make good on poll ties and go wrong on soclety? That's the question which all Washington ts asking Itwelf today, Nobody doubts now that the ad | ministration is progressive so far as politica ts concerned. Everybody fe wondering what stand It ts go- PHONES “ccd” with ait Tpumtattsam Dy _m Galty, ona moni RATES Osc he — Le —~ MOST ANY THING <|f- |THE ADVENTURES OF| LIVELY NEIGHBORHOOD Gotterthemon ™s [sonny mouse {pi lf ; | a i |here in the woods. I do not know jing to take towards that great, subtie, but powerful institution Washington soolety ni CANNOT BE ALLOWED TO MINGLE The same old crowd of men and women in Washington soclety—people whose reactionary inflw of one single soul that has built a OOD. ences have been as strong as the purely political influences—are storming the White House, It re new barn or whitewashed a fence. WITH OUR MAIDENH i“ mains to be seen whether they get in. For & great many years they HAVE been getting tn. | Come to think, Mr. Bugene A While the’ vale ensainibeen| Sprin has bought a new horse, stars have all gall of privilege t and Mr, Samuel Hampton was going Rive ittie: Brows, sian ts £0 De 8 Teens we ieee wivat hello Agger Mme siny Bod to repair bis barn, but was taken pv’ rybody knows, coas ne, but his WHOLE great country for some time to ¢ the executive offices, advising with | nick and {t fan't done yet The high notes that they The tests home government are going to make President ¢ |presidents, their female partners | by rg ee > ee 7 to Wilson and Rryan uncomfortable in their easy chatre—and we hem bave been altting in the White BFE EE Posed may be tars, Japan will decide on reprisals against 2 bt 27 ery ain tea with the sus in bloom.-Woodbine Corre 8 ¢ as a nation 4% House mitre: yondence, Himer, N. J., Times 7 De y know WHY the coast people are so unanimously opposed They have discovered they can sponden " tg THE WAGES OF GIN ig . the “little b ? We think that, east of hte Rockles, the |not get into the White House of. : 2 - BREATH, nace to not en about the reasons which move our ef | flees this time, so the effort to get | Occasionally an “honor prisoner a ES be Gallfornia brott ws against the Japs |{nto the parlor 1s more strenuous will make a getaway. Probably to Looks Good on Paper, “9 cgay ye Bt writers and keen race observers, Pri |than ever Jencape the jibes and accusations of| geatticites planning toes Citar bes ¥ { k which baa | Aidal? Field reumitly gives [betas © “bone poe” | will bo interested in the di n been brought out by Charl Bo is entitled “The West) | dinner at the Chevy Chase =i : hat & sheet of writing paper 9 fa the East, ® chapter on “Japan” we find this summary of | club, where the guest of honor Chances are that those women or “the brown man"-—the man who wants to buy land on our west was’ Miss Margaret Wilson, who ride th enies of ganolt ; te aan cin we president’s oldest daugh baw Py - go ped nts or cl c Megrdh tobe a eee oe er. dder ov suse 0 ne os pan has had her first tooth, and taken her first step, amid Fidel lo-0 Galienieus dare ng ee a the wondering admiration of other peoples, She has built ships, or eontative from Virginia. He le Sign in Washington st. barber| sona or THE ewaTal , agnized commerce, founded a government, fought out a war, She ts a thorough-going reactionary. shop window: Mes éle. off, no longer an | nor a callow youth. New standards of Judgment thé Wa the ean whe meee tae “Bate Oot, 10. en, die ee are being used {n the measuring of olitical, commercial, ethical ister "atti on, Wittlocs “Bhave, 66 rt eee merviver and social stature; and both Japan a later critics are frankly Bryan In the Baltimore conven- ‘Saturday Shave, 10c.” ‘The longer you're alive Gmappeinted ‘ se i | tlon, defending Thomas For pkethaps & Saturday shave ts one “i The days for the Sir Edwin Arnold and La io Hearn literary tas RAL AO) rrattnnion ngs, «Noa ; Ui petting and dandling of the baby J 6 gone by. It was all | aire ecorporationiet, from Bry- ore | It’s Different Now mawkish enough any time, and did Japan harm that lasts to this an's famous arraignment. Tacoma is ¢he biggest goat mar day; and my Ja se friends would sure, consider it a gro- Misses Margaret and Eleanor ket, but they don't all fall for it. CS, [arr tesque study tn in were | to write to them about them, in the Wilson attended the “hunt ball” at Ss a ce cooing and soft-sy 4 nolses of a nurse dandiing a baby. I have! \the Chevy Chase club a tied te Be the chimreiie no intention of I am merely an advar $ picket for my| This is the select official and In some fair damsel’s hand, countrymen, ret ribe what I saw. I bring merely maps, millionaire country club, It is the For every time she took a puff. sketches, descriptions, opinions, surmises, and all without malice or spring and fall playground of social Um-m-m—you understand! prejudice, except that I am an American, and, if that be treason, | |toryiem in Washington Sonat Wikes. must submit to punishment from those I describe, In good part. a & Yon ware eaten Pe : ete | tained Miss Eleanor Wilson at a What has become of the old-fash “It is only when you leave the high official, the kindly and con-/ | dinner party. toned Sean Who’ Ghek $0. Gone «|The. settle sca Seoul Biderate host, the traveled cosmopolitan Japanese, and hear tale: | Mrs. Meyer ts the wife of the for nutmeg on 4 string around bis neck ing day— @f the Japanese as they are se them as they are, at the temples |mer postmaster geveral and naval to ward off quinsy? Aud te the puremen Gal n the railway carria) hawking, spittin: secretary, being one of ee nay, nay. emoking, sc ime 6a ¢ the foremost old A Renton bachelor says !t seems | He plows by steam and plays Bated cupsidc booths « Roosevelt-Taft in, impossible to ke some babies other inek, fair; crowded dea! with subordinates at a . ox t unless you them make a/ For he rides home now fn es dank, postoffice ther notse truck y and why entistac they tor as polit tor parochial their lack of consideration their callow and sophisticated nity, and in its place a chip ass ng alone for others youthfuls he-shoulk r new feeling of a scarcely veiled contempt for the white race, which, by the way, is not even veiled among the Chinese; all these characteristics, overiaid with a lacqu a national selfishne account to some extent for this extraord ft of i condescend ing fondness to virulent and loudly expressed cont er) “We moral | of moral «a womanhood West that Ing wor m have come to b no an be elves, and that n of womer en. Th Japa believe this ! During ° h years. there were 2,450,838 ages in Japan, 821,121 divorces iegitimate bir tion in Japan is regulated, controlied and taxed by the state. ne last census gives the numbe of females in Japan as 23,131,207; of this number, 7 79 are be tween the ages of 15 and 35, or roughly the age when the Eastern woman is physically attractive. One writer claims that there are 600,000 public prostitutes and at least 1,000,000 procuresses » total of such women is probably 1,400,000, and if to this, again, about 600,000 Geisha be added the complete grand total cannot be short of nearly 2,000,000. “If the American woman knew that every Inn, every tea-house and every hotel, and many of the temples in Japan offered easy virtue to every traveler and pilgrim so disposed; and that the sale of herself by the woman, to relieve family necessiti is looked upon as a worthy) self sacrifice in thousands of Japanese households; if she could see the whole Japanese attitude toward this question, both at home and abroad, she would consider the admission of the Japanese in any num- bers in this country, to be educated side by side with our children, in the public schools, as an intolerable suggestion “And she would consider that to permit freedom of social inter course between Japanese men and the young women of America an in- suiting suggestion. It will be time to talk of offering freedom of our Quarded and cherished homes to the Japanese when the Japanese have our ideals of what such a home ought to be.” GOOD FOR M’KENZIE County Commissioner McKenzie shows proper concern over the disposition of the $3,000,000 of road funds voted by the people. In view of the reckless expenditures made In Commissioner Ham- IIton’s district, McKenzie can well afford to ignore any advice or recom. mendations of the gentleman who “didn't know” what the picture of the $950,000 proposed courthouse represented. McKenzie is right when he asks time to investigate for himself whether Hamilton's resolution, locating $1,825,000 of roads, corresponds with the terms of the bond Issue. The subject of good roads is admittedly an tmportant one. The special little meetings on non-business days which have made the docksite deals famous, must be strictly wiped off the map. The spend ing of $3,000,000 of county money abso! uirea the full light of careful scrutiny. It is by far too big nount to trust to the fudgment of Commissioner Hamilton e. McKenzie has the hearty approval of the people of King county when he says he will take] nothing for granted where Hamilton is concerned. “No civilization Is complete,” said Queen Victoria, “that does not} fnclude the dumb and defenseless of God's creatures within Its sphere of charity and mercy.” And in two years over 89,000 vivisections of animals in England and Scotland! | | | And through building that canal we make the scandalous discov- ery that Panama hats are not made in P but in Ecuador. Turkish proverb: “Haste is permissible in three things—in getting @ husband for your daughter, in burying your dead and in setting food| before your guest.” And maybe they'll add a fourth—in outrunning a| Bulgarian. Up to 1892, Uncle Sam had given over 56,000,000 acres of land to| projected railways. No wonder that such successful beggars got the potion that they were bosses. crisp, delicious cookies you have made with Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard ood for children, better than crackers or rich cake POD an, Anas casily digested. Give them all they want when they are wade tke way Aittver-Leat Lard: 4 emp butter } cap sour 9 cope sugars 4 co F Ce codar aaron ta atin, Ficst anowgh Wo Bains 9 eo etc sugar over op aie! rot la bwtore calting, od health and good baking be about the shortening you use. Swift's Silver-Leaf Lard makes tasty pastry — It is pure, whole some, Government Inapected, "Put up in tight covered, new tin pails where dust or odors cannot reach it. Order a pail of your dealer and see what good things it makes. Swift & Company, USA At Your ext r OURS patience that was almost painful THESE GIRLS NOWADAYS and when I concluded—I made th petition longer on his count tive his over wrought relieved by \a sigh that ost startling. I looked for him afterward, but he had gone. A young man with Hght do you know him? “Sure I do,” replied the door tender. ‘He was waitin’ for th Jcopy of your stuff for one of th Norfolk Jafternoon papers—an' had to get |longer, George. you'll get some . lthing worse than a fall in the Sack Suits $3.50 up. pring; I'll duck you under the ° pump!"—Judge. a . P aor rteg tae Suits for Little Boys rah Bernhardt was narrating eminiscences of the stage to a $3.50 up. of friends Tom—TI wrote her five letters ask-| ~ — 1 notes,’ you call them, |ing her to return to me my diamond|{.. “A Weston {eae aie auld: labeling |RokeeRcinat lle |] !REE—A “Reach” Baseball Out “Well, I ceived a very funn Dick—Did she return {t? |] fit, consisting of Bat, Ball and mash note once in a small tewn of Tom—Ne She sent me a “Don't-| jyour Far West dance ¢ | This nt, giddiest and *RGE VON L. MEYER; | “Amartest” soctety set in Washing MRS. EDSON BRADLEY (IN CEN. | 8 composed ch TER), AND PRESTO: 30N, | young fed couples, se eipnconiimeninprininy modern trot” variety, and have heen so gay an to canse even ha “ BY HERR SCHLOSCH ACOB EIMER Washington society to lft 1 brows fternoon the of tea at | BUNK | sued The Star for calling me a poor che day about my divorce in Olympia. | had nin the other three | had bribed, so | thought the o peor In its story last Fri- riende on the jury and e was as good as mine. However, the judge instructed the jury to show no mercy. They deliv, ¥%* ve ash. Bison Bb erated for two days, sleeping most of the time, and then brought in a“ Mr. « Preston Gibson verdict of mansiaughter In the fourth degree. Mra, MacVeagh is the wife of ce. eS the former multimillionaire secre | hate to brag about myself, girts, but | once shook hands with a fel ‘Ary of the oe low whose uncle knew Willie Ritchle p ‘ The Eason ys constitute oe 8 Jone of the ri and “smartest lies of Washington. This sounds like a bad begianing ans if the old sc crowd were 1 didn’t print my spring poem In Tuesday's Star, for fear it would |" belittle Billie Burke's and Berton Braley’s. So here it is today: O, drizzly, drazzly, droxzly W Do you call yuroself Spring! jo ag Bee Pad » House. All these drippy, drappy, droppy Rains, | These ‘exceptions, The pres You have no right to bring. t and accepted a single tnvita O, soggy, saggy, suggy Clouda, not } , You should be dissipated. eS ee ee weet oe O, roten, ritten, ratten Spring, ; gi gc a nna You surely are belated. A noted English partial "I had a bad cold at the time tossed back his thick wh was afraid to blow my nose all of hair, stroked white t the evening.”"—-London Opinion and sald in a broad Scotch acc - - to a New York reporter | “So you're back from New York The rise in t wages has | Si? been great, but {n world Yea; an’ t prices has be We hav “Fast tow } had progress, but it has been prog | Fast ain't for it. I ress in the wrong direction saw banks of t t' ‘com ‘A rist was traveling In y: nodate them as their money Far West. As he inspected an In- fn th’ evenin’, I s'pose; an’ dian encampment said to hi yers’ offices at 3 o'clock cowboy guide: fn th’ mornin And are these Indians pro-}are in a burry fer dtvo: greasing? jwait till day ti an Betcher life,’ the cowboy an-| you th ? | swered, tab a fresh chew of to-| hat else? Wall, I wouldn't be bacco, ‘Bet life they're pro-|s'prised t’ hear of anything. gressing. All their medicine men} “An' I saw a fur ketty are patent medicine mena now, plit, with an a hearse Washington Star in’ th’ pere an’ settin’ th’| “There was one young man,” said | Wall, St, I s'pose they have t’| Gia chante “cuenta git th’ dead ones out o' th’ way in — ——* a hurry t’ give th’ live ones room seemed to regard my ope on . si t oh ?"—Judge. prayer with the deepest He showed a degree attention of nervous im hair and eyes and an obtuse nose | Redelsheimer’s in time for th’ noon edition Cleveland Plain Dealer. Suits for Boys “Paw"— “Well, “Do the eorge?” have winter {n summer | in the Arctic regions?” New biaclo and white checks es, 80n “And do they have summer tn and stripes, tan and gray mix darn sn the tropics?" tures, nobby browns and stand- exactly. iF “Do they have spring fn the fall| | ard weaves, Ages 6 to 18. any place?” | “Hard Prices $4 to $10 “Or fail in the spring?” “If you keep this thing up much Worry club” b Glove, given away with every ge. “'You are adorable,’ my mash Boye’ Sult or Overcoat note ran, ‘and I'd have preferred to ES cl send you orchids; but In this one FIR CIRCLE TOWN = horas town I am reduced to mo - | ; In candy, of which | am for WINNIPEG, May 15.—Little hope | J } vere) | ) warding a two-pound bag? Wil!|is entertained for the town of An ® Redels neimer you take supper with me tonight?|drews, near hore, which {s entirely & Co. If you consent, blow your nose on|surrounded by prairie fires. The the stage, and I will understand.’ |citizens of the town are putting up Mme. Bernhardt laughed again a desperate fight to the encroach First Ave., corner Columbia, “And the worst of It was,” she|ments of the blaze, 3 Mrs. Wilson themselves | | White | | | dustrial world, and. created the|Of Rugs especially suitable for summer d¢ farm, the village and the city. All| money-saving prices. Space forbids lengthy description, the states within the United States|rest assured the values are UP TO THE USUAL Grote are from the start his work. Laws} » . are rules of conduct established by | Rankin standard, F a state or nation, to be obeyed by| CAMP STOVE SPECIAL S, men and women alike. No reason-| able thinking person will say that a] A line of Camp Stoves in the popular Basement House man who commits murder, arson or| furnishings Section has been marked at special prices. larceny should not be punished. | + te |'Then why should not wemen be|and see them acl punished for committing the same 1H sontelael. sortase! 100 2—Has cooking sw offenses? Ifa person takes time to| aS i Meet 2 13x19% inches and. 0 study law, he will find that the/11x1& inches and oven ; RiBeys English common law doos not favor|9x10 inches; special. ... 95e 9% inches; $1 { men any more than women. A class ee ORIEL css area Nee of wild women called English suf. fragets, who defy police one mo ment and beg for their protection | Goin’ Campin’? Look at These Specials! h me ca paying a vist ig for then r home or camp will be fo he prices are a little lower @ y attention is directed to an vecials—at prices that hardly pay their construction, See these by 6) SPECIAL...... ‘$2. A well-made Dresser at a that does not in the slightest sami gest its real worth. Is built of gop 1efurnishing ng ¢ able here and in every you expected paying. of real, money-saving sf the material used in means! st CAMP DRESSER S_PRSERE EXFESEIE ESSsS SETRTAS EESS_ GES. SEERS_SE_BSS. =e | oe | IN EDITO MAIL BLAMES THE STATESMEN den fir, has full-length d P Editor The Star: Comparisons toomy storage compartment Be are odious, it Is said, and tt plate mirror. Very special at $28 exception. I wish to cor 7 acts and results of the statesmen | and lead. citizens of Japan and the United States. The Japanese are wisely trying to! conditions of their labor. by settling them in thor rich and fertile countries that are sible to her, s ng ad- for them itn & cas orever beyond reach ho remain in Ja our nen and They encourage Japanese coolles to come here, y lever and force that they nand to compel an unwill-| ive them, know- the an. states A Chair that is almost too good for a sD ba th 4 se ag? sure} camp, but priced at a figure oné usually alt of such immigration ts the - ; 7 , Cains nak dineeanilee ae Fon Ror pays for camp chairs. Built of hard ple «mong whom the Japs may set-| Wood in golden finish. Strongly made knowing that the Jap will al-|and well braced throu ways remain loyal to his emperor; | hat his one big dream is Japanese domination of the Pacific coa: What do you think the historian of the future will say of such ac by those who are supposed to look after the common w of a people? F.E A mighty Metal Cot, Special $2.95 | yood value at & AGAINST SUFFRAGETS The Star: I noticed in \\ ho’d want anything better for a camp than one of thet] May 3, 1918 n article | cero, made cots? the price k i » B. Frazier, 3804 Tenth av, | 5t7O" madg cots And the price asked is so much , title of which was “Suf-|than the regular figure that the opportunity to profit ™ f ‘et gh i) ight c Sex.” } J | Bahr Pent & pate A sores on| indeed exceptional. Like the picture; is strongly braced a which the future historians will} has woven wire top. A rare value at $2.95. | herald the English suffragets as say- fora. Is Justice dealt by the man-made law? Let us Investigate. Woman at one time was satisfied with be- ing the mother of the family, while| the father was judge and ruler of his home, and under his leadership families were made into nations. As conditions gradually changed SOLID OAK DINING TABLE SPECIAL. 8.95, A well-built Extension Table of solid oak in the popu golden finish. Not room here for the picture, but its% neatly designed table and well finished. A real value at 907% |}CREX AND LOG CABIN RUGS AT SPECIAL PRIC man gave woman more rights and i privileges. Man constructed the ns . ee o™ i ‘ # uml church, the university and the in The Carpet Section is featuring for this week a m home and camp the next moment, after committing arson, burglary or attempted mur- der, should. not receive any more sympathy than a man. Rut some women think that the English suf ots are Justified in endangering » or destroying property. RNEST HEDERICK, Logger. Monroe, Wash, R, F. D. No. 1, Best modem outside rooms in Seattle, 25c to 50c, Stewart House, 86 West Stewart (near Pike Pyblic Market), tata a ee,

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