The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 26, 1913, Page 4

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®¢ or THR sOmIrYS NORTHWRer News MEMPER LBAGUR OF NEWSTArRES 7 Service of the United Press Assocation. pestoffion, Senta, Wash. ne secund Published by The Star Publishing Company every evening excapt Sunday Batered at the tase mation IT CAN'T BE HIDDEN THE STAR—MONDAY, MAY 241913. PHONES “ti? t's comme RATES Me i Ao rata e Best Short VERY LEARNED MAN, WHO ; MAY BE NEXT WEATHER B Her name is Mary. She is 15 years old. She is your STORIES P M ’ daughter, or your sister; at any rate, some other good fel j D ROPHET; NAME’S CHARLE low's daughter, or sister. At 15 years of age, girls want of the ay : > THIS BoY Neeos A New | .many things, and they need many things. PAIR oF S | Charles IMam Dabney, deapite | Mary wants to look decent as to clothes. She wants tc AIR OF SHOES AND HE R 3 ’ “A nice young couple the fnet that he wearn atx « : s GREAT ScoTT!- 4 thi ne arned degrees behind bi My dance, now and then, She wants happy. companions, She WORN THIS PAIR ONLY 1 ff x lerowd were married this #t and learned degrees behin 4 hg = : 7 Laeey \ | relates ce young fello n the} nar with hand {llumined diploma ¥ wants sodies,” and she wants to take in a place of amuse THREE Weeks, SAY YOUNG MAN, bo ped Lien EE. rea com ther aovifor east iia Wethen i te ‘ meaat every in a while. She wants flowers. She wants 1 JUST SCUFF AROUND AND & © Geen thee honeymenn they |enolcest cholestic Latin, ts to hear goo In short, she wants girlhood SPE HOW FAST You cAN went to housekeeping In a ce known thre out his wide acquain far needs comfortabl y a decent rooming place, apartment house in the Bast F tan an ( Mary need mf Rone ele thes, a - ent roc a WEAR OUT SHOES 2 e They had one servant—a little ¢ His learr & unquestioned good food, health, books some recreation ‘ < » mother used to do the wash. and bis democracy of the straightest r that Mary wants are really luxuries, All ing for ber folks, and who, there-| kind Witenn i) talabing | things th needs are insistent necessaries. fore, k all about them and eame | eerion fr ne » chief of the ‘Ts it enough that Mary only be able to supply herself with cheap and willing. Well 1 went t we ather Hureau % . yet A. A the positive necessaries? No. This would mean stagnation. call on them the other e ee ll jareback-and-Up | ‘i It would resolve Mary into a machine, It would finally re- I Young Dabney came into the) sult in reversion to barbarism, or farther back. If the Mary Har ney, Va., in| of thousands of years past been content with filling her stom- cot loge i nt ach with whatever would appease hunger and covering her me I - « dtinees 10 back with whatever would keep out frost, we would all to Are Mr. and Mrs {buted their quota of day be people of a stone age. Progress lies in the desire and 4home? I asked equipment the opportunity to be and to get something a little bit better Yes, Mr. brown ne k to. the United s than that which “will do well enough.” are. hey enunees | the Ttcegeee dhe ie | But our particular Mary works at $5 per week. Maybe eo airi, blushing ti tivitle ntil 1904,| it is because she is independent 1 ambitious. More likel) i ried Cleveland Plain Deale he bec president of the it is because she has to, in order to get even a few of the b/ ' reity of Cincinnat! | vital necessaries. E | ! ; 0 @ morning Hil the r ches see Dr. De 7 gives one ¢ e| What are the prospects of this Mary, who may be your in ewe labors, when suddenly , direct looking and talking} daughter, or ye sister, who surely is, resentatively, the {hi} face to face with the ow the man who seems ing only} mother of unborn generations that must decide what man’s f// yr, who naturally, he thought,|@ very small portion ot the tre} DR. CHARLES W. DABNBY, > la bed, 6 Anew mendous energy stored up in his} fate shall be? roe 4 : : | oh ‘ we jone was the bi xen of the quick-moving body. He knows the|everyday man. He was in the Our Mary cannot have the luxuries, and this means that} morning as the redoubtable squire mce family by their first|nosis of the Wilson cabtagin she is at a standstill, at best yed U r who names and mort of his life has|nostications, the Department But it is also demonstrated that she cannot have many stammn g. been trying to put all the mem-| Agriculture having been ment of the necessaries. This is not standing still It is going Ge in bers to wo for the common,'at his most prominent symptemy backward. Mary has merely a choice of one of three things wiOh,” replied the lord of the land . CHARITY—"“the living off others,” which means retro- Bg Bs came modi isn = . 3 jon and degradation; eeloun test of the witch DEATH—exhaustion from overwork before she really he carried ‘ a 4 has begun to yl N But why, may I 4 ou out #o PROSTITUTION. early? f Keep in mind that Mary is your daughter, or sister, or Living close to nature makes for] ny. may 26—pretty tuff for; then he goes’ out in the om t : 1 ckness here was arcely edk i hot your brother man’s daughter, or sister, and ask yourself es os ps" es peli! Setoee Sill fr a en a : jwith a hammer and cracks H which of the three choices you would pick for her. There is epited I orate _ r ie seg The Die re ull noon, after dinner be dos ‘ ) ¢ m rning, ¢ o hh 7 some mor q } “no escape from a choice. Beggar death or shame! ; Weill, now, squire, that’s curious.| brass bed in his pa’s house in 56| no white Mghts for freddy i This is the tremendous, the horrible object lesson given Here you come out early to get an) street the evening, just one little ) the world by Lieut. Gov. O’Hara of Illinois, in his investi- appetite for breakfast and I come) he doesn't hear the house maid : | gation of Chicago industrial conditions. out to get a breakfast for my 4P-|walloping # chinese gong dow: { Beegary, death « - alternatives forced upon me he an ght And th rying to hide such an ob A Collinwood school teacher me & Pi) ject lesson, a lesson that ca eaven and eats its wa) ee - — — _—— — af os us | - give of his silk h@ into the heart every h r and brother, a f a TT AI Y THON pots bath gre - a ™ | she d 1 th ho # 7 and then dress h 4 rotel sai r lesson that we have almost 1 ¢ after n y two ou Ja. Fury th. iy : LAR ON a | perte first his new spring soot and ask james to a . ye ae : sand years of Christ's teac they're tryi to hide this ie cree as week ¢ sad ave his car sent around to the | mercy no matter . ji f fiendis “0 1 ial jhas been uned since last June,”|60 DOES OUR WIFE, BUT NOT [of th worst the door + monstrous picture of fiend 4a e and a * +A riteh 3 folks } , ror i] nd he gives these IN THE SAME WAY rlass 7 ented himself to he no, he does not do none of thet a he depravity behind a 1 about O'Hara. Progress B0Sn Wise swathes World to Growing Better.” me hat 45 yo Want, Buy?” ohel thing nO eee ee pe h 10 days om justice, the hig 1 h fat oe he we Har | SAYS n anked kind oe eddy hears a large, coarse my, my, that feller krotel girls are to be hel ill, while we discover if Hara) | De mor youse promi oF | ame f ang three times never do to try a standerd off looked upon a woman sin “Miss Pandora Wows : : wood conduck MAKE.” tye [on the ll outside his cell, | sugar trust case, would he But it must not be : The question is not as to whethe! Zwteback bra tore gehac Md esieia® ih Bodh ator a ha vous Gina Hh mane an is to get up Es : O’Hara registered at a Chicago hotel with a woman, or w Y a Star.” et's see—why, your mark! { dont know what 7 forty women. uses so Shall there be something else than beggary, or |much per ~ death, or shame for the American working girl? Such |fume that Soy Bean, is the question. It is nation-wide. It cannot be put} our village cutrup, re- down by anything that those who take millions in fers to her mirthfully profits do to O’Hara, or any other man. It is a fierce! Colognes! Dame” pain in the national heart that will surely be relieved [OS & by the treatment of those who love men, regardless of the fate of individuals. How Was the Congregation? The choir at the Presbyterian : church Sunday was full 1 the +H music was excellent.—Blairstown ie la Banner. i —_ : Perhaps there is some public interest which guides the APCS a ys naloat five me o insteac aI urgiar Assurance. 3 movement for a port commission of five members, instead of] won ob ia ee Os i three. hospital have {t announced {n the i There is certainly a lot of personal animus behind it The| society colun i c interest b d it has bee at obscure thus far i public interest behind it has been ra her obscur us fi page te apr ; Just why five members on the port c ission should be| remarks an ex considered an imperative necessity is not at all app: providing he's not what standard is it gauged that three are not eno ate needed? V not seven? Or nine? If the t is wrong, which is the basis employed in the selec council: SWAT! SWAT! SWATI YOU KNOW WHAT ty cor ot use the anic basis of nine} t for Seattle? at five? The human wretch who put the : Truth is, make little difference whether there|!inks in hiccough ts probably the are three or bers on the port commission. It is|"*™e *#* Put — ; not a vital or t question, by any means. The only| That re reason that it g election man who, hia wife June 17 is be cer zens failed to/to put roared What do you th I am A me consummate the Ayers terminal fake with the present be chanical engineer and are deeply, sore! its personnel It was their w ective against Commi “Here,” writes Frank Bingaman sioners Chittenden, Bridges and Remsberg that met response ne original titles for retaliation, the proposal to in the port membership.| The increase was to have been by mere appointment, as at first pro d the Chamber of Commerce bill in the last legislature, but Senator Landon succeeded in 4] the 1 m referred to the people Whether there are to be five members, or three mem bers, is of little consequence—except to satisfy the picayunish | souls who are clar x for vengeance against the present| delusion ler the port commission an g them that sweet feel- that an increased membership will bri 5 6ing of revenge. who seem to be w Just because the Chamber of Commerce couldn't travel over Bridges, the soreheads say these are “days of mercurial, demagogical poilt The people should worry. Put 1 tables; Maybe altruistic, and not “mercurtal, demagogical policite” prompts the double-taced crooks to hal! La Fotlette, Borah and other progressive republicans as the leaders of the defunct G. O. P., whom they had so bitterly denounced but a short time ago. Maybe, sugar, | on Point Come on, Ernest; don’t get faint-hearted, You're on the right track about this non-partisan t don't stop short till you get state as well as county non-part n elections. fe and sane” Fourth so far this Haven’t heard anything about a 4 year. Can it be that the Roosevelt trial for libel 1s expected to last that long? | Have you registered this year? If you haven't, do #0 now, and vote| in the port election, June 17. | J ov af | Now the effictency committee of the council wi!l make a bluff at reviewing the testimony in the health department investigation, despite | fhe fact that half of its membership failed to hear at least half of the testimony | New York World now calise Roosevelt “most eminent citizen of New York Teddy being ims Go Sulzer in his fight for direct primaries. help President Wilson’s Latest Story WASHINGTON, Ma A caller*at the executive offices the other day asked President Wilson what he thought of the question, then p@mding, whether the senate finance committee should hold hearings on the tariff bill “I think,” replied the president, “what Artemus Ward thought of the ke hole.” | “What was that?” asked the Inquisitor. | “Artemus Ward said,” President see a snake hole I say to myself: round It.’” Wilson answered, “'When I “That's a snake hole,” and I go | Made Bread nm butter, 1 table spoon Silver-Leaf Lard, 1 tablespoon teaspoon salt in large bowl. iling water and 1 pint scalded milk, when lukewarm add 1 dissolved yeast cake and | quart of flour, Add 2 quarts of flour, mix and turn on floured board. Knead ontil smooth and elastic and until bubbles appear under the surface, Cover and set in a warm place to raiee. shape into loaves, place in greased pans, cover and let raise to double bulk, Bake in bot oven. A good recipe, closely followed and good materials will give you good, sweet, wholesome, fine grained, tender bread. | Swift’s Silver-Leaf Lard | shirt a guy wears Gimme de quarter."—/| what freddy Takes Sheriff's De aler ie his nice little blackwells — Auto; Sixty Da . accompanied by| there is a cute tin washbasin he | shared the same/can wash his face and bands in, MACON, Ga, May See | belief, was walking {n a country|then he toddles to his breakfast Quincey Thornton, a negra, graveyard one night, when one of} dear me, how freddy does miss| ployed by Sheriff Hicks the men declared he saw a “shnd-| his cantalope and his rolls and his| chauffeur, stole the henity Electt f Senators. jale, but siips out of, and gets A Distinction. “The man who runs that store has got tho right idea, all right"| How so?” | “Ho advertinos agpipes and musical instruments.’ ” Man wants but little here be. owy form.” medium biled eggs and his coffy| sutomobile from a garage sal 5 low—when be has the means of | “Have you any {dea whose ghost| with thick creem | took a joy ride. The maciine iy getting nearly everything. ft wan?” asked the other. | instead he gets hash, bread and| was damaged. The en ae ~ “No, I can't tell you,” he replied, | bottleg sentenced to serve 60 And Only 997 “put over yonder there lies a man| pbottleg fs what the biackwells| When his term is ended Mey Fete eae | who had thr On th one island bunch calls their coffy,| will be prosecuted by the shay aie Mit init Avie ot the first 4 My Wife, on|probly they got reasons | ttf on a state charge. Dal of 188 the second ife,' and ca) ——————— flood of 11 ted ghost does walk hereat = up his residence on the hill topa—| |Me Toom PLENTY oF TIME | should says it Is the first wife's.”— | je niaghalee —_—_______—_| Harver’s Magasioe ‘Summer Furniture at Keenly-o a linat has become of the old What Did Grace Say? | “I want to be sure not to miss tne| a i. : ja ‘ashioned man who used to have Miss Grace Jones has the mumps./early train!” a bit anxiously said/ his wife sew a button on the back { ly crowd of young |the drummer, according to the Kan-| ut rices is ee of his collar-band? Sunday afternoon at|sas City Star. | s . A i } They gathered to ex-| “No danger o' that, podner!” re This week has been set aside as Summer Week, and | F His Master’s Voice end th Fon ge 08 Seen enon nM" ed the landlord of all the lines of bright, new Summer Furniture have beea | ; eee eee AN coat | marked at prices that mean decided savings to those who After all,” says a Chicago pro "eo'e Fou can at purchase now. Below are pictured three of the intet fessor, “it is the father that ts the| the depot ptly at 0 esting values available. dominating fored tn civilization.” | and set arou the cold for two Yes, but not in Great Britain hours and twenty minutes, or such 3 z ter, waitin’ for the train to ‘ 7.88 ¢ DOe $11.50 WILLOW, BETWEEN the piles f at Potlatch, Wash., J cGrath, second mate of the SLIPPING A record of his matster's volos Potlatch, sustained a One afternoon they He is at the Provi They put {t in @ phonograph dence hospital CHAIR D $ And then the same they played. dog, he didn't recognize once look up. ad no whisky on It, #o couldn't blame the pup, annual RS’ from Chico to , Was partict $6.75 $i2 Letter of Thanks Editor The Star: Please accept the ap jon and thanks of the| Rocker to match, Seattle jucational Corps for the] press support given the May Fes. }tival of Music. de from the musical prepara, | |tion, th fal side of the fes-| ival entails responsibility, | jand, as chairm the committee, I deaire to thank you most sincere. ly for the generous assistance ren dered us in keeping the subject be fore the public and in calling at- |tention to the successful outcome Jot the first concert Yours sincerely, A Oh, Yes; But— to hear the watch 2 SS BARREN RO REA A OREN Oe Ps Steesnvpcoasa Bore eas REED. Pour ‘Tia sweet dog bark As one goes home all lighted up, But still, for safety, it is best To be acquainted with the pup. Stir until thoroughly mixed, Cut down, knead, WILLOW CHAIR $4.10 $8.00 Rocker to match, is the best shortening you can use in your bread. Itis Government inspected, guaranteed pure, put “< in tight cov- ered, new tin pails to keep it sweet and clean, until the last spoonful 1s used. Swift's Silver-Leaf Lard is always good and will give you uniform, good re- sults in baking. Use Swift's Silver-Leaf Lard for tasty pastry. Swift & Company USA Ask Your 5th and Pike Dealer for n the Hear€ 0 Silver-Leaf lie ae aye ss! - ol He was STRUCK WITH ene S 2 a

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