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mom ae iY Smigticn ear oe ere = ater nea SS thames = i NSS cl AOS y THE NOWHEAPKES, TDelesra News SORES NOT NEE BAG n Heevice of the United Drom Asssolation Ratered at the postofficg, Hentiie, Woah, a9 excand ‘Gina matter. Published by The #ter Punish Company every evening exeapt Nuniiy ONPARTISANSHIP! IT’S COMING The day of non-partisanship in public affairs is at hand. Even the wouldn't remove a cobweb because it might violate a precedent, feel its coming. | the last legislature. But it| moss-back reactionaries who Non-partisanship was throttled ir as sure as another election is coming | ich have opposed non-partisanship hereto- limit its scope. | will have its innin The forces wi Their game now is to fore appreciate it ing to accept the doctrine of non-partisan- “hey are now will ship so far as its affects municipal and county elections Thanks, for nothing. In our big cities we already have THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAY 238, 1913. EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR (-MOST ANYTHING =) How the War Started | when our desire for death shall be satisfied A painiess, humane death for the fly, say |. Chiereform, | ether, or some other merciful | anesthetic—H. F If we are not overestimating tho| promise, being an “ethion! pris-| oner” at the Ohio penttentiary ts} almost as soft a job as being suc-| cessful enough a crook to evade the law | +e 6 During this cool weather ts a nsh The people did not have to wait for the inate party lines in city elections non-part ip. legislature to el Remains now the county and state, and, if there is any branch of the g which needs non-partisanship to} make it worth while, it is the state legislature—and the gov ernor | Just why anyone should advocate non-partisanship 1 take such great pains to insist is beyond logical) »vernment city and county elections, anc upon blind part sanship in state elections, that a governor and a} Even the inane excuse yon to nint or elect United States comp legislate senators n longer exists. Let us have non-partisanship that is worth while, city, county and state. And that is exactly what the people are going to get, too. | AN APPROPRIATE HONOR asked Louts F. ap} PE that President Wilson bi assistant secretary of labor. ‘an editor who for many years has preferred freedom to speak the truth as he sees tt to a big Income with somebody means a good ¢ It Post to Post write ar else holding & He is a sin string on him le taxer who Would rather open the mind of an unio formed skeptt that doctrine than eat a meal He is a “conspirator” who for almost a generation has been “plot ting” with nocrats throughout the land how best to try to make life bri for the poor and humble Not half a dozen men now alive have done more to advance sane} radicalism than Louls Post thre h his writings in “The Public,” his eye and the fine influence | othe lectures, his coaching of men in the public of his unselfish character. He helped Altgeld and Henry D. Lioyd and Bryan and Mayor f Dunne of Chicago in the trying days of Dunne’s battle royal with the Yerkes traction octopus; he was a right bower to Henry George and ‘fom Johnson, and there hasn't be toward democracy in the past 30 years in which he wasnt r to do his utmost people's side t has b n honest, earnest, courageous and persevering. He this country needs to offset the natural the eas resourceful, enship | man | pugnacious, kind of ct of the averag studious, jest way for notable distinction the president selecting a mar In has shown a fine discrimination and has proved t he himself is a free spirtt The honor ts to the clean everywhere. the brave and the democratic journaliam | | According to Washington advices, Japan is not going to lick us./ “The acute stage” has been passed. Japan is “pleased with the state | United States has great interest in her welfaré mes mainly from our having a college man for president When Hiram Johnson gave notice that he would sign that so-cal antiJap law, Woodrow Wilson took his good old college pen tn hand and wrote Japan a “note.” Woodrow isn’t letting us eee that “ for publication. However, we have an pointed out that California is only part about 1,000 words into expressing the love and ac majority of our people for Japan and progress ingly high state of civilization whic enti The achievements of Japan are respected and the American people are really anxious to ghow that they regard Japan on a basis of equality with all other na | tions and powers. ote,” but has left it to Japan) nkling as to tts contents, Ho} of our nation, and then he put fon of the vast d the exceed we Altogether that note is a smearing on of free-flowing syrup that will be a marker in the history of diplomacy. It ts a regular “Sugar is-Sweet-and-so-are-you" valentine, w of pink roses and a bor r. Publish it? Why, it is one flock of happy little cupids as a of the things that proud and conceited Japan will paste on her outer walls. Every enraged hair on the Jap back will Me flat and greased like, for, like a a r president has smoothed down the fretful fur of the Nip onese polecat with words that cheer and com parisons that inebriate. Oh! we don’t Have to see that “note.” It ts the first diplomatic effort of a gentleman and scholar to whom the choicest combinations | of the English language are but as willing slaves. MY DOG’S GONE your dog?” That's what they ask ns that my heart ts like a log and } mope “What in a flippant way d’'ye mean you but it mear and worry the whole long day; {t means that my eyes are sort of dim and my life, somehow, has jumped a cog. He was on a mutt but I'm fond of b THAT what I mean | lost my dog.” He was always nging about the . ready to follow me where ;I went, with a Ic of | his face, and his brown eyes cocked in way intent, it was second nat to have him near, to have him close at my heels to jog, and without him the world seems Flone—and queer, THAT'S what I mean I lost my dog So if you ve seen my home pet I wish you would tell me/ twhere he may be, for I pl 4 murn 4 chafe and fret for my gilent comrade to come to me; a dog Just cuddles down in your heart, | and you wander about tn a dre fog when he’s lost or gone—and the! mean I lost my dog! | tear drops start, THAT loth to approve the trans For shame! And some deluded ct s were fer of the mayor's auto to the city Imagine the predicament of isseur John Petree of the} booze squadron had that 8 en denied him. It fs fearful! to contemt He we had to eut down the Ust of had to hire a machine at thetr| invited “gues else they woul ve own expense to make the “inspection” of the Cedar river dam. Worse yet, th tion might not have heen undertaken without the Stev And that would h: meant that t workmen em. would h missed the example ic appreciation of Cedar Jake. They in the notion that Cedar Falls, having been voted n, was not an invit place to stage a booze orgy christened and ployed in the ¢ shown the might h: Gry in the But, yrtunately, the Stevens-Duryea was daly mate its maiden as the councilmanic machine, just in time to dispel | such fantastic not | 80, David Starr Jordan has resigned his college presidency In oréer to work for w peace, Luck, Davey! As prexy, you were| ‘a dandy. As dove of peace, may your beak be full of olive tree | In Japan, the fellow who has $100,000 Income must pay one-third of it in taxes, The f heathen Col. Roosevelt, even his enemies will admit, has nothing on Seattle's official family which “in <toa” the Cedar river dam, June 6 Is the last day to reglater for the port election. If you have mot already re tered this year, do so at once, Judge Humphries has plenty of flags In his courtroom now. 80 he| miseion in jail for refnsing to buy him/ (ORs the county com n row s stice’ rce and the Ayres crowd | sthp from three to five | and vote 1 t commiss' Go to th crease the it go at that want to But don’t le ibly She Failed to Chew It Memortal Day Excursion Arrangements have been mafo by| Gus Eckerman lost one of his MOQwaukee” to run a special ex-|, one a curston from Seattle to Sr e8t Cows. She ate a nail —Sum ulls on Decoration day ( mit, In. News. Popular excursion fares h authorized, $1.50 tle te A London apectalist who looked qualmie or North Bend @ after ( throat declares that to Cedar Falls even his bones are musical, A rap Special ave on hi ickles, says the doctor 8:20 a. m., from Milwaukee #tatlong| produce distinet musical sound. Fourth and Jackson, Caguso should join a minstrel com facnt, | pay aud rattlo himself, good time to practice swatting “Say, what's mattor with tis rugs, for instance., or flies . . town? } Bach woman in it wears a frown, Hi Bar says yo can't tell Yapers The venom in their eye | “Well, etranger, if you want to|Prt by its habits frum any r “em ‘ ceptin’ there ain't #0 many | | We just pullod off a baby show,|* use them, | | | And only had one prise. a , | .* 9 No Carnegie Medal | Editor Most Anything: | 1 demand merey for the fly. In the name of civilization | protest against the totally um necessary and shocking cruelty of the crusadere who are en. deavoring to exterminate the fly All around me | hear the ery, “Swat the fly!” | hear in all directions the swish of the cold stee! as it whirls through the air and decends upon, or near, |The mad dashed along the ite victim, Men, ordinarily of street kindly manners and conduct, Folks fled in wild affright, | women—gentle, tenderhearted cept a young man who stood! women whose every instinct ett causes them to shudder at the | Ah! twas a thrilling slght suggestion of suffering—and |And when the dog had gone folks even children, Innocent little said, children, rush hither and yon t and thither, fierce hate written upon their faces, ewinging thelr bloody Instruments of death, crying and shouting ike saw preparing to torture their brave al you're right |" would have run, too,” he replie | “But my pe too tight ao were “Is ft ever this way with you?” staked victim, And all to kill [asks T. BM. “It always is with me if, are we becom |» W, ver I take my beavtes off. Ing bloodthirsty people? 1 do not wish to argue, Mr. Condemn me for a fool fickle weather never falls Th Editor, that the fly should be To turn uncomfy cool. allowed to live and to increase in numbers. it should be ex j“and when em on again id—but by humane The we faileth not sir, humane methods. Within a h an hour or so Why not chloroform the fly in. » turn uncomfy hot stead of beating It to death and causing It the agony that ac companies the crushing of the body? You have to give the English |,."NO” Mrs. Harvey answered.| suffragets credit for one thin But I've bee ut and out They are preventing a whole jof mone and I e into lot English men from loafing. ieee 0 miles} ne ssl inetd ol work Uke men |i t here Mra. Harvey's eyes’ Impure milk probably causes more dangerous narrowed and she asked uptly: fi} ness mg children than any other thing. And IN THE EDITOR’S MAIL PHO RATES Mat 0100 Vrivate Desting with nll dopermaeeta Wy mati, Oniiy te; ix nls 190; one DID YOU KNOW THERE ARE GIRLP HOBOES WALKING OUR STREET9#E Their Leader Tells Star, Y Writer the Woman Out of Work and Money Has Dread Fate to Fear By Idah McGlone Gibson Why He Smiled There are girl hoboes and wom en hoboes in Seattle ust yet so “ - i clety doos not call the outof-w Tm on my feet again,” he eatd,|°, p "And feeling quite immense,” |ET & hobo 7” It doos the joblens rade picking up?” “No, but my|()a% pays Mrs, Pe Weal wg. a he only 4 woman hobo ir Ran into a stone fence.” rte dir ho {8 weeretary of stone & the Interns Hobo union a > “What is a hobo? September Morn Sundae a & Bo ‘i promises to be popular with |. answered he re is any pers man, woman, ¢' blushing young women during the surmmer, who is out of work, out of m ey, and nearly out of hope. A sal Meetnd, hobo «irl 1s any girl jobleas, home Joe Poast would like to ask what |!0%" Mmoneyless, hopeless. Just as {¢ is @ sign of when o girl hands |(b® man, hobo wanders around you a fomon. He had a girl hand | SU's for w rk, #0 does the girl him a lemon at the church door ?°7) ‘ hin aif one night last wook.—Junctioa Cor.|,, oem, 's only , th f aifference ~wulding Democrat td] ¢ can ‘count tlos’ along Paulding Demooret. | the railroad, ride in freight cars Bont fatalities may be decreased | 454 Ket to the pincw where work is by having r rocktheboat pre » outof-work girl cann lo tha P ties remove ‘ ¢ vandal | Pat one fate is here—death og Bld 1 and left ashore 'aeath by starvation or suicide . $s e8 “Nol 1 forgot! There's an- | The man who Invented tho} pede verte pen Raga sell trolley car died the other ay ’ “ | But the man who invented aa thet Is Beart shame, and then a straps no doubt Is still in good) More & oe ale a hoe | e's always that monster of — eee |vice waiting for the out-of-work Wherein the Dancer Discloses a sige Fal inorg u bi 3 . oe down | “eying o her last penny and her hunger IDAH McGLONE aie 4k . ‘ , R eries the loudest for food iLONE SON (AT RIGHT) AND M Mins Fulton in wonderfully Mke| °C", ue na is ae HARVEY, THE WOMAN HOBO LEADER ne Bernt . with the latter's gest-)) 1 ioe. son kiteb tea potting? oven Boe - ae 2 the otueig’ hak juan |iines.’ ' But no girl out of work Ww and, more than those, her stage|as anything to fall back on—ex-) features. The dancer discloses a|°Pt her own self” | ® b) Knock and a talent that has not| , You don’t look nocept nsure Your babies found perfect expression in any-/ Sy [eee 0" jbo, & ge 1} thing hes done before—Oak-|~Y°Ur clothes are not ragged and/ land, Cal. Tribune. cinta.” "Health During the What would you do if you were in |i] is especially true in the hot summer months, whidy When the fly Is killed by one sudden blow It does not suffer a strange town and you 44 notlMl just now approachin @ Great deal, one must admit. | A SOLDIER ON FIGHTING | BAY® _& Job?” | PP &- But how many files are killed jANOTHER VIEWPOINT IN THE | 1 stamme ‘nute while t/ BUT SEATTLE MOTHERS NEED N by a single blow that makes JAPANESE wag dT Editor The & Wie you may | thought, and red I probably | As th t f tt ilk th oT death = instantaneous? Not © JAPANCSO | he a lover of prize f ra, 1 think! would apply at some newspaper of- | s they can be sure of getting milk that is absol many! Saar sua * us sees most Im-\ what ec » will be mot | fi pure and free from germs by simply calling up the wo, three, four and even more . “ among the * were all filled,” le Dairy and arranging times before death relieves wit t read pinning me down ; capt eng for a rogues ae their suffering, And think of f The Star cyes i ; ; the large number that are head atte always room tn | ey have just installed a De Lavel milk Cl reba, Drak h t fighting, It see to mo, is 7 ontdl hick j jown ary o to die | man to . hy tC raid. which is guaranteed % i ities from siow and painful deaths; and against should be placed before she) Lint, civittzed, or nee Rage g om 1 don’t ke .” she answered. |} milk . a 7 : of the many more that are only readers. | neon bat | tally ctvilized people should be|°T have aps lied numberless times Why dis et ; * wounded, a leg or wing broken, | Heretofore there has been bat srriving to attain. Did you ever|for kitchen work when I nesded a} y run the risk of getting dangerously impare perhaps, or ome Internal. in- » side of the J aneso quest ® stop to think of the good that Is fob. ee would be wurpriaed o for your children when it costs you no more to get jury inflicted, that must live to derived from a prize fight? It is|70U know the countless number H from the Seattle Dairy that is guaranteed to pure’ ioe tortured by the excruciat Boog inher Mage Impoastble to think of the good, for| Women today who were starving |j All y' d to do i a! 2 at ng pains of these wounds only one ride of there is none. It looks to me like |t? death In this land of abundance.” | ij All you need to do is to call us up and we But, worst of all, think of ed & prejudice a step toward barbarism. Of g we |] @ wagon call at once and arrange to supply, you regu the Influence of this crusade aide only, at that {me | corse. th n ' Wt . ‘ : i 1 +h, course, there is money In it, but if] ¢¢ 4 bb ” |}]] as your needs require. upon the morals of the people. The time is coming whon the 4), hy ‘ + m e HHI ’ s especially the children. Cru. |nations w bo brought und vant is t er ¢ miroras e fact a pout lila | e \ pa. m, then we had just as we a) city, we know, begets crueity, tration | Pay Age Bre Ah et ] e : pest ph fhe ba geaetnlptid ebeyger dh ioae. © oe ereeener seem a eee Stunt Is Fatal] el ppter digi alagersl i of wy Soar ‘euacers turn him out into the world to see HALLE, Germany, May 28.— | @a e al 0 _man say , r p how many robberies he could com-| @ student named Krusskopft , demon-| a ent is dead here today the re- x s 4 demon-| "A thing that no good comes from| quit of attempting to imitate 1415 Eighth Av.—Phone Elliott 912 — er of a dangerous thing, and !s sure Wiillam Tell’s shot at an apple know! to create evil. I am surprised at| on hie son's head. Krusskopft BRANCH OFFICES: to obta’ to the people of an advanced age Iike| Placed 4 Bear mag © pees roy 2200 Ladd Place 1926 North 45¢h the e in f telling a fellow st t to fire. hone h 2359 hey ar : wo live in standing for @uch &| The first shot struck him in the P North: 668 Phone N They * that en this nation. © war with Russia ther as & n me at the all of their nd word tions are belng rand wider. The ques | answered is, what {s the f s nation to adopt} ly solve the Japanese 0. D, BALDWIN, PREDICTS CITIZENSHIP FOR THE JAPANESE. Editor Tho Star: Nottcing sev. eral arti on the anese ques tion in your valuable paper, and all] these articles appearing to be 1 de » was a good feb saved a few dol » wages the od. AB 1 them | t laws } white men o were ant Sale of Suits [iret ts see rom scale of wages, the her was $24.50, $28.50, $30.00 and $34.50 sired a ground themselve This ery about a few Japanese | on | * : this Coast makes me tired. On the] Tailored Suits Atlantic coast they are dumping} ‘ shiploads of dirty, {gnorant hordes 216; ] $19 50 from the south of Europe, and still Specia ¥ +t you don't hear a yelp from any. P The Japanese are physically, Latest styles in brown, |mentally and morally the superior tan, black and white of many other nationalities. The uy all this ub) rill and fancy mixtures, be cit hip for th 7A My “4 — navy, copen and gray. Cc. H. RIDDLE. Boys’ Suits 2% to 18. up. Ages Prices $3.50 Free—A “Reaeh” Base- ball of Bat, Bal Outfit, consisting 1 and Glove, given away with every 3oys’ Suit. J. Redelsheimer & Co, First Avecorner Columbia, ze fightin “A SOLDIE Ging center of the forehead, killing him instantly. 2 ROY.” Don’t button-your coat ! Put change in your-outside pocket for WRIGLEYS ity (i t i i * }