The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 13, 1913, Page 4

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OF THE SCRIPPS NORTHWEeT LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS Telegraph News Bervice of the United Press Association. Ratered at the postotfice, Seattle, Wah, a0 secand ines matter, Published by The Star Publishing Company every evening except Sunday KE. Cl counties Lister's app of C Thurst Mason ave been expected from a governor classed as 4 Gov. © eourt judge of me odt was not to @ progressive democrat nent As superior fensible AY por and in completely t Claypool is notoriously a rank stan ter, mm Out of harmony with the progressive ide of the people > @ this state © ¢ More than that, Glaypool is politically an “undesirable @itizen.” He was one of the men who actively engineered the political robbery at Aberdeen one year ago, and he stood pon the rostrum of the Grand theatre, where the republi ean standpat vention was held under lice guard, and ates in behalf of Taft | @xulted in the theft of deleg Claypool has a glib tongue, and that undoubtedly gives a high standing among lawyers. But he used his tongue twist the pronounced will of the voters of his party and to fob them of their voice. This is no longer a mooted question. The November election has plainly indicated the size of the perpetrated by Claypool, Tom Fisk, who by the also had the effrontery to project himself as a candidate the same judgeship, Beverly Coiner, Tom Dovell, et al.| Claypool is a relic of bygone days. But Lister, the| ple have been hoping, is a product of new day in| litics. Lister's policy of economy and the saving of a few] | into insignificance if the state jousands of dollars dwi h to be saddled with nary judges of the Claypool real And Claypool is the first judicial appointment made by Lister. NEED OF A FASHION IN POLITENESS fashions that we copy from abroad aren't any too Preditadle in character or source. The suggestive dances so much tn ogue in certain fashionable circles xample, come from the for underworld, as do, many of the absurdities in women’s dress, tend unduly to display the human form We are so eager to follow a fashion that we rarely take the trouble inquire if it is either sensible or respectable. But there's a fashion forming in Berlin which we wish might gain yptance in this country * A number of young men @apleased by the growing lack of chivalry t ment of women, have formed a league pledged to prac politeness {n public places. 4 Members of the league obligate themselves, for instance, to sur gender their seats in street * to women and the aged; to offer as reet crossings and tn other places of peril and to women at st Tevive, so far as possible, all the little niceties of deportment which Into eclipse about the time that women began to compete largely men as Wage-earners +. The objection to chivalry ts that it Is only skin deep; that along " gith extreme politeness may go the most substantial Injustice. + That, of course, is true. But {sn’t {t better to have the injustice With politeness than to have neither justice nor courtesy? + Courtesy costs so very little, and it 1S so nice! % The toast: “Women, once our superiors, now our equals,” war 4 ‘as a witticism, but isn't there danger of {ts becoming a tend-| ff we do nothing to check the rapid disappearance of old-time ‘and courtesy among the young, and especially among young | toward their sisters, thetr mothers, and other fellows’ sisters and ws Sas Bor Scout movement has elements of usefulness in this direc but a Courtesy league for elders, as in Berlin, might also serve 4 purpose in our careless age. Saturday Three ene. civic bodies, the Municipal league, Commercial and Pul Ss Many of the f of good standing {n the German capital. © be seen in men’s treat tice and encour- a good day to buy Seattie-made goods. ic Ownership league, are against increasing the port ‘The Chamber of Commerce alone is for it. Guess it's not Bar to soparate the sheep from the goats on this question. “| “What's in a bath?” Bill re might well have asked. It the services of Judge Smith's private chambers for more than 4 e hour to tell about Dr. Waughop’s bath. x © - From the length of time It took to tell about It—behind closed : Gore—Dr. Waughop Is the splashing boy when he gets into a tub. : ~ Firat judicial appointment by Gov. Lister goes to ‘That's not backing up President Wilson's admit rank reaction- stration much, — ee ® Pretty husky bunch of men, those veterans who fought at Gettye- Sars. Over 40,000 of them allve to celebrate {ts 60th anniversary. >t A et bd elected ma: of Los An s, H. H, Rose says there's ot pocsians. Ling, ting. ling a ifn. and the mocking bird is sing- in the tree. ———— * Police Superintendent Hyland of Indianapolis Is blinking from a between the eyes, and there's small hope of his recovery. The Yt women of the city have arisen as one man and demanded that stop the wearing of split skirts without undergarments, and hope he'll “take it seriously,” they said. Take it sertously? The Indianapolis police force ts doing that, for they're asking how thunder they're going to tell whether or not those undergarments te ee = Death has taken Homer Morrison from thie vale of tears and trou- tie. Homer was husband to two Chicago women and engaged to a Death knows his business. | a a} lenheim castle, which Consuelo Vanderbilt’s millions m: right ble, is closed. Some suffragettes have been seen snooping ee in the bushes on the front lawn _ §HIELDS WRITES = LONG STATEMENT - a statement, covering ten type m sheets, Ben F. Shields, de as vice president of the Com- Club, insists that action ts nd makes the charge that Secretary Lewis and others “running a private gambling ~ jroom,” and that some who partici- pated were members of the board of directors. Shields says the charge of dis- crepancies in the Lewis accounts had been sustained after an expert was put to examine the books. His insistence that criminal prosecu- tion be started, he alleges, led to his removal from office. THE GREAT READY-TO-WEAR Clearance Sale FOR WHICH WOMEN HAVE BEEN WAITING Continues Tomorrow $15.00 ($5.00 For Suits worth For Dresses $25 and $27.50 worth $8.00 $18.50 |$17.50 For Suits worth For Coats Bee | pss end be $24.50 |$10.00 | For Suits worth For Coats | $37.50 and worth | $42.50 $20 and $22.50 ENTIRE SPRING STOCK AT A TREMENDOUS REDUCTION THE GREATER SEATTLE CLOAK AND SUIT CO. Corner Third and Madison WESTON PASSING THROUGH A TOWN ON HI 1,600-MILE HIK TO MINNEAPOLIS BUNK Once Was Sufficient BY HERR JACOB SCHLOSCHATEIMER | Caught! a, Affliction sore long time he bore. His doctor waa in vain. Then they called in three spe nor other misery, for health means ctalists happiness. ‘ ‘| Who will not call again, —Don' eS “| walk to keep well,” continued ee: ha ee aipone be akeered: TV) tne whitehaired soptuagenarian, | M. E. 2 switching his “game leg” with hin “TH bite,” wri D., who, not knowtng what kind of electricity Jack Rabbit—Oh, that's all righ but I'm not sure you don’t eat b H. FP. K. used tn the “death chair’|tween meals. for files, declared the invention {m- ae re possible. “What kind of electricity | has H. F. K. in mind? Static?” Cer. tainly not. X-atatic . To the BEACH MOCLIPS PACIFIC WESTPORT COHASSETT Excursion Tickets Daily With Season Limit Very Low Week=End Fares Saturday and Sunday June 14 and 15 . A gentleman from Chile, one| Ezequiel Ossio, has stepped off the! boat at New York, bragging that he| 1 nitrate kin) ind worth more) than John D. Rockefeller, Our own) guess {s that John D. never heard of the gentleman. Otherwise be| would not be the nitrate king. . A Chicago minister declines to accept a wedding fee. We don't know why—whether ho's ashamed | to, or thinks It isn't worth a few. eee Not Always “The way Is not always hard,” Yeas said As he fell from a second story Plump into a flower bed. of the transgressor o 2 e But Can He Hang Wall Paper? 8. C. Wiberg, the Swedish sailor, has been engaged by the town of! Wakefield as a swimming Instructor because he is handy 4% a carpenter and painter —Boston, Mass., Post oes Summer Three Trains Daily Each Way Buffet Cars Coaches Safe From Legal Action Parlor and wish someone would along,” Bighed Weary, on the blink, “With price enough and heart enough To prove it—that I drink, He'd have no fear of libel #1 I am inclined to think." JOSH SE SAYS: “When a farmer has an auction or vendue he has to set out a swell lunch or his neighbors won't buy his goods at one-tenth their value.” 1 come EXCURSION TICKETS EAST On Sale Daily Four Transcontinental ‘Trains ASK YOUR DEALER FOR dy onule HEEL PROOF FLOOR PAINT MADE BY SEATTLE PAINT CO. THIRD AVE.SO. & JACKSON ST. SEATTLE. Let Us Give You Details They Are Interesting J, 0, McMULLEN City Pass. Agent H. N, KENNEDY, Gen. Agt. First Ave. and Yesler Way Seattle, W. Tel., Elliott 5750 POW WOW At Spokane And Each Week Through jf Low Fare Tickets June 16 anf 18 | MARY BOYLE O’REILLY WALKS FULL DAY WITH WESTON ON HIS 1,500-MILE HIKE FACTS ABOUT WESTON’S LONG WALK | Wiry, cular hind he light, # pace, and a half miles ar bent, body forward, exerting a min imum of energy, the “Old Ped,” who has covered 100 mi in | 40 years, doen not lift his feet high | but progresses with an odd shuf fling step taught in the French army | “Where did I get my remarkable ndurance?” repeated the grizzled athlete. “Why, where most men get their best qualities—from my mother, who had great a heart In her bosom any woman who ever lived. It Is for her sake that | never walk on Sunday. | promised her that | would not. “A crub wor started me walking, though! o had me dis charged from my job as office boy and walked me out #0 fast that tt got to be a habit. “In New York n and other bi« cities, the average man walks a mile a day, and he looke it! If I could induce worrted and brain- weary men to walk more I should | feel that I had averted more) trouble than any man tn the world For instance, there would be no suicide if people walked enough— | Jeane to stimulate circulation When you have led a careful | life, age does not count. When | started to walk the hundred miles from Philadelphia to Manhattan | Ithe doctors said: ‘Don't think of} it. Don't try You are out of it.’ | | ‘Out of what? I asked. | o- Best Short STORIES of the Day Watchful Mother—It looked very much as though young Mr. Huggins | was stealing a kiss when I saw your neads #0 clo&e together. Confiding Daughter—I wouldn't put {t that way. He may have thoughtlesaly embezzled a few, but | I'm sure he'll repent and have them with him the next time he calls Chicago News. . ee “You admit, then,” inquired th magistrate, severely, “that you stole | the s?” “1 suppose I must,” said the pris lone | “Very well,” returned the magis-| trate, with decision. “There has been a lot of big stealing going on laround here lately, and I am going to make an example of you, or none of us will be safe.”—Tit-Bits, ee Governor Blease of South Caro Hina, apropos of certain criticisms of his recent pardoning of 76 convicts, | said in Charleston | “These people make me feel like old Aunt Chloe “Aunt Chloe's husband was. {ll, and a friend sald: “Has he been Chloe? “‘About free weeks, ma'am.’ ‘Hut is his {ines critical? ritical?” sald Aunt Chloe. ‘Well, I guess {t Is critical! And 1/ jest wish you could see him when 1| bring his gruel or his broth or his} milk toast. Why, he ain't satisfied with nothin’’"—Washington Her ald, iM long, Aunt | A famous humorist says that a |new-rich family {n Cleveland, who were beginning to put on a lot of airs, hired a girl just arrived from the South to act as thelr serving maid. Her new mistress insisted that all meals should be served in courses. Even when there wasn't very much to eat, it was brought to the table in courses, At the end of a week the girl threw up her job. Being pressed for a reason for quitting so sudden- ly, she said: | “Tl tell you, lady. In dis yere house dere’s too much shiftin’ of de | dishes fur de fewness of de vittles,” }Baturcay Evening Post. | Were pial o | SLAYER MUST DIE | ASTORIA, Or., June 12.—Jack F Adams ts today under sentence to be hanged July 18 for killing Barney Chamberlain February 7. Adams found Chamberlain tn his home, and shot bim to death, © PHONES "footing! with il aapertments, By mall, dutty, one month in advance, six mon,, $1.00; one year, 82.26. carrie, in elt, 260 ® month ! | A SUBJECT DEAR TO HIS HEART More people die from under. little watchfulness In the sim- Ho is walking from New York to Minneapolis, a distance of 1,446 miles He expects to negotiate It in 60 days. Hoe ts 75 years old and has covered 100,000 miles tn long-dis tance walks in his lifetime His greatest walk wae in 1906, when he hiked clear across the American continent Upon completion of his present walk, Weston will lay the cor nerstone of the new clubhouse of the Minne is Athletic club | 1D. By Mary Boyle O'Reilly | “They tell me | 1 75 years old, but | m't feel it!” Edward Payson Weston, the father of long-distance walking, laughed as we were parting on the outskirts of New York, to where I had accompanied bir “I began this hike,” he added without training, but PRIDE, PRINCIPLE AND PLUCK will carry me through And so, until Friday at (¢ Friday at Callicoon proved r! | | The dust sun-baked road | Weston, the Walkist He was rest |the hotel his precious feet careful | | chair. | “Time's up!" called some one from within Another nt he and I were off for a full day’s tramp together—the center of a friendly, mildly excited crowd! — | Callicoon had turned out en of everything,’ they said. | manse Every man and woman You are too old If you try to de not nailed tc or a cookstove, that walk, your circulation will “What's that book about, Molly? was there stop ‘ ; is ‘ Chipper ax a boy of 20, Weston Oh, will sald I. ‘Well, we'll Sherlock Holmes strode forward with the springy pec ASA’ ie Lk Week Tk wan o “Any bungalow plans among ‘em? easily negotiates from mere matter of making up my oe seu peel ] e & day, according to mind and sticking t. My cirew “A brief stroil, say two or | wonderful heart, @ wonderful di- | the roadwa Jat did not et three miles, EVERY DAY, a gestion and wonderful muscle: Well, I keep in good humor, sleep exercise than from over-exer- ple things of life and some nat- /five hours a night and eat like @ clee. We are a nonwalking na- ural physical ability—that is |Christian—ONE SOLID MEAL A tion, more’s the pity. But It | all the preparation necessary DAY costs less fatigue and less | for long-distance walking. Never taste Mquor nor never harmful to walk 100 miles in 24 | ‘Training is artificial and so cigar. As a tonic, walking hours than to run 100 yards in | harmful. eats whisky. And the use of to 10 seconds. Remember MAY MANTON PATTERNS. this Store is open every Saturday evening until 9 o'clock for your ponvenience. “The Economy Store’ — Second Ave. Bet. “The doctors tell me I have a! PHONE MAIN 6035, it, bacco is a drug Seattle's fastest growing Store, where Popular Prices always aa Spring and Seneca Women’s Beautiful Dresses at Low Prices Saturday we feature a choice collection of Marquisette, linen, ratine, rep, crepe and linenette Dresses which are specially adapted to street wear. white, lavender, pink, tan, brown, black and white stripes. embroideries, pipings in colors and pretty crochet and including Balkan and coat dress styles. Sizes for range from $3.98 to $14.95. A Tidal Wave of Laces Saturday Beautiful Summery Laces at wonder- fully reduced prices. Fine Silk and Cotton Shadow Bands, fine Silk Maline Laces and Bands, and handsome black Silk Malines and Chan- tilly Laces, worth up to $1.50. Satur day— Big Saturday Bargain in Little Girls’ Coats Spring and Summer Coats 4, 6 and 6-year-old girs, con- of the following materials mixtures, pongees, serges, checks, diagonals, flannels and linens, Collars of velvets, pop- ins and reps, otherwise finished in braids and fancy buttons. They sold at $9.98, $3.49, $2.98, $2.75 and $2.49. Just odd coats and we want to clean them up QUICK, hence $1 98 . this he window.) Ladies’ Silk and Kid Gloves Malin Floor Beautiful for sisting Mannish shepherd BATHING SUITS FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN AT SPLASHING (See them in t Ladies’ 16-button, pure Silk Gloves with double finger tips. Colors tan, brown, gray, pongee, pink, blue, navy black and white. Prices, $1.50. $1.00 and............. 5e Ladies’ regular length double tipped Silk Gloves, a big value number, in all the leading colors y Aid: AU MON A Pele ssa cavescnsdevecdscaass 50c LADIES’ GLACE KID GLOVES $1.00 We belleve you will agree with us that these are the best values you have seen in gloves of this kind at the price These are the popular overseam Gloves in tans, brown, gray, champagne, mode, red, $1 0 $1.09 black and white.’ A pair... women and misses. The colors are blue, Tasty trimmings of laces, plain buttons. Popular models, The prices Pumps and Button Oxfords All sizes, all widths, all leathers; new models that instantly appeal to all who see them. Fine shoes at low prices, $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00, BUTTON BOOTS In gray, brown and black suede for the “Good Old Summer Time.” The daintiest boot of all in a new, perfect fitting model. Our Suede Boots are not $5.00, but they look it, and are worth it. Our low spe- ctal price, a pair, $4.09 BD OO. ccsccccccce Barefoot Sandals for Less Our Barefoot Sandals are sewed with best wax trhead, have good, thick, flexible soles—just note the prices Sizes 5 to 11, a pair. Sizes 12 to 2, a pair....... Better quality Sandals, size 11, a pair Sizes 11 to 2, a pair. CHILDREN'S SCUFFER PUMPS In tan, velour and patent leathers. broad orthopedic toe, a fine pump for Summer. Again note the low prices: $1.39, $1.19 and, GGG sement. Boy Scout Shoes The best shoe a boy can slip into for Summer—soles about as hard as steel, uppers soft, tough tan and well nigh everlasting And be- sides, Boy Scout Shoes are low priced and economical. According to size they are $1.75, $2.00 and $2.25. Men's practical working. Scout Shoes—the shoes for outing Our most and nnn enn SSNS Men’s Summer Shirts Main Floor, New Soiesette, French Ouff Shirts, attached or detact tary soft collars, plain or fancy colors. These plireeepee ig very best values on the market and are fully guaranteed for both fit and service. All sizes, ...$1,00 CHILDREN’S STRAW HATS 790 Price each Black, brown and tan colors, in boys’ and children’ ; sizes 6% to 6\%. A bargain at 79¢ Saturday, egeamenetciah MEN’S HOLEPROOF HALF-HOSE 25, ‘Tose famous guaranteed Hose for men are in black, tan, gray, and navy, Six pair in box for §1,50, "Ona or by the pair . Ladies’ 25c Union Suits 15c Ladies’ Summer Union Suits, in various styles, low neck, sleove- less, and high neck, wing sleeves, Knee plain or lace trimmed. Size 4 only. 15c¢ Per suit —>

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