Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MEMBER OY TRE SCRIPFS NORTHWEST LgAcun OF NEWarArans. Telegraph News of the United Mrese Ansectation. Ratered at the pestuffion, Rentile, Wrah.. a0 sronmd ‘lacs matter, Publidhed by The Star Publishing Company every cvening except Sunday Work for the Workless They thought Gen. Coxey was crazy when, years ago, he Jed to Washington’an army of down-and-outs to demand that Uncle Sam give them work But here comes Senator Poindexter, admittedly safe and sane, with a bill to create a national industrial army to which any able-bodied person above 16 years of age who shall swear that he wants work and cannot find it may be eligible for service on harbors, forts, canals, reclamation projects, etc, as long as he chooses at $2 a day. This is simply Coxeyism brought up to date! | And why not? In this great land there surely is much i public work to do, Moreover if there isn't enough to keep all = otherwise unemployed workers busy, it wouldn't be difficult to plan more and to pay for it by taking for public service some i of the uncarned increment which now finds its way into pri- : & vate pockets, with little gain to society at large. i Isn't a jobless man who wants a job an indictment of society, which society, through government, should be made to answer for like any other criminal? Why put upon this weak : member of society all the burden of finding the work, when it is society and not the man who makes the work difficult to. 1 find? : i Then, too, think of this: If the man doesn’t work, it’s a sure thing that society will have to support him anyhow, Why not support him in the least costly fashion by providing Fi occupation which doesn’t forfeit or weaken his self respect? | We suppose Poindexter has put in his bill less with the| expectation of seeing it pass than of forcing us to think But | it isn't an entirely academic proposal—it is really practical | and practicable. All that is nee ed to make it effective is a) : strong enough public support. Society does owe to every hon-| est man a fair chance to earn an honest liwng; and it is much} wiser to help him to that chance than to take the dire conse quences of his not getting it : Why wouldn't a government army of industry be fully | creditable an establishment as a government army of pro | fessional killers? If the latter is necessary to cope with rare emergencies when killing is requisite for public safety, why| mot the former, for emergencies much more frequent, in which the public safety is at least equally concerned? Think it over. It may be we made fun of Coxey when the joke was really on us. How to Be Happy on a Home Vacation | | DD If you can't afford the time or money required for a vaca-| tion trip somewhere, why don’t you plan a vacation at home? Don't you think, after all’s said, there's quite a bit of fool ishness about the way folks usually take vac ions? What @ person needs in a vacation ts a change of activities and of A spirit. Doing things one way in one place day after day i begets. monotony, the mother of weariness. But you don't} a have to spend bunches of money or put up with a lot of sum- : mer resort inconveniences to get a change of activities and| : to turn a new soul to life ie . Travel is fine. It broadens and, if done sanely, it re- 4 freshes. But it costs like sin. That is, if you travel com : 3 fortably and far. Those who can afford it do well to do it 4 But if you haven't the price or wish to save for more import-/| "ant purposes, why not try some scheme like this? | Change around your habits of living. Put a tent in the j back yard and imagine you're camping out. Get up an hour or, two earlier in the morning and take a hike through the rk or into the country. Have the missus pack a basket of | Food, and with her and the children ride out to a or! brook or grove and hold a pienic now and then. Tf you have | Saturday afternoon off, arrange to go for over Sunday ed some hospitable farm house or village inn and take a com-| plete rest for 36 hours It would even be a good lark to go gypsying if you can get the use of a horse and wagon Any a thing for a vacation from the deadening routine and for the F freshening of spirit that comes from being close to old mother 4 earth and from throwing dull care aside. For it’s the spirit, after all, and not the place that makes the vacation. And that, thank heaven, isn’t a thing of price Even in little old New York, where the horsecars only recently passed away, they've been hitting up some speed on rate reductions lg $1.00 rate—and the new SO cents minimum. Hugh Wallace, our Guggenheim friend from Tacoma ani age except when he is asked. Well, who's going to as Those Harriman merger railroaders are pleased with dis-| Ss solution to a degree that makes us suspect that Uncle Sam | gets into tt doesn’t have all the fun at the funeral of a merger. Lunacy specialists in solemn conclave announce that per- a sons with high artistic temperament are “looney.” expecting it, * Gov. Lister seems to be as strongly opposed to road- houses and automobiles as to certain road appropriations and steamrollers f Can Knudsen break away from the ring? Or is he con-| g tent to remain the “g ? Come on, speak up, Krist ; There will be several chapters written in as many courts ™ hefore the library damage case is finished. IN DRESDEN, where the government runs the telephone mono 7 oly, the only reply to 20,000 complaints from subscribers is a threat to suspend the service for a year !f they don't stop kicking BOSTON PREACHER said women’s new styles would soon mean yells for the women or blinders for the men, Reductions ON LADIES’ AND MISS@@ READY. TO.WE : Gowns and Dresses $18.50, Special . $10.00 and so on upwards Street and Afternoon Coats Values $15.00, Special ..$10.00 up to $28.50, Special ..$15.00 and so on upwards, 3ut Seattle is still tied down to the old) pirations, old t Washington, D. C., says he will not meddle in federal patron-| dreas would We'd been} & Tailored Suits. Values $30.00, Special ..$15.00 up to $38.50, Special . $24.50 and so on upward J. Redelsheimer ae THE BIT ggg als Mas POOR LITTLE WAiF! MATCHES ON THE STREET IN} You NO HOME, Z LitTLe one THE STAR—THURSDAY, SELLING TER COLD. HAVE a7 INDEED, COLD- lord Ballyrot one team to w eee Everything In System S “iy wants to know Roosevelt's home address. Just Although having as| Write to Washington and it'll 1 was fay | forwarded » all those }invited to a select social tion es on file —the annual WA {the Protzet | Tiny titel | inquiring vening Little « J . | recetved Queer a him?| this informatio: | In thie mighty | “Sure, your soup And bring golden dollars |and-fish, yc rags, your To the dentist's hand O-Gusste harn 7 guy whet see has to doll| Spain has accepted the Bryan up In a hard est protector, | f but this will hardly sheet-iron shoes « a twowlnged safe for Alf. to make a shroud. This { well affair and st. parade at noon. How any gink what sto y in the | ever, peace talk in Spain has been dn his e-clock ers will| quite rampant, or might say, rouse s up in 1898 your killers, get me? “ee | My word Pa, what did the snake do in 6 3 Eden?" | He Did That! Asked Willie, “Why, ev'ry one} | He there? She—She was fo Who is that rocka: She marrie |and he got $20,000 He—He earned right, all ri | Guess John “Supposs Venus de alive today" bi | “Yah!” interr | “she'd never have on the arm . | No, Jessie, | Here's an oft in Seattle papers Baa. they wouldn't go b at |;They're fighting again. in the Bal-| ane; A-fightin’, and | Reminds us that | fightin’, A-fightin' the blamed mosquito, | RHEUMATISM. | Stomach Trouble, | Skin and Blood Diseases will find quick relief in.... Always the same old story. " If they'd raise these checks right Slams, Jabs, Boosts and Most Anything JOSH WISE SAYS: | “Th town Beeleysport, atatietice | has more) players fewer piano | re cent show, checker and players than any town o” Its size in) th’ Middle West. . “Why did you move away from) Chicago? The doctor advised my husband to m some town with only pent of Eden the ut on more ioe wh! apa.” then shouted Me A wh nch of snakes I Would be sure of steady employ. | ment | If they hit this old town today eee Bees Act Like Regular Wea-| | ding Guests. ugly woman over SIR, J HAYE'A I DO NOT MIND THE I €AT PURE, WHOLESOME FooD, CHEWING eee EACH MOUTHFUL THOROUGHLY, AND ) UPON RISING IN THE MORNING, I us) TAKE A COLD SHOWER BATH | FOLLOWED BY A BRISK ih RUB-DOWN, WHICH RENDERT ME | INSENSIBLE TO THE LOWER / { TEMPERATURES. — byl TOKIO. |& prominent died at his } JULY 10, 1913, By Condo KIND — a HOME. VISCOUNT me here today TODAY ivsa Beauty SIZE 36 Inches Long 15 Inches Wide University Felt, Handsomely Embossed. Regular 65 Cent Value for Four 5 Cents. Coupons and 1 rmally Miss Gold od Lord De Broke 000. Special Correspondence. the money, alll MOSELLE, Miss, July 10.—Dr. {R. H. Crawford, while preparing ° |for hia wedding yesterday, hitched ny's Right hia horse too near some bee hiver Milo were|and was #o severely stung that he ant teacher. became unconscious, Dr, Crawford u Johnny,| was revived by fellow-physictans been vaccinated |and his marriage with Miss Lona Miller took place about an hour late: Not “Re Dr. Crawford 1s treasurer of the | uring headline |town and surgeon-physician for the “Cheek Was! N. Orleans Northeastern ratiroa couple left for California via New Orleans soon after tho cere- | mony bad . more’ the woe; | soon we'll be Eezema and All} Sulphurro| falls, Tooth Filler stops the ache, Never Butler's Liquid Drug: gists 26c.—Advertisemont, Clip the Coupons From Page Send or Bring Them to THE STAR Office. Order Your The Seattle = HAYASHI Japanese statesman, | PHONES “9819? ith" aopertmente. Ky mall, daily, one mpoth in afvance, RATES ‘s0; six mon, 91.96; one your, 88.26 By onrrier, in city, 250 © month CHUMS SEEK DEATH TOGETHER E LOSES SWEETHEART ' Saul and ; | _ WHEN ON Staff Correspondence CHICAGO, July 10 Jonathan,” says the paatmiat, “were Ae iF teal de , Daalist, w , If tt'e ¢ ct, Cheasty Has It and | thelr death they were not al Eva and Aranka were Ike that Eva We and Aranka Nuns baum worked in an apron factory | Thetr work benches were side by T «irl at the factory called then the twins rather derisive ly. They had never seen such friendwhty It piqued them that Eva and Aranka never gossiped and joked with th at noon time or went & to pleture shows on Aranka was a frail, timid little creature he had no folk except Eva, who was father and mother and brother and sister to] her, t gh there was no blood tle. | Weak One Comforter | And Eva w strong 1 self. | relan Nobody wil know allt did for Aranka | en Eva began around” | Iwith Jim it jened Aranka, be | cause he took so much of Eve's | |time, and that left her alone. Hut | she reconciled herself to it, be | cause it se : make Bra ha: EVA WEISS (ABOVE), AND| | Then or ing Aranh ARANKA NUSSBAUM | The | . home heat. They were both 20, but eth Sobowltz, Eva's m Jeath Eva seemed much older mn Uhiand st They t ed cause of the dark circles around tones, Mrs. 8 jher eyes, made by weeping | rd enough of the A piece of rubber how that Jim had gone|to the open gas jet rea When I lost you. » together—cold In wp Best Short Stories of the Day In the South they say it fs cus- | woc $18 || For Suits and Overcoats that i] represent double those values. |] Considering materials, style, sidewalks in the elty of wearing qualities and general fit- jtomary for the walter to ask | W Canada, holes were bored when breakfast Is ordered, “How|in the planks to let the water run |] Bess for the use of well dressed/ bay Eg nave er a es ae ugh |] men, the clothing values we are ne c ad ordered he morning twili«! Ce some satisage cakes, rolle and cot-|man found a man with the tip of || camiaying 1 our Popular Price ee, ways the Chicago Record-|his wooden leg in one of these|| ‘partment are not excelled Herald. When the walter asked,| holes and hurriedly walking around || even in the largest cities ofrthe “How will you have your alga? | “What are yo doing here!” asked | man replied, “You the may eliminate country. ; ™y ence this morning.” th oliceman The negro looked at bim and way, offsher,” said the man. | Specialy. Seaeeere went to, the jkitehen, Returning | ° rat 10, eet home before the old Blue Serges, Cheviots and ortly he said ch, eh, mister,| Indy wakes up.”—Everybody’ orsted {how did you say you would have| : — oS } bos a - | your atga?” The kind hearted woman had) The man replied, “I said you| given the frazzled tourist a gener-| — |could eliminate the eggs.” Pack went the negro to the kitchen, but {returned pretty soon and said: upply of cold viet “Haven't you any regular trade | TY’ n or occupation?’ she asked him. | CHEAS Ss \"Bay, mister, we have got a splen-| “Yes'’m,” he answered, with his | HABERDASHERY did chef, who has worked tn most| mouth full. “I'm an actor.” | of the largest and best piaces in} “And can’t you find anything to| Second Ave. at Spring St. If Cheasty Has It, It's Correct the North, and he says he dun have | do on the stage?” no tools to ‘liminate any alge “No, ma‘am; they ain't usin’ any) real actors on the stage these! days.” —Chicago Tribune. PENNANT Start Your Collection With a University of Washington PENNANT Correct Coloring OFFICIAL SEAL | Years ago when there were only You Can Get This LARGE SIZE FELT REMEMBER, A DIF- FERENT STATE, COL- LEGE, SCHOOL OR BASEBALL PENNANT EACH WEEK. | & / Office 1307 7th Av. Phone Main 9400 Paper Now STAR 1 and at KB simply HAD| to w their faces met | back o table was a verse of poe wan utterly wretched, and|try that had n copied in Eva's | now it was the weak, timid Aranka| handwriting It read | who comforted her, the strong one When I lost you \A 1 finally, Mra, Sobow!tz heard; I lost the sunshine and the roses, = | Aranka say lost the heaven of blue, Well, Eva, !f you must go, I'm) lost the beautiful rainbow, | going, too I Jost the morning dew, | Find Them Dead. I lost the ange e me | | Next morning the 5 8 winter an “ Eva Aranka in the | | of the airlens }I lost the gladness that turned | ther’s arms, their faces p: into sadness | |