The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 23, 1913, Page 4

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NORTHWEST Telegraph News Aswo MEMNER OF THE soRIPES LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS Service of the United Press Entered at the ‘elass mation Company every evening except flee, Seattle, Wash,, aa seco ished by The Star Publis diay “Silk Hatted”’ Progressivism silk hatted “friend of the pepole” is not always what = “progressive” who clutches at leadership may only be masking for the purpose of securing some selfish and person The sha in our political affairs of today We have the newly converted | s h el in the movement } ain » “progressive” is the most dangerous ead sham” progressive in Seattle, King cou and Washington. We have the example of one of then eee elected as a “progressive” last fall, who, it seems, combed | 7 An, NELLIE the whole county over to find the very rankest standpatte | 1 FEEL , in the legislature of 1911, and then favored him with an A SENSE appointment, while progressives of far greater ability, con-| OF GUILT. Scientiousness and efficiency were turned down Medill M’Cormick, the big Bull Moose leader from] Chieago, visited in Seattle. But the common herd got no| Opportunity to get mear him or hear him, He was taken/} in tow by Will H and was feasted at an exclusive dinner The for sending our rea nary friend, gress, and for the defeat of the Generally. ; If the progressives are to retain the strength and virility Parry, president of the Progressive league, | at the progressives were responsible last fall Rainier club ue-blood Will Humphrey, to con ticket | progressive state wf their cause, they must make their “silk hatted” friends ) Serve an apprenticeship in the rear ranks, to prove them fm selves before any leadership is turned over to them | i Seattle is speeding right along toward success, ac-| cording to R. G. Dun, the fel o keeps tab on finance | - | 3 It takes a lot of harping to start a little resend © but it doesn’t take very long to end it when the people get the aumber of the trouble maker High Class Diplomacy HEY ought to recognize Mr. Of “the Huerta’s diplomacy, if not Three” who wound Reyes was killed in battle, G Mondragon is having a good time as delegate to the expo ‘ition at Ghent, and now Gen. Felix Diaz 1s to go to Japan| M0 express thanks for Japan's participation in Mexico's cen ) fennial in 1910, a polite job that Porfirio Diaz, jr, Emilio lero and Gustavo Madero left unfinished because of death mecessity of skipping out at night time | The Hottentot. Mr. Huerta has so arranged matters that he can almost} fell who will be elected president next fall. He must have Studied diplomacy in the school of old Grandfather Diaz, who > Mever let an election arise without knowing who was going ) to be elected. bo Mr. Arthur Pelkey, white man’s hope, refuses to fight qntil after he has dragged, off at least ten weeks’ stage} ‘Salary. Arthur will be about ripe in the merry Christmas| holiday season. What would Christmas be without a prize-| > | his presidency. Big Madero’s regime, Gen y's And now a college professor as minister to China! Who'd | have thought there were so many democrats hunting a col-| education ? | When Ballard women want what they want, how can @ mere city council say them nay? Pity Sergeant Wallace! He escaped from the Washi: st. mob only to be killed by printers’ ink. ton a }Observe the Hottentot. He'd rather have it hot than not.) It’s a safe bet that now, after the harm has been done, pany Binghamton, N. Y., ions. will have a new set of building regu- | Ot clothes he doesn’t wear lot. | ‘ A savage he, despls He sits beneath tree all day, | Sans collar, cuffs and lingerte Drat it! Cna’t those Washington correspondents give us| Right on vacation he can stay, Something new by telling how Jim Ham Lewis eats corn on He is not ph age | & & ‘ the cob without using a whisk broom, or something else with) 1 would be all right, though,| _ Soloratura in it |wouldn't it, if Bryan lectured in| » |favor of a high tariff and higher Burrian, great grand opera tenor, goes to a Dresden prison | freight rates? | © for a month for eloping with a 19-year-old wife who died pene. | from eating New York oysters. N. Y. oysters just do raise| A sign that was In front of a the deuce with artistic temperaments, often ey ee oe Tae Se, ee Slashing Prices leral days ago, and {t finally landed, Your Benefit stable. It read Stamping Done Here.” O* ‘Alfred Benjamin suits, famous the world around as the finest product of modern tailoring, and Cheasty Special $15 and $18 clothing. e+e “Tries to Die Twice in Cell,” says a New York headline dently the man wanted to make sure of it | WOULD YOU—? ( You GAD > | (These departments occupy our entire second floor.) Careful business men and men of judgment seek to place their orders where they will give a return greater than face value. That’s why so many of Seattle's prominent men are taking advantage of this great clear- ance sale. You will be unfair to yourself if you do not “invest” in clothing now to last you for the next twelve months. hon bea OaLl VERILY, NIK! | Surgeons pulled a piece of skull lout of the brain of Black Bart, in |the Michigan penitentiary for train jrobbery, and Bart has been re- jj | leased, the surgeons declaring Bart |} now has too much sense to rob a train, Let's wait and see. If Bart \has sense one may expect him to Blue serges and cheviots, handsome mixtures in wor- steds and tweeds, medium and light weight; ail the latest styles and models. All alterations free. Sack and Norfolk Suits $15.00 Suit for ..812.00 | $27.50 Suit for ..$20.65 |}])steal # zallroad. || : $30.00 Suit for ..$22.50 Hf Bow-Wow! ee onteead — $32.50 Suit for 124.40 [| or. and are Anthony Park are . $20: : ti lor .. a 5.00 Suit for ..$26.25 the proud parents of a 10-pound $22.50 Suit for ..816.90) $40.00 Suit for _.830.00 baby boy, born this morning. — $25.00 Suit for ..$18.75| $45.00 Suit’ for |. 833.75 Ip Clinton (la) Pelesram. | They've started a noise in Chi- feago, With Jackson in Paris and |J. Ham Lewis in the senate, ts it possible there Is*any noise left in Chicago? Fancy Vests, Extra Trousers, Dusters, Office Coats, ete., proportionately reduced. | | The cost of running trackless cars 75 miles daily over the fivetmile | Vienna line is given as 7 to 9 cents tper mile | aay There's a Iimit to all greatness. Christy Mathewson has to get a woman to help him write a play about baseball, Cheasty’s Haberdashery Second Avenue at Spring Street. SEATTLE, WASH {DRAMAGRAPHS peccive ment = A TRUSTED FRIEND MAKING LOVE To me wire! Now, THAT JUST SPOILS ALL THE REST OF MY EVENINGS You SHOULD WORRY, \ Ni ' Hl \\\ ‘\ iL ae THE PURNITURE AND RUGE USED in THIS PRODUCTION, LOANED BY THE 2UZOO OUTFITTING CO. il HHI 1 } ‘ yh yA | THE EXPLANATION. Can’t Please 'Em \"1 cannot Iive without you, love,” | Was his wild, pleading ery. |"Oh, very well then, |_ “I will not let you die The story ends in manner sad, For now he wishes that she had. Who is that man with lofty air Who seems to tell folks by hie! Afraid They'd Get Wet ag, Stare, ey On account of the rain Thureday You are not in my class?” evening the swimming pool party Is he some mighty potentate that was to have been given by Oh! no—but by some freak of fate) Mise Anna White for her guests, He got a baseball pass. Misses Margaret Lamb, Frances Witherspoon and Gladys Moody, at Why Not Use An Egg the Centennial park, was postponed. ? r Beat two ékes with a half @/—Nashville (Tenn.) Tennessean, tablespoonful of salt till they are; ee very light-—-Norwalk (O.) Journal.| A Mexican war veteran of one see |hundred and two in the soldiers’ Misdirected energy— home at St. James, Mo., attributes Living in Mexico. his old age to a strict diet of corn- But there's one good thing about bread and bacon. It must be pretty Not many men there live very |tough to have to live to one hun dred and two on cornbread and Will Taft hae fost 40 pounds bacon since he left the white house. Some ‘erhaps he's only some young how or other, every time we read fellow of eighty#even or eighty- anything about WH we are re.| eight who bas lived so long on c. b minded of the expression, “the fat and b, that he feels like one of the land. hundred and two. . | However, if the vet i one hun- Mrs. Pankhurst has gone to jai|‘@red and two, we don't attribute again. One might say Mrs, Pank.| Bis age to his diet. More prob- hurst fs an in and outer. jably it's due to the fact that he was | born in 1811 it long. eee Something New From a German Specialist Blood and Nerve Tonic for all Nervous Disorders, Mental Depression, and in fact every disease of the nervous system, A great help in relieving Epilepsy and to purify the blood of all eruptions, pimples, blotches, boils and catarrh, and all obstructions arising from colds, biliousness and all dis- orders of the liver and kidneys, A sure thing for constipation, appendicitis and diabetes. rheu- matism, and in fact all chronic diseases can be helped and re- lieved. It is a system-builder, and. it excites the natural tathattic of the bowels and atrengthens them. Poisonous attermust be expelled from the tystem. Blood and Nerve Tonic will do that and_ still says the government can save $1,000,000 a year by making its own armor plate. That reminds us of jall the money a man can save by shaving himself, PATENT SucTion Are You Hard to Please? The woman or man who is leave’ the svstem free from| ¢xtra hard to please in Teeth, He 4 ee as in everything else, will stop medicine, This medicine has] short of nothing less than True. been used by the specialist] to-Nature Teeth, over 15 years and is now pre- pared by the German Pharma- It don’t take you long to tell the difference between a proper at 'Co;, of Gentle: ' * fitting, good looking set of cal Co. of Seattle, uniter his} ‘eeth® and the. mistite that persona ' ton rere 18] so many people have to be satis- over one month’s treatment] tied with. in each package at $1.90 a box HKeautiful Sets at $5, $10 and For sale by Ouaker Drug} $15 per set, according to mate- Co, First Ave. and Giles| Tal used. Drug Co. 1125 Tackson St You will find names and testimonale of feattle people tn anch packn: fend all communteations tu the German Pharmacal Co. Corner Market and Mth Av. N. W. Ballard, Seattle, Wash Boston Dentists 1420-22 Second Aven Opposite Bon M In present location 11 yeara ° _ | stant and interested reader of The id the girl, I Secretary of the Navy Daniels | 9400. Pri ange com PHONES *\ecting with ull depart RATES p30 i inet By carrier, Young Millionaire’s Wife Invents New Way of Keeping Cool; Lounges About on Bungalow Porch Clad in Boy’s Bathing Suit; Bare Legs bathing suit instead of the reg- ulation feminine attire. Mrs, Beimont d her chum, Mra. Alan Lang wife of a magazine writer, are practicing it at Kansburg, N. J., where they have taken a bungalow. They lounge about the porch all day in the new garb, much to the wonder of the neighbor: Mrs. Belmont has never been able to recapture her society husband from his father, and she announces from the front porch at Keansburg t she ls going to “get a wad of all- mony.” NEW YORK, July 23.--Mre, Raymond Belmont, who gave Broadway its 1912 sensation by marrying the son.of Mult! millionaire August Belmont while she was still a chorus girl at the Winter Garden, and by subsequently trying to re cover him from his kidnaping parent, has coralled fresh atten tion this summer. She has in- vented the latest and most dar ing method of “keeping cool” that the Atlantic board has quite simple. eof wearing a boy's MRS, RAYMOND BELMONT “KEEPING COOL” ; wi the highest mountain) The L. C. Smith bullding, 42 2 stories high, is in course of con- struction in Seattle In Editor’s Mail Another Disappointed One Algona, Wash., June 18, 1918 Editor The Star: 1 am a con- | Star, and belleve if there is a rem jedy for any wrong The dtar find it. Regarding the mother's pension, it was through The Star that | a# well as many other desti-; tute mothers, saw our first gilm-| mer of hope in keeping our little ones together I wrote Judge Frater a week or #o ago explaining to him that I had been left more than 15 months ago with three babies; had been di vorced more than a had never received one penny for my support and was utterly dependent on rel- atives for my own and children's support, as I have been fll much of the time. My children's father was ordered to pay $40 per month, but avoids doing so by remaining out-| side tho state. } All this I told Judge Frater, and he wrote me just last Saturday to come in and make application for my pension. Yesterday | went and was told that Frater had drawn the line at divorced women, and w not even allowed to make applica-| “The Economy Store” — Second Ave. Bet. Spring and Seneca These Splendid Bargaing in Midsummer Goods are making a strong bid for your attention this week at our July Clearance Sale now in progress Don't buy anything in summer mer- chandise until you shop around. Get our prices—we will save you money. Girls’ Summer Oxfords, Special $1.39 tion, but was told to write again soon and they “would see what in the favorite button styles. could be done.” % What is meant by this course?|fm Very low prices for Thursday have no one to turn to who under. in misses’ and growing girls’ which means the entire range of sizes up to large 6, in patent and gun metal leathers. does it mean to me to be turned |g "264 down tn this way? I must see my little ones separ ated and given to others, as my relatives can no longer support us all. Why {s a divorced mother not jy * P8!t even worse off than a widow! She Whi has the disgrace as well as the J Women’s $2.00 Ox. | ite Low Shoes, burden to bear. MRS, GRACE MOONEY Algona, Wash. Special $1.79 Choose tomorrow from Ladies’ whjte low Shoes as follows: $2.00 white canvas Pumps, $2.50 and $3.00 white can fords, Special $1.49 Snappy styles in the season's popular leathers and the } Explains Russell's Crews most |. Editor The Star: In yesterday's button wanted but : ; = | Star, on the editorial page, 1 read bbe F sip Se stag Ow Oxtorda; also Ladies’ white Sea the letter written by Mr. Kurnts, | Tyeier numbers $1 49) nd Pumps at, regarding Pastor Russell teaching | nr ancedlmed ve |e pair there is no hell | Pastor Russell does teach a hell : | BOY SCOUT SHOES $1.69 f Mr. Kurmz would take the The best hard-service Shoes for boys, for they are made of the jtrouble to read Pastor Russell's fm toughest soft brown leather, with almost indestructible soles writing on the subject of hell he Sizes small 10 to large 5% would find that hell is large enough how a pair, special tt sane se nee teas eneeeee |to hold all, both good and bad, All|{g Men's Scout Shoes, sizes 6 to 11, fo to bell, the Bible hell. Pastor |/M NOW, a pair -. -. Russell “shows (as all scholars Red Letter Da ls Up to 98c Children’s Sun Hats Third Floor, Ribbon rosette trimming. The colors ar whites, reds and navy, with bands to mat the thing for summer outing; of 4 to 14 years +6 see Ladies’ Seashore Hats tn assorted colors at agree) that the word hell is trans. lated from the Hebrew word sheol, which occurs sixty-five times in the Old Testament seriptures; three times translated “pit,” thirty-one times translated “g thirty-one jtimes translat * In the New Testament the Greek word hades is the exact equivalent of the Hebrew word sheol. The thought |is the state or condition of the dead, in the grave or hell Even Christ it to hell, as we} read in Acts {1:27 | “Because thou wilt not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suf |fer thine holy one to see corrup tion.” Second Floor. And other good brands. There are many styles and materials involved, the most pop- ular fabrics being mohair, cotton serge and Sicilian, trimmed in plaid silks, striped gal- ) teas and braids. Sizes 84 to 44. Prices om 91,75. $6.75 from For tomorrow's selling we direct your spe- cial attention to a “Swim-Easy” model in alpaca, in blue and black. These are the popular one-piece styles with square neck trimmed tn black and white stripe ¢ $2.75 bands. Sizes 34 to 44. Price . All Kinds and colors Men's Bathing Suits at $1.00, $1.48 and up. athing Cape from Boys’ Bathing Suits at 49c, 75c and $1,00, Boys’ Trunk: 10¢ and 15¢ Fancy Parasols At Half Price Main Floor. These warm, sunny days are great para sol weather, We didn't carry over any from last season, and so our stock is ail new We'll clean them up now at Half Price for astor Russell further shows that there is to be an awakening of all that are in their grav T would advise Mr. Kurntz to study the Bible as well as Pastor | Russell's works before making himself too ridiculous in the sight of those who know, Yours truly, 8. L. MARKER. 4 i t 1457 21st ay. Says Allens Oust Nativ Editor The Star I am a Star| reader and appreciate the sid | take in the Hindu tmportation. | What chante will an Amerinan citi zen have In a few more years with| the Japs, Poles, Swedes, tralians, | Hindus, Chinese and other races? They all come here, make a littl money and go to the old country and spend {t Lots of employers would preter a Jap or other foreigner to an American citizen now. They work cheaper and would work 28 hours a day; if they will only make tt so there are that many hours in a day. Governor Johnson 43 doing perfectly right, in my opinion, He should not only deny the Japs the right of land-holding, but put them out of the state—every state. Look |fM all grades from $3.00 up. over the “want ad” columns and seo how many employers adver.| fg $300 Parasols at... $1.50/ $5.75 Parasols at tise for Japs. Why do they? .$2.13| Children’s Parasols at........ f There's a reason $2.50] ....180, 280, 350, 490, 750 end up A STAR READER,

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