The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 22, 1913, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MEMBER OF TAR iad LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS. Service of the United Prees Association ae second Entored at the postoftios, Seattle, Woe! Publishing class matter, Published by The Star Company every evening except Su The Plant Velen of Better Roads| MYSTERY of the countryside is why so many farmers] e Sam's recent country-wide inquiry into the eco non € of road i ovement revealed positively what had een believed t any, that each dollar prudently spe vk t nways better ¢ {ways for farm] most instances more than a dollar to a t values. | This was an almost immediate tion if you regard each farm as a f 1 keep its books as carefully as you w tl of a store or factory, ow f increase in farm values due ance should be to improved roac The isn’t far away wth of land the country capable of being made productive will be needed to feed the people Moreover, capital will be looking for farm investments as it now looks for unearned increment in the cities. Just as, in the cities, it picks the places where travel and economic pressure are increasing the most notice ably, so, in the country, it will bid highest where the means of transportation are best A er wil to jog along through the mud to his children Is owes it or dust of ly to in what orly des of increase the value « willingly at say nothing society to co-operate f their herit will THE OLD mossbacks are on the run. Some of the slowest snalis among them have caught up with the commission government Idea it won't be long before we will see some of them also supporting tne nt to cut out party politics from county and state govern hove ment as well. The Lawyer and His Fee OW would you like to to a lawyer as you would go H to the inf window of a big postoffie¢, for med lawyer ass free? How would you like to have a icer would be sent to quarantine advice to defend you as a health ¢ . develc heria W of Milwaukee read a pay you if diph Judge Donn he have cltion boldly to go court, in which Ie er day that the co lawyer wot cer the a lawyer is now an to ally many lawyers are for Thegretically tu oath assist in ad a public serva of justice. But what they can to obstruct or pervert justice, in the interest of the rogue who pays their price The justice's notion was that lawyers pract be hired on = : Salary by the state, to work for justice impartially, would do away with a great part of the present burdensome lie Itiplic which cost of the courts, remove the incentive for the m of litigation and probably lead to simpler and swifter pro- cedure Looks pretty revolutionary, doesn’t it? But if it comes to pass nobody but the lawyers themselves will be to blame. ever OF COURSE it’s none of our business, but why le It necessary for | — i» building a room house.—Croasroads Ga his on skeet eee eee eee . * DELAYS ARE DANGEROUS When you are angry count fifteen, My boy,” the teacher sald, And you've finished eount will o . when with the Your anger fled “Nix on th the kid, whi the stunt I did, The other guy would biff me id start fade.” have t dope,” replied “Por, counting And me lamps to Seeeeeeeee eee eee seeeeeeeteeeeeee aeeeae No Great Trick “It must be hard to cut one of these new style gowns.” “Oh, 1 don't know ien't much to it.” There THE STAR—MONDAY, 8 EPTEMBER 22, 1913 sure orrcine mroo T5929 WhLOW AVENUE ON A HURRY CALLE YEST MOANS: EHP TURAL <noWs. MAY Whee te ve eek h eee OLD METHODS. By Berton Braley. tan't much de wi for thetr I'm strong for the mod And tn bette ne » is nor For ading the ways tha These uptodate Must sometimes be It's then I believe The ¢ The genuine sp The hard-ban The long-d reason theless the But fashions on bolater © spanking t anking Jed spanking spa bt that our 1© efforte at methods have bettered girls i of boys, th tered ys freedom unf nat inly ranking or Rave, king, nde us behave, suaston, than the rod, “ asion t our ancestors trod which we banking od by measures more shioned spanking hat made us behave grave; nking, That made us behave! ehhh SOME JOB, EH? “Eh, but I'm claimed a tall and thi meeting a friend street “Wh ing to £ the other “Well man, draw man, in have been do t sp tire you er” a got am haven't and | wlaying all a yard measure exastly, #ix feet b oblige her I've b down and over her house Setteeeeeeeeeeeeeeee ee ee ee es ee Each Had a Hobby afdn't take interest in horses you better off,” snapped Mra er. “You have had horses on your brain all your life. “| suppose that is bow I hap- pened to marry a nag,” retorted Mr. Growler. PHONE RATE Love Is Too Often Used Schmidt, and little wrongs they inflict 3 By mati By carrie WHY DOES MAN K THING HE LOVES? the Case of the Unfrocked Priest, Hans DO “all men kill the thing they love?” OR do men enly use “love” Main 0406. Pri meeting with wil 4 the in elty, & ey ILL as a Cloak for Bru tality; Proves It. as an excuse for the reat on women? he unfrocked nna Aumulle ein a life. explanation all sufficient ake of peace, women af Above, the eyes of Hans who has killed “the woman h a comparison. actuated by motives so differer as much a FA as sex As soon as wo ke though it be a righte tion changes instantly to repul he loves” with word” , or * to make his GREAT LOVE f ruptcy, murder. Love, it seems, is the only of Rev. Clarence Richeson, who killed “the woman he loved’= ATTRACTION and “a bitter look” “with a sword.” * When Eve passed beneath the flaming sword out from the Garden of Eden, she had already discovered how natural man conducts himself when he is incensed. And she ought to have warned her descendants. But she did not, and woman still wonders how man dares all his WEAKNESS, all his CRIMES—even forgery, bank- |man can DELIBERATELY DECEIVE HIMSELE | He EXPERIMENTS with science, QUESTIONS thed-- Schmidt, the unfrocked ¢ loved” and, below, the nt that sex-ANTAGONISM I§ s a demand upon man, even she irritates him. Attraee sion, and man “kills the thing - +. or a “flattering ‘or her his ONE EXCUSE for thing in the world about which \e —We SEnE. | BE | $xE25iz32-2,52, | | : yp\ cs z a4 Saree oven, 90 troup: the: formality of 0 las atere: cording a ——=| logy, DISCARDS a worn-out political theory, ADOPTS 8 ' ti tempt of cou + r ir | . tS he acoseatitg: witees pu prosecuting attorney and jury) <THE DIARY syd rete aaa philosophy, WITH GENUINE INTEL as well as magistrate, why shouldn't he be jailer also? | 2. A But LOVE he finds by chance and accepts without ° | i r Hi | thought. i Where Is It Going to Stop ? | FAT, ER TIME | And one day he finds that the WEB of love has become a m en = ertehendaneianciorhe socal ———J |a NET. : Bee eee Mew, York correspondent bie: informed. our WOMEN ALWAYS THINK A STORY HAS WONDER how many people have considered why the letter “W"| © HE IS NO LONGER FREE! ‘nor readers that the latest theatrical “shocker” is a new play A HAPPY ENDIN’ WHEN TH’ HERO J should be called “double U" instead of “double V,”" as it looks. | Just as Hans Schmidt found that his love for Anna Aw — The printers of the latter part of the 16th century began to recog. | ; barre) P fitee that there wae & sound In spoken English which was without a muller had entailed responsibilities which demanded ope AN HEROWINE I5 MARKIED> whose sensation hinges on the meeting of a father and daugh- | : P : recognition. ter in a questionable resort, the details of which meeting are) representa’ n aiphabetica sign. Prior to this tim cognition. : ; } such words as “wet, “web,” had always been spelled “vet,” * © * indubitably repulsive. “veather,” “veb.” In order to convey an idea of the new sound they Now when fate balances man’s honor, his traditions or began to spell these words with two “U's,” and as the “U" of that date had the form of “V," the three words looked like “vvet,” “vveather,” his conventions against a woman, he cries out that he loved” Where, we wonder, is the nastiness going to end? Fashion is doing its best to rob woman of dignity, | The Aaliwaye, say it. Woeld SOiE| «man sruccdel Gin’ ee wnssiee|“Vveb." Later on they Joined the two “U's” tagether and made the EP Ste Oi RETA TROYS HER—or her happiness lence and tiodesty. | $633,000,000 to replace wooden |are both « a new on-—-Mod-| character so well known as the 3 | te RESERVE 2M. aed the “ 4 mila” magazine ‘lterature that’s based|DSMeneer care with steel, Theyil | “ ———_______.'| ~ er ee ot eee But he deceives himself. ticles el gaa : for IAW SRrE 10". Saf : The electrical and mechanical His REAL cry is for LIBERTY, and so he breaks the in seduction of gir! 0 7 ° evaporation proce of a New ey % ped ath 2 dat be 4 »|them from butlding the steel cars ‘The New Edison Tack eceeoake to cated bo ¥6Giioe mnd—the bond which irks him. a And, for five years or more, the cash, if not the “popular” | peso | (aximmed faitk to powder at less z He asserts himself once more—thus regains he the approval, has largely been given dramas based on rank im-| Lady Constance Richardson has H T |] . jth 1 per ton of liquid. The pro Best Stories stery lities or vile social relations. arrived from London with her hus orniess a Ing s in adopted for freeing many * *k * » Moralities or ie ( _, | band and 43 trunks, After looking| ds from liquids, giving such “Feminism,” or the present world-wide unrest of woman, Where is the tendency of “popular approval” of exhibi-| at Constance’s pietu our guess ° products as solid glue, sugar direct | @ * ee as nage pti 3 * f id 1 relati . to ‘et dv is is that the trunks are filled with] ac ine a from cane juice, and recovered ma DOUBLED THE BID. |proclaims though that man is NOT deceiving HER as gem an PATS SeEN FHRTONS GONE tO op, OAS UF WHO | er husband's clothes terlals from waste solutions rapier 5 : @/ erally as HE USED to do. ima st be stopped? oe |Wond ago a yonmatet in Seattle not long) Woman is demanding THE TRUTH abont LOVE aad There is nothing Puritanical about this question. It is| Answered by Mr. SyHAnae Stays: onder DANCING wishing to be near a certain dis-| the LOVER 7 a question being asked by every sensible man who has a sah oh horny Pe | HIPPODROME n a beng ‘ judge, allpped the: head She is not afraid of a play like “Damaged Goods.” Not or re Hold each blade o' miy | alte naif dollar and asked him | ned to ask for eugeni age laws. daughter or son who will, in the next decade, be pretty apt / against a piece of hardwood, oak | Witth and University to seat him next to the Judicial waste - 4 are bing ca sea ps tis as his favorite or hickory, and shave it to the de 10-plece Unton Orchestra, one And she is robbing ma of se ro as s to yearn, more or less, for popular approval of some sort. troll thiskneuk. Take: sare not 101 Dancing Taught by Competent When the diners were seated,|refuge for all of his sins AMERICANS AND English eidiaiea- tie the . se the blade or ery oe waver, the young Iawyer found And when that time comes, murders like that of Hans nglishmen predominate In the number of|i[f the blade ta too wide, cut a lt ne at one of the table| oop 311 tha carer, to . na f “rs delegates to the Milan conference on temperance, and our own George|tie off cach side with a chisel d tho judge at the other Schmidt will be rarer, for the Anna Aumullers will not 7 Fletcher Cotterill is at the head of the processidn. $ What does this mean?” angrily|loves at a value assayed by its owner—they will gauge a 1, Risase tell me how to ryt a clgaret.—| demanded the lawyer. “You told| themselves SG rlabaslgg Lb bee car tickets, one week from today will be)” i+ aij depends on how far you| = Rute place me next 7 - 4 wish to roll it | — “I khow I did,” explained the ' Kal | (i h ‘ 4 and have two warte right | walter, “but unfortunately I could T TOOK a !ong time, but the voice of the people, it now appears, 1d and have two warts tight! aa. shove iilusfration shows the Wat helo. witweie™ ° has at length even pierced its way to Councilman Peirce. Weedlt tao des ie aes ‘ ing |STHCe ANd beauty of Its lines, but | “Couldn't help yourself!" re- } potiier about removing |it must be heard before one ¢ turned the lawyer, “Wha ‘ Broker smote hallboy In an uptown restaurant just because the boy|them? Why not raise hair and| realize, marvel at and. fully ay CUT- Licino ii shall dat ‘was acting as hallboys in uptown restaurants always do, Sequel in po | comb it over them, thus hiding} prectate the amazing volume and “The judge outbid you,” was the aye court—broker discharged Heh See PS __ | them? tone quality of this New Diamond RATE gentle rejoinder of the waiter ie Point (no needle), Edison's latest He gave me a dollar to put you RENE 6 teas’ sense vege. and the world’s greatest talking r) as far away from him as possible.”| Buyers Now in East Visiting Principal Market Centers— save my wh machine. es ‘ i for Coming Season's Business. | As soon as the campaign opena| The tone reproducing results of rs Lan Buying Heavily pha Ses ae we shall oe he Star ‘ ) print this great Invention are unguestion: | JEROME LUCK, A representative of The Star was|coats which have just arrived from ¢ Hanson yeeche! wt the|ably superior to that anticipate ss - a , sCor- one Meveland’s foremost mamtt fleas read them, We are pleased|by the most enthusiastic admirers “Where in the world have you|Complimenting Mr. Robert McCor fnntaraets th Pte Ulaeee Salts Plush to learn that your dog has educat-|and advocates of the talking ma been, Jim?” asked one clubman of|mack, manager of McCormack | in Arabian Lamb. They ed fleas stead ot literate ones. Laney - fie sorecoost het rol of ae “I haven't seen you for a/Bros., recently on the beautiful dis-/ much richer and dressier than last od muste in the home. In fact, its ap-| | en i: y Fall Merchandise they had fall's styles The New York university's foot-| peal has been so extraordinary as|W® STAND MACK OF OUR WORK] "No," replied Jim, making room |>!@Y Of Fall Merchandise they | idee ders that ball coach is named Jack High. His|to render it practieally {mposaible| FO 19 YEARS’ GUARANTER [for the other to slide in on the |? exhibit in their windows during) “Our clothing man considers |their Fall Opening last week. The|our patterns in men’s clothing am name Js one of the best known in|for the manufacturers to meet the couch beside him. “I have been on f j bo Bega en : ‘made the world of sport. | de é a fis g tr 7 : Newport |*rtistic manner in which the mer- | very conservative and better eee Sk jsetnene |® fishing trip down along Newport|(yandise was draped and inter-|than last year, We feature Amalgam Filling 50c Up | bay.” a | “Fishing trip, eh?" returned the | t Moch-Berman union-made clothing, mingled by beautiful floral displays and several other reliable makes Jaok’s team, we take it, will not could not be excelled on Fifth av., | m b jit p 8 f rs a h h fi fi |(O.) Star Journ lay an open game. * Pompeli's harbor, which has been ulssing for about 2,000 years, has n found. The strangest part of is that {t was not found in the ossession of any railway or steam hip company see Did Mr. Herman Protest? The regular prize awards were as llows Hest decorated auto driven by a ontleman—Karl T. Bates: Rest patriotic auto driven nt-—J. H., Herman by a Sandusky o- The difference between a critic nd a playwright ts this: A eritic | treats the play fiippantly and takes is own work seriously; the play- wright takes both the erfticlsm and y is play serious! * 6 It’s all right to cultivate a thirst r knowledge, but there are few reo lunches |One of These Wonderful Machines With 10 Inde- structible Records Only $65.00 A small payment down and a it tle each month will give you the pleasure every home ne fue D co, A. JOH rd and Univ P. §.—Don't forget our new sheet musio department, opened a few days ago with a large stock of pop war and classic music, including the complete Schirmer llbrary, musical follos, Instruction book, etc, Gold Crowns $3 and Up. Bridgework $3 and Up Full Sets Teeth $5 “70 We have thousands of Seattle pa- tlents who will tell you that thoy ne knew that plates could be fit- ted so perfectly unti! they had us do the work Any work that doean’t prove ant- isfactory will be repaired froe of charge at any time. Come In SOON—today, {f you wish for FRED examination and erti- mate. 12-Year Guarantee to All Free Examination 207 University St. 2d and University r-Vaterson Co, second party, putting a match to his Manila, “‘What luck did you have?” None at all," was the prompt reply of Jim. “I didn't hold an thing better than a pair of deuces the whole blooming week.” see TOTO TTT KKK Kk * | * TEMPERANCE NOTE * The first temperance — so- * clety was formed in New Eng |® land and tts pledge read |® “We, the undersigned, |* Meving in the evil effect | ® strong drink, do hereby pledge * ourselves on our sacred hovor |% that we will not get drunk |}* more than four times a year | —Muster day, Fourth of July, |® Thanksgiving and Christmas be- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * eee KEK Kk kak Fills the teeth—banishes Tooth ache—Butler's Liquid Tooth Filler, Druggists, 26c,—Advertisement ew York “Your millinery win |dow attracted me when coming down the avenue. The beautiful Paris creations in women's hats, which we read so much about in the papers, are fully exemplified here. I really did not expect to see such a varied display of fine mi chandise in this end of the avenue Mr. McCormack remarked “We have not been asleep, although the blockade in front of the Smith building certainly has retarded progress in this end of the avenue But now that the streets are open for traffic we expect to see the old- time crows promenade the thor oughfare from Pike st. to Yesler way, And in anticipation of this McCormack Hros. sent two more buyers than usual to wistt the East- ern manufacturers and importers, so that we would be in a position to compete with the biggest and best concern on the Pacific coast, with merchandise of quality at the right price. | was just looking over some beautiful fabrics in women’s | Our hardest proposition was to ge something good in boys’ suits at & reasonable price. After 15 ¥ hard study we have at last got ® fabric which will stand the test. “Our Men's Furnishing Goods De partment is complete with every thing for men and boys. We fet ture the famous Geo. Rock Australian wool underwéar, Cooper, Spring Needle and the Globe, beside several other maked of world-wide reputation, Any 1 Castlegate sox for men, [0 mere, wool and worsted. Our hat and cap departments are complete with all the newest blocks and lat est shades in men’s and boys’ h gear, including the J. B. Stetsom. Mallory’s cravanette hat and se¥ eral other brands under our beer trade mark, Our shoe department! {s about the most compact de ment in the store, where fa mother, sister @r brother cam fitted in any kind of leather oF style they desire.” " ts

Other pages from this issue: