The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 7, 1913, Page 4

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TH STAR—TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1913. MEME OF THE SCRIPPS NORTIWIT LEAGUR OF NEWSPAPERS Telegraph News Rervice of the United Frese Association, Bintered at the pentofficn, Senttie, Wash. ae second class matter, Pablished by The Star Publishing Company every evening except Sunday DIPHTHERIA IS AN ACUTE] contagious disease, due to a germ ymes from patients who pationt in exposed, | | DAILY HEALTHOGRAM Dave had the disease, Within three days the nore, the th t or larynx become inflamed and gradually ered with a “men which ¢ after the or grayish pateh: | Council Takes Sensible Course HE CITY sensible] thing @M opportunity of saying whether or not they des +) change in their form ent From the beginning Star | plan last night only practical course to take The ed the ‘for the election March municipal elect f a con finally has done the the COUNCIL the matter of seattle | in affording people of govern The lorsed the | the that was contended AS by the council officially et resolution, providing of 15 freeholders, whose Griffiths att council { the regular next, mission ¢ @uty it shall be to prepare a new charter, which charter hall be, under the law, submitted to the people for their approval or approval Mr. Pe 8 gestion, which ma adopted by the Hgouncil at its next mecti that same time the “ves” or “no” in answer to the question “Do people vote you want a cor siderable merit if the people will bers to give a correct impression Councilme odds @gainst the Griffith resolut form of government?” is of con turn out in sufficient num-| city’s sentiment Marble the and of 1 Bruskevith voted ‘ lon as to the size DOWN IN Alabama there's a newspaper discuss ‘ef the whale that caught Jonah. One editor has had to take to sleeping amid the lily pads in a swamp because he scientifically demonstrated that no whale has a guilet big enough to admit a man to the interior "a to set forth BLISS CARMAN uses up a whole page of Hapgood the claim that woman can’t be free until freed from the restrictions of dress. Maybe, Bliss wants ‘em in tights, so they can kick harder and higher. Pa and His Duty to the Baby t OTHING is more interesting, more fascinating (and wisely guiding) the } worth while than funfolding of a child’s mind an You remember, don’t you, Hessor, Dr. Sidis, who gave up six years this son, the infant prodigy? watching d sou the case of that Harvard pro to the tutoring ot i Some folks thought it a hardship, but it wasn’t. It was | ithe finest vacation he ever spent. { Men without independent incomes of course ¢ uldn’t do ‘that. Nor is it necessary to do it to get (and give) great lyalue by this kind of thing. The needful ng is to give t he task all the time and thought and patient watcht ilness that you can. ‘ We've seen—haven’t you?—men who found plenty of ‘time to give to the rearing of dogs or horses or pet cattle, twho had no lack of leisure for ball games, automobite trips, ‘hunting parties, yet who never gave a serious thought to the Qraining of the little lives for whose presence in the world Mthey were directly responsible. They looked to poor, tired ma to do all that. They hed sheds just shed their own parental responsibility as a duck ‘water. If baby is good natured and amusing, they will now anc ‘then pause to play with it as with a pretty toy. But when] uty calls, they duck. Ask school teacher, the next time you see her, how many fathers of the children under her care ever visited | the school, to sce how well it was doing its work Here again it is a case of “letting George do it”—only George is usually a Martha or Leaving aside all question of duty, th jdous factor, the man who thus edges away from the training | tof his own child misses an immense amount of the finest kind Sof fun. A kind of fun the like of which isn’t to be found ‘elsewhere in all the world. Fun that broadens and enriches “while it entertains. If, pa, you've been negligent in this matter, take a brace and get into the baby-trainin Don't think hire it done, or that it is something you can afford to leave fo chance. And don't hog it all on ma. THE P.-|. suggested today that the other judges assign Judge Hurry jes only divorce cases to hear. The judge's well-known tendency to ire would then, perhaps, be of some benefit the P.-1. points out. ji bene ’ Mary. ugh it’s a tremen-| g game. you can BUT WHERE is there a man or woman, no matter how stormy things may be at home, who'd sit through one of those monologues for the sake of relief? | | | | | | HOW WOULD you like to do It? NEITHER WOULD WE! HAVE YOU been reading The Star Pink editor’s comments on udge Humphries, in the new column, “The Town In Review"? THIS ONE, for instance, from iast night's Pink: “BIIl Curry asks not to mention the fact that Judge Humphries is from Missouri i's from Missouri himself.” JUST A word for Acting Mayor Robert Hesketh. He has shown avery good sense in this matter of securing for 1 nce to @ay something about a new charter. He refused to be stampeded into appointing a worthiess commission of 15, provided for under the God- ard resolution. He also let it be known that as soon as he returned @o the council after his relief from the duties of acting mayor, he would align himself on the side of the Griffiths ordinance. That was moral Gupport, at least. Mr. Hesketh’s brief term as mayor hasn't been ‘wasted. TEXAS HAS hookworm so bad that her editors are cussing it as ‘an immorality. cette Invite you to call and inspect their new office, corner Third and Pike, with entrance 1504 Third av., over Bank for Savings This new office is finished entirely in white enamel and ts sanitary from © standpoint. You will be treated courteously nd examination of your mouth and estimate of its immediate needs ‘will cost you nothing. We have confidence in our ability to serve you well and we earnestly solicit your patronage. Our prices are moderate and we suggest you come and let us quote them before going elsewh A LADY ATTENDANT Rhoa ds DentalCo. Dr. Frank 0. Rhoads, Mgr. THIRD AT PIKE Office Hours—9 to 6 Week Days; 10 to 1 Sundays Evenings by Appointment mundy—there’s only one bigger fool thing a feller can do me Ye than givin advice, and that’s takin a verry nice yung chap which | know found that out @ cuppel of nites ago he had only been married a few weeks, and he went out to a little it card party with some of his old pals the feller that was givin it had quite a lot of prune julce standing | around, and it seemed to be quite #0 when the party busted up some of the boye wae kind of merry | and gay, speshly our fren gee, he asis, | aint never gone home like this befoar since | war a thiraty night married, what will | say to estelle now you take my advice, bill, saye a off married man, and you'll | be all rite when you git home, and the wife gives you the Inkwiring eye, don't make no crack about where you've been, or what time it is, nor) nuthing like that make some chatty little her or you or what you've been doing, and you'll get by without a scratch 80 bill he went home, and when he came Into their room, his wife set up In bed and yawned and sald if the poor slob hadent said nuthing at all, he would of been all rite, but he remembers what this #0 he sets down In a chare, and he looks at his wife with two eyes that Is just as loving and tender as a couple of poached eggs, and hi estelle, m’ dear, he says, ‘stell, wasent that nawful thing happend to mary, queen of scote well, it's all over now, he has atill got his home, and maybe he ark that aln't got nuthing to do with! hello, billy other fish has told him will be allowed to go to a party again some time but he won't make no chatty remarks when he comes home * * . * | * LUCKY FOR THE TEACHER * * “If you please, sir, pa says he's going to killa pig, and would # you like to have @ side of pork? * fo) fake | * Y y y,” said the country school teacher. “Tell him ® * A week passed away, and, as the meat had not arrived, ¢ |, Comic t--Not by « long || RATES ‘ | ® teacher re » boy of his order. * shot You pay for my sketche 4 put ty; we want 4 * Ll expect you forgot to tell your father, you young rascal!" @/| OF YOu don’t Ket ‘em he Ms ey Se A # said the teacher, good hamorediy * jave © our cut Fates * Ob, no, sir, I didn’t,” said the youngster. My father hasn't Badalona sp or ary & killed the ple * has cx into th ° ne leo guasastes thes « How's that, Tommy? Wikis wat pai oe en . ‘Please, sir, it's got better. . boy, where is your ha COMM TODAY—DON'T PUT IT Orr Boy (who » RRR RRR RH him) ot, Hipendlg oo" ba | Set of Teeth, Guaranteed @A 35 Doctor—"Well, and where || Fit, NOW «.+--++eeeereres inélans dentist Is under arrest, charged with robbing his patients’ | ought it to be? Solid Gold or Porcelain $. | mouths of gold fillings oy—"O: a 17 3 Boy nm father’s ‘ead, sir Crown seeeeeeeee sere eens | ee —"| Gold or Porcelain Bridge $3) [week eee eee eee ee WVork ..---- eee a¢onesneae * REASON FOR Wan | Solid Gold Fillings... 75¢ UP| *& “Why did the Jenkinses have # | Silver Fillings ...... 50¢ UP ®@ such a terrible falling out? At ® . | © firet y seemed to be sub- & De t f | Gaye + Albany Cut-Rate Dentists * “Rel enough. One morn- «| rs “ey ® ing pice Pegg Pegs ite ee # second Floor People’s Mank Building WITTY WHEEZE 8Y SOY BEAN, OUR # early and ordered her to start * ina Wieraiar ox Wenk.te & the fireless cooker * OUR PRICKS WILL BURPRIBE TOU of Living Sign on 15th av. N Maid's room if desired. apartments rage da says the boss Is going to n for governor In the next New York sta Murphy was governor b Sulzer—but hadn't gon trouble of run ning. election fore he to the turkey trot ne plotures me rot eee Three correspondents object to our theory that the old-fashioned football player wore his hair long to protect his collarbone. They de clare his object was to protect the end of his spine. But which end? eee We Hope They Didn't Sew 'Em Monnott hal! Tw i tel are tabooed at oa pre: | cether.—St. Claire ) Gazette vs | Jane Addams says, “The fewer | clothes the better.” Yes, Jane, the | better—but for whom? | Ti Be | Women Are Naturally Attracted to Weddings. Headline tn Indian Sun. t's our {dea of a subtle ob | “The movie censors won't let me | pay fiv a picture of a | | © cents to see man tah postcards Mr Anon, walk into a saloon und see the real thing for nothing. a drin it I can “Did you ask what had become lof the old-fashioned man who blew ut the gas?” writes H. OG. J. “I just noticed his friends pass him and remark, ‘How natural he looks.’ eee Misdirected energy—The efforts | of rich old hen in Callfornia to ac juire reputations as philanthropiste by alding 19-year-old girls whe be long to the slashed skirt brigade. . | We have the address of a rich RARARRARAARA ARE ARER HR ARRARKAAAH Another Excuse for the High Cost! with private bath | ee A Regular Mexican Affilction Prot. W Ra ne Imperator in Stiff Gs says a New Yo me headline But a Vind lowtn 99 Miles an Hoar Doesn't Stop the Deck Games.” Re ferring, no doubt, to poker a hearts. Still, our idea of a deck game n an Atlantic liner ia bridge. ee One of Tammany Murphy's! johny MLUAGE CUT-We: / SHOULD WORRY LUE A. SHIPMENT OF EGOS AND GET New York man who did not con tribute to the Sulzer campaign. oe Thomas A, Edison returning to work waa halted by a new office boy, who took him for a crank. He |proved he wasn't by complimenting the boy eee Ce ee ee ee * * * PARADOXICAL * * Two yee men robbed a laun- & © ary, * * They did it quick as wink. * * They got all of the money, but * * «They didn't get the Chink. ® * * ctktkthk ehhh see We doubt not, Christeen, that many of those open-work stockings |were made in an open shop—open to the air, anyway This Is Guaranteed to Stop Your Cough Make This Family Supply of Cough Syrup at Home and Save $2 This plan makes a pint of better Jcongh syrup than you could buy dy made for $2.50. A few doses conquer an ordinary cough ves even whooping cough quickly, Simple as it 1s, no better remedy can be had at any price Mix one pint of granulated sugar with 14 pint of warm water, and stir r 2 minutes. Put 2% ounces of ex (50 cents’ worth) in a pint ; then add the Sugar Syrup. It has a pleasant taste and lasts a family a long time. Take a tea spoonful every one, two or three hours. You can feel this take hold of a cough in a way that means busi- ness. Has a good tonic effect, [braces up the appetite and is slight ly Inxative, too, which is helpful JA har remedy for hoarseness |spaxmodiec croup, bronchitis, bron jehial asthma and whooping cough Tne effect of pine on the mem jbranee is well known, Pinex {8 a most valuable, concentrated com pound of Norwegian white pine ox tract, and is rich in guaiacol and other natural healing pine ele ments, Other preparations will not |work in this combination This Pinex and § Syrup rem edy has often been imitated, though jnever successfully, It is now used jin more homes than any other cough remedy. A guarantee of absolute satisfac. tion, or money promptly refunded, with this “preparation, Your druggist has Pinex, or will get ft |for you, If not, send to The Plnex Co., Fort Wayne, Ind, goes EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR i : | ~BITS—— And Bites at "Em —————————————— Bhoes of Jacob Schiff, millionaire banker testifying in Sulzer trial were stolen from outside his hotel room door “oe He might have expected that to happen In Alban ed “When Tammany is in desperate straits, and needs a respectable can didate,” says a New York editor, “It always goes to the supreme bench and takes a Judge re ae Just goes to the wash line and picks off something it hung up, eh see “1 love golf for its own sake,” says Uncle John Rockefeller eee driving things at the In n laughing Golf consists into a hole and th other fellow, doe | Sha Pe: | THEY HELP THOSE WITH KIDNEY TROUBLE With a amile on his rubleund ¢ reason why Foley Kidney | features the hotelkeeper was || Pills are the bent Heine for kid peacefully enjoying 40 winks [/nev and t qubles and urt Business was ming; the place J/ nary trregu oe they | was full. Good f those hea Knocks on the door of his and re sanctum, however, brought him © nee back to rth In staggered a € r alter vital organs. Foley Kidne perspirtn “Popp leane, the sir,” be stammer may not pay ed, “I'm tn a terrible fix. A gent » Kive the has just ordered roast mutton of medical ! es what of it? came the that you Ket Foley | exasperated answer. “There's your kidney and plenty of it, Isn't there” bindder troubles. They are tor “You, air,” breathed the dis} in action, quick to & good re tracted knight of the napkin sulte and contain no harmful) “But he's already had one por | drugs. Sold by Bartell’s Drug| tion of {t as venison.” Storee JUST LIKE AN ARTIST! | ‘ALBANY CUT-RATE, REAR ARRHHERETRE REE VLEASE YOU Play Stops While Audience _ Screams With Delight OUR WORK WILL | “Oh, promise me with delight. It is that | a relief from the Some night you terrible plays we've and I had all last season. Will take a little | Jt is just funny— | Supper on the | ¢very line of it, and | sly!” ¢ rybody enjoys | r : cr } it WwW ell, if ae he “The Girl in the Girl in the Taxi Taxi’ runs ail didn’t end that |’ eee.) he aarne way, she began it. prices as hereto- And the number of | | | people who unfor- tunately interrupt- fore are charged— 10c, 30c and 50c, instead of $1.00 to ed that — supper $2.50. The Seattle party made _ the Theatre is the only audience scream . playhouse in Seat- tle playing popular plays at popular prices. It the only house not in the Theatrical Trust, and this sea- son it is doing an with delight. In fact, so continuous was laughter and applause that the show literally stop- ped—the actors standing as mute as is Egyptian mum- enormous business. mies, with faces as | Last night stand- though cast’ in | ing room was at a stone. | premium. Tonight It was great— there will be a simply great—a lit- good chance to see tle “spicy” maybe, “The Girl in the and possibly some Taxi”? —and_ any of the very good night this week. people will not like Believe me, Septi- its suggestive situ- mus, she’s some ations, but the |. girl! | audience 7 roared DAS WANDERER r PHO: RATES Main 9100. Private exchange com necting with all departmenta. Dy maf, Aatty, one month in sdvance, ae oem, $100; ome yenr, 86.26 v be 26e = month SCRIPPS NEWSPAPERS SEND WOMAN WRITER INTO RUSSIA Mary Boyle O'Reilly, Who, as Special Commissioner for The Star, Is Now In the Ghettos of R Investigating the Charges of Di bolical Oppressions of Millions of Jewish People. Mary Boyle O'Reilly, in whose veins run the blood of patriotism that for centuries fought oppression, is going to tell you the truth about the charges of the new bondage of the children of Jacob in the czar’s empire. Every few months the world is horrified by some new story of atrocity against the Jews, by not only the Russian the Russian officials and the government people, but by itself er a strong effort is to be made at Washing- ton to negotiate A NEW COMMERCIAL TREATY B I'WEEN THE UNITED STATES AND RUSSIA. The ‘ 1 of passports for American Jews traveling in Rus- 4 1 come up, but in t and interesting above all to the American people, will be these questions: “ARE THE CHARGES AGAINST RUSSIA OF IN- FERNAL OPPRESSION OF JEWISH CITIZENS TRUE?” “ARE THE CHARGES OF INHUMAN BRUTALI- TIES TRUE?” “If they are all true, shall the United States ally itself in friendly treaty with a nation guilty of such oppressions —guilty of defending outrages on an inoffensive portion of its citizens?” MARY BOYLE O'REILLY IS THERE TO IN- VESTIGATE THE CHARGES. SHE WILL GIVE YOU THE TRUTH ABOUT DARKEST RUSSIA AND THE JEWS. aS conn jon, WOMEN’S STOCKINGS with pockets are on sale in Philadelphia. | Safety deposit boxes wouldn't bother them, either. MAYBE BILLY was a mere child in money matters, as Mrs. Sulzer s, but they sure put man's size pockets in the kiddie’s clothes. HARRY THAW’S taken to weeping whi Maybe it's tears of rage over the saying: ROTTERDAM SCIENTIST says he can mature cheese at once by electricity. But we aren't rioting for more quick age in chi . What we're yearning for is restoration of youth in che some of that soft, delicate, baby-breath atmosphere, as It were. IF GAMBOA of Mexico looks like his pictures, they'll never put down anarchy by electing him presidert, unless they put an amend- ment In their constitution to make him shave daily. LOW WESTBOUND COLONIST FARES In Effect Until October 10, 1913 From all principal Eastern Points to all points in the Pacific Northwest —VIA THE— UNION PACIFIC OREGON SHORT LINE --AND— O-W. R. & N. Bring Your Relatives and Friends West by our PREPAID ORDER PLAN You can buy your tickets and berths right here at home. We deliver these tickets in the East to those for whom they are purchased. We arrange the de- tafls of their trip. Omaha, Ka Detroit .... .....$43.50 City, Denver New York . 55.00 itt 54.75 47.00 Philadelphia .. Pittsburg ... Boston ee Chicago ...... Proportionately low fares from many other cities in the Bast to the Pacific Northwest. Select our ne, and your friends wil! enjoy the benefits of steel coaches, splendid roadbed, electric Nghted trains, courteous attention by effictent em- ployes, and ELECTRIC BLOCK SIGNALS WILL PROTECT YOU, Let Us Give You Further Particulars. J. H. O’NEILL DISTRICT PASSENGER AGENT 716 SECOND AV. TEL., MAIN 932 PU ——

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