The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 15, 1913, Page 4

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q 5 ; - . eg OF (THR SCRIPPS NORTIWHET OF NEWSPAPERA Telegraph News Borvice of the United Press Association. Batered at the pentotfice, Seat las matter, TP Company every IT WAS Charles Dickens who eatd “Cheerfulness and con nt are creat beautifiers and are And it was Henry Van Dyke who & waterproof coat and a foot) i] z e ~< = sz) > 3 Zz > |= pre A cheerful comrade ts better thar in the Church ? Ohio, Courting t HOS are going to put a “cour tainly headed in the right direction | There would be some problems to solve before the court ling parlor could fill every need hing, but courting remains one stries. “Two are problem in a public parlor would be to find enough cosy nooks or corners sto meet the call for privacy | Maybe this could be done by borrowing a lesson from| t That is, build the parlor like a hall, with re-| Pastore arsons, d oe southern who | Lutheran own in general council of their church | to 1g parlor” in every church building, are cer-| ORR " | Socialism may be spread-| of three a individualistic in-| So the our company and crowd.” ¢ barroom Peesses on either side It's pocial centers the weather keeps most of us ‘were parlors at home steady.” But in our big and crowded cities, with high rents reing people to pack into tenements, it's a different story Sparking a girl in the presence of pa, ma little ‘brother has its drawbacks there's a tendency Hto shift the scene to the fother place where danger | And all this while the church plant stands idle most of its Hime, open only on Sunday and dnce or twice during the week i Clearly the church isn’t doing all that it might to better feonditions here on earth. We wish those Lutheran pastors buck. THE REMEDY is not In the removal or the contro! of Judge Hum } but rather in abolishing the laws which give such him such 5 us powers. Remove the constructive contempt law from the Nbeoks and put in the recall law. of during the cold months, when no laughing matter, though; this need better And especially In olden times there 1 indoors her in which daughter see : and Small wonder lance hall, the wine room or some rks. 4 \Poor Thing! She’s a Social Martyr | AKING 1,600 calls in 120 days, ef than 13 a day, is the high water social record in Wash ington’s official life, a record held by Mrs. Marshall, the ming wife of the vice president. And she’s kind enough say that she makes these rounds not only because they're part of the official goings-on, but because she delights meet folks. Still, we've a notion that in her heart she'd prefer fewer minute formal calls in fuss and feathers, with cards to ie butler, an eye-level hand-shake and a quick escape, on le who are a mixture of interesting and stupid, and more for real visits with friends worth while. | _ The trouble with the formal, “sassiety” calls is that it | doesn't get you anywhere, It's a dolled up bit of pretense in} which the game is to be as bogus as possible and to break paway before the human nature underneath has a chance to} \show through. | an average of more} An Acrostic J-uation, with shamed face. There is some heart in a visit when good friends swap penn pp tareenyn epee greetings, advice and gossip. It breaks the tedium of the eatee, Se sees Ge f day's routine and makes you feel that there are some who ® a " 4 t But to spend hours each day on a dreary round of formal | ~< | pop-about calls, not upon those you like to see, but upon those | " you must—why, it seems we'd rather serve a sentence in| . 8 jail. Wouldn't you? i! Is the custom worth its bother? ‘THAT WISCONSIN decision, we venture to say, Is making old) Jacob Furth eit up and take notice that the city councils in 1900 were much easier to manage than public servants in 1913. | COTTERILL SAYS he will tell us as soon as he hae conferred with friends. Well, that ought to make it a cinch he'll run. A Distinction Ruff—Heilo, Fluff! I hear you |married a woman with an inde-| pendent fortune. | Fluff (disconsolately—-No; I mar ried a fortune with an Independent woman. ; GUESS WE ought to win that six-fora-quarter case after the Jolt }the Wisconsin court handed to the traction company In Milwaukee. There is Comfort in knowing that you can obtain one tried and proved remedy ecoughly well adapted to your needs. Every woman who is troubled with headache, backache, languor, extreme nervousness and depression of spirits ought to try ie Straight Up “They say he's a fine, upstanding fellow.” ] “Every bar within a radius of aj mile of here knows {t!” | ri Well Fixed | “Has she any visible means of support?” “Has she? Say, did you ever see her in one of those sift skirte?”- Judge. (The Largest Sale of Any Medicine la the World) bored all Indolent ‘and learn what a difference they will make. By ri rd the system they insure better digestion, sounder BB gird | nerves, and bestow the charm of 5; arkling eyes, @ spotiess rosy complexion and vivacious spirits. jousands upon thousands of ‘women have learned, happily,that Beecham’s Pills are reliable and The Unfailing Home Remedy “Is Jones lazy?” “Lazy’s no name for tt. Why, he'll go into a revolving door and then wait for somebody to come in and turn It around.” 6 2 | The most useless gift in the world | In boxes, 10¢., 28¢. sce ent Gamine cree —a $5 umbrella to a bedridden cripple. | eee | | IT’S IN THE NUMBER ad Mike was passing the golf | links when a golf ball hit him | | in the eye. Enraged, he sald | | things to the golfer. “What's | || the matter with 2” yelled ° Get Into a ° the golf fiend, “when I ery | ra ury Suit | | ‘fore:” you should get out of | || the way." ij “w is it? Then when I : | | ery ‘folve,’ it means you're go- | his al || tng to get a whack on the | | nose. FOIVE!’” | You'll feel and look better than || * pmcnge od ever before. It's surprising what Harry Kemp has been sentenced | confidence it puts into a fellow to ]|to hard labor ; magistrate may Harry's poetry and thought reading his sentences suggested hard labor | one know that he's properly outfitted in correct wearing apparel Easy Payments, Too Our convenient credit plan per- mits you to own one of these up to-date suits at a nominal cost and by paying for it a little at a time it will begin giving you good serv- ice immediately. Ask us about it tomorrow. The former controller of Winni-| peg lost his control of $64,000 in an experience with Gotham confi dence-men Taking the roll away from a controller doesn't leave | enough for a counter. | ee Some beautiful women may wear janything and it is becoming, but other women cannot do it while| autifal, |they are becoming | S08 | You may pay your taxes when you are ready for the griddle. o © 6 Saving "T trust your late something saved husband = had} 1332-34 Second Ave. Near Union & up for a rainy Seattle’s Reliable Credit House day “Indeed he had!" replied tho] widow, with a fresh burst of tears. die had seven or eight umbrellas,” "Deadshot Bill" sees ’em decorate The wall with posters ruther ornate. AT WOMEN (5 NEVER” SOSP/ICIOVS UY A A Ky HE STAR—WEDNESDAY, OCTOB Like he waz part of them thar scenes He clutches the gun that's in his jean POLITE BULGARIAN PROVERBS Only the nightingale can un derstand the Before God you may say rome. cannot,” but not befor Strangers forgive; parents forget | Every woman needs three husbands—a rich one to sup port her, a comely one to love | ber, and a fierce one to beat her One's own pain fs better than | another's happiness When the cloth is woten the loom goes to the garret Better the child should weep than the moth of th hild Two happy are seldom brothers The lame man laughs at the man with no legs at all Crooked chimneys send the amoke up straight a man is doomed to live icine to cure him will perfect of cafeteriox what patrons of other places listen | grammar used by to in the cabaret songs. ere At Home and Abroad “You are « very large man,” sald! ¢ jan, as| a tailor to a new congress he took bis measure. | | the governorship 1] | @ remarks upon the Im- patrons Woll, it i# much like “Think #0, do you? replied the} MC "I certainly do.” “Well, you ought to see me when Washington Critic I'm at home. | i} | Thin is Sarecky, secretary during the latter's 20-year-old Louis js on the witness stand at the { peachment proceedings at Alt Sarecky has testified that he sponsible for the a ities In the expend ppalgn funds ures of t HERO UNAWARES, | Reginald de Bacchus, profit gate son of a millionaire soap manufacturer, sat up in bed and begged for water. "This is the end of my soctal career,” he moaned. “I drank too much last night at the ball and staggered into everythin Ardly ardly,” mur mured his v apologetically Heveryone's praising you for inventing a new dance. | Brooklyn Life, et STOLE OFFICE FUNDS LOS ANGELES, Oct. 15 Frazer, former assistant postm ter of Colton, was indicted by federal grand jury on a charge stealing the office funds Mother Love Portrayed in “Kindling” at the Seattle “Kindling” is the play which made Margaret I] lington famous. It is a play which grips the heart and stirs the emo tions. And it appealed to a big crowd of theatre goers at the Seattle The atre last night. It shows how a woman soon to be come a mother steals for her unborn babe—steals so that she may be able to take it away from the crowded tenement to the fields and flowers and the sunshine of the West “Kindling is a play of to- day. It teaches a lesson to the rich as well as to the poor. Its characters are finely drawn and it is staged quite as elabo- rately as the best road production Critics — tell ‘me that the two-dollar production by the Theatri- wasn't a whit And that Miss Leach in the role of Mag cal Trust better gie can play on the heart strings of her audience quite as effectively as did Margaret Illington As is well known, the Seattle Theatre prices are not ordered by the trust. Fifty cents gives one the best seats on the lower floor. Thirty cents admits to the balcony. To- morrow, Saturday and Sunday matinees are 25« eat in the theatre. it is generally the Seattle ‘Thea the money- for any And known also tre is only back Theatre in the Unit- ed States! “Kindling” runs all this week, and is a play to see and to remember. DAS WANDERER. By Frod Schaefer and A. D. Cond A to Wm. Sulzer campaign for | of New York, who! " 34 an a of Main 9100, Private exchange fom porting with all departments PHONE RATES arth Gears Fah Wy eneriee, in cy, te o moi THE GREATER SEATTLE CLOAK & SUIT CO. That Sixth Ave. Bridge - Editor Star: Permit me th tard Fie taloae'itie ssh il For 3 Days Only lendid victor for democrac in Pee, Golaureneie the eae weds Thursday, Friday and Saturday rf h ma “bridge--and” the poor The Greatest Money-Saving Event in History | “ok was good and valid reason of Seattle. i was advanced for the 10th av. N. F i Napa UHLE Caw batorachliisin accla Hand-made_ Tailored wet Into the city 10 minutes quicker Suits, values $25.00 the addition of those 10 minutes to the working man’s arising hour thus forcing him to walk or ride way around to 10th ay.-and ob-| fously of course the addition of thousands in value to University ity holdings! then to care for the Y district r What discommodance of the five schools rved by the Sixth av. alte, or the Olute rulnatio ot dozens of homes # moat of all—| those who bad bought property th the of the bridge maining at ite present location welected by the Civic} 4 to ever expect Just run timate or Z eyes the poorer own the is a great big factor back of this = what's the tter with Seat coat and tle?” The bigger the contrast, the ask yourself better seems t fact that the ph blind them to the sical, ethical and if you ever saw Beautiful Coats in all such @ economic justice must blend in all style in all materi. tr perm. mt city upbullding your Iife at the Lapgia terials, he w ere’ not surprised at $17.60. Sure + . their selection of the by far costlier ip tate ae splendidly tailored and at 10th av. N. EB And an ab. wonderful tute injumice to other brides istecrepgiveorls fancy three - quarter imant shts. Rumor has ft fer the t the traction company. also fay length and full length. Se ES am -~—_ wv SS eee EE CC” Bincere It wilt siynte p. Prazter, [MB pak! oth Values $25.00. For 4 10th av. N, E. investigate Re eaggecnae three days only Has Plan for Cleanliness and = prices ‘ t over its low death-rate and| unbeatable arkable bealth, would it not be See our well to consider that the apex of anda {health and sanitation is not nearly Bpe reached? Seattle, proud that she ba “8 ni t filthy to the core A ¢ f this nature hile not v from the outside, becomes very apparent when one reeks a room, house, or housekeer ng rooms where rent is not pro hibitive tary conditions of many housekee itively abhorrent be rooms Are pos Filth ts rampant. and to one who has ever upheld the standard of cleanliness the aspect is extremely rer nant | If a city’s health represents {ts agsets, and filth ts detrimental to health, then Seattle is being rob-| bed in a high-handed manner. Go among the housekeeping roome—| search for a week for a fit place of Daditation and you will be ap- prised of conditions and realize “ + ' that these stet nts of mine are| healthiest city in the world, but) A crusade against filth would be modified rather than exsggerated.| would be the cleanest as well. "Tis|more far-reaching than a de- If those moving Into buildings or|only through co-operation with the | termined movement against crime— rooms that are unsanitary would| board of health that the masses of/as filth invariably fosters crime. Immediately rotify the board of| workers ean ever expect to acquire! Yours for sanitation and clean- health, Seattle would not only be/| sanitary accommodations for them- | liness. A. O. WELSH, | Proud of its distinction of being the | selves and families { 2022 Eighth av., Seattle. See Cheasty’s Great Display ° The Greater Seattle Cloak & Suit Co. 1418 Second Ave. Opp. Bon Marche —— «| é. 4@-A PECIAL exhibit of all the new Fall Styles, arranged to aid you in making a selection of just the Suit, Overcoat or Rain Coat that will be most becoming. To be well dressed no longer requires a great outlay of money. Cheasty’s is the most economical place in Seattle to buy your Clothes; there’s full value in every article. Pit Neyo he a Benjamin Clothes There’s snap, youth, vigor and general satisfaction for you in the new Ben- jamin and Cheasty Special Suits, Raincoats and Overcoats; they’re distinctive and carry those marks of individuality that stamp them as a part of your per sonality. RENJAMIN CLOTHES in blues, blacks, pencil stripes, fancy mixtures, seeeeees $18 to $45 in all the most approved models CHEASTY SPECIAL Suits, Raincoats and that -.. $15 and $18 Overcoats, in values elsewhere cost you twice the price Entire second floor is now occupied by Suits, third floor devoted to Over- coats and Raincoats Cheasty’s Haberdashery Second Avenue at Spring Street. If It's Correct, Cheasty Has It.

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