The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 6, 1914, Page 4

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mighty encouraging ward in the past in penal codes Only 100 years ago, there were 200 separate crimes punish able by death in England. In many of our own states today, | MEMNER or LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS Service of the United Preae Assoctation, For good y Some true, NORTHWEST Telegraph News THE scRIrrs h.. ae second Publishing and bad, and like to toward the movement a hanging is a quasi social function In Seattle a f the city y years ago, ome false, but every one of you Stamped with the Image of the king defe coin, —Tennyson, The Humanizing of the Law OW been founded upon a fallacious theory; that in order to build upon a truer foundation, the individual and not the crime must be the primary consideration.” There is a human note in this plea by Brown, of Seattle, father of the “lazy husband” Fred that Justice act, E are realizing, as never before, that man is his brother's | keeper, that our theory of criminal punishment has ( is Lawyers and courts have not been for-| humanizing our nced A, oon age | suit, and the plaintiff, a woman, stated she had been married but once. Her marriage had nothing to do with the merits of | her alleged accident, and the woman was anxious to hide a re gretted past. But she was prosecuted for second degree perjury and sentenced to the penitentiary. The individual didn’t matter, as long as the law said a crime had been committed, whether that crime injured anyone or, not | Justice Brown is in the vanguard of the men of the law who The law had to are conducting the campaign to humanize it endeavors to make lift Judge-Made Law I working conditions idly. grieving today at his parture, wil ~ told at the reader's convenience? be satisfied JULIUS REDELSHEIMER Is dead. Seattle knew him ae few men are known. Redelshelmer loved to meet with men. He fraternized. He was a very human sort, congenial, con- He loved life and its enjoyments, ind many, | attest to hi y for others as he could. number annoy - life, might have the right to publish its grievances _» commission an "year, $5,000 less than he ha: _ should be remedied. Any could get Goethals’ services w © more. It will be no soft-snap to run that canal region, and the "work should be well paid for. re YOUTH IN &t. Louis whe spent his inheritance of $65,000 on an actress, worked half a day in a brick yard—and quit Work! half a day in a brick yard is 965,000 increment Governor of the Zone. “Ration can well be jubilant with Panama. and deserved a job, Goethals has earned and deserves that gov-| ‘ernorship, and Woodrow Wilson is wise, too, i d making it a “one-man” governorship. the governorship will pay Goethals $10,000 s been getting. This is wrong and} ;, private enterprise that needed and ‘ouldn’t hesitate at $25,000 or because he felt til. harder than spending SCIENCE SHARPS eay that there is e ju human knee that is insensible to a pin prick. Wi hatpins please take notice? The Wonder Milli We have the very |; a newspa} unearned This Store Will Be Closed Tomorrow on Account of the Death of Our Mr. J. Redelsheimer J. Redelsheimer & Co. 1625 Second Ave.——216 Pike St. MID-WINTER STYLES! est in gold, lace and side OUR FALL TRIMMED HATS FURTHER REDUCED JUDGE WOOD hase withdrawn. Whereupon the remaining nine candidates optimistically and unanimously join In the cherve—"We should worry.” Let More Pay Go With It ANAMA Jubilant Over Col. Goethals’ Selection as | jonn 1. + heading, and the| down. f ever a man earned} in two THE EDUCATED woman of 28 will not marry a drunkard, @ rounder or a bounder, says Elbert Hubbard. Be Ausonmecan’ girl.” EASTERN MAN says he gets drunk because hie wife goes to the movies; she says she goes to the movies ‘cause he What'll ehe do? WHAT WITH governing the Panama cana! zone, building the Alaskan railroad or ruling the New York police force, Goo thais hae three pretty stiff jobs offered him. et al 1) ladies with nery Co. roll effects, 1525 2nd Ave.—-Two Big Stores——-216 Pike St. AN injunction proceeding in Cleveland the other day, the judge laid down some curious rules to govern picketing was in a strike of hotel waiters for living wages and tolerable The strikers had posted a ets about the hotel, to inform the public The judge ruled that they might have one picket at eac main entrance, but that he might not speak above the tone of moderate conversation, pass out circulars or It any If one picket at an entrance, why not two or as many as might be needed to inform all concerned? j by whisper, why ban the silent circular, in which the story is If communication i This ruling has the look of judge-made law with a squint in favor of the hotel owner. If capital may hire gunmen to act as private armies in defense of greed, surely labor, battling for in wiping out the}as they are now bullt al | | | h} an any other bread excepting that be baked YOU ARG THE ADVERTISED IN TODAYS | ARE THE SAME AS , | PAPER ¢ New York's antisaloon league wants a law providing that every deer bottle have a skull and cross. bones label. That might stop somebody, but we believe a far bet- ter label would be a picture of Sullivan from his neck eee A Cincinnati man declares there is a gross waste of space in flats That may be true, but still most renters pre fer a fat a little larke, so that wall) paper can be pasted over the plas | ter. “ee A woman prevented a wreck near Hawleyvilie, Conn, the other | day by using her polo coat as a signal to stop the train. Don't ask us what has become of the old fashioned woman who used to pre-| vent a wreck by flagging the train} with her red petticoat We Have a Copy of Wm. H. Taft's First Message to Congress Ruchange—8TATUR OF CUPID fine condition, for « a eee | “The girl of today,” says Rev.) Mabel Irwin of New York, “seems) to have lost her backbone.” Serves | her right for her carelessness in| not keeping it encloned “Even doctors and undertakers | profit {n the long run by an in crease of population rather than by the present high death rate,” says| the Indiana board of health. Then| what's the use’ eee An ocean has been declared get the Tammany business there's an Investigath n | ge ae Answered by Mr. Cynthia Grey: steamship rate war Probably to T aan use when asking | It'ls easy to understand your | feelings, Alys, though we think you} are unnecessarily shy, But tn or-| der to sav ) embarrass | ment walk boldly up to the drug] clerk and tell him you wish to buy a nut-pick Dear Mr Grey) 6 not notify th vate detect! until Wed there and Mre tT. J This certainly was quite a: fea for a woman of 79, and while we) do not encourage the pfactice of defrauding railroads, the exe reine | in good for the health Please aive mom recipe fay currant LOB bread Is made the same! it must in an electric) oven, In tt writing for the answer of } Not unles#® she is your wife, How can 1 keep frulte through the winter? —Mra. C. G tan stove fon?—R. W What color invisible Ink should I use on a light bige writing pa per? | OPRIETOR OF,.JHIS STORE | AND You SAY THESE GOODS Do not do anything ao foolish. {a much wiser to eat them throug! the winter. QUESTIONS MR. GREY CAN. NOT ANSWER— | popped a bushel of popeorn the other day and find I have half a/ bushel too much. pop half of It?—R. W. Is ft true that the Japanese use oiish for the complex-| Ay A How caa I un) inte exchange come departments, PHONES **.2ic¢ th In n@panen, year, #98 The Adventures of Johnny Mouse. | . | | 18 LIKE MAGIC TENT Jit is about aa follows | worker myself odlatelg Editor The Star: We hear so! Plastere $104 5 filed a | t | much nowada of the war be printers, $102 brie About t time the ficlals ade | > tween capital and labor | carpenters, $75 1 ministering ¢ t ineus that the real in am afraid, in| teamste and labo $54.66; anee t c > recovedl lost #ight of in the smoke and con iter, $4 nd altrensen, over & tovering | fusion of battle $29 cont n | That there in a straggie going These 1 nen ‘ r fi-\t t of ¢ y on, ho thinking man or mnaan will) cient to raise f . an ed ‘ t € Py ny But it is not, as the social | and clothe childre and it b ita lowe the r t of 2 | tats would have us believe, a strug-|matter of a few years until the| which means that the ¢ —lxle between class and class, but}earning capacity of a man who! forfeit @ great part of | rather i ta and | works with his hand in material wt h or ne ed e mate ¢ on ide a ly lessened. There are few jiobe rdert ke good the de | law-smade institution on the other. for old men of olvent emp |The institution in question is none| { have never taken a man out of surance 7 mee other n our old enemy, monop-|a private loyment office. I “ | Land ts a good deal like the mag-|or hospital f nor have I held f the year) wha fe tent in the d Bastern fable.| back their pa fe time lost| ment for the in |This tent, when folded, was no| through tiness or accident, and I tion f, be nmencing liarger than a lady's fan, but when| have never worked the contractors’ | operations; {ts # shall be | v jsp ad out was capactous enough | boarding house graft; yet, without calculated upon the estimated pays | Ly to shelter whole armies income from these questionable | r etc | | The workingman, by simply | sources, I have paid workmen not GEORGE WAL but more, as g of what n order to | spreading out the magic tent, or,| what they DEMAND, in other words, opening for use| claim to know that land which is now held beyond | a decent man reach by the land speculator, would | live decently create thousands of opportunities! Entirely apart from a humanitar tfor employment WwW. J.B |ian standpo' t is very goo iness for an employer to share WORLEY ON WORKING MEN ea with his men } = (0 a a TZ. we wr 7 Kd The Star A great deal|ter the men and the t = “ eens ' been said and written con the greate | Sow! * KINDNESS be I can’t see ft, and, in the GEO. B. WORLEY | course of a number of years, I aise any time have employed isands of In most cases, and particula in the building trades. are fortunate to ha from six to * NEE DRINK HOT TEA FOR A BAD COLD Get a small package of Hamburg his Breast Tea, or as the German fo! ning the pay f all con tea, put a enp of upon it, pour through and drink @ teacupful at it is the most effective a way to break @ cold and cure grip, COMMISSION NEGLIGENT? Editor The Star: Last March I se St opens the pores, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bow was employed by the Parrell Lum-| els, thus breaking a cold at orca, nine months’ employment in the ber Co. and remained with them| It ts inexpensive end entirely year, and. striking an until August Se ee aretanae 2) ee monthly wage for the whole year the company My fellow ' Advertisement. QUES AN ECONOMICAL, DELIGHTFUL PLACE TO TRADE average ‘How Thin People Compare our ow, econasion ren YZ, Can Put on Flesh § os 42 stores, and t's easy to GUESS —<- Dis i | A New Discov hearty, filling dir night.’ What b preducing, now ay like unburn on grate. The mate ut your food doern't work and atick and the piain truth is you hardly get HOW WE DO IT MEN? =) a) GUNMETAL BOOTS a) Dutton and blucher. sty’ %% vo i % SF 4 [ Satisfaction or your money back. WOMEN’S BOOTS Stylish, durable Boots with medium vamps and round or broad toes in Patent Colt, Gunmetal Calf, Russia Calf, Viel Kid, Velvets and Satins, at $2.50 Mail Orders Delivered Free by Parcel Post Take Elevator. Open Saturday Evening to 9. BOSTON SAMPLE SHOE SHOPS* SECOND AVENUE AND PIKE STREET Second Floor J. P. RAWLINGS, Mgr. Sargol tablet 6 differs It 11d pounda of h blood the carryin ig ery) ounce of aking material in| your food to every part of your body | Rargol mixes with your food it for the bi form HEALTH TIPS Clothes worn next to the skin should be changed at least twice a week during the winter and every other day during the summer, Underwear worn dur ing the day should not be worn while sleeping It Binds the body and prevents perfect rest ay f sonth while ts f Eltel Bidg. HEASTY’'S Suit and Me) Overcoat = Sale you more than your offers money ever bought before—the utmost in clothing value In overcoats there are all the new rough fabrics in the most approved and expressive models In suits, the tweeds, worsteds, cheviots and fancy mixtures are the finest it has ever been our ge for. tune to display All the clothing in our $15 and $18 great department is now $12 and $14; $20 gar $15 $25 garments are $18.75; $30 Benjamin ments at garments, $35 $22.50; gar ments, $26.25, and $40 suits and over coats, $30.00. CHEASTY' HABERDASHERY Second Avenue at Spring St. and relaxation 'S.A.R. ELECTION The annual meeting of Seattle chapter, Sons of the American Rev olution, was held after luncheon at Good Kats cafeteria Monday. The} following officers were elected President, Dr. Clarence A. Smith reelected; vice president, A. Virtue, reelected; sec y W. Smelser; treasurer, H. W. Mead historian, William Douglas Johns chaplain, Rev. John O, Foster, D. D. Complete Report of Market Today Ferices paid profucers tur vegetables | and froit erected Aatiy b i Have Purchased the Business of E. A. JOCHMANN le ¥ 3. W. Godwin & Co) tne 6’ O16 ng is LADIES’ AND MEN’S TAILORS ; a git AT 500 UNION ST. bead 'intnes *? : uid I have also bought a large quantity of im- ported woolens which I am offering for 10 ‘a 3 days at greatly reduced prices. In order to get 118s ot acquainted with you I am going to offer the 20 @ following prices for the next 10 days: $60.00 SUITS ror. ...9 40.00 $50.00 SUITS for... $05.00 We guarantee the goods and trimmings to be the best quality and the workmanship strictly first class. Perfect fit guaranteed. We can surely please you. All the details of suit making are under my personal direction. Having had 20 years’ experience, during which time I have been associated with such firms as Redfern of New York, Morris of San Francisco and others of equal repute, enables me to give you the very best service to be Complete line of New Spring Patterns to choose from Prices paid prod poultry, veal and (Corrected dally by Perry Broa) under fat and under spring ducklings “4 Turkeys, fat, lve on Turkeys, old Toma, fat ba, Kood sire, dow 2.00 a fowl, lve, dow. 2.00 | Helgian hares 9 {Old pigeons, good alze, dx Pitt] Ole Eo ife-tt Le obtained. ae ok howe «pres for butter, exes Corrected daily by The Bra Butter Native Washington creamery, brick a fold pack 33 rea Wastern creamery, brlek Zealand creamery, J. T. CROOT 500 Union St.——Cor. 5th

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