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THE SEATTLE STAR Mow mR OF SCRIPES NORTHWEST EeAGtE OF NRW | == Ry mati, out of ctty * os aix «ois year $32 | |Wehnny Meuse) by . eg Co. Phone, Mata 9100, Private exchanae . ents a us ‘ , i Love is a medley of endoarments, jars, AY AWEU | ’ if Suspicions, quarrels, reconcilements, wars Bennw Seas A i Then peace again { ie ; Willam Walsh f & ao \ | Our Candidates for the Council ) i “i W ( a NUMBER of candidate the 1 just \ iH now vey ) it and they are campaign 1 any What do these candidate t hy With one or two exceptions, the pu 1 about them. They are gumshoe the wena nae (ae } § possible the council may elect sor ¢ m ' ie I searcely ever heard be That was the case with Harry Bruskevith, and the people took the first chance they had to defeat him That was to a large extent the case with Jo ) 4 i The council has had two rat \ Mi of electing men whose pledges were to se H instead of to tt Lic ; The candida r the council at ld be AS publicly pledged as were the candidat « ti ‘ : G. F. MeConnaughy | ‘ us d ; ithis. He stands squarely f 1 al ow and for *honest, humane, and ¢ 1 u *make a good councilman w t ¥ (ao : f would mak i—Mr B i| | oem P . ithe candidates for the ¢ Wot tecampaign, conc ealing themselve 1 the m the » public. q The council, profiting by past experience, should ignore ; mem. Fine Chance for PeanutPolitics HE GENTLEMEN of the charter commission about centralizing rest lity and elim polit m ty government i And what do they p act A city «manager clect * Can you imagine any politics than selection of a city manager by i would be employed in the such a body? It would be 3 t politicians and ward heelers an ideal situation for the peanut 4 bunch of ward politicians, heeled with Sp tmoncy, have, in the past, been able to ¢ ! zones, or wards rh luence w . i, attle began elect councilr n D> fcharter framers at least tentatively propose t ’ © (old system with 30 COUNCILMEN INSTEAD OF 14 ‘ Gentlemen, go slow. Think well 1 earnestly. W 1 the be less politics in a 30-ward council, or more? ill a 30-ware ‘council tend to centralize or scatter a cediatiee ? Will a | 3-ward council select, free of politics, the right kind of @ city manager? . A Talking Point “This phonograph,” salesman, “needs 10 on. “Why not? “It apenks for itself” Siegel rob the eee REASON ENOUGH 5 Those Stolen Savings in a OULD it be anarchistic to suggest that the great, rich] state of New York, in letting Henry thousands of his ill-paid store girls of in a “bank” over which the state took no suf incurred a debt which it ought now to pay ‘by | ‘appropriation to replace what these unfortunates ‘ Putting Siege! into prison, however important as a warn fing to others, won't help these stranded oriP ye They must be cared for somchow until they can find a chance again to care for themselves. Why isn't caring for them duty of the negligent state? E What is government for if not t : And when it grossly defaults on its * it be “stung”? Individuals are held accountable at law for the conse- quences of their criminal negligence Why not states? little savings ion at all their er ssing have lost protect the w job, why Zi EASTERNERS WHO have been spending much time shoveling Snow off their sidewalks should now be in good trim to spade up their back-yard gardens. bysielan to tak and I'v eve AMBASSADOR PAGE made those Englishmen laugh, anyhow should be given credit for that. He walks Never experiment with so important an article as the human food It is the high quality of Royal Baking Powder that has established its great and world-wide reputation. Every housewife * knows she can rely upon it; that it makes the bread and biscuit more deli- cious and wholesome — always the finest that can be baked. It is economy and every way preferable to use the Royal, whose work is always certain, never experimental, There are many imitation ba from cheap ingredient They pound, but their use may b: z powders, made ay cost littl: per atthe cost of health, averred the trod uc. me a ma'am. e long THE STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1914. THE SEATTLE STAR’S LAUGH DEPARTMENT | OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE | Come HERES ‘AND VUL PICK You uPA AA LIFE BOATS! STAND Back $ WOMEN AND CHILDREN A WISE In the Dark uy A little colored girl was alled upon at school to write tence on the blackboard ing the word “de This {s what she Where was Mone when de light went out? ° ° eee Simple Enough A an can a m from know oe The Worst of It During the sermon at a certain church a baby began to ory, and Ite mother Immediately picked It up and began to carry It toward the door. “Stop!” the minister exclaim | Tramp—What's the price of | | the steak? ed. “Don't go away, The baby Senn Cie shithine le not disturbing me.’ Tramp—And the coffee and | The mother continued her way | bread? to the door with the very aud! Walter—That's free | bie remark: | Tramp—Woell, then, take the| oa t, ain't ‘e? But [steak away, and let me have the| ' coffee and bre leMUT” 1S RIGHT! | NEW YORK ut” was the oo| upation Rodman Law, daredevil movie actor, gave police when lock: | ed up for attacking a theatrical manager in @ quarrel over money | matters. WOULD HELP DRUG FIENDS Editor The Star: It fs my opinion [that there should be established in | Seattle, or at some other point in th great state ¢ Washington, a » institution where a drug fiend| r procure treatment and be| ¢ of that awful habit | Some years ago, after a apell of —— February and March Worst Months I found myself, 4 , & drug victim, When I re-| for This Trouble—How to aliz the horror of tr ation, | Remove Easily net about to try to get | There's a reason why nearly ev ght every cure I heard of, only | erybody kles in Februar nd n, after I had spent all the| March, but happily there ts a A money I possessed, tt was dope in| remedy for these ugly blemishes nother form. 1 only wish I could/ and no need stay freckled get cured now get an of othine. ‘There are sanitariume, | know, | 40 rength, from your drug if one has money to pay tn advance. | F'#t d apply a little of It night WOMAN VICTIM and n ng, and a few days| you should see that even the worst DYNAMITE PLOTS freckles have in to disappear Editor The Star: It seems that] While the light ¢ have vanished 1 unearthed a| Cot Now rid ich was planned | Yourself of freckles, for if not re time to dis ved now they will stay all Sum r, and #y an otherwise beaut! wonder hov r money back will stand to t ar me . ertisement ful complexton. Ye falls. —Ad public y such dastardly methods achem. and executed by the enemies of itfized labor? A READER GIVE COPS LESSONS? | Editor The § Ir g of he accident on Second ay. Satur da ht, | cannot help but think of the carelessness of the police de ing officers who do 1 how to manage unruly, The « to shoot the ant partment in ha not wnderstar cUT- RATE horse comes officer wa ‘OHI mal, wh » enough to show that | DENTISTS he s head ild be a good Iden for some of the mounted 1 emen to take We make a specialty of teeth leasons from the New York police| without plates by our painless or the Northwest mounted police. | method Better still, send them to the Round up next fall Coxsravr neaver Amalgam Filling . $1 FEARS ENGLAND'S ENMITY 4 Id ( Editor The Star: First Lord of 0 rowns the Admiralty Winston Churchill, in course of hie speech before the hn of common effectively dl Porcelain Bridgework $3 posed of the sophistry tag fleet of warships is a peace agency He said: “The causes which might ‘Full Sets Teeth $5 & Up ; lead to a general war have not be emoved. The world is arming as| Any work that doesn't prove never before, and all attempts to] gatisfactory will be repaired free arrest it have failed of charge at any time, All of which means the constant} Come {n SOON~-today, tf you multiplying by great powers of| wish—-for free examination and hese engines of war is because it| estimate is expected they will have to be| we STAND BACK OF OUR ised, not as conservers of peace. | WORK FOR 12 YEARS! This is real common sense GUARANTEE ‘ need England's friendship, d. iftwe, b owating the tolls | 20? University St, 2nd and Unt Mahuadil he ie noatdta taal versity St. Opp. Fraser gain England ill-will, Englanc " | Paterson Co. iance ith Japan, good until 3921, | would cause us to be vastly out-| fj numbered on sea and land | The wild lettuce ited State source of rubber, f the northern? bas possibilities as a HE LOOKED THE PART Judge—Let see—what are you charged with? Prisoner—Bigamy! Judge—Kxeuse me; I might have guessed ft ee ee * * * Frightens Fa . * The gentlems * ® red, red none * ® tram-car wh * *® mixchance, had * ® moment . * The atience wa * ® The little * *® the man with » | * And the * ® ask hin fathe * . Merciful heaven!” mut- # # tered the fond parent l* # am the father of a freak * * * el “ee Good Advice 1 ward her ‘s mas tery of one’s 6 Yes, Why Not? Why doesn't somebody try the rad » cure ¢ t cost of It seems to be recom all other afflictic ee Gut We Hate That Most of us are out for the dust but we hate to have it thrown in our eyes. mendes for His Explanation What do you by f mean 1k me only 12 ounces of steak when I send for a pound? Butcher—Ob, I don’t know but I'll tell you what I dt I lost my pound weight, and so used one of your pound packets of tea Instead cee All in the Bill “I have sent for you,” said the man of the house, “be- cause there pipes need look- ing after. There's a leak somewhere, and a lot of gas going to waste.” “No, sir.” repiied the gas company’s inspector, med! tatively; “maybe there's a leak, but there ain't any gas golng to waste—you'll find it all in the bill THE E DIARY OF FATHER TIME It is proposed time to serve a mammoth punch at at some future | some function attended by Hon J. Bryan. But there will be only one ingredient—grape julce. } hat reminds me of one of the big-/ | gest punch brews T ever saw. It} was made Oct. 25, 1694, at the} home of the Right Hon. Edward Russell, commander-in-chief of his| majesty’s forces in the Mediter ra » fountain where and in it] the Mlowing ‘Ingredients were | poured: Four hogsheads of bran dy 0 lemons, 20 gallons of lime | |juice, 1,300 pounds of sugar, 5] pounds grated nutmeg, 300 toasted s and one pipe of dry moun-| Malaga wine. A boat was spe built so a boy might row it and fill the cups of the ing about | ta a Hin ng of steel on the t northerly trans 1 railroad, the Grand Trunk Pacific in ( ja, some time next spring, scenes attending the completion of the Pacific rail i, the first transcontinental, tn 1869 will be recalled As the con struction work proceeded, I remem: ber, transactions in rea! estate in cities and towns that sprung up mushroom-like re fast, furious and uncertain. Everything that looked solid was a sham, Red brick fronts, brown stone fronts and stuceo walis were made to or-! der in Chicago and shipped in (pine) sections Ready-made houses were sent out in lots, boxed marked and numbered, half a dozen men could erect a block in a day and two boys with a screw-driver could put up a@ house in a f hours business deserted the eee or the town moved on, all he had to do was to pack his store in sections and ship {t to the next town The driving of the last spike was announced by telegra all oper ators throughout the itry being instructed to keep o freuit, the taps on the golden spike being sent ax dots to every point, When the ast blow was struck, at Promon on Point, Utah, the word “Done’ was sent, and in every city in the country elaborate — celebrations were held, lasting some cities With th newest contin fol we for two or three days SMART COLLIE PROVIDENCE, R, 1, Mar 1. 8. Gatehell owns a collie dog that can understand English ng to her owner, “Lady,” a pet 1s called, can pick up he demonimation asked up the stepeof any house street she climb inte any wated, accord the a coin of will walk along ted to, r wil desig: | he automobile The Rev. Herbert H. Gowen tor of Trinity church, has chosen to deliver the baccalaur ? ‘ sermon to the 1914 class of the Un A balky motorcycle tossed ® man Edwin Wilson of Ce lumbla (MORE BACKBONE ** LONDON, Maret 6223 25th av Dawson, celebrated anthropologist 3 # dinc red that certain Kak Mrs. Lorenz Smith of Bra ve alsts one Conn., has just begun ber 100th ) the rest in the same house tn wh SPINNING’ S GASH PRICES | Is Help te mone price The heat SPINKING'S CASH STORE 1415-1417 Fourth Avenue. SELECT GOWEN MOTOR BALKY; COP INJUR raity of Washington t un at 46th station and Fer cer is & today at his home? she w4 born in 19 OPE Your New — Spring Suit You want it before Easter. The quicker you get | it the more good you will get out of it this season. At our Upstairs Store you can buy a suit at a cash saving of just Ten Dollars. MEN’S SPRING SUITS —$25 Values for— SATURDAY EVENINGS The secret of our value-giving is this—Upstairs, with low rent—the minimum of operating expense. We invite you to make comparison. Every garment guar anteed to give you absolute satisfaction or your money back Lundquist-Lilly UPSTAIRS CLOTHES SHOP Second Floor Joshua Green Bldg., Fourth and Pike Entrance on Fourth Avenue BANKRUPT SALE Saturday Last Day of the Bankrupt Sale of the MEEK TRUNK AND — BAG CO.’S Stock of Trunks, Traveling Bags, Toilet Cases, Card Cases, Drinking Cups, Military Brushes, Suit Cases, Ladies’ Hand Bags, Bill Books, Pass oo Flasks, Umbrellas. 1s must positively be closed out rardless of cost, early All g March 28 retail store. ( by Saturday, t day we close the 1 bargains. —— 92! First Avenue AT MADISON Rainier-Grand Hotel Block reg as on the ome if you want res