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‘THE SEATTLE. STAR MEMRER “or sonirrs Entered at Seattle W dine Pabitened Datty wy Te Get Out and See, Wm. ! BODILY comfort the O* Queen Elizabeth, in the heyday her power, or — than of George III, says Wm. H. Taft in his latest li | ‘contribution to a weekly magazine Mr. Taft might well out among laborers ‘and see for himself, at first hand, whether of not iy the statement he makes is based on fact. ol suinia| ao” It is true that the application to mechanicd a ; ee { electricity, electric ligigt, street cars, tele raph and tele-| | She—On, there goes Porgy ee ys re eet ' Pot production| Brown! Isn't she lovely? I wish phone and the motor have reduced the cost | Lets B I was half as good looking! and have made the lives of many more comfortable ut He—Oh, but you are ae er they have not, as he says, reduced the cost of the necessities of life. Surely the greatest necessity and everywhere, things have not reduced its cost H wore Of course, if we had not progressed through inventions long and discoveries in cients ty ad mechanics, this nation| airt thet, would be standing still and, standing still, would die "Sew and then Instead of sitting back in smug contentment, however, | eet 8 reat and drawing Utopian wor tures of how much “bodily) p g_-on, xen, Mame, we've comfort” e masses have, would it not be better for the] got to work tonight, too. diplomats, sociologists and ex-presidents to see things as a: eee they really are te their mental energy to devising He Should Work! | ways and means of nishing work to the men and women ras Wite thie ee Ra supplanted by steam and electric driven machines? To ts a vind A lesson might be learned from our young neighbor to} sweat—I know you the north, Canada, where @ movement is providing women, increasing the ernment land, ET US have charter commission. “NORTHWEST Ry mall, out of city, 85 per mon. up to six mos. By carrier, cl not only employment to men and but a good home and living, WHICH TO PAY FOR THEM. LeAGUE OF WI ®THE STAR—MONDAY, MARCH 30, 1914, six mos. $1.80; year 08.96 month, humblest laborer has more than the great mass of is food, and these} BY JIM MANEE back the work is beginning k effeminate to me. . practical to land whe Got the eer and at the same time production of food-stuffs for the world | W rat 2 owe Up there, when a worthy man takes up a piece of gov-! Brown $ 1 must go around the railroads build a comfortable house for and pay ht A ae him, furnish two cows, pigs and chickens and perhaps some, )')"" hth a with you! Brows | 4 e sheep AND GIVE HIM TWENTY YEARS’ TIME IN : = + © te Pe nyt i gh a A Myth! Sure | | 80 inches long; the average The dealer tn antiques was | woman's waist ts 30 inches showing an old violin to a round. How wonderful are Why Not Submit Both Plans? probable buyer | | thy works, O Nature! y ” “Yes,” he sald, “that ts of rs ° a heart-to-heart talk, gentlemen o the! bistorical fnterest; that ts | eee | the fdentical fiddle Nero | Inconsletency played while Rome was burn Poet—You said the other day For the sake of the argument, The Star. will grant that meh Ry oi | tn your paper that poverty ts not Oh, that ts a myth | the city.manager and 30-ward council, as you plan, may be he dealer sxveod, tayiad eet ive a desirsble form of city government for Seattle Yoo, it fai, , wis Poet —And yon decline my ? e me was on it it has ornes use you # Piut regardless of the merits of such a charter, there is an Geean, oe Ey ig Bog oo ese inst it. Still fe _ governmen t, to them. In view of that vote, Then both the city “Set-Back?”’ . Now, let us consider a of something that she wants Most of merely, wholly, | wants it. it. a On the contrary, a is after. It is a battle-cry. more chronically than ever. She did not demand, BUT HE learned one lesson, through undisputed fact that a large percentage of the people|~ And they will vote against it ut his eyes to the probability that such a charter is likely to go down in defeat. Boe of Seattle want to change their form of| or they voted overwhelmingly in favor of the commission government on the advisory question proposed ig much opposition to the 30-ward-council-city-manager plan, | it seems only fair that the charter commissioners should also! ‘ernment charters can be submitted to the voters as alterna-| tive propositions, and Seattle can then choose one or the Ii only the 30-ward-council-manager-plan is submitted, there is a grave probability that all the work of the charter commission will be a sheer waste of time and energy and Huh! HILE the equal suffrage amendment had a majority in the United States senate, it failed of the necessary ‘two-thirds vote, and the women have had what is called a} “, ” “set-back” to woman in a matter us know something about woman—not much, We know that a ely, that she isn’t getting what she wants WHEN she It does not mean that she ceases wanting it, her determination, desire, ferocity to finally have what she And the Adam of today is almighty dull if he hasn’t Eden, and that is that when And one can 4,000 KILLED IN TORREON BATTLE and in view of the fact that there EL PASO, March 30.—With bis|took part In the earlier fighting to : torce of bodied men reduced to| the environs of Torr Vib re a straight out-and-out commission government plan. | pot more than 3,000, Gen. Velasco, force very narre acaped manager and the commission gov-|commander at Torreon, wa: sihilation at Gomer Palacio. sisting today, according to a dis Mines Exploded | patch from the front. The federals pretended to re. treat from the town, the rebels pur sued them and tmmediately several sent, and although ft w ted the mines exploded, creating dreadful rebels were slowly gaining, they havoc, while at the same time a mitted the struggle the federals, terrific machine gun and rifle fire were giving them was something | ¥a® opened by federal soldiers hid they had never dreamed of den behind the parapets which sur It was estimated that fully 2,500/ round the roofs of most of the federals had been killed and as adobe houses (SR "che"ite"bae ase vr| OUCH! BACKACHE, | RUB LAME BACK Rub Pain Away With a Small Trial Bottle of Old The battle in Torreon's streets was raging when the message was Rebels Lose 1,500 ' Arrivals here from nabua City said they believed d stitutionalists bad been killed. Of their wounded they asserted that 600 had already reached Chi huahua City and that the hospitals and has set out to get “ ” at Paral Jiminez and Santa Rosalia “St. Jacobs Oil” ; set-back” to her MEANS, | vere Milled. exclusively, definitely, undeniably,| according to other wounded who Poe hs: sore and rheuma- n't suf. back is sciatica, D. 0 : ‘ or quits fet Geta e of old, trying to get it, or ever will quit wanting it and trying to N f h honest “St at any drug ews of the | joe sot tan it a “set-back” to woman, in her wanting ai tye Irene ha nee me and trying to get, is a whetstone upon which is sharpened Nort west 4 ons oad Arche gt gor Pe : . * . * crippled! ht OO! It is inspiration for the girding | . YARMA~Ch r won - . 7 ee pe NORTH YAKIY Ch ga asp up of the loins and going after the object hotter, stronger, | |, ” sdon, Duluth illlions will| Used only once. It takes the ac build great mansion on bis fruit|#%¢ palo right out and ends the et Adam to promptly eat the apple at first|ranch here. misery. Te is magical, yet abso- ATE IT! Ss sam lntely harmless aad doesn't burn or rot tote ll CENTRALIA. — Centralia repub- | @!scolor the skin cans held “get together Saturday night. anque Nothing else stops lumbago, scl- atica and lame back misery #0 promptly and surely. It never dis- tens of centuries ttarts in to get all the woman what she believes is her right, a “set-back” means just about what| SPOKANE.—John Pattison, dem-| appoints! we've herein said it does. You can apply this to a ballot |ceratc national com omen, | b et " says rk horse will get ¢ nocrat a Dosnet. {ec senatorial nomination. Ment dresses. Paris thon hunting touris' THEY'VE FOUND a federal judge In Indiana who enjoins street car alice | men from quitting work. For variety of judiclary, Indiana Is the place YOU CAN'T judge the value of its contents by the number of locks on a woman's head. PARIS SAYS New York women are outdoing Parisians in indecent foolish to make that admission, if it wants our sensa no names. _ DR.E.J.BROWN y Jue PORTLAND. Cleeton re fused to permit se nt of suit 0 of Elizabeth Larson, servant, who 4 she had been kept slave by A. Paige for 16 years. N sks $6,600 wages. The T BELLINGHAM, Wash. ea TODAY" 8 STYLES ‘TODAY | Liberal Credit Will Make Buying Easter Apparel Easy at the Eastern | grand jury has been discharged | TACOMA.—Mayor Seymour try-| ing to get scalp of Chief of iote| PORTLAND. Portland's tat} municipal dock was opened Satur day FAIRBANKS, Alaska will be closed Sundays after Saloons April BY A DENTIST You don’t have to out! a large amount of cash OLYMPIA, Wash ON FIRST AVENUE hete—to get stylish, well-fitting and up-to-date clothing two more for Easter 7g al hg oak 4 Why, then, put off bu intil the la t- RICHLAND, Wash.—Mrs. Emi ing to get all cash, bef lecting your aster outfit Koehle ied of pneumonia two Buy apparel with a reputation—On Credit—like Brad cat ogy ath of husband, August budy Garments for Men, and Regent Clothing for Women 4 new apparel in this large and beautiful st« | pec es i en fan to snve you Just ; «made for you—and, after your selection ioiar ¢ tale : ‘ small amount down, the balance wher Wd Dm Ida N , ft lor, it We will cheerfully open a ant for V Melt seine it’s so handy? governor of Colorado 1 do get yours now, Convenient Credit System. ~~ 1332-34 Second Seattle's Reliable Credit House Al THI THEATRES TONIGHT cy Moore—''The B Browns. - iy Metropolitar T rDWN }, FROWN, D. Dd. S$ tion pictures At -& 211 Union at Srahautie-Ck Senttles Lending Dentint |] Seattic > Jane's Pe | 713 First Avenue | Tivoli—"T) t Kin | ope nings untt) & and days MOAR Aldea s edesbeelda Ril ible | ntti 4 for people ™ work. 8 | The Miser 1 asked him how to get rich, he told me but I shan't follow his advice. Why not? “I don't i ke his methods.” “Dishonest? “Ne at all. He eald he sim ply anved his money instead of spending it for everything he thought he wanted.” oe Had a Self-Starter If you {nto the matter you will find that every man who has | gone the downward path was equipped with a self-starter Two More of 'Em to Give Us ‘Once Over’ Two more official visite from Washington bearing on the ew tablishment of the govern ment railroad are announced In dispatches telling of the coming of Franklin K. Lane, secretary of the Interior, and Roosevelt, ant secretary of the navy. Roosevelt will spend four days Inspecting the Puget Sound Navy Yard, April 19 to 23. Ghops for the government railway may be established at the Bremerton yadis. The secretary of the interior has announced he probably will reach Geattle July 1. | KILLED BY GAS An accidental opening of gas jets caused the death of Fred W. Coburn. in his room yesterday at the Colorado rooming how BO, A normal head contains about 80,- 000 hairs. KVERKY ONE Is INTRRESTEO IN A GOOD PLACE TO EAT. Visit Thie Home-Like Restanrant The Meals Are Good, WARREN’S LUNCH Wheeler's—218 Union Vormerty NX “Me. Out-of-Town Buyer | trom your printing by mal) FRANK P, NOLAN 1407 Fifth Ave. @ will save you money « orders. on all prit DANCING HIPPODROME Dancing Ta Tearhe p Quit MEAT IF YOUR KIDNEYS ACT BADLY Take Tablespoonful of Salts if Back Hurts or Bladder Bothe 8. We are a nation of meat eaters {and our blood ts fied with acid, says a well-known authority who warne us to be constantly o j suard againat kidney trouble The kidneys do thetr utmost ur to the blood of this 1 ing | acid, but become weak from tl overwork; they get sluggish; the eliminative tlesues clog and thu | without finding the waste Is retained tn the blo dy to poison the entire system, When your kidneys ache and feel | ike lumps of lead, and you have tinging pains in the back or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or the bladder iw Irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night; whon you have severe headaches nervous and dizzy spells, sleepless ness, acid stomach or rheumatisn u bad weather, get from your | pharmacist. about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a table i a glass of water before t each morning and in ‘ ‘your kid 6 will act fine. 4 famous salts te made from the of grapes and lemon juice, bined with lithla, and has b used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys, to neu | tralize the acide tn urine so tt ts no longer a source of Irritation, | thus ending urinary and blad disorders. Jad Its is inexpensive and can. not injure; makes a elie ul ef. rvescent Iithla-water r and obody @an make a mistake ng a little occasionally to kee | kidveys clean and active, p the 2 "What in your greatest wish, doctor, now that you have sue | sefully passed for your de | Kree | Young Doctor—To put “Dr.” before my own name and “Dr.” fter the names of other people. . c+ Perfectly Plausible Cautious Customer— Rut tf he's a young borse, why do his legs bend so? Dealer mal too low been Hiving in a stab for him, and he’s : | A Good Actor Hunt (a poular and pros perous t)—Now, Albert what'll yer say when I take ye into the kind lady's Srorin’ room Albert (a proficient apll) Oh! All right, | know; put on a beautiful lorst look and say, “Ob! | | | Ah, sir, the poor ant- | as | had to | stoop! o- Mra ee SPINNING’S CASH PRICES Enable your money to do more se We ‘sell for cash; pay personal attention to details and save you from paying the strenuous prices credit houses have to have to make up for leaks and losses. 35c 6-in. Pincers 50c 8-in, same 15c pr. 3144x3% Season Japanned , Loose Pin Ball Steel Butts (1 pr. in box with screws) 10c 35c 6-in, Japanned Chi .25c 50c 8-in. Japanned Chain Bolt 5c 750 Bin. Solid Bronze Foot Bolt Finish Foot Bolt Foot Bolt 60c Dull Brass Finish Fiat Stee ted Casement or French Window juster ave 12-02. can U. K. 0. Hand Soap 4 cans U. K, O. Hand Soap ‘ U. K. O. Is old Gresoivent—the best hand soap we know of. You get 48 ozs. of U. K. O. and 24 ozs. of other hand soaps. This gives you 500 worth for 25c. 1415 Fourth SPINNING'S CASH STORE 1417 Ave. AMUSEMENTS Vaughan & Bushnell Cope BeRtiges M Oo ORE wvwi! ‘METROPOLITAN THEATRE muvver, Js this heaver | Bi “THE INSIDE OF THE WHITE SLAVS o 96 | TRAFFIC” siesta ‘The Blue Bird 7°" Judge Have you eve en the a] awer Ploor, no pd 82.00. ive Be nal F Witness—Never, your honor | but I've seen him’ when I strong: | ALL NEXT WEEK | PANTAGES ly suspected he'd been at it | MATINERS WED. AND #AT. | ee | | ALISKY'S HAWAIIANS Boot Meat | eg y ea Sweet Singers from Southern Seas Talking about a shortage of | CREO food at one period during his Mall Orders Now Seate Thursday a last expedition, Sir Ernest i Pricea, the to $t; Wed. Mat, Beot| 1 the “Creation of Woman” Shackleton tells am amusing Keats $i, Bat. Mat, 260 to 61.80 100 and 200 story of one of his companions, | i On his return to England bis # ToJo-YW-Ou]-J| SEATTLE THEATRE bootmaker met him, and asked Vhone “o “How did yo d those boo! Musienl Comedy. t Mate pcre ae Jon ine tater, Pree “THE MUSTARD KING TONIGHT AND ALL WERE n 1 ever taste! waa the Chorus BAILEY &@ MITCHELL PRESENT prompt reply MARRRSAN CABINET MEMBER WITH US! William C. Redfield, secretary of commerce, who looks, with his burnsides, like the pictures of “Mr. Common People” fn the funny car- toons, is having the time of bis life in Seattle, He likes the town and the people fo well, he says, that he's ortaaaat back just as soon as he can tease President Wilson Into giving him | & good, long vacation from het duous dati f being & secret of comm Safe ugh it is to say his viatt | will result for the general better ment of Northwest fishing. inter ents, He's Busy Today Conferences galore to this end have been mapped out. The secre. tary is a busy man today In spite of business duties, he ts having a Soll ood time, With Mrs. Redfield, he went to church yesterday and he ard the Rev. H. Hi Gowen, Tr b preach they went over d to “Ala bama d Mrs WwW. L rings In the party we Judge George Donworth and Mrs. Donworth, Her vey I ey, Miss Mary Gazzam Miss Lea Gazzam and Miss Ruth Gazzam. They returned on the steamer Kitaa ast night, and Recretary Re 1 went to the Washington hote Wants to Come Back “The ov ment railway in ka will mean ar f great prosperity for the te and the Northwest,” said Sec Red field. “I hope to ret r and make a more prolonged visit of be guest of cratic club tonight in the Lyon building. To morrow at luncheon he will be the of the Comm jal club. The » Lucia will be sung by Ir rlub ning for 7 BANDITS WHO SHOT UP BANK ELUDE POSSES ELMA, March 30.—it is be- lleved today the seven men who shot up the Bank of Elma early Saturday and stole $3,500 In currency from the vaults have made good their escape aves We mor A posse of 40 men returned late last night after ing the woods for several miles in every direction, trace of the bandits, The roBbery occurred while cus: tomers w coming in and out of the bank. The men, led by a big fellow who spoke broken English lined the bank employes up at the points of their guns, awed passersby | with fusillade that a injured no} one, entered the vaults and took the] coin at thelr leisure. They fi several shots up and down the | street as they took to the woods. $90,000 APIECE! The widow of J. D. Thagard and his former partner, FB. V. Adams were awarded $90,Q)0 each by Judge Frater in distributing property in volved in two saloons era ° Sights “00-260 Nights 7:15 and 9 Mary Jane's Pa \Rargein Night Monday. STUBBORN | HIT BY A TRAIN VANCOUVER, Wash., March 30, VANCOUVER, B. C., March 20.—| —gtruck by a North Bank passen- It may several months before | ger train at Washougal, George A. Sheriff d Wells of Mt. Vernon sue-| Cady, a bookkeeper and timekeeper ceeds in getting Geo, Pall, beld @8 | on the North Bank right-of-way, was one of the bandits who robbed a | killed. He was dragged 420 feet. Great Northern train at Samish and ieanweres three passengers, back | linto the state of Washington for |trial, Although Ball Laliraprang Mee teen | innocence, he says he won't go bac without extradition papers. B. J. Boyd of th “Nobody knows how long you'd! , oor, Bord, ibe government his approval of the reduction of ex- penses planned by Mayor Gill and Health Commissioner J. 8. McBride - for the Seattle department. “BALL hold me tf you got me down there,” he told the sheriff. “I prefer to | fight it out here.” Special railroad rates for Califor. nia fairs agreed upon. “GAS, DYSPEPSIA _ AND INDIGESTION SETTLES, IN “PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN” SOUR, GASSY STOMACHS FIVE MINUTES—TIME IT! | | remedy | You don't want a slow when your stomach is bad—or an| incertain one—or a harmful one—| your stomach is too valuable; you} mustn't i it with drastic drug I e's Dfapepsin is noted for its || ing relief; its harmless- || ha celle ie harolets’ Dr. A. M. Johnson regulating sick, sour, gassy stom- Licensed Chiropractor achs, Its millions of cures in ind!-|]qm_eatTs ALL NERVOUS AILMENTS gestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and || successfully without the sther stomach trouble has made ft e. There | will f | ment, doctor | | skeleton frame and nervous aystem be Id ove fect stomach famous the wo Keep this per 10 disemee yield under his drugiess treat- because by bis knowledge of the in your home—keep it handy—get || ts able to locate the cause, which te an a large fifty-cent case from any tmpingement of the erves, resulting drug store and then if anyone || = int and tater should eat something which doesn’t = Ba: agree with them; if what they eat hea jes d, ferments and sours || If he will tell you so, : “a: caumon headache || if he ean not help you he will not take va jus; causes headache, || your case, Hundrels have been cured dizziness and nausea; eructations|| py nim who had practically given up of acid and undigested food—re all hopes of ever being well again. member a8 soon as Pape's Diapep. He makes no chi yon fi neu sin comes {n contact with the stom ages for consultation. ach all such distress vanishes. Its| Oftice hours, 10 5 p.m. and promptness, certainty and ease in||7 to 8 PR ™ Lady w t overcoming the order try &. ee worst stomach dis 812-815 American Bank Block *« is a revelation to those who | Second at Madison, Main 2788. This Man Has Secured immortality w% HelasPerfected the Talking Machine save by deliberate design, The records are half as big, yet twice as long. One was played im the Edison laboratories six thousand times without showing any signs of wear, They cost no more than ordinary records, The machine costs from $60 to $500, But even if they cost from six hundred to five thousand they would still be cheap, for they re produce the human voice—not in the accepted manner of the ordi- nary talking machine—but without any hissing or scratching and with a clearnes: 2 nearness—a volume so remarkable as to border on the supernatural When you hear a woman's voice on the new Edison machine vou will instinctively un- co yobr head It is a pity that we have only a few words with which to deseribe 80 great an invention You are invited to come and hear it. No visitor is urged to purchal —It is nev@r necessary THOS. A, EDISON Mr. Edison has produced a talk ca UREPSEUCSCEE Tam) ing machine which uses indestruct ov 2 ° ible records and which requires no iets Wisc House needle Instead of a steel point RS Kringer Mer & Port Owner the new invention carries a dia-| \ mond. Edison has produced a disc record which cannot be broken