The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 25, 1914, Page 4

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THE STAR—SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1914. U. S. BLUE JACKE G AT TAMPICO TO AVENGE INSULT TS LANDIN affE SEATTLE S oF sChIPPs NORTH ‘VERA CRUZ IS ee | | QUIET UNDER Datiy by The star Publishing ¢ exchange consecting partment Americans Rapidly Cleaning Up and Improving Sani- tary Conditions. |NO FEAR OF ATTACK SS. 3 What Seattle Needs Most AT Seattle needs most ts constructive leaders, in thought and action. One man with energy and capacity for leadership can ao complish more for good or il! than a thousand men who simply fol- Proximity of U. S. Warships | Guarantees Safety in City. “One lender like La Follette of Wisconsin can direct the thought of & Whole state and finally wip @ fight for progressive, coustructive | By Bernard Rucker | VERA CRUZ, April 26-—~The pa cifieation of Vera Cruz was com- | plete today, though Admiral Flet |cher still advised Americans to | keep off the streets after dark. The United States’ forces’ work | was mainly administrative. The sewers were ordered cleaned, the dead buried and the most energetic | measures generally were being jtaken to establish thorough sant |tary conditions, This was consid- ered of the most urgent import One leader like Edison can revolutionize industry; one leader like Morgan can build up a gigantic trust and control the wealth of the ‘Oho leader like Abe Ruef can plunge a city into dishonesty and in- evelops leaders, Not all men who are graduated ‘college are leaders, Many men are leaders who have never stepped the gates of a untversity college training gives to the student who seeke it a broad out. | : ‘on life, it gives him vision, and {t develops the latent powers of | a within him. College training such as the University of| ington offers awakens students to the ideals of life, to the! Meaning of service to the community. The tendency of colleges to de-| Jeadors in all lines of activity Is growing | And right now leaders are what this city—any clty—needs more) than anything else. FARNSWORTH WRIGHT ‘The Universities and the War W HEN President Lincoln issued his first call for volunteers to tn: | ance, since the climate js such that in the event of a prolonged stay, |the greatest precautions will have to be taken to prevent much sick- vade the South and put a stop to what appeared to be a little news. rebellion, the students at Yale, at Harvard, at Princeton—| and, ot, nearly every college in the orth, answered by enlisting tn | be in xe helping drill other compantes. The entire etudent body | ‘one little military academy volunteered, In the South similar events) king place. Whole colleges enlisted. Universities went to war “with a whoop, professors and all ‘What will be the attitude of the students fn the untversitips toward ting to fight Mexico? | We do not believe that patriotism—and that does not mean the ‘Outward manifestations—is taught better or more successfully tn other institution than in the modern university. The collegian of | foday carries his patriotism to the polls in election time, He does not) his patriotism in business transactions. | But the university man of today does not love war. Ho ts inelined oubt the advisability of gotng to war on any account. He Is a man He {ts human in that he loves to Itve. | But when the president of the United States—and especially a pres- ident 0 popular and so universally loved as Woodrow Wilson—tssues @ tall for volunteers, the university man does not lng behind. He does) have to be coaxed. He will never have to be drafted / Today at the Untversity of Washington more than 400 students | ready to answer the first call. If these students actually are d away to battle, others wil! enlist, and when Coach Gilmour issues first call for football material next year, he will have build up an eleven from men who are less than five feet four inches or who are otherwise physically unfitted for military service RALPH BENJAMIN. City Resuming Normal The reestablishment of the mu- nicipal government was progress- |ing slowly. Street cars are run- |ning and the newspapers have re- sumed. They give lurid accounts jof the city’s capture. Unquestionably there {s an up- dercurrent of bitterly anti-Amert- can feeling. Nevertheless, the city is regaining much of its normal air of gaiety. The cafes were crowd- ed with laughing, chatting crowds last night, while the marine band played tn the plaza. To the peons, who did most of the “sniping,” the Americans were a problem, They could not under- | stand how the bluejackets and ma- |rines could shoot to kill one day and feed and nurse their enemies jthe next. | Gen, Funston’s troops were sex- pected In three days. Attacks by Gens. Maas and 2 pep ev =<=— = = es . longer expected. Cor ; The above rst action pic sinc i the fleet's guns could annihilate picture, ¢ hostilities commenced, of the American squadron at Tampico under Admiral Mayo, The marines af€)inim if they attempted such~ a shown landing to avenge the insult to the American flag at the place where it was offered. thing, it fs not believed there was further danger of an attack. Getiatess at eso won exten et |THE SEATTLE STAR’S LAUGH DEPARTME Ga ee tain disadvantages of the large city as the location of a univer. v ws, the small town in which it ts situated tends Ifa uni cr gro" | WASHINGTON, April 25.—Gov. |Hunt of Arizona wired Secretary mosphere of the whole o- i a — \Garrison today regarding the mili- QUESTIONS MR. CYNTHIA | ‘tia. Gov. Colquitt of Texas also learning. The students | SEEN 'EM? , and with their chers. | | By Jim Manes. OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE ew evects or? y | Ab, ba, the Paris women [___ourpursts OF everert True || o reside ated na ered wired, inquiring whether the gov- vents or institutions which distract from study and the - se ttiebttipiatitinnehgtomitin are few « | it chilly winds would freese; In it too late to prune a aoe ernment would pay the expenses of / D. T. ihe wholesome ences of college life, Truly, the college town ms created has carats felightral charm. ~ Their latest outdoor fashion tree . 7. militia already ordered out, and " But the large city, such as Seattle, is a wholly desirable location Is skirts up to their knees. Please tell me how to lace state university, such as the University of Washington. Our styles are quite some differ. curtains.—Helen 8. the feature stories in today’s Star show this more clearly ent, How many feet are there in a statements within the compass of « brief editorin! could. The newest fashion sitps, railroad yard?—Orrle K. thing, a university so situated ts accessible by superior The women's classy shirtwaists What kind of mattress would transportation, both by water and rafl. For another, With backs slit to the hips. be dest on an onion bed?—M. Mbrary facilities, both general and professional et . the experience of city life, in itself invaluable in the| ,%S Well, wolh we are glad My coachdog ts suffering from Hing of faculties and the stimulation of #, and offering! *° ** youre spetted fever. What can I do for unlimited opportunity for the study of social political prob- a badtibe bim?—J. life of the city, the great construction projects Pricing It. operation of large plants and industries pro- Timid Youth—What do | have clinical experience to be had In no such abundance} pay for a marriage license? | Facetious Clerk—Well, you get more importance than anything else !s the very masa) It on the installment ' population. To be but one in a great crowd may be dis| Timid Youth—How's youths of small ambition, but to youths of mettle and pur- Facetious Clerk-—Two doliars it means loss of egotism and gain of the true spirit of democracy. down and most of your ealary ENOCH ANDERSON. Pn week for the rest of your le. Garrison replied that they would not be paid unless ordered out by the government. Ay Me. Out-of-Town Buyer Order your printing by mail FRANK P. NOLAN 1407 Fifth Ave. He will save you money on all printing orders. ——AND WHAT'S MoRS, K Know WHAT I CAN DO; awd WHGN I WANT To, 1 CAN Kee? UP WITH THE BEST OP 'SH, AND TAKE [IT FROM ME, B ALWAYS KNOW WHERE To GST Orr, 4nd —— Mr. Cynthia Grey's Household Hints Always keep a jug of Iimburger cheese around the house. The children can amuse themselves with it on rainy days when they cannot play outdoors. Beautiful pillow shams can be made out of unused flannel cakes, Much time and labor can be saved on washdays by taking the engine out of the automobile and “Why don't you wish to go wane it to turn the clothes | along shopping?” wringer. ” Never rock the baby to sleep in — with your style, peo. ple won't believe I'm with you.” & corn-erib, “Well, I'll overcome that. I'll An old-fashioned sieve can easily be converted into a has- stop and ask you for money ev- ery little while.” sock. fe for table use can be made slippery by rubbing {t with a hot fron. nitmcesoes “!* TH SPINNING’SCASH PRICES Are a direct attack against fancy profite and credit figures, Protect your puree by buying here, 0c %-Inch thin-nose, Red Devil, SCRAMBLE BGGS— natural finish, Combination Pliers Know-It-All First as Reco do you "LOT of fellows go to college for an “education” and quit in four| Charge two hundred dollars for years, thinking they have one. They go around with a know-it-) curing a case of mumps when ‘air and get in bad with real men the world over. But the| YOu amputate @ leg for twenty: has a real education may never have been in college at all, | “ve dollars? low who knows how to learn. He keeps on studying from| Second Doctor—-Oh, when I saw | begins to walk until he figures out how to avoid tripping, ® !°6 off, I do it at cut rates. gray beard. If he has a chance to go to college, he goes. bitte aes can only go to night school, or maybe only watch the boss Good at Figures. hile he works, but whenever he has a chance to learn Helter—They’ve hired a ladies’ | he goes at it. When we want advice or a job, we go to him,| tallor as paying teller at the Suf- boy. The university is a fine thing. It teaches) fragets’ bank. to get. But it Skelter—A tailor! Why? ROBERT ©. WRIGHT. Heltec—He understands wom- en's figures.—-Magazine of Fun. Formerty Wheeler's—218 Union. GREAT SCoTT, TALK ABOUT SOMEBODY SLS6 ONCE INA WHILG!! The best time to try this meth- o4 ts between 5 and 5:45 p. m. Buy two dozen fresh exes. The fresher they are the better. Place them in a white paper bag JUST ABOUT the luckiest man In Mexico today Is Fellx Diaz, who In some piace else. “ Sie Then take a Green Lake car onesies -» B8¢ WHEN THE shelling of Vera Cruz was ended Uncle Sam held the eee £.c0 relent end, Beiden fier Seer Couldn't Be Done. : ape ‘kernel and Vic Huerta had the shucks. A New Yorker tells of his so- Journ at a certain hotel in the Carolina mountains, says Lippin- | THINK OF all the good Chautauqua print that goes to waste that Willlams Jennings Bryan's lecture on ee fe not pte “apropos. “DOWN AT Oregon Agricultural College a tempest is raging against bead spike-talied coat,” saye an exchange. The farmer boys should face cott’s Magazine, At about 8 in the morning he was aroused from a sound slumber by a knocking on | | his door, “What fs it? shouted. { | | | | | “Telegram fo’ you, boss,” re- | plied the darkey on the other side of the door, “Will you open the door?” The New Yorker was angered by this. “I will not!" he yelled back, “Can't you slip it under the door HERB IS ALWAYS HAVING HIS JOKE Herb Walters is quite a humor- ; same he paid $1 for the Banner fst in his way, He came in the | When he was in, wich many do | not do, & ough ey use our Loy agp aes ogo igen pens and ink and borrow ex- ame ij + 9 | Changes and expectorate on the you sorry you learned the trade?” | poor Wagner (Ill.) Banne: Jack, if you waut to get the full | : a point of it, has been setting type | “What was that haughty youn) . but « brief ported of time. “No.” | lady saying?” sai ipa says Jack, “ not.” “Well, “Said when she saw what good A masse meeting will be held Fri- then,” Herb says, “T didn't know times the common people had she | day night tn the Green Lake l- you had learned it yet.” Herb is | almost regretted not being one of | brary to make arrangements for a always having his joke. Just the | them.” ' neighborhood rose show. Ree DIANA DILLPICKLES IN “CHES NUTTE SHINES ONCE MORE” A 4-Reel “Screecher’Film UNCLE SAM has thrown away the kid gloves and gone back shirtesleeve diplomacy. : pene THERE'S A finish fight on between the war bulletin and the score _ beard for the attention of the American citizen. Dancing From 3 p. m. to 11 p. m. Fine Pavilion, Beautiful Beach, Edibles on Grounds. Tables for Picnics. Loyal Beate fee Market St. Bal "No, bos: My was the response; HEADLINE: MAN in clerical frock wanted for passing worthiess -ghecks. Chance for another minimum wa igitation, us thinks, ft. _- COLLIER’S RUNS an article enti “When the Farmers Shake ‘the Money Tree.” And to it might be added: “The middieman will be ‘tinder it with both hands ready.” on a tray. Spinning’s Cash Store 1415-1417 FOURTH AVENUE Golden Gardens Amusement Co., Leasees. 0) Th. CHES. NUTTE, PAPA. "Has | a, Hes"DUe INA Rew MINUTES? ated 1 RADUNS Fee "PAPA, Cheap Dental Work ‘vain tas NUTTE’S COMING. Tanenser our, — Nat, Dap, 08 STAY AROUND— MAYBE | “— HOSPL TAL!" rf To THe Expensive nee ee WELL PUT A LITTLE ‘There io = pe Aifterence between ae UFE in THE PLACE! DAUGHTERS ie cheap Dental work and getting Dest Dental work cheap. We do not compete with cheap Dentists, nor do we Dental grafters who claim to put in teeth without plates or bridge work and then sell you cheap junk for bridgework under another name. BEST 18 THE CHEAPEST best Gold Crowns in 4; the best Porcelain 1d, $: h is tee world for $4 if 2; Silver Fille, 50c; the best or Gold fillings, $1.00 up, mame above is a guarantee that your work will be of the best . niess. PP you. exactly whet your Bet o: $1 lc ‘armination you. ork is sure to pi work will cost by free Our Ww are sure to it you, We Go an we advertise, Ask your friends about us. ALBANY CUT RATE DENTISTS Becond Floor People’s Bank Building Keron and Pike id ‘Take Bievator or Walk Up

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