Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
STAR—MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1914. PAGE 4. Te 7 ExPecr ev Diana Dillpickles In STUNNING. SLOAK, AND I Stampeded by Rivalry A 4-Reel ‘Screecher’ Film TO GST MARRIGD, I OUGHT To Drass BeTrer, THESS SUITS ARS REALLY Bvr I've 0 How CAN BHE 4) AMPORD.IT.$¢ 5 GONG BROKE BUYING A New Suess "UL HAVE TO MAKG MY QD 3vIT Dos 1 FEEL Sick MIT RAIN IT 185 ™y Liver. THERES A LOT OF QIFFER- ENCE BETWEEX A AIRS WEES AND WIS WANTS PNG STILL *OORE BETWEEN MIS WANTS AMO KHIAT We GETS. IN DER HEADACHE. I DINK YESS. DoT's (r= 1 MUST BE SUPFERANCE FROM BILIOUSNESS COMBLICATET AIT PIP, 1 GETTER TAKE AH, How LUCKY! HERE 156 SOME PILLS ON ADOLPH'S DRESSER. AND, BLESS MY HGART, Bess Maceis HAvroONe A PEACH | THIS 18 MUCH * * * * *SAY, ADOLPH, DOSE LIVER PILLS WORDS BY SCHAEFER—MUSIC BY MACDONALD “Quick! Stow MS THs DWELLEST REDInecoTS YOU HAVE. Size Bo! Boy, auick! FETCH ME A DOCTOR, “BANKER DONOVAN’S BUNK Smug, smooth, well fed, crafty, J. J. Donovan, banker, lumberman and boss of the gang politicians in Belling- ham, came to Seattle Friday before the conference of Social Agencies to denounce Initiative Bill No. 9, the “first aid” measure contemplating relief in medical at- tendance to injured workmn. Donovan thought he fooled ‘em with his hypocritical statement that he believed in the “first aid” principle, but _ that he objected to the form of the present bill. Donovan thought he fooled ‘em when he urged that the workmen of the state should wait until the governor calls another conference of employers and employes, such as was called in 1910, to draft a “first aid” measure. No, Mr. Donovan, you haven't fooled any one. You no more believe in the “first aid” principle than you believed in the women’s eight-hour law, the minimum wage law, the mothers’ pension, or any other measure _ that betters humanity and makes life a little easier for the workingmen and women of this state. IT WAS YOU, MR. DONOVAN, AND YOUR ILK WHO LOBBIED AGAINST THE “FIRST AID" BILL IN THE 1911 LEGISLATURE, ALTHOUGH THAT BILL WAS RECOMMENDED BY A JOINT COM- MITTEE OF FIVE EMPLOYERS AND FIVE EM- PLOYES APPOINTED BY THE GOVERNOR. YOU WENT BACK ON THAT AGREEMENT, MR. DONOVAN. WHAT WILL PREVENT YOU FROM GOING THE SEATTLE STAR| HEMBER OF SCKIPPS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWSPAPERS United Press Association. Telegraph News Service of Entered at Seattle. Wash., Postoffice as Second-Ciass Matter. ‘mat s on. up to #ix mos.; six mos. $1.80; year $3.25. a “ey “Dy carrier, city, 25¢ & month. 5 —— plished Dally by The Star Publishing Co. Phone, Main 9400, Private 4 7 “iachanse connecting all departments. Learning Slowly N CLEVELAND they are trying School Superintendent Frederick for discharging underpaid school teachers for joining a union after the common pleas court ordered Fred- ‘rick not to do it, and the attorney for Frederick wants to show that a strike of teachers would mean “that the teach- ers would force children to truancy, keep the schools closed and keep other teachers from accepting positions in such a situation.” For heaven's sake, let the man show it! School management will probably be the last to learn the cheap pay means cheap service. Factories, offices and stores are learning it, but churches, colleges and schools will gnaw) On it for some time to come If Cleveland cannot pay its teachers living wages, and} then some, she'd better have truant pupils or closed schools. Certain it is that, through strikes or some other efficient method, she should bar out teachers who are willing to enter the school room with empty stomachs and inspissated livers, figuratively speaking Buy a Box of Apples HE Northwest begins today Week. - Appl® Week is an innovation. It has come to move the Worthwest’s 1914 apple crop. It has been made necessary by he war, which has killed foreign markets that in other years Jamored for our apples. Unless the Northwest and the rest of the United States develop a new taste for apples, this year’s crop threatens to rot. Seattle is vitally interested in Apple Week. The apple vanks high in the resources of the Northwest, and Seattle reaps from it more benefits than she realizes The Northwest crop this year totals 11,000,000 boxes. Washington's share is 8,000,000 boxes | Nobody can truthfully advance an argument against the Be It is healthful, nutritious, wholesome, medicinal, good eat. | the observance of Apple Buy a box of apples—TODAY! If WILHELM can only collect the Indemnities as he goes along, | ‘The Virginus Kitchen | Privileges | Hotel Mighth Ave and in Bt, Benttle, Any care vin Woatiake Ave. Modern, ole gantly furnish with the bemt in cleanliness, comfort and courtesy for the least money. Transient, 600 to $1) week- y MoH BACK ON A SECOND CONFERENCE, OR A THIRD, OR A TENTH? You, who have put out your tool, Lin Hadley, as a candidate for congress in your district, to defeat State Senator John A. Campbell, father of the eight-hour law for women, and a real friend of the people--you, who have been lined up on the side of the dollar in every battle between the dollar and humanity—you, Mr. Dono- van, have a lot of nerve to talk about any principle. Your life, Mr. Donovan, has been devoted to selfish- ness, to greed, to the exploitation of labor, and to hoard ing money. For even as a banker, you have been a shyster You have hoarded the gold of your depositors. Yours is one of the three banks in the whole state denounced by Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo for hoarding gold, for keeping it out of circulation in an initial move that might have resulted in a national panic if other banks were as unscrupulous as to follow your example You prattle of trying to be fair and “ workmen. Yet you and your kind have been grabbing « lar a month from workmen for “first aid.” You've col lected more from the workingmen than you have paid to the state under the industrial insurance act WE'VE GOT YOUR NUMBER, DONOVAN, AND THE WORKINGMEN AND THE FAIR MINDED VOTERS OF THIS STATE DON'T WANT ANY OF YOUR ADVICE. * to your | OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE OPERATORS ‘REJECT WILSON’S PLAN WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.—President Wilson admitted to callers today for the first time that Colorado operators had refused his three-year truce plan, except with modifications eliminating all its essential features. He said all negotiations with the operators had been closed, and indicated that future action in the matter had not bern decided upon. Anewered by Mr. Cynthia Grey; My Dear Mr. Grey: | broke) the second hand of my watch while cranking my automobile yes- terday. Where can | buy an other one?—Ernie A. You can buy one at @ second hand store. But we doubt if you| |will get good results from a second hand second hand | 1 am 80 beautiful that when |! walk down the etreet all the men| and many of the women turn| around and embarrasses What would you advise —Ethy! C. Take your face { | mill. to a planing Please decide an argument for me. My wife claims country peo- yple are kinder-hearted than city |folk, while | maintain the oppo site, What is your opinion?— 0:7. 6. As a rule the country ‘people jare kinder. We once knew a farmer who was so tender-hearted that he cradled his wheat and| kept his corn in a erib Is a black band too quiet for a young man of 18 to wear on his hat?—w. D. Yes, Wear a brass band | Will you please tell me the dif-/ | ference between a bell and a lad-| der?—George G. | There 1s absolutely no differ jence between a bell and a ladder. ax everybody with any sense knows. | | But if you are asking a conum-| |drum, a pernicious practice of jmany {ll bred and tmpolite per-| sons, we should say you can hear @ bell rung in the dark, but you cannot hear a ladder rung even in broad daylight | | ee | Quesitns Mr. Grey Cannot | KIDNEY TROUBLE 22 swiss, gest | use In laying the track, Take a glass of Salts if your Back | Windsor or Oxford ties?—A. P. S. hurts or Bladder bothers—Meat | My clock has run down twice in tens ake ania |the past month. Why doesn’t it se jrun up? My grocery bill does. — If you must have your meat ev-|E. F. Lb. ery day, eat it, but flush your kid-| Which Is the better In a game neys with salts occasionally, says a|of poker, a pair of fours or a pair noted authority who tell of ash trays?—X. Y. Z, | meat forms tfie actd whic can | make a paralyzes the kidneys in fast when forts to expel it from th £, MeT. They become sluggish and wea’ tell me which is the most | then you suffer with a dull misery a geranium shoot or a in the kidney region, sharp pains | mill race—R. O. in the back or sick headache, diz-| eee ainess, your stomach sours, tongue} A jot of folk down in New York is coated and when the weather i#|are having a great row over who| bad you have rheumatic twinges.| wrote “Ben Bolt.” We didn't The urine gets cloudy, full of sedi-|We never even sang it ment, the channels often get oe ae and irritated, obliging you to se An Bastern men has found & two or three times during | way to fireproof children’s clothes But many a kid will have his] asta, oo eae ee eiison al Jacket warmed just the same finsh off the y's urinous waste | Pine get four ounces of Jad Salts from SST One Ae harmacy here; take a table-|Mary had a little lamp, spoonful in a glass of water before|,.'t Was well trained, no doubt; ‘Cause every time that John came | Answer, | thinking of buliding a postage it sticks to a any breakfast for a few days and kidneys will then act fine. famous salts {9 m from the of grapes and bined with lithia, and used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, neutralize the actds in ur no longer irritates, thus bladder weakness In That little lamp went out. GOT ENOUGH OF IT also to| ne, so it ending | m: has been From whale off to champagne! After spending a year in the Arctic in cramped quarters aboard Jad Salts 1s inexpensive: annie} und “paige be Pee injure, and makes a delightful of.| (he Folar Neat, john Here ae fervescent lithia-water drink | . 4 Quality te jthree Harvard graduates and sons | I C Service of wealthy Boston men, who, with Dunbar Lockwood and Eben § ICE DELIVERY CO. ELLIOTT 5560 aT ES | Draper, chartered the schooner for trip, took a suite of the | Washington hotel Ja hunting rooms at rday “This sport hunting stunt may be all right in the summer time | but never again for mine in the | winter,” declared Mixter, These Prices Show You THE ADVANTAGE * *" SPINNING’S CASH STORE 2425 Fourth 1417 Ave. $2.00 Deita Electrio Hand Lamp Burns ordinary Eveready Dry Cell, which we sell for ing lamp and battery cost you $1.75. 28x1'% Sturdy, Red-Studded 1915 Pennsylvania Single-Tube Bicycle Tire $3.25 yptian fabric, $1.60 26-In. Narrow-Point No. 71 Atking Special Steel Hand saw é $1.22 Blades are taper ground and specially tempered. Choice of 9, 10 or 11 teeth 6 the inch. 11-In. Nickel-Piated Towel Bar Extends out three inches from the wal nice for ties, collars, towels, handkerchie: $2.50 No. 1 Wells Hinged Pipe Vise Holds pipe from % to 2% inches. 6-In. Round, Heavy, Nickel-Plated Wall Match Box ... Two places for matches and one for burnt ones. The most sub- stantial, most economical and best-looking real match receptacle known to the writer. ELLIOTT SPINNING’S CASH STORE “i210 LORIMER BOOKS the hub on which will turn a lec ture tonight at the Y. M. C. A. by Ralph Parlette, editor of the Ly. ceum Magazine of Chicago, who edits his magazine and a news-| o paper from a railroad train. He's B Lesons, tos, yen en oxen on the go the year ‘round, lecturing | *°countanteemployed by the Scan- dinavian American bank and re- cently appointed to the state board of accountancy by Gov. Lister, has} been selected as one of the ex perts to check up several sets of everywhere The use of the Metropolitan thea- tre has been donated to the Seattle | branch of the American Red Cross|&nk books in Chicago, including day night, November 5. The pro-| mer, Serator Jones’ friend, indicted ceeds will go to relieve the suffer-\ for ‘misusing money belonging to ings in Europe. his depositors. THEATRE DONATED | for their big benefit concert Thure-|that of ex-Senator William Lo ~- REAL ESTATE LOANS | In Amounts from $300 to $25,000 on Improved Property or for Building Purposes EXTRAORDINARY PRIVILEGES AND LIBERAL TERMS NOT TO BE FOUND ELSEWHERE 1.LowCostLoans ., Tot! , expense: $500 loan $7.75; $1,000 loan, $10.25; $2,000 loan, No $15.25. Other amounts in proportion. Commission, This covers attorney’s fees, ap- Actual praisal, reording fees and final ab- Expense stract continuation. (ft does not Only. cover cost of bringing abstract down to date prior to making loan.) 2.. Elastic Method On each $1,000 that you borrow . you can make sure at the start that you have ten years in which to re- pay and that at no time will you have to pay more than $12.14 a month, in- cluding interest—yet, and here is where our plan is of advantage to the borrower, as fortune favors you, you may pay more than tlie regular pay- ment in any multiple of thus re- ducing the interest charges, or you may pay the entire loan off on any in- stallment date with interest to date only Straight loan, $1,000 for 5 years at 7 per cent Principal .. Interest Commission NO BONUS COMPARISONS Our Plan as Against the Old Style “Straight Loans” + »$1,000 350 : 30 -——— 1,380.00 payments of 1,216.80 Our plan: 60 $20.28 equal In favor of our plan .,.... ++$ 163.20 Washington Savings and Loan Association 810 Second Avenue Assets $4,000,000 Established 25 Years