The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 29, 1914, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

STAR—THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1914. PAGE 4 “AS 1 SAID BGFORG, CHSS, ip Be DeUGHTe@D To HAYS You ComG ve, BUT LISTEN,..NOT TON IVE GOT SUCH A RAGING TooTHacue $!" “WHY, AR, SPOONGRLY, YouR oup BGAU, JUST SENT WORD He's COMING TO See You THIT QVOENINGS AVSG I'VE BEEN HAVING A TERRIBLY DCE TIME OF IT. 1 SDON'T KNOW WHAT'S SOT INTO THE P@LLOWS. NONG OP THEM eVGR C4Lr ANY MORS, Nes, THIS (3 DANS TILCAICKC Ou, (s THAT You CHES NUTTS¢ THe BOYE ( PaUSE) NGS, INDESSD, )'D BE DEUGNTSD TO HAVS You VP THIS | ee SVENING! “wHaT's THAT You say, MAS” - Diana Dillpickles | NOT 30 AST, In DIANA, I'VS Gor | SONG THING To | ‘taf ee in Mid-Stream = 4-Reel ‘Screecher’ WHEN IT’S A DECIDEDLY LONG WAY TO TIPPERARY [IT'S A LONG VAY TipPeRaRy! * © ® WORDS BY SCHAEFER—MUSIC BY MACDONALD a fornia $< Ly 7 s * * ‘Ss IT'S A LONG VAY TO TIPPERARY! BY GOLLY, Der F i YESS - OSPECIAL PONTO, THE PURP 4 ITS 4 LONG VAY To Go! MAN 186 RIGHT! KINI! AFTER APELLER HAS PRONOUNCED ALL THE NAMES IN THES® WAR DISPATCHES, HE CAN APPRECIATE WHAT SHERMAN SAID OF WAR. SF Det You SAv? 1 Q ¢ io rt LONG EF You TRY To Go BY VAY OF SYDNE Knudsen, Roberts, Carrigan, Sickels—Swat Them! y, let the ax fall the « the da EXT Tues¢ Tuesday is the day to get rid of Krist Kn rigan and W. K. Sickels and John their ilk. P ras Don’t be misled by Mike Carrigan’s hot air. Carri- has been in the commissioner's office before, and firs RECORD IS ROTTEN. He has not stood for the right things. He has fought humane reforms and he has contributed to political extravagances. He has allowed pay rolls to be extravagantly padded so as to accommodate all sorts of ward heelers at the expense of the taxpayers. Carrigan is a Tammany hall brand of politician. punty ring. Tuesday Mike Car- and be ay for action sen and W. Roberts Krist Knudsen is the most incompetent county com- missioner any county in the state ever had. Every one who knows Knudsen knows this is true. He can't discuss anything intelligently. HE'S A RUBBER STAMP IN THE HANDS OF THE SHADY POLITICIANS WHO ARE TRYING TO JOB THE Pete Smith, county commis pala ndige er eine. He es the ever Pete cupetenensant of county perks when be superintended in the county. inspector—for what purpose no ON OF SCHIPFS No! Telegraph News Service of ¢' Batered at Seattle, Wash. Postoffice as Kecond-Class Matter. it of city, 35 ym. wp to six mos; six mos $1.80; year $3.28 ie att, oct of ait, 86 por mom. Shey: fico month Peblished Daily by The Star Publichiog Co, Phese. Mais 0400. Private . Sachenme connectizg all departments. ' ‘Our Postoffices and Politics j A FOLLETTE, Borah, Clapp, Kenyon and Cummins, progressive republicans, and Senator Miles Poindexter, gressive, voted to allow employes of the postoffices who Rave formed organizations for mutual benefit to affiliate with Yhe American Federation of Labor % Senator Wesley LORIMER Jones voted against it. So id Guggenheim of Colorado, and Penrose of Pennsylvania, ‘and Smoot of Utah, and Gallinger of New Hampshire. ° There you have them—Jones, Guggenheim, Penrose, ‘Smoot, Gallinger—the same bunch who voted for Lorimer, "the crooked senator, and Archbald, the crooked jud | Still, Jones hypocritically claims he has been a friend of} Tabor. The postal employes, at least, know different | Mark Jones’ attitude, and notice the deadly parallel of Ole HAnson’s stand | Hanson wants the appointment of pos from politics. He wants the postmaster man who has worked up on his merit political pull Edgar G. Battle is postmaster in Seattle. The Star has nothing against Battle. He's an estimable gentleman. | 3ut before he got the appointment as postmaster at a “salary of $500 a month, he knew no more of the Seattle post office th On Colkett, years, ar Battle rs removed rather by 1 you de “other there is First Assistant Postmaster 5 has been in the Seattle service for upward of 30 all the ins and outs of the office. ends on Former master Russell, a repub depended Solkett As a matter of fact, ¢ tt is the real postmaster. Yet he is the man who is always overlooked because he is not a politician. Hanson wants to put postoffice appointments out of poli tics, and Hanson is the r » will do it, too. WHAT HAS JONES EVER ATTEMPTED IN THIS RESPECT? AND THE politicians get # solar plexus by the forelgn-trade state-| ment for September, which shows a balance favorable to Uncle Sam by $17,000,000. Trade off your hammer for a horn! FOR DANDRUFF, FALLING HAIR OR ITCHY SCALP—25 CENT DANDERINE ne and, Post- If your hair has been neglected and 1s thin, faded, dry, scraggy or olly, get » 25-cent bottle of | Knowlton's Danderine at any drug | les the |store or ft im-| little as di particle | after you will investment y We sincere! If you care for heavy ha glistens with beauty and is radian’ With life; has an ymparable “softness and is fluffy and lustrous, ‘try Dander Just one ‘eauty of y mediate ‘a8 of dandruff; you can not have nice heavy, healthy hair if you dandruff, This destructive scurt|of every’ robs the hair of its luster, tts ou desire soft, lustrous, beautt strength and its life, and if|ful air and lots of it—no dandruff me it produces a fever-|—no itching scalp and no more and ftching of the scalp; | hair—you must use Knowl. roots famish, loosen and | Danderine. If eventually Kitchen ir, that | too apply a minutes | his was the best ver made. lieve, regardiens se advertised, that very Beate Modern, z the best iness, comfort and courtesy for © leant money, Transient, 60¢ to $1; weekly, $2.60 to Privileges 5 ser "MOST ANYTHING. Ll A Reminiscence. “is lke @ bird, at spelle; | “What's the trouble?” the bose. “Man wants a prescription filled,” said the clerk, “that was ortginally| put up here in 18 | “Well, go abead and fill tt.” “You forget how the drug bust ness has changed. We haven't enough drugs in the shop to fill it now.” ree It | All Nationalities Treated ir and wen one weer |Feaiy and Square) Guess where Johnnie Lamphere| |. was going Sunday over the hill and People of all nationalit far away in a new red geared|‘® the Brendel Drug Co. 1 Sasi aioe vit | way, and recelve medioal tr from our Physi, of come| Yonler le (lowa) Banner. . Willie's Tact. There was company to dinner and father was carving his pret tlest on a fine roast, when sudden the knife struck a skewer, made al} sliding motion and came out on| va top. Father attempted to cover his! *!t i will cost y: real feelings with jests, but there| you have not was an embarrassing atlence | will refund y Willie took advantage of It iy lg Be Rigs. Cook has burned her nose orful,”| Pah: and we alm to tr he said, | “Too bad,” muttered the father still wrestling with the roast. “How|? did she do it?” | —aT— Brendel Drug Co. “Trying to pull those skewers out with her teeth.” . Bomb Droppers 117 YESLER WAY ‘opiane,” said Mr. Meggs, fet. First Ave. aad Occidental Ave. | 4 write you prescription utely FREE OF CHARGE. Our prescription clerk will com thing. Just t t cveryaods| br | Doctor's office hours are from § m, to 9 p.m. Ladies and children, | Othe. | one knows, except to draw $125 a month, KNUDSEN IS A DANGEROUS INCOMPETENT. There Will K. Sickels, whose recklessness is a notorious fact. His office costs the taxpayers of King county $20,000 more than it should Sickels loafs on the job. Many of his employes loaf on the job. They have no sense of obligation to the county, Their hours are irregular, There are altogether too many on the pay roll. Tt's @ partisan, political office instead of a non-parti- san, bualness office. Sickels ought to be kicked out. He’s totally unfit. He got into the office on his father’s tion—that’s all. And John W. Roberts! is He has an unutterable nerve to ask decent citizens to vote for him. But the gang politicians are working hard to elect~ him y'll peddle all sorts of bunk They'll ask you to forget Roberts’ inhuman atrocities as a deputy sheriff. ROBERTS OUGHT TO BE DEFEATED BY THE BIGGEST VOTE EVER CAST AGAINST ANY HUMAN BEING IN THIS COUNTY. AND HE WILL BE IF YOU DO YOUR DUTY, IF YOU VOTE AND SEE THAT YOUR VOTE IS COUNTED ELECTION NIGHT. These are a few of the high spots in the county election. Don’t let any party ACT AND VOTE 'FOXINESS FEEDS ’EM LONDON, Oct. 29.—British of.-| floers did not receive a hearty wel-| come at a French farmer's near| Mons because the to be Germans, and they could get} nothing to eat. The British com-| mander pleked his biggest man ou! \aide in the woods, put a German hi |met on him and had him knock |the door. When it was opened his| |oqmrades pounced on him and pre-| |tende to capture him. The French | family rushed to embrace the Brit ishers for capturing the “German,” jand overwhelmed them with food and wine. \Stopped Son From sing Cigarets of the Cigaret Habit With a Simple Home Recipe She | Gave Secretly. A simple rectpe mixed at home| $2.50 Roll- Adjustable Roller Skates . Choice of either boys’ or girls. will bring roses to the cheek FOR mislead 5 GOOD CITIZENSHIP! ‘ast, Bal!-Bearing, Steel-Wheel user to be graceful and save shoes, 25¢ Can Wall Paper Cl er noss and sanitariness of the paper, and carpets by using {t. 10¢ Can Krystal Soiloff Hand Cleaner automobile drivers or any one who wants to For mechante: hades move the dirt and grime from the hands quickly and easily, Se Bi They help to raise the Our Latest Price Many Rich convenience that is appreciated. heet Shows You How Little it Takes to Capture rgain Prizes—it Is Yours for the Asking SPINNING’S CASH STORE 1416 Fourth 1417 Ave. Vn Gow OUT AND GET A OIG - - WELL AEVER MIND and given secretly was used suc! woman to break her son from smok’ ing cigarets, In a recent statement she said: “My son has smoked clgarets for years and I was sure it was hurting him. I finally ob |tatned from a drug store the for lowing recipe which 1s perfectly harmless and has no color, taste or smell and costs very little. To 3 ounoes of water add 20 grains of muriate of ammonia, a smal! box jot Varlex Compound and 10 grains lof pepsin. I gave a teaspoonful to| | him three times a day secretly in| bis ecoffes or food. Many of my) friends have used this recipe for wonderful results."-——Advertisement esstully by a well known Omaha @— HE ALSO CAN FIGHT | BALTIMORE, Oct. 29.—A Baltimore relative of Gen. Joffre of the French army writes that he is a dandy, dotes on bonbons, adores his wife, always takes a nap after lunch with a handkerchief over his face, is proud of his pretty hands, would rather face the German army than hear a child ery, and seldom talks much until | | after dinner, when it's hard to } stop him. | the tobacco habit tn all forms with! g __ —e) GOODBY, MR. JONES Jones when paigning for Washington etandpatter against Miles Poindexter of Spokane. Preposterous? Well, Mr. Jones, then you ought to retire thie year, for In Poindexter we already have one Eastern Wash- ington man and in Ole Han- son we can now have a Western Washington man. RHOADS DENTAL CO. Third and Pike Dental Experts. F When ft comes to ® good, fire ctass dental service at @ reasonable site Lat them tell you all About your teeth, what to do and 4 what not to do them, you wit! ein full. Not at will surely fret to tte lasting results. ‘Th: bean in practios 4 thetr advice will be |another: | From SEATTLE STAR of Octo. | ber 20, 1909: “Justice Brown came up clear from the bottom, and—more {m portant—ien't ashamed of it. He had to shine shoes for a living | when he was a boy, and grew up to be a barber while he was studying nights to make good They try to throw this at him sometimes—men of little, smaller character do. He had no college An office fitted entirety In white enamel and sanitary tn every way. flee them before going sisewhere Gold Crowns £5.00. Neideo Work $5.00 Fillings 500 Up. bishness, He grew to absolutely belleve In the first principle of American law, that all men are equal and that justice is not a | matter to be graduated accord: | —Paid Ad by Fred Dental Co. Third and Pike (Paid Advertisingy ing to wealth or soctal postion, With this training Brown was admitted to practice, a lawyer who was of the com- mon people, of the masses and | And for that for the not of the classes. reason he was chosen office which he now holds, to the | perpetual regret of law-breakere of whatever degree.” “This is perhaps why the po- Htieal activities or possibilities of defendants or thetr friends do not enter into Justice Brown's consideration of guilt or inno- cence.” “FOR OVER TWENTY YEARS JUSTICE BROWN HAS LIVED THE PRINCIPLE OF JUSTICE TO EVERY MAN ALIKE, AND C, Brown Campaign Club—By Ed Justice :| Why Fred C. Brown for Prosecuting Attomey? OR five years Justice Fred C. Brown has been dealing with the administration of justice in Seattle. He has made good. T; |Seattle Star has said so repeatedly. The Post-Intelligencer has |satd so. pan Seattle Sun yi spoken well of his work. The following extracts from Seattle newspapers are fr \ticles published before Brown became a candidate har pein ing attorney and not during the heat of a political campaign. They are, therefore, not flavored by political prejudice one way or THE HABIT OF THOUGHT TWENTY YEARS i8 NOT. LIGHTLY THROWN ASIDE.” From the POST-INTELLI UES GEN. “Justice Brown tlee in a mann be a commo to say the least. From the SEATTLE SUN; “Judge Fred Brown, th of the Lazy Hu oe been doing for some time all that the law requires. It was a work worth doing, it helped and Protected a considerable number of women and children whe Practices jue. which seems to ise version of it, needed help and, Py White, President. * Preto

Other pages from this issue: