The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 30, 1914, Page 4

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eS STAR—MONDAY, NOV, 30, 1914. Diana Dillpickles In MUSE INSTEAD OF NE. J EITHER PROPOSE OR QUIT EATING HIS MGALS HERG ...--* AH, L NGAR MIS RYTHMIC FOOTSTEPS APPROACHING IY Jilted! Prosaically Jilted! A 4-Reel ‘Screecher’ “MR, RHOBARE IS A GENWUS, BUT HE Woos THE o wish Ne'D Be MING! I YouR Feet HEART, MY HAND AND MY ENTIRG FORTUNG CONSISTING OF Poems,” "AISS DICLPICKLES, PAGE 4. PT Wave THOUGHT Your KIND WORDS OVER, LAY AT MY BUT, THANK You, 1 AUST rea WILL CLOUD MY WHOLE ensrence f Heavens} THIS REFUSAL THAN WAN EXISTENCE eoeeeee THIS Yes, @>UT I'D RATHER CLOUD YouR €xXIST ON CLouDS ouT, NR. . PSx RHUGARB | AH, DISS Iss DER LIFE CAPTAIN OF A DESTROYER, ROAMING DER SEAS, UND LORD OF ALL I SURVEY! Ki-Vi! A HOWLING DOG 1S A GREAT COLLECTOR OF BRICKBATS. SAY, OLT Top, YOU GOT ANY FRESH LETTUCE ABOARD? WE'RE OUT OF VEGETABLES. Why a Woman for School Director? Such a woman is Mrs. Nellie M. Burnside. She possesses the qualifications necessary for the office of school director, but she claims no extraordinary abilities or professional expertness. She is a mother of three children, and she has had a great. educa- tion in rearing them to manhood. That is her par- ticular qualification, as The Star views it—AND IT Seattle is to be congratulated upon the high character of the candidates for school director who are up for election Saturday. All five would ful- fill the duties of the office with honor and credit. Two only, however, can be elected. In the opinion of The Star, one of the two to be elected should be a woman. The school board, which directs and guides the conduct of our public schools, is the one public institution, above all others, where woman’s activity should be fostered and encouraged. It is the one public office, above THE SEATTLE STAR UE OF NEWSPAPERS | OF SCRIPPS NORTHW 1 Entered at Seattle, Wash., Postoffice o#.; € mos, $1.80; year $3.25. : . 36e per month up to 6 By mail, out of city, be sor lt Re iy carrier, city 250 Published Daily by T' c Cee neers Baltimore American thinks it hears a call for Taft for | president in 1916. Ear trouble, ear trouble! | “Square-Up” Day F EVERYBODY in Seattle were to be square with ever I body else—which means that if all debts were paid, di ferences adjusted and all the old,hatchets buried for keeps— by January 1, this city, says Dr Sydney Strong, pastor of Queen Anne Congregational church, would experience one of the biggest booms, financial, moral and religious, in her his tory To bring it about, he is writing every member of his church, and urging others to do likewise What a fine idea Dr. Strong has dropped among us! He is tackling a stupendous task, to be sure, and there is} no possibility for every last one of us to be squared up by New Year's; but it’s a bully scheme, just the same, and it's going to balance a whole lot of accounts, moral and financial There are thousands in Seattle with old petty debts cling- _ ing to them that should be wiped out. The debts aren’t all in dollars and cents. There are old grudges to be forgotten, petty | spites, and nasty little jealousies to be erased—oh, there are) hundreds of debts we could square if we wanted to. Let’s do it, folks—what say you? Let’s get square by January! The Judge Behind the Gun EEP your eye on Circuit Judge McGinn of Portland, Or 1] He’s got a new style judicial temperament, and threatens to shock the entire legal fraternity. “I’m going to smash this thing of precedent every time I] get a chance and every time it will do any good,” says His Honor, McGinn. “To do something just because some one} else has done it is nonsense,” he adds. “Precedent has stalked through our courts and legi latures until it has become a bug-} bear and I’m going to put on armor and use heavy artillery against it whenever I meet it.” j Go to it, McGinn! Of course, you'll make some mistakes, but rejuvenated justice has got to creep before she can run, and hog-tied by precedent, as now, she seldom gets anywhere Civilization, such as it is, is due to the fact that some| old time McGinn smashed the precedent of climbing trees) for acorns, sleeping in holes and cating the sabre-toothed tiger faw. Harveyize your armor and judge, and may your score be i use the 58-centimeter gun,| 1 bullseyes! Similarly 4 KAISER’s proclamation to his soldiers remind one much of the first Napoleon’s: “The enemy is moribund and barbarous. glory of your country and your emperor. front and die!” AND THEY DID. Remember the Get out to the all others, where woman should have representa- tion because of her sex. The touch of woman is needed in school affairs just as it is needed in the home. Where the welfare of children is con- cerned; where their education, their morals, their training, and their conduct are concerned—there woman's duty properly belongs and there her in- fluence should be encouraged. The school board has heretofore had representatives from the com- mercial and professional life of the city. Why not also have just a mother this time? You KNOW MY YOUNGSTER Doss SOME MIGHTY AMUSING STUNTS ANO DAYS SOMG OF THE FUNNIEST / THINGS YOU EVeR HEARD. Now YESTERDAY e I HAVEN'T Got THE HEART To STRIKE A MAN IN YOUR PITIABLE CONDITION, But I's MY DUTY TO LEAD You TO SOME GOOD SANITARIUM, FOR YOU HAVE A WELL*ADVANCET CASE OF FOND Fatuer itis? HMC ne ee (al Pt family, in resigning to Join the col- janoney | week | firms will exhibit (QUITS WOMAN’S JOB WILL GIVE ’EM JOBS The hundred resident park em ployes recently let out of work are to be reinstated by the appropria- tlon of $7,500 by the park board for clearing and grubbing several city parks A number of unemployed also will be given work converting dead trees in the parks into cordwood at $1.25 per cord. ROTARY CLUB SHOW With the concrete forms not yet oft the top of the Stuart building the Rotary club will hold its an nual exhibit on the first and second floors of the new structure Thurs. day, Friday and Saturday of this Sixty Seattle manufacturing Privileges LONDON, Nov. 30.--The butler for 15 years in a wealthy English ors, wrote: “My work as an indoor servant is such as can be done—and in times like these I think sould be done—by women.” AVY YARD ROUTE _ ners H. B, Kennedy and Tourist man Dock, Seattle, 6:30 (except Sunday), #:00, 10:80 m m., 1:30, 2:00, ox- copt Sunday (Sunday 2:30), 6:30 p. m. Saturday, 11:46 p. m. ‘Time table subject to change without Jon. Phono Main 3101, Price 800 Round Trip ne We @uarantee the superiority of the Lundberg T nd give free trial to prove tt. Tru A. LUNDBERG CO. Deformity Applian Artificial Limbs. 1107 THIRD AVENUM. WOULD MAKE THE SEATTLE SCHOOL BOARD MUCH BETTER BALANCED IF MRS. NELLIE M. BURNSIDE SATURDAY. A GOOD IDEA | Editor The Star: Two dollars be- | tween me and starvation, and I had! to give one dollar to the employ-! nt Office for work which I didn't get. When I went back and told the woman at the employment office, she did not return my money. | Why don’t the people patronize the free employment office? If the people of the city really want to hel the girls, one of the best ways is by patronizing the free employment Office. Think of taking a working girl's and then not giving her a Tam glad to see that the relief committee Is feeding the Belgians even if the American gtris starve. | UNEMPLOYED GIRL job IS ELECTED NEXT SEAT HOGS | Fditor The Star: In answer to| your editorial in regard to babies | mothers and street cars | It is very evident that you are not | fully informed on this subject. 1) think’that there are more inconsid | erate people standing up than sit ting down in the average street cars | After paying a fare for each of| our two boys my husband and 1/ have often taken a boy on our laps in order to give some one a seat Sometimes the persons to whom we proffered the seat occupied ft unt! thei? destination was reached, re-| gardiess of the fact that there were empty seats all around them Holding a 12-year-old boy weigh ing 85 pounds is no joy On one oc =| casion I asked a woman If she would kindly take another seat in order to help me, and she politiely told me to take another seat myself. That was the straw that broke the camel's back, and now when I see people standing I smile to myself jand wonder if they think that their nickel Is any larger than the ones we pald for the boys. A MOTHER, CASE OF NEGLECT Editor The Star: There ts no place in Seattle more beneficial to the comforts and conveniences of the public than the comfort station at Pioneer square, and there {ts no place so neglected. The park com missioners surely can’t realize the condition {t gets into when it rains | If they do they shouldgbe alhamed | The water pours down the steps and jinto the room. The place is damp and cold. It 1s enough to cause the fllness DENTISTRY At Cut Prices Until Further Notice. ALL WORK GUARANTEED FIFTEEN YEARS $10 Solid Gold or Porcelain Crown $10 Gold or Po lain Bridge Work... Extra Heavy, per tooth .. $25 Set of Teeth Guaranteed $15 Set of Teeth Guaranteed Solld Gold Other Fillings OFFICE HOURS Dally, 9 to 6; Sundays, 10 to 12. [euy: DENTISTS 1420 Second Avenue, Opposite Bon Marche. Bring this ad with you, | of the matrons, and they try to keep the place clean and sanitary The city should make it comfort | able for them, as well as the public Wake up, park board, and look |into this! STAR READER, | APPLES FOR POOR Editor The Star: I was in the | Milwaukeo freight yards recently }and saw a box full of fine apples |from Wenatchee. ‘There was a little blemish or scalo on a few of them |such as we see on all apples at times The fruit inspectors opened up a |few boxes, held a quiet conversa |tlon, and then threw coal oll over the entire lot and spoiled them all, You can buy apples fifty times as bad as those were every day at the market. Why can't the elty buy such ap- ples and give them to the poor? INDIGNANT READER, APPROVES SCHEME Editor The Star Let us have more about the proposal to estab- lish a municipal depot for the sale of necessities of life at a small per cent above cost. Many of us are in- | sonably, terested in the idea, If carried out carefully and rea- SPINNING’S SAVINGS Will Help You Buy More 50c 414-In. Ohio Pocket Scissors jo by Clauss, Every pair a cutter. A useful present. 50c 4!%-In. Shackle Motorcycle Steel case a locking tumbler. bargain 600 16-In. “Phoenix” Old Hickory Hand Saw > 45 A good saw for home use, very moderately priced. A good pres- ent. 15¢ Eureka Putty Knife .. hell; . A remarkable +106 Handy for setting glass and for scraping stoves, pots and ket- tles. $2.25 5 or SC Balley Iron Jack Plane 5 1s smooth bottom and 5C is corrugated; length 14 in.; 2-in. cutter; made by Stanley; a ‘asting present. Genuine Plumb Scout Ax and She. ath The official ax; any boy and most men would feel proud of one. SPINNING’S CASH STORE 1415 Fourth 1417 Ave. it will do an immense amount of good and prevent people from being driven to crime. M. R, THOMAS. ABOUT CHINESE EGGS Editor The Star: I want to say something in regard to eggs ship- ed from China. Last year I was San Francisco when the first hipment of eggs from China ar rived. The merchants said were full of germs, and went so far as to hold a meeting and passed resolutions which they sent to Gov, Johnson to see if he would stop their transportation. They claimed it ruined the egg the eggs| industry of California. eggs came just the same. In less than three months, how- ever, nearly every dealer was sell- ing the eggs from China, at 55 cents a dozen, the same price as fresh eggs. That is what will be done here soon. Those eggs cost only 6 cents in China and 6 cents freight, 11 cents wholesale, FRANK REYNOLD. | Moving by parcel post Is the | latest use to be made of the mails in Grass Valley, Cal. A family moving there from Nevada sent most of their household goods by mail But the Carnation Milk is fresh milk, with part of the water taken out by evaporation, and sterilized to pre- serve its wholesomeness. Carnation Milk comes pure—hermetically sealed y Mil Paste This Recipe in Your Favorite Cook Book. To Season Canned Vegetables Canned peas and doans should be emp- tea n into coland id rinsed with cold water, Heat peas, beans or corn in saucepan, add cup Carnation Milk, salt and pep- per and a bit of but- ter, if desired kep pan the not acec | economical milk because (unopened) it can be T to you clean, sweet and always ready for use. ou will find that Carnation k is convenient, and more than the ordinary which comes in bottles, t almost indefinitely on the try shelf, and there is not usual daily waste through having uses for it ry Carnation Milk in the ympanying recipe. From Your Grocer’s or Delicatessen.

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