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eee eee rane ere | STAR—THURSDAY, DEC, 3, 1914. PAGE 4 THE EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE STAR | The Women Can Shape the Policy of Seattle Stores if They Will i|| T HE WOMEN can shape the policy of the stores. | This applies, whether it be drygoods, drug, ii] hardware, grocery, paint, meat, bakery or any other i} sort of stores. The women really do the buying, as merchants who run stores and advertise and editors who run newspapers and publish advertisements will tes: fy, to a man. | What's the answer? | Why, let the women demand of the storekeep- ers goods “Made in America,” and the thing is set- tled, we don’t care whether “goods” referred to MEMBER OF SCRIPYS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF N ‘Telegraph News Service Entered at Seattle, Wash nd-Clase Matter, By mail, out of city, Mee per menth up to ¢ mos: ¢ mos. $1.80; year $2.26 By carrt c ‘eae Pabliahed Dally by Th IT SIMPLY wasn’t In the cards for Ole Hanson to win, Hanson fan 16,616 votes ahead of his party, the official canvass shows, while Jones ran only 2,000 vot id of the republican party vote and Black fan 4,000 votes behind the democratic vote. OCCASIONALLY THE courts confi New York appellate court Orders that Boss Barnes’ libe! suit against Teddy Roosevelt be tried in} another county, Albany county justice being under the thumb of poll- thes. He Forgot to Kiss His Wife } E REALLY MEANT to kiss his wife this morning as he | left the house to go to work But he forgot. He was thinking of the cares of the shop;| of the thousand and one matters which concern him in the world with which he wrestles for a living for her and the ie. Anyhow, he said to himself afterward, what's a kiss? It} oughtn’t to take such a mere formality to convince of his love and trust the woman he has made the mistress of his home, the mother of his children. Pshaw! the chance are| she never noticed the omission—so why should he worry? | But back home a woman wept. Wept, not because she} doubted her husband's constancy; not because she felt that she wouldn't prove big and true and fine in an emergency; but} because, woman-like, shut within home's four walls, doomed} to another day of petty routine, much of it to be endured alll alone, she wanted that kiss as a token and a memory—wanted| it as proof that not in her case could the poet write: “He’s lost, you see, ‘cause he married me; » My lover, good-bye.” Now if you, Mr. Man, made such a break as that this morning, do you know what you ought to do? Go home, tonight, with a present in each hand and plant} two kisses where one grew before. | Do You Know | HAT the 11 countries which have the lowest death rate among babies are all equal suffrage states? That in 26 years the socialist has multiplied itself 600 times? That a publicly owned telephone system, free to use the best appliances, could give first-class service at the rate of a| "penny a call, thus enabling practically every American citizen to have a phone in his house? | That if every college and high school in the country gave its young men military drill two hours a week, including rifle practice and occasional maneuvers in mass, Uncle Sam would soon have, as a fighting reserve, the largest army iu the world, needing only equipment to make it immediately avail- able in case of crisis, yet costing a mere fraction of a stand ing army’s cost, and essentially democratic? That if workingmen could put their savings directly small-denomination, public-improvement bonds it would soon be possible to have municipally-owned, three-cent street cars and electricity to light, heat and do the cooking in every home? vote in the United States} mean skirts, seidlitz powders, nails, soap, varnish, sausage, doughnuts, or anything else that’s put up for sale. It is the demand of the woman shopper that makes the storekeeper jump. He may be able to regularly put off on the masculine shopper “something equally as good,” but, if he doesn’t car- ry what the lady really wants, he sees her go to some other tradesman who does. More than this, much more! If the tradesman can’t provide his stock with what the women want, he is bound to demand that the manufacturer or wholesaler furnish it to him. The manufacturer who can’t deliver cottons, for instance, because the war has cut him out of German dyes, has got to produce the dyes, and thus the women promote a new industry. What true of dyes is true of a great number of other things that we should be making in this country and would be making, had not the foreigner got into the market fi Tremendous things are possible in the crusade DON'T SPIT ON THE SIDEWALK"! ————— OLD SWEETHEARTS MARRY IN SEATTLE; ANCIENT ROMANCE (Continued From Page 1.) st, Just two months a of Thomas and notice itt” “That's Tom.” | “I'm not surprised. 1 always |thought Tom would make his mark if he got a chance 1NG/| You Owe Your Face a Good, Clear Skin And Stuart's Calcium Wafers in a Very Short Time Will Clear Up Your Complexion Naturally " Just in a few days one may clear|@ the skin of all-manner of blemishes! It's worth. He says that they|such as pimples, blotches, liver| might get through the winter more " ete. if one will use Stuart's comfortably by putting isinglass in| Calcium Waters the slits and perforations of thelr; Don't use pasty lotions and garb. creams to fill up the pores when they are working constantly with| @ the blood to throw off the impurt. ties of your system. Good Idea Howe of the Globe offers a suggestion to the ladies which ts passed on for what O14 Ed Atchison 0 eee Sex Equality There ts a little girl in Spring field, Masa., who, like many of her sex, resents the imputation that the feminine mind is not so strong as the masculine One day her A mother remarked wert Ts tain « large arted leavetaking was | |not many years inter by the de |parture of the sons for Amer lica, © @ © And yet with all his boyhoo¢ dreams turned to mere memories |his home broken up, and apparent ly notht tained his old-time opt; jhis dashing ways, and | You see, Thomas | thing would oo out right, Just kept thinking {t would |the proof that Thomas was to live for, Thomas re iam, and his smile. knew every if he (An¢ & 00d lesson to all the so down-in-the mouth people — whc wear sad facen in Senttle.) see | Two years ago come the 3rd o next April, Matiida’s husband alse } died, leaving her in cir n which made {t necessary to work for her living. | About that jceme to Join his sons in America | da were great friends. Through let ago that And so— seven months | was a widow. night as they sat in the Oregon Washington station, waiting the train that would take them te SALMON Pacific States Lumber Co. “His sister told me, “Tom wants r some one to go out there, and EAST: S$ 1 25 would you like to go?’—and I said s I should like to go the very next Pays for a 7 to 91h Salmon by pre | cel” eaid the new Mrs. Cleaver paid express anywhere tn the UA] her curiously bright ever twin (except Southern Kapress). J. P. TODD Room 1 Colman Dock. kling I came all the way ocean alone,” she added, London, too! “She left -\the Philadejphia, rough everybody even the stewardess and she wasn't a bit.” England, Nov. 14, and was ae seasick But she was here because she Chicago, and ail over—pretty when she didn't come, somebody had got her away me again. $6-0446 2008 was det Cough medicines, as a rule, con ntity of plain syrup. atgd sugar, with near crazy pint of «ran home of Thomas and Martha, but none to the home of the Beeches. * © © And when the youngest son | Martha was but! the wife and mother for a better! followed for her time, too, Thomas The sister of Thomas and Mattl-| tera to his sister, Thomas learned manent But let them tell you the story an they told it to ® Star man last for | |their new home tn Selleck, where Thomas is night watchman for the across the and the first time | was ever out of on} it was so except ‘Til, This (proudly) from Thomas,! who went on; “I sent her pounds to come on, and I told Just what to do—didn't I awful late getting din and | was up and down a-thinking from for materials “Made in America.” It is all in the hands of the women. Men have their demands, but we venture to say that the women, united for it, can turn the trade in this country in any direction they please. They can persist in the senseless practice of favoring things foreign simply because they are foreign made, or they can put the label “Made in America” on every article, in every store. And you'll see the masculine demands follow- ing suit mighty quick. DIANA DILLPICKLES HER “BRAVE FIRE LADDIE” BEAU | | ‘4 RAINY SUNDAY AFTERNOON, 4ND NO CHANCE OF A CALLER. ‘THAT CONGS OP PAVING A BEST FeULOW WHO'S A FIREMAN AND CAN'T Ulda's wedding, he marri Mar tha. ave THE Seine Le And the years passed, and the four were the good friends they had always been. * Two! sturdy sons came to brighten the A a i ' "MAYBS IF I PHONGO Him Ke MIGHT MANSCE f To GsT HERS ; Somehow, OH, 1S THAT THE NO. 41 ENCING COMPANYS = WSLL, THIS 4S 4¢¢ DOUTHNLT AVG. TELL HARRY SPANNER He's WANTED UP HERE RY AN OLD FLAME.” | Think it over! on the apparent lack of intelli my We went right up to the court gence in a hen if _ nd, house to get the marriage license, Tou cont teach o hee enp-| Sup. This giver new intending to wait until Christmas : | 1 d, but somebody sent | When Courts Will Reform thing,” she sald, "They have done ents, @ full pint |to get married, but somebody sent| * r s more harm to the garden than } yrup than/us upstairs to Ju umphries, LIHU ROOT, of course, spoke the simplest truth when drove of cattle would. You ean ii fo-|and it came out all at once, and aro me i ap ies Sa? teach a cat, a dog or a pig so ci-lwe were married before we knew he told the Am rican Bar rciati n that there wasn’t a) thing, but s her adhe me) t. He te @ folly gentioman—that bit of public need for “all this bedevilment of practice by law H'm!" exclaimed the child, in-| or| Judge Humphr , te gave us Surely not. It’s just hocus pocus, like the antics of the |dignantly. “I think they know as| REL tat tetraee chosi to eat i - e re * os ey knew abou in Eng Indian medicine man—and of some e men who are pee as thes . iuitkis land they wouldn't know what at not Indians | DISTRESSING It Tooena the r tlht|think!” rumfnated Mrs. Cleaver, | But don’t you fool yourself, Elihu, into believing that flamed membrar va Hoa it sr ae Bese geal ton re “SH-H-H? THE BoYS THOUGHT rials wletiton . painful cough also na the for. | Biggle. you lawyers will ever straighten this matter out. Like the ‘Before | rid my face of pimples mH ih the throat endl And my youngest eon, Richard OH, ” YOU WERE TURNING IN AN jury in the case of the colored brother acquitted of stealing a pig, each one of you enjoys too well his piece of the pork Reform of the courts from within has been promised these hundred years It will come when the disgusted plain people, tired of being played for suckers, go to the job of procedure with an ax reforming court THE AMERICAN fiag not having been safely fastened to the tail of every one of ma’s long-horned steers, Willie Hearst seizes upon the withdrawal of our troops from Vera Cruz as occasion for vomiting an other of his vile editorials upon President Wilson's Mexican pelley. SPOKANE via the | “MILWAUKEE” HORT LINE SERVICE a TEEL TRAINS SPECIAL SLEEPER on evening trains to and from Spokane. Can be occupied on arrival at Spokane until 8:30 A. M. Leaving Spo- kane, the sleeper is ready for occupancy at 9:00 P. M. | Oxservation Car and Daylight Service on famous train‘*Olympian.”’ CITY TICKET OFFICE SECOND AND CHERRY, SEATTLE a7 | Kitchen Privileges ‘Virginia #. and Fighth Av., Beattio, Cores ‘any cars via Westlake ay. Modern, siegantly furnished roome, with the beat in cleantiness, comfort and courtesy for money. Transient, Ste te $1; Virginus FI ba erage Fi gy kee Joff—in a hurry. That's because jie r . Z “or yt eats i, . hag they're made of just the ingred aus 2 6 alc A oo 1B PRBS.” | tents on ed to drive all poisons ‘0, Sahat be per 1 and impurities from the blood b ma ar a srg ‘ pne wuz. | That's why doctors prescribe them | the boss of the firing party asked, That discoloration on the avery, bey Mich. | was not thought to be pretty. But all the change | made was to clean my blood and skin.” Many a face is made with beau tiful contour and artistically line but when the skin fs discolored one them by rubbing stuff on the out side of the face, Purify the blood and the blemishes will disappear.| Stuart's Calcium Wafers will] often clear the complexion in al few days’ time. That's the won-| derful part of it-—-they act Please, teacher, #80 constantly You will spe tiful comple if you use these wonderful li Wafer » ce ded, found guilty, and wen-| wry} eg PE te aed, tow | will become as clear and pure as a San ‘dae : sepa | rose. Nobody likes to have pimply Have you any parting request?"| faced people around, With Stennis jum Wafers you don't have to | walt for months before getting re suite, Even boils have been cured in a few days’ time with these re markably effective blood cleansers Your whole system will feel better in a marvelously short time and| |my, what a difference in your of | looks! You can get @tuart'’s Calcium Wafers of any druggist at 50 cents poor fellow! | box. A small safhple packags it-minded | |matled free by addressing F. A of chemicals—very, | Stuart Co., 175 Stuart Bldg. Mar His Final Request They had arrested the moving picture manager ax a spy. He was lily enjoy a beau Don't make it too long.” The movie man nodded My operator,” he said, “has never seen a real execution Just | let him turn the machine on the} last scene and don't hurry it any Succe| what has become Wasn't he study. | class last year” »rofessor. ‘Tom Appleton? ing with the Ah, yes. Appleton A fine student, but in the use | extract, combine inflamed thus ending the 25 years old, gave the bride away huckled Mr, Cleaver. “I've got when she was a girl, see,” said the mischievous Thomas # good looking now, but she concentrated » Norway 1 with gualacol, n used for gene membranes of the throat mpound an cannot see the beauty of the face| to ne. better looking then lines. One notices only the skin| drummiat f« blemishes. and “don't a: ‘old dimpte Was ia her cheek It's because pimples and erup-|foney prompti Well, Tom, you're not so smart tlons come from the inside—from]| this preparation {Ror you were then, either, impure blood—and you can'e cure| Wayne, Ind clared Here Are Five Chances to Save There Will Be More Economies Each Suc ceeding Day—These Should Disappear Quickly at the Reductions. 15¢ 7-In, Nicholson Mill File, with one round and one square edge 7 -» Be The round edge enables you to file saw gullet smoothly and accurately $6.50 Stilleto-Excello Pattern Carving Set ; ; $5.00 Crescent back, Turkish scimitar blade, bev eled scroll handle tip and bolster; fine stag handle. The biggest carving set bargain we have seen. A beautiful present F 25c Bennett Hammer Fulcrum .. Be bles you to pull a 20-penny nail as as & 6-penny; saves time; saves easily handles. $1.50 6x1! Two-Cell Tubular Flashlight + 99 $1. 50 ‘6! AxiViq Franco. Radio Tubular Flash. light . $1.25 These have the new Radio lens, now Radio wire-drawn t en bulb; give better light and consume less battery, A perfect present SPINNING’S CASH STORE 1225 Fegustn 1417 Ave. a pleture home of her| you should | HARRY! | phy sical mastery,” said Rev. Leon- ard Wednesday night, “and the ? highest soul development will |come only after we have, by the ats haarueerinnad grace of God, brought physical na- Whether or Not There Is a ture into subjection.” Hell” will be the subject Thursday night of Rev. A. W, Leonard's re- vival sermon. Friday night There Is a Heaven.” Peter Bilhorn, evangelistic sing. er, will conduct the song service, Meditation is that gynnasiur of soul in which aid is given to NAVY YARD ROUTE Steamers H. B. Kennedy and Tourist 30 yhether or Not) Leave Colman Dock, Seattle, Sunday), $:00, 10:30 a, m,. 1: Sunday (Sunday 2:30), 6:30 pom. y 145 pom table subject to change without Price 600 Round Tuy notic Phone Main 3101, wn ab OE =|" mt