The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 3, 1915, Page 4

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~W oVNLeDAY a ns whee OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST LEA THE SEATTLE STAR Telegraph News Servt & mom, $1.80; year $3.25 6 mos. 7 Whole Families Will Lose Life Savings, and Very) Roofs Over Their Heads |, if Mandate Is Enforced. McArdle—Patriot . "S drop & non-partisan tear of sympathy for Rep. L. D McArdle of Jefferson county. For the past week Me-| By Harry Payne Burton | ] Ardie has worked like a Trojan, He has labored until the} | DANBURY, Conn, Feb. 3.— $weat rolled off his brows in beads as bi bricks, valiantly) "@ hate to be the constable that's got to put all these peo Beeking to prove he was not a political barnacle or payroll! pie out of their tittle hom 5 he'll have to have ai ot Se But alack and alas, the world is filled with: scoffer heart, that fellow willl” and unbelievers. | John O'Hara, tears in his 1 Irish eyes, and t es in his F, Even as he reached the climax of hig noble endeavor] 402) irtcn'velce, tooeald the @! showing himself an unselfish patri there were mem words as we went town t Hers of the house of representatives yesterday who virtually feered him * McArdle did not take the job examiner under the! ®tate auditor for the money there was in it, but in order to} *obtain an education in statehouse matters,” so that he might be a better legislator and so that he might accomplish greater} mommies : | H McArdle said so himself. He admits it. And still there! #re_ unbelievers | ® McArdle drew only $150 a month for the first three Months, he said, and then he was raised to $175 a month, ith traveling expenses on the side, But he didn't take the} steps of Mrs. Jam Costello's trim white house that stands on the Old South road on the outskirts of Danbury. Mrs, Costello, gray-haired, drooping and widowed, stood at the front window weeping as she gazed out across the wet, soggy fields to the black bulwark of Shelter Rock. Shelter Rock that watched her come to her home a bride, watched her become the mother of nine child) watched five of them slip away from the state payroll altogether. Jefferson county ‘ } to satisfy a shuge judgment of) POnly entitled to one member of the legislature, according} body of her old helpmate. th A. which she is wholly ignorant, to/ the population basis. Maybe his statehouse education! But there ts still another scene| satisfy laws that she knows not) ht him economy in that direction for Shelter Rock to watch before) even the istence of, to be an in ahqer henge : the drama of the little white house| nocent burnt offering to gods of; But no! The skeptics in the legislature fail to credit the rspiration-covered explanations of Rep. McArdle What a dampening effect it must be on the unselfish trictism of McArdle to have Democratic Floor Leader Wes remark right out loud that it is too 1 other mem of the legislature “did not have the power and the pull ® get state jobs that would yield an education across the Selds ts closed—and it] Mammon of whose gigantic greed lis geing to be the saddest scene’ she has never even heard! Tt sure is fierce to be a real patriot at public expense! subject at the ime meeting ‘anged by two women's clubs. what a foundation for an exciting time. | COUNCILMEN ERICKSON and Dale are billed to speak on 4 's Going to Preside More, Too PHOENIX dispatch states that Mrs Munds of Yavapai county, the only woman member of the Arizona lature, presided over that body as chairman of the com- lee of the whole, during consideration of a bill to amend law relating to the fees and salaries of county officers Under Mrs. Mund’s parliamentary rule the senate rec mended the passage of the bill in short order Again mere woman usurps the self-assumed prerogative mighty man with a facility doubtless disconcerting to the ediluvian who insists that woman's sphere comprises ly the wash tub, the skillet and the cradle. Frances OLYMPIA TROLLEY Iine will run jitney bus extensior in con- with Its system, giving transfer privileges. Who said Olympia ? { First Ay HAT a great relief it must be to a soldier who has gone to war to fight, bleed and die for his country | o be captured by the enemy. | His life is no longer in danger; he gets all he wants to}! and a place to sleep where the shrapnel and bullets don’t} paten. | Of course, there isn’t much glory in being a prisoner} war. Out on the battle front a man can swap a leg, an) a lung or his life for whole gobs of glory, but the! iso of war will go back home after it’s all over and happily ever after. Tf the privates in those warring armies knew what was good for them they would hurry up and surrender, and the! se would be on the other fellows who captured them There is nothing heroic about being a prisoner of war, it has many advantages over being a hero. The poet Said that a hero's fate was “A dose of cold lead shot into his head, And his name spelled wrong in the papers.” SENATOR BETHEL took off his coat to fight against the fighting When you're in Rome, you've got to burn Roman cand! is the senator's motto. te Is Very Simple "MOST ANYTHING. : A Ory Town. jon “Revolution in the Mince Pte. “ Othe people want to foot the bills for this wild and “Where can I get a drink in this) Colonel—That's the kind of revo - " |jtown?” asked C. H. Code, niovie lution you like to put down, I sup dangerous experiment (ship purchase) |salesman, who landed at a little pose, general? * which dent Wilson is determined to try?” asks a reader |town in the ofl region of Oklahoma, . is vere -. seg iteel{| ot the bus driver. ; It is a question easily answered because it resolves itself|".o0 that millinery shop over 66 9 imto such a plain proposition there?” asked the driver, pointing Do the people want to put their money into the hands of|to a butiding near the depot Private shipowners in the shape of subsidy or do they want to|_ “You don't mean to say they sell SORE TIRED FEET Use “TIZ!" Don't have puffed-up, r . key 1 illinery store?” ex Put their money into something that they will themselves) Shiskey ina m ly burning, aching feet or mene Presi- own? This is all there is to it No, | mean that's the Ask any man you may meet on the street whether he| place here they don’t sell it,” said Prefers to give his money to Tom Jones to induce him to|the bus man. | do business or to invest his money in business for himself.) Ask any man if he prefers to foot bills contracted by some-| “Wwe Yody else or bills contracted by himself. Of course, the! before “ Not exactly, but I've had a good In Training. well! Did you ever milk feader will not ask such questions. They're positively foolish “"TIZ’ makes ‘ ; ; deal of practice with a fountain on their face. pen. vey nud But putting through such fool propositions on the gov- Pi | Just dance,” ernment seems to be legitimate statecraft and the climax of business acumen. Seizing the Advantage. “What are you boys making such racket down there for?” | “Why, we're two big nations gone | to war.’ | “Bat what are you both pummel-| two ling poor little Freddie for? side| “Oh, he’s @ neutral so be can't fight | | The Coming Ruler | 66PPVHE war will last at least one year and probably more. the or Germany cannot win, because having the greater number of men and resources available} i$ sure to be the victor. Germany will be worn down after! Friendly Tip. © long conflict."—Thomas A. Edison | The ferret-eyed little man stepped From the present outlook, the last man able to tote a|@cToss the rtreet-car aisle and whis pered into the ear of the tall chap musket and wield a scepter will be ruler of all Europe and|in a grey sult his dependents a host of widows and babes in arms. Even| “You'd better wipe that bit of ee the schoolboys are being o as a sacrifice to the insa-|off your chin, The income tax man tiable God of War | 8 Just two seats In front of you.” || Ab! what relief. No more tired| si os © | feet; no more burning feet;no more '. “s | Not Stubborn wollen, bad-emelling, sweaty feet Make It a Draw Rd ys is ape yy of the earth?” | No more pain in corns, callouses or| bs : jasked the teacher bunions, No matter wh sy ey tors ER may win in the present war, we .are| “Round feet, or What nds? Neen don doomed to fight the winner The only thing that! “How do you know it's round?” | tried without getting relief, Just : 5 | “AN right, it's square, then; [| use “TIZ, | could save us would be for the conflict to end in a draw don't want to start any argument.”| “TIZ" is the only remedy that! Hudson Maxim ae {draws out all the poisonous exuda-| Well, we ought to be able to whip one or twe cripples Deserve it tions which puff up the feet; Mrs. Scrapp—Statisties show that married men live longer than! will cure your foot troubles 80 single men, | you'll never limp or draw up your Scrapp-s¥es, and It serves them| face in pain, Your shoes won't right seem tight and your feet will never,| never hurt or get sore, swollen or! tiged. Think of it~—no more foot! is magical; “TIZ" is grand; That's all that’s going to be left, appa . They Hesitate, “I wonder why there are #0 few! misery; no more burning corns, | “Perhaps women are afraid they Ge 25-c: ALL, RINDG OF ORIXDING night be called designing creat BD rae ae eae a Woot Arches for All Foot Troubles oro store or department store, and get SHOES MADE TO FIT THE FEET 104 CHERRY ST., AT FIRST A Shoes and Blades by Parcel instant relief, Get a foot relief for only 2 of itt whole cents, A Favorite Rebellion, General—I see here's an article rs Lewman Think & Nanford’s | Widows and Babies, Old ‘tlons of the jurists stirred! i: " a “a gpa we Group of children of the Danbury hatters and home Mrs, James Costello, aged widow, must turn bb for the money-—always remember that. Le was going to] from earth, watched two of over to a rich corporation after a lifetime of paying for it. : t an educaton, to study how to economize state expenses the others marry and finally Perhaps if you gave McArdle time enough, he would) watched the black hearse drive | in the world—the sce this; When the black-robed judges of} And the papers throbghout the cone! 4 a at home, anc oul himself up to the door this year to silvery-haired widow and mother|the United States supreme court| country, #o little did they appre m economy, like charity, at home, and would cut himself) Ob sway forever the lifeless | is turned out of her abiding place|the other day handed down & digni-|clate what this decision meant. fled verdict in favor of the plain tuff in “the case of Martin Lafior et al, ve. D. EB. Loewe et al,” down in Washington, the rarefied air of that marble-fluted room was searce ly ruffled, so little were the emo- had finally been settled and the sum of $2 & setback to th | OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE | MISHAPS OF DIANA DILLPICKLES HER LAWYER BEAU "TM GAD To KNOW YOU're A LAWYER, MR, BRIGF, 1 WANT To ASK Ye° IF Ae HAD A GARDEN, AND B, Next DOOR HAS CHICKENS, AND B'S CHICKENS GIT OVER INTO A'S YARD, CAN ay ere... aTC. *1V@ TAKSD YO YouR BEAU IN THERE, DIANA, BUT DOGGONE IF IT S@G HOw HE BVGR GoT ADMITTED To TH’ BAR." “I THOUGHT HIS NAME I3 MR. BRIEF. WHAT MAKES You CALL HIM ‘necessity’ ¢* “On, 1 CAL HIM THAT, FATHER — BECAUSE 33ITY KNOWS NO LAW" ‘NEC printed only a few lines saying that the famous Danbury Hatters’ case the defendants would be obliged to pay 00, and that it was! cause of organized ; “labor in that it stamps the boyoott Men and Women, Real Victims in Supreme Court’s Decision in Danbury Hatters’ Case practically an illegal proceed-| good man, lied ; Hut up here in this little town! one can ta our he from iG bighnset in the Co’ helter R m't dene o necticut bills, THEY know what t So we left Mr Costello #o means! It means th weeping—but gathering grain of | That scores of poor working comfort from the Ile n | people of this village—people | O'Hara HAD to tell he | who sweat out a hard-earned : rf existence making felt hats for Mrs. Costello whom yo . city folk to wear e going to | just one of the score oF of have their little bank accounts such cases caught tp t e e and their tiny homes TAKEN | disaster,” ssid John W. Se | AWAY from them, and all be president of the Hatter: of cause their union only tried to | North America, to me in his " wage a battle for better wages | York office, These people t for them, WAGES THAT | lose rey nth to each ¢ THEY KNEW THEY OUGHT | them a@ lifetime of toll—their roof TO HAVE BECAUSE THEY |and their ecount NEEDED THEM FOR BREAD The case was f taried ‘in AND THE NECESSITIES OF — 1N/ LIFE! th others, D/ BE. Loewe, a bat es @ turer of Danbury, brought Why, they can't take my little against many members of the |HOME away,” the widow Costeil.| Hatters’ union, declaring that by, wept out tome. “They ain't going, boycotting him they had acted con to, are they? Why, it's built on| trary to the anti-trust law and were the ground my father ga me.| able to damages | Jim and 1 butlt this little bqgse and| In accordance with the Connecti our babies were all born here. And) cut statute, attachments on the. some of them died here ban counts and homes of the And Jim—he died here, too, defendants were made, pending the \ spring final outcome of the tr Why, he never did anything The American Federation of La wrong. Just worked al! his life in| bor came to the rescue of the hat- that wet pressing room at the hat ters and the case has, in the past works till the rh ism killed! 11 yea been carried throygh him. every court up to the supreme court at Washington. The final Ihas just been handed down in fa- plaintiff What have we don keep my little won't | And then. Jobn O'Hara, being 4 vor of th Oh, 1 will house, i? | Too little attention is given toythus early in the tender mind of jie selection of a nurse by the/a child is often almost impossible mother. Remem to eradicate and may engender a ber that you can permanent timidity, A too rigid not expect the obedience to the nurse on the same care given | baby’s part should always be your child which you give it when you entrust it to others. | Viewed with suspicion as suggest- |ing methods of secret discipline, From all of which considerations it follows that no mother should Irrespon sible . neglect to investigate the character sirls—often total of the nursemaid she proposes to strangers, are put in charge of chil-| enga dren of tender years and the moth-| Give the sun a chance to protect er goes about her dally pursuits be-| the baby from disease germs. Take Neving that she has “done her him into the parks or to the open duty.” country as often as possible and it is unsafe for a woman, after stay in the open as iong as you | Spending weary months in raising) can. Fresh air and sunlight are |her child to babyhood, to permit a even more important to a baby than car nurse girl to undo all she to the grown Many girls are not clean person- Stops Tobacco Habit in One Day jally and their habits are objection- able. They may carry disease from Sanitarium Publishes Free Book Showing How Tobacco Habit their homes or from others with whom they come in contact and/ Can Banished in From Days at then fondie your child—submitting | it to all the dangers of infection. The nurse girl may threaten the baby with the policeman or with| imaginary hobgoblins, | This is very bad. Fear instilled he Elders Sanitarium, located at b vs tn from one sed tobacco for more than fifty years have tried this method and say !t im entirely suc- essful, and in addition to banishing the desire for tobacco has improved thelr health wonderfully, This meth- od banishes the desire for tob 30 DAYS Jo: icocU ns CUT PRICES|: oe FREE EXAMINATION 25c Per Cent Reduction’ from these regular prices. 22K Gold Crowns. ..$5.00) Bridgework ........$5. Full Set of Teeth.... Porcelain Crown. Gold Fillings Silver Fillings We do exactly as advertised. Lady Attendant. Terms to suit. All work guaranteed 15 years. ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS tet and Pike, Opp. Laboring People’ At e wanting a copy should ame and address at once LIVING—STALL 52 Floor Pike Place Market FREE DOCTOR Call at the Right Drug Co. 169 Washington st, near Second ‘ave, and have the ex-government phy: clan diagnose your ease and prescribe for you, abs y without charge. We want your patronage and of- fer you the doctor's service an inducement ventists. the Yellow Frey tention, Ladies! These special prices are given to help the woman who "8 to economize. Wk 35c¢ Special 4+Seam Broom ess sevenebaceed Made for Marshall Wells Hdw. Co., who market goods of merit 25¢ doz, Handy Household Hanging Hooks, doz.. 30c doz. Handy Household Hanging Hooks, doz A push or drive pin with a hook for hanging articles on, Se Cloth Dish Mops You don't ne +2186 -20e ee tecnses Satesesees +++.8¢ 1 to stick your hands in dish water if you use one. $12.00 Coldwell 15:in., S-blade, 10-in, wheel Law The best we know of ERS Your Bla Razor es will be sharpened better here. SPINNING’S CASH STORE 3225;2427 Fourth Av. There Is Only One Lin Made From This NOT A DRUG BUT NATURE'S OWN Grr PROM IS WONDERFUL ‘ SBA" ed Water Soak Lake Salis ‘ Lake Liniment awn process the curative properti Acted and put in such shape, we are COMB AND SKE US And we will advise you personally how to get ree * from our § ap Lake! Treatments. JANES & CO., 1406 FOURT OW ASK YOUR DHUGGINE ABOUT enue es rRopucrs

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