The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 6, 1915, Page 4

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STAR—TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1915. PAGE 4. DIANA DILLPICKLES IN HER HOT SKETCH TOO BAD HARRY’S BRAIN CAKED "NOU BOYS ARE LOSING W-7 | *WELLTLL HELP You, HARR YOUR MINDS OVER My THINK OF A NUMBER! * ; “BUT ONLY GIVE US A HINT, MISS DIANA. THE SEATTLE STAR MEMBER OF SCRIFVS NORTHWEST LEAGUN OF NEWsrarnns | “WOW SUBTRACT THE, “BY GEORGE, I'VE ORIGINAL NUMBERY* FORGOTTEN WHAT ‘ : of THAT WAS!" “VERY WELL. “NOW ADD 1 HAVE” ‘Telegraph News Service of the United Press Association Entered at Seattle, Wash. Postoftice ax Becona Clase Mt By mail, out of ofty, Me per month up to ¢ m y carrier, eity 260 ar Pubite ing ¢ sosneeting oll 3: Billions for a Navy for: PEACE INSURANCE ‘Not 1 Cent for a Navy for Aggression THE REMEDY An Exceptional Case ‘ HERE can be no legitimate criticism of Councilman 1 Hanna's lone opposition to the sale of $1,779,500 bonds} jt Carstens & Earles of this city without public bids, Theoret deally, Hanna's position is sound, and bond sales should =) Ordinarily be made only after competitive bids are submitted be) Practically, however, the council was eminently justified, from @ business standpoint, departing from the usual rule Tncluded in the bond sale yesterday were $100,000 muni-| ipal railway bonds, $125,000 hospital bonds and $400,000} Hight extension bonds. It is significant that other bond-buying concerns, even while protesting at the council's action yester- May, counseled the city not to include the car line bonds PWith the rest. In other words, they would not have bid pom car line bonds at all. They never have as yet bid on any Municipal railway bonds, and the only sale of railway bonds tefore was made to the state of Washington. Incidentally TEW YOU PROMISED TO PAY BACK OVER 4 MONTH AGO EL HERE'S A LITTLE ADVICE FER YOUYOUNO FELLERS DAT ARE ‘TEMPLAITIN’ GETTIN’ MARRIED ! “LOVE WONT BUY might be mentioned that the hospital and light extension BREAD NOR PAY d\ Impatient Father—You are al ds have also been offered for sale before and no bids ” / ways whining for spending forthcoming THE GAS BILL - money. 1! notice Eddie Binks always shuts up when his father tells him to \\\ Aa ri Discontented Son—-Of OnRae yey Pinel < 7 ee the thought that maybe by the “But Iam, air! My father te tt Must Follow . EXCEPT WHEN SOME ONE ASKS time she gets past the Darda an ice king; my ‘brother is a , Committee Chairman — How r, nelles forts she will have t prince Of prod fellows mat tam does the organization of which }YOU TQ WavE A DRINK nar - oY ae Wow comes a bond-buying firm, for the first time in the ‘ of the city, offering to purchase railway bonds as well as the others. Was it good business for the city to} cept the offer while it lasted? The council, the mayor and common sense agree that it was The people who are troubled over the fact that the Queen Elizabeth can travel faster and 4 SAID THAT 1"'VE OFTEN NOTICED oot further than the California WHAT BAD HEARING YOU WAVE may find some consolation in READER fires this at us: “What ‘right’ has one man to expect another to} him work? No one has such right.” “Ab, Mins Peache, it is a pity you are not related to royalty i 4 " vi s " » all bereft of these advantages. The It is true enough, as between individual In the begin-j 5 queen of burleaque you are a director make all Sts TOnNS cose aivlie tot aie wot » might was right. The stronger man had a recognized} aa ae A si, ain wi jolts to take whatever he wanted from the weaker. i} Now He Knows exact Siiaaiel of eke wont oa Later on came organized society. The strong man gave ares te - Seeman cy ag but “tt 4a en altogether @ifferent Teste of tie ‘Trade his right to take by force. In exchange he got the right |B (jiiliiant repartee ‘eenar ici? -provens from the one they use at Piimmor—Met Wmeon dows SEE. tn aetGs a dine “This eociety cwee ‘him. “if . the mint.—Baltimore Amertean. town today, He'd just bought a unity e ) Versation, each word of which . . "s way of doing things deprives him of opportunity, his#} has 17 meanings, 16 of which tin horn, a triangle, some blocks 3 i Going Down! ttlebo: ne yells anc ess lies in tearing down society as organized, with its) a ought to know."—Ohio Tim—I heard Diggs boasting of / ee ee eee its and hods. ~~ oe his descent a baby i i ref C Tom-—So ould 1 if y ore i “ Tn this country it can be done peacefully, but none the Money Saved Peg Sgt cabin oo er d mace te a He's a surely, with the ballot L I Mra. Subbubs—The Nexdores Judae things are part oe eo atfit m3 There’s no bigger fool than the anarchist who thinks he's} had a lawn mower come today +8 i h to change things by blowing up a Carnegie, a Rocke- Subbubs—-Thank heaven! 1 “$ie0e'e-a: enen-euteg terdiveree See. was afraid we'd have to buy one because his wife goes through ot our own.—Boston Transcript. his pockets said Mrs, Smith, tities nd reading from the newspaper. Now a man dies and is cre. “What would you do if you woke 4 Corporations cannot be bombed. The jobless man has poerg Fes Portland a his ashes up and found me going through es spigy 1 ” sent home by parcel post. Gee your pockets?” fo right of complaint against individuals. He thas “rights” |B Qnis: Suppose that mail bag “I?” said Mr. Smith, sadly; “T society only. 1 should get lost. would get up and help you look.” ing Up American Passengers "3 | CE REE TE - —-\| tical with the second committee, | COUR another roar will now arise over the seat DARNIVAL OF BRITISH BURNING QF FALMOUTH § and among ie members were Rob of the American, Leon C. Thrasher, in the Falaba, sunk} | VY ) wre , jerris john Hancock and Sam C Jashingto' ispatches rt it as an “ominous t a ss i : 1775, to cember, | is ma In fact, Washington dispatches report it as an { From John Paul Jones to Dewey—A Tabloid History })"8e committee bad charge of naval , or any other individual. With such individuals sky The Higher-Ups dynamited as fine as mincemeat, the conditions would They say Mrs, de Style always welcomes her poor relations un- der her roof “Yes; I understand she puts them in the attic.”—Rocky Mountain News CARBORUNDUM No. 1 4In. Carborundum Wheel, Inclosed-Gear Champion Tool Grind- er seen No. 2 5-1n. Same .... | No. 3 6-In, Same ..... .” But how there can be anything more ominous in this} +) ) shy 6 affairs; it was the nucleus of the The abc vo tie en eae is oe . inci i ) of Americans in Mexico is diffieuft| —- ti of Our Navy; Something About the Difficulties (navy department je above are the r ular high-grade, inclosed-gear carborun- dent than in the deat “pg ~ ; Hn ‘ i} ys g ict a8 ‘ee : dum grinden see. Ifthe sinking of passenger-carrying vessels by sub- b pretty girls in attendance | and Triumphs of Uncle Sam's Sea Fight- Jk. proved to be a clumsy and 9} No. 1 41. Carborundum Wheel, Oil-Tight Case, American Tool rines is tolerable, the fact that the vessel happened to carry |*¥erywhere about the big dancing |; t w instrument for carrying for- I Grinder ; iin ‘i $3.00 Ps | pavilion, the Carnival of Commerce American citizen certainly does not make it any less SO.) opened with a merchants’ luncheon |) is to be expected that German underwater cruisers will use| at 11:30 Tuesday morning. The | ers of the Early Days. {| ward the work of supplying and : No. 2 S-1n. Wheel Same . mann No. 3 6-In, Wheel Same fyi vane oe - $5.00 The An an oll-tight case is the most durable and easiest- 1 by a “board of # . a f rn fore e P oy ¢ u = o e i up of > on - zeal in ascertaining the nationality ofa vessel before Seaton aesetsy ieolnccenl Bhar PP gg hh nd cbr wwe || AMERICAN NAVAL HERO missioners — Rasy ‘ne running hand tool grinder made. pedoing it, and to assist them neutral vessels are ProMiNeNt-| ae midnight Shot seheeery ofits Amatiean 1? | congress: this board tasted till oe Sarg a Adjustable, 5x1!-In, Carborundum Wheel, Oil-Tight carrying identification marks, which thus far have been) The carnival is under the, Navy,” published by “The | 1781, when Robert Morris became se Tool Grinder viene bien b chee ea teaconees saunas $6.00 fect: But the Germans could hardly be expected| auspices of St. Margaret's Guild of| Wertd'’s Work” in its series on agent of marine”—the first time | One finishing face; adjustable to any angle, horizontal or per- ly effective < hoard, or, if they did so, re-|St. Mark's church. Latest apring| American defenses.) jnaval affairs were placed un pendicular The finest Mee of tool grinders made. One will save recognize a lone American on board, or, y , raiment is being shown this after-| one head its price many times each year if you use many tools. in from firing. If such were the case a new profession,| noon by society giris in one of the | BY JOHN M. OSKISON oe Razor Blades Sharpened Much Better it of maritime mascots, wottld be opened to our American} most unusual fashion shows ever Chapter |. (The next instaliment of this rT 1416-1417 A : Stripes he affront would have been} . “ ‘ navy will be told in this paper to- Fourth Av. ing the Stars and Stripes, then the affron | growth he navy of the United morrow.) i mational one. As it is it’s merely an individual issue ‘600 TO SEE SEATTLE 5": would have four humps rep-| or oy s . Mexico lresenting vigorous growth. ‘Three Americans have exposed themselves to danger in Mexi en ia . heir fool lof them would be followed by de d on land in Europe and have paid the price for their fo |. Eight hundred Kastern Rosarians| pressions—long slides downhill ness, and further than to ask indemnity for their fam-| have notified Seattle Motroist club| that represent periods of comple * $ rc could well be done. that they will stop here en route to| apathy on the part of the public | & nothing ‘has nor the exposition this summer, and| and of congress : | plans are being made for their Every growth that the navy has| At San Francisco they claim to have sent the human) toiiinment had was @ response to an emer woice 721 miles, by wireless. Married gents doing the Mid- —--—— - gency in our national history m v 5 . x jor less grave. In meeting th te ee sca eer ULL HAVE PROGRAM 025205. our! cas sot Wheat went down in Chicago because the allied fleet } . ie | courage, desperate industry, and it goes up because the: Gen. Lee's surrende ok have yed to make the rec fees ce “g pence gy sip d ¥) Grant at Appamattox, April 9, 1866 ppm aged weige i again. , eh? a | A New } e j Will be commemorated by veterans! spain has the line showing growth | ; esate a - ze jin the Armory Saturday afternoon.| held steadily, if slowly, upward: | | e e one rec or Gen. Felix Diaz is planning a revolution, says Wash-)4 parriotic program of songs and| that now it is inclined to din meain Capt. Isaac Hull ’ ington. Still or again? | speeches will begin at 2:20 o'clock, | does not surprise the reader of our under the auspices of local Grand} naval history ¢ to Gen |to the creation of the first fighting i ise’s stockings, and weighs seas; our o & commerce was or in her stockings, or anybody ¢ ngs. | destroyed; and English ships were | blockading our harbors One of these blockaders, an armed schooner, appeared off Ma: | ; jehias, Me. early in May, 1776 |Down from the woods, to hear tales of the insolence and fearless s of the British seamen, came a an named O'Brien at the of man uum O/Brien at the head of Will Go to Press his mon listened to the talk about to Pr the blockaders until they couldn't The reasan why colds usually} remaining open, the germs cannot | St! any more of it; then one} end in earache or in troubles with |elimb up the tube, but because the |Msht they went aboard a lumber > eager Rasa r garry | tube 4s closed the fluid-in-the mid.| sloop In the harbor, armed mainly bd fold. die ear is retained and while pus| ‘th pitehforks and axes, satled Yl 7| If the tube jdoes not form, there is pressure |*0nssite the armed schooner. which runs from | from the retained fluid in the ear br ieigs be ay side, and pro. the upper part of | which may rupture the eardrum or Atator to make American nevel| the throat to the | Teqiire lancing gy | |middie ear re | As a@ result of infection tn earty They ¢ aptured the schooner and mains open after | life or following some disease like | °T d set forth on a career of inflammation is scarlet fever or diphtheria a great | PMvateering, which proved highly | Pl arrange for any chan e jset up the germs many people have a slight but con Te sa ESO. | ease b4 may travel to the middle ear and|8tant discharge from one or both | aan re epee mare a a | Pi = ae develop there, and in that case | ears y imitators sought prizes: by d l |seeon ofthe eer and the ‘prodne.| This always indicates a ruptured |October,. the” ritish adteal you may desire in present listings tion of pus in the ear cavity re-|@rum and a diseased condition of | G'@¥e% had become desperate, and | wulte. the middle ear, generilly a chronic|®® ® punishment he de tion. Many Of Aime neran|upon Falmouth (new Porttand) or advertising as soon as possible 220 pounds. She's detailed to keep order in the Midway, and we guess she will. Take Care After a Cold Bea Everybody “takes cold” now and)! used them when I was having with co-operation of American Medical Association ‘then. Few of us take the trouble | kidney trouble and they cured me —<—S nace eet wassues #e to esas the tasene De one Pelee en 2 Save Tees at BOOe Reasons Why Colds Should Be Prevented | | The kidneys have to filter the | 9: _ | Blood, and when it is congested, as @uring a cold, they are Itkely to ai i weaken; #0 when doctoring # cold, 't forget the kidneys; especial: | , if you notice backache, muscu- | Jar or joint pains, or disorders of urination, dizzy spells, headache, pervousness and tired-out feelings. | _ Remember that neglected kidney weakness leads to dropsy and When convinced that the kidneys | fre weak, use moderation 1n diet || and drinking. Avoid overwork, | worry, and late hours. Milk and water are especially useful, and, as a special medicine for sick kidneys, you can rely on Doan's Kidney This is usually a very seri. | can be ¢ A +F Me,, and burned the town | Pilis, in successful use and highly ous condition. v Drug clini r Greatly valleved | rat he final Q he world over. under proper treatment, while ‘the vat was the final stimulus need d 1 h mementos * Bich t-chnd peerage ype continuation of this discharge — is Jed to move cong an not later than Apri 15t a real daiger On November 2, 17 that body SEATTLE TESTIMONY: drum and allow the pus to | | voted $100,000 for naval armament cape, then no serious condition Germs, according to Henr: ic ype ee oO To Miss 1. D. Cochran, 1010 Boy! may result, but if treatment is @. Plimmer in astune efor, Fe eee ees © ornithine i om aiwage aie ,| delayed until the eardrum rup: the Royal Institution in Lon. Soon it appointed another "| tures, the germs may be forced don, are immortal, When they | mittee; its recommendation wne| T | back into the deeper structures attain a certain age—16 min- | that a "ply Pgs of the ear and may produce a utes—they each divide in two. | quired mastoid abscess, which is very One germ in 24 hours, provid- [be appointed to look after thei dangerous ed all the conditions were | constru and equlpment—the | D RAPH COMPANY That is one very good reason ideal, would become forty thou. | ships were to hi from 24 to 32 why people should strive to pre-| sand. billion billions. Condi. |auns Con acted promptly vent colds. Here 1s another tions rarely are ideal, but thie | naming 1% men, one from enact If the tube from the throat to shows the possibility of mui colony, the “marine com titer eae | the ear becomes closed instead of] tiplication in germ tife. In make-up it was almost’ iden |

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