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*NOW DIANA AND MR.PUTTEES IN SCENE 34 LET YOUR LIPS MovE! TALK! SAY ANYTHING GET THE. EFFECT OF TALKING.” Ry mail, out of city, one year, Watered at Beattie, Wash Pe My carrier, city, tSe @ month "FALSE ONE! HOW DID YOU ENJOY OUR DANCE LAST NIGHT?” "1 SCORN You, JACK DALTON! WASN'T I(T LOVELY f* Pabitened Daily By The Mar ostotticn as second clase matter Good Seed ) BI™: not always the man occupying the | highest niche who performs 7) meritorious act. =) This time 'tis a little country justice of the peace, in Wichita Falls, Texas, who sets fan example which wiser and greater might well follow. mo longer hear vagrancy cases, because the mifee system of Texas puts a premium upon » conviction fs Yagrants must be convicted before the trial me court officers get any fees; then if the pris- a) oner can’t pay, the county must ; The inference »vious, but one # mot have to infer. It's being done SOME S WHERE every day, and it's what is turn- | Hing lots of unfortunates into criminals— | | | most men He announces that he will In Texas and many other states, is does } man's inhuman injustice Wrong? Of course it’s WRONG, but it's | SLAW. This obscure peace officer saw the mwWrong. So have lots of others who hid Behind the statutes. THIS judge said: “The Maw be hanged! This is a court of justice. = Don’t bring them before me any more un Jess they have committed a crime,” which i leads us to believe in Wichita Falls » Don’t Deprive Him of War! : TTORNEY FRANKLIN TAYLOR of New York has got a new fear of wom- Wan’s suffrage. He fears that when war threat- Pened “the women would focus their vision | ‘on the threatened loss of husbands, sons and | Sweethearts.” | It might be. It might be. Some of them Thave got almighty sick of focusing their P¥ision on coffins, cemeteries and crutches = Still, any man hungering for war could have “it. All he would have o do would be to Smarry the right sort of a woman for war purposes. ROLAND COTTERILL, secretary of the board, is peeved. He writes us that Star quoted or misquoted him personally @bout this roof garden matter. Far be it from uch, Roland. We guiltily confess we haven't ; €ven a passing interest in what your. personal Fiews are. It’s the park board we're worried about. '- “THE HEART must be trained,” says | President-elect Suzzallo of the University of "Washington. Immediately the board of re- gents fires Dr. Hart. “MAYOR FIGHTS ADMIRAL WAY,” | Says newspaper head. Does that mean he’s for against a larger navy? 4 } SEATTLE SCHOOL board wants to know popular the demand for vocational train- in public schools may be. that it won’t be as popular as baseball, but “much more popular than botany—with the kids. ENGLAND NOW talks of fighting with “similar expedients.” It must be tough to ! be killed by a similar expedient. SPEAKING OF the Power of the Press: A Chicago poet wrote a poem called, “Hail Straw hat day,” and it did. SOME ONE charges there is a trust in ' fountain pens. Imagine any one having trust _,in fountain pens. JAPAN AND CHINA ho evidently con- ultimator, ultimati: Our guess is | Indefensible jo CHILDS, assembly impeachment charges, pleads guilty to call ing a man a liar thru the columns of his} own paper, because he was a liar. Now, that sounds like a perfectly good reason | But when the judge pleads guilty to the) offense of being a newspaper editor we are reluctantly compelled to withdraw our sup-| port There be no defense f that} crime | ! | whom a committee of lifornia is tryng under can os Opening for Italy iy Italy is downright anxious to help the | Allies, a better time than now could) hardly be found. If the reported Russian defeat is true, the situation is critical for Russia and an attack by the highly efficient Italian army on the west of Austria-Hungary| might save the day | He'll Get It, Too “cc HAT is your greatest wish?” asked] * the romantic lady of the youth who was just about to take his final examina-| | tion in medicine ; ea “My greatest wish,” said the practical] youth, “is to put ‘Dr.’ before my own name| and ‘Dr.” after the names of other people.”— Ladies’ Home Journal It’s Unconstitutional | ALIFORNIA certainly stitutional notions | At Sacramento, a negro has been sent to} has some uncon- j | ont prison for stealing a pellow hen, which} elected to roost on the back fence instead| of in the hen house. In Mississippi, they would arrest, as a suspicious character, any darkey who wouldn't swipe a chicken under} such aggravating circumstances. Editorialettes THE “INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT” still remains invisible to those who look the op- posite direction. THE UNITED STATES will demand many has already advised the United States) that she, in future, will do. Guess that set- tles it then. OUR BARBER, who thinks one way, says the Germans ar murderers for sinking the | Lusitania: our bartender, who think another, declares the English officers ordered all Amer icans drowned as soon as the torpedo struck in order to accuse Germany Truly, we're a | grand little nation of neutrals A NEW ORLEANS gir! broke her engage-| ment to a Chicago man and demands that he | crawl to her on his knees before she'll make! up. That man ought to start crawling due north. | A HUSBAND-WEARY chorus girl advises all city men to marry “unsophisticated coun try girls.” Only chorus girls and city men | think country girls are still unsophisticated. ELLA WHEELER WILCOX advises hus- bands to treat their wives as they do their business partners. If they ever do the divorce courts wil be jammed. NEW YORK'’S board of health gives the place of honor among school luncheons to] bean soup, bread and prunes, with teacher counting the prunes, of course. | jugate it: Ultimatum, For Ladies and Misses A considerable number of Suits have been reduced in order to fill in the popu- Yar priced lines at $19.50, $24.50 and $30.00, which had been almost sold out This means that we are now offering a good many Suits wt reductions varying from $4.50 to $16.00 per suit. Inspection cordially invited. See our new arrivals in White Suits and Coats. J. Redelsheimer & Co. W. H. Fisher, Mgr. First and Columbia ‘GOVERNOR OF | MARYLAND T0 TALK TO LEAGUE The governor of Maryland, Phil-| lips Lee Goldsborough, and the gen. eral secretary of the National Con. |sumers’ league, Mrs. Florence Kel- ley, will be the principal speakers at the annual dinner of the Muntet pal league, Commercial Club, Mon day night at 6:30. The governor has, been comp. troller of the Maryland treasury, | collector of Internal revenue ,and state attorne Mrs. Kelley, who, among other accomplishments, has — written “Some Ethical Gains Thru Legfile | ton,” whic has t the cause of | much sorrow on the part of political economy students at the university when they were told to read it, and didn't—is one of the women of the country who are doing the big things She {# Irish, and has wit and flow of oratory There will be ents—at six-bits per general the Irish and music and other things, You. and your wife—4f you have one, or anyway your lady friend—are in. |vited—at stx-bits per STAR—FRIDAY, M AN ACTORINE; EV BUMPS AY 21, 1915. PAGE 4. "CURSE You! witt YOU TAK“ UNHAND ME NOW FOR SCEN' WNCH wiTH MET? VILLAIN} CERTAINLY.” Seattle men who are getting there or who have really arrived. They tell some- thing about themselves and their methods that explain the how and why of a rpkk ce RR psc EES ine hi “i 8 YP" Ne ane A 3 ): pa ah that Germany, hereafter, shall do what Ger-| James C. Marmaduke and the Washi RGANIZATION and system,” said James C, Marmaduke. “O their success. j } | ington Hotel, of Which He is Man- Ir. never will,” he said. ‘We have four! departments here, each with its Orderly quiet reigned in| head—dining room (which includes/| | the lobby of the New Washington.! kitchen and bar), housekeeping,| The clerks at the desk went about) front office and accounting. thelr tasks leisurely and went. A liveried bell boy pass. ed thru the lobby, calling a name. “See that man over there!” asked Marmaduke The man was reading a newspa per. : 1 don't know his name, doesn’t know mine. He and he doesn't know me from Adam. The popqjar impression of the duties of the man- ager of a hotel t# that he must hang around the lobby, smiling and af- fable, meeting guests, as did mine host of old. That man doesn't know I am manager of this hotel And he doesn't care. All he knows about this hotel is that he ts get. ting the service he is paying for. If he doesn't get it, he will kick or | leave. “That man over there,” Marma duke went on, “must never know anything about the machinery of this hotel. It must be so well ofled that It will never squeak. It must be so nicely tuned that ft will nev er rattle. “Does that man want a certain dish? It must be served quickly, properly and to his taste, Does he want to send a cable? Does he wish to buy a flower for his buttonhole? Does he require the services of a barber, a mancurist, a chiropodist? They wait upon him.” eo. ARMADUKE is a Seattle man who “got there,” Oddly enough, he ien't lly a hotel man. ly training In busine far removed from hotel He was a promoter and a con- struction man. He and his asso- clates came to Seattle to erect the Alaska building. Their method was to construct a building, then lease or sell it, and pass on to other fields. When the Alaska was com- pleted, they put up three or four other bulidings. Then they bullt the Washington In a niche In the top of Denny hill. When the hotel wi new, the top of Denny hill was on a level with the Tith floor, and there was imminent danger of the hill sliding into the bed. room windows. Hard tim hit Seattle, and nobody could be found to lease or buy the hotel, So, after try- Ing a manager or two, Marma- duke tried his hand at the hotel business. That was five ye ago. He's been at it ev: oe OW, his role in the constru tion business was the same N as It is at present Organization and system!” | have never hired or discharged a cook or a chambermaid, and I Guests came} He's a guest here.” “At 10 each morning I hold aj l‘cabinet meeting’ with my heads of | |departments, I hold the heads re-| sponsible. They get results or go./ is for the heads of depart-| its and thelr subordinates to be bie and polite, because they! come in actual touch with the} guests, The guests do not see me —that fs, not often. oe 6“ UNN & hotel {* not easy. R Sometimes I long to get back to construction. See that marble tiling, I bought it. 1 knew beforehand almost to the pen ny how much {it would cost to buy and put in. The hotel building cost build, and we had to furnish it at a a million and three-quarters to cost of a quarter of a million more. “But buflding a hotel and running it are different jobs. Building ma- terials are unemotional. In deal ing with the changeable emotions of humankind I would be at my wits’ end ff I did not have organi Some zation and system. people Doctor Lathrop is licensed by the |State Board of Medical Examiners |to practice fn the state of Wash ington, and he has been practicing in Seattle for several years, The doctor does not claim that him treat ment {8 a cure-all, and he will not take your case if he thinks he can not benefit you, If medical or surgical treatment is what is need ed in your case, he will tell you go, and advise you to go to your physi. clan and surgeon for treatment. Dr. | Lathrop does not charge for con sultation and you are weleome to | visit his office at 214-15 People's Bank Bldg, any day except Sun | days, between 9 a, m. and 5 Pp. m. |Some of the diseases that Doctor Lathrop scoasfully treata are | Asthma, rt Trouble, Dyspepata, La Grippe, Female Trouble, Conati pation, Limbago, Neuralgia, Liver | Trouble, Rheumatiam, Appendlettia, | Headaches, Paralysis, Insomnia, |Kidney Trouble and Stémach | Trouble, " ! i 35.° My Lady's Lids She calls them Tipperary bats. I don't know why it's so-— No woman's lid was ever known! A long, long way to go. | She wears the thing @ day or two,| And then to pieces plucks, } When It's good-by Piccadilly To another thirty bucks j But what's the use of kicking | You've really got the dough | He buy that Tipperary | For the sweetest girl you know.! see | Betrayed Senator La Follette was talking about dodges and squirms of a certain corrupt railroad officia “For all bis dodges and squirme,” said the senator, “the man was Well shown up. It's like the case of Smith. “A collector entered Smith's » Pushed into the parlor and ) Smith's little son * your father? away, the urchin an “ ‘Gone swered, according to orders. ‘Gone away’? Humph! Where tor “*That closet there,’ was the re ply.” . In Bad Shape “It—er—seems,” sad he, regard: ing the unfortunate with scien tiffe interest, “that the attacks of fever and chills appear on alter nate days, Do you think—is ft your opinion—that they have, so to speak, decreased in violence, If I may use that word?” The patient smiled feebly. “Doo,” suid he, “on fever days my | hae so hot I can't think, and on ague days I shake so I can't hold an opinion.” eee Lacking A rifleman,’in telling « story, | sald: “My aim is to always tell the truth.” “Yea,” said a brother private, “but you're the worst shot In the Tegiment,” | eee No Suth Luck Father was reading a list of the imports cut off by the Euro- pean war. He came to “hen: and other material for hair dyes, when mother, who is very much younger, «nid: “Well, it would have been much worse if it bad happened ten Years ago.” “How's that?” “You had more to dye, then.” “Bah!” interrupted young John- ny, “I don't think much of this war—it ain't out off the supply of castor ofl any.” To Be Sure! “Hist!” whispered the villain. creeping stealthily away “1 expected you would be,” re Joined the stage manager, with curling Mp. | eee Hie Tale of Woe Boy Merchant—Yus, kind lidy, there's sevin ov us at ‘ome, orl starvin’. Muvver takes in he in,’ she do, but she's took hill. Farver, ‘e wos too kind-‘earted, ‘oe wos EB sed 'e wouldn't see us starve, so ‘e run away and left us — a a are fresh-air enthusiasts, while oth- ers fear draughts. Some people like to bathe in cold water, some in hot A dish which one guest will find delicious another will declare unfit for human consumption. “You are a family man? You have experienced problems and dif. ficulties of domesticity? Then mul tiply the problems of one home by 1,000, and you have a conception of what it mesns to run a hotel, “The entire machinery of com- fort and service which I have built up would come tumbling about my ears if I did not have ORGANIZA- TION AND.8YSTEM!”" Dental and Optical Prices Cut Te Sa No au for atrictly Dental and Opt work were ever offered In Seattle or elsewhere You need not hurry, as my low prices will con- tinue while the hard times last HARD TIMES OPTICAL Can teal PRICES at My Op Depart Have your. ey *Xamined and Inanes fitted ‘tor| you, and I will guarantee to save yc a from 600 to $6 on any pair of gine you may require. & apecialty Edwin J. Brown, p.p.s. | Seattle's Leading Dentlet Lenwes duplicated | A PEST SQUARE ON PDB. | * THAT WAS GOOD. | THE BEAN WELL, THEN “ae ("LO Se You AGAIN Y= ALONG. TOWARDS THE END OF THE WEEK, YES, AND WHEN Sac] YOU COME IN AGAIN, USE re ACUTTLE MORE JUDGMENT IN| STRIKING MATCHES Iii! BUYING HERE NOW $1.78 No, 70 At kine Special Stee! Hand Saw ... 88 Choice of #, 10 or 11-point 100 No, 93 7-44 Syracuse Nall Set see Be $3.00 219 Goodell Two Speed Breast Dril! 01,77 “Bearing Ball Gears. Genuine Red Devil Gi Cutter 9 They have stood the test for 30 years in 41 differ. ent countries, Spoke Shave ..... & 6. M. W. R. of Union Nickel-Plated Adjustable soesece eereeseresscvessceccce recess MOS one. Around home one answers to cut metal, wood or bone, Hotpoint Electric Irons ....... OU MISS MANY OTHER BIG ECONOMIES IF YOU FAI VISIT STORE EVERY DAY SPINNING’S CASH STORE 3425;2427 Fourth Av. $2.44 L TO Link Your Interest to Our Chain of Stores, Spring Outerwear High in Popular Demand, Moderate in Price Tomorrow will truly be a notable day fn suit beauty and economy, and we bid you welcome to our unusual value presentation in Suits, Coats, Waists, Dresses and acces- sories. Tailored Spring Suits, $15 and $19.50 its in Serges, Poplins, Fancy Mix- The assortment of tures and Novelties {n styles, materials and colors that are highly favored this season are offered at these remarkably low prices tomorrow, We also show higher-priced garments at $22.75 and $24.75, Sprihg Coats at $12.75, $14.75 and $16.75 Pretty Spring Coats, in the very newest spring styles, inf Coverts, Serges, Poplins and Mixtures, in all the favored colorings, Very reasonably priced. SILK DRESSES FOR EVENING AT $10.00 UPWARDS. SERGE, POPLIN AND EPONGE DRESSES AT $6.75, DoNot Forget | Young Men’s Suits In the new Glen Urquhart That we offer you cred- overplaid, Tartan plaids, checks it privileges free of| and Stripes, in English and Gemi- charge. We invite you) English Soft Roll models, double to open a charge ac-| breasted, and the new one-but- count—you can pay in| ton models are here, too, in accordance to your con: | , Ho | 5 Blue Sergos, Cassimere, Home- venience. Woe charge | spuns, Tweeds, Novelty Mix- no interest, no extras. tures and Worsteds, at— There is no red tape, no collectors. $15.00 .. $27.50 GHELYS 119-1121 Third Ave. Between Seneca and Spring.