The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 23, 1915, Page 4

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niga te a AIR iN ep ag ea? « ee saureceve rey os SOEs 4s GREAT DEAL ABOUT YOU AND YouR PROFESSION OF SOUICITUDE FOR THE WORKING Man! s TINDUSTRIAL CONDITION —.. Member of the Sorippe Northwest League ot Newspapers Published Daily by The Star Publishing Co Phone Main 9400 MAKE THEM “SHOOT SQUARE” J: IST a shoe string equity in 10 acres of building property in the heart of Seattle’s business dis- trict is the threatened legacy to the school children of Washington unless some of the university re- gents get another viewpoint. Years ago a generous citizen donated the 10 acres to the university. The property was leased to the Metropolitan Building company. The consid- eration was velvet for the company. Some build- ings have been constructed and all will revert to the university in 39 years. Three times the regents have been cleverly persuaded to make concessions on the terms of the lease. Each time the university, and not the com- pany, has suffered. Practically no taxes have to be paid. And if merely taxes—aside from rent—had to be paid to the university, it would get $104,000 a year. Last year the university got about $40,000 in rentals. Pretty soft for the building company. There was a time when people thought that 39 years from now the state’s foremost educational institution could throw off the burden of poverty and negligence and come into its own thru the down-town holdings. But the chances have dwindled. Warped ethics IT ONLY WANT A MOMENT oF YOUR TIME. I HAVG HEARD 4 Yes! = Ive JUST BEEN THROUGH ONE OF YOUR | ESTABLISHMENTS If She—I noticed at the 1 held aloof from ou Kissed her? Not late! the br Have He In Madagascar has been d money Keep right on—Pop Isn't so ie red a tree producing coffee » ie he Jooks! to be free from edding t OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL CHRISTMAS Redelaheimow FIRST & COLUMBIA W.H. FISHER, MGR, One-Fourth Off On on Boys’ Suits and Overcoats Reg. $4.00, : off Reg. $3.00 $6.00. 50, 4 ($4.50 ff. $5.65 Other Suggestions for Gifts for Boys $4.50 Up | Wor 00 Up 10 U 50¢ Up 25¢ U Men’s Smoking Coats and Bath Robes x Of - Mackinaws | Glove Sweaters, . Scout Suits Blouse Special $3.75 . $4.50 . $5.65 Remular 500. wane Negulnr $2.50 $6.40 7.50 .$9.40 $10.00 .. $12.50 [Outbursts of Everett True | EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE SEATTLE STAR STAR—THURSDAY, DEC, 23, 1915. PAGE 4. Ky mall, out of ety, one your, $3.00; 6 months, $1.00; ie per month ap to @ months. By carrier, ety, 160 = month, Entered at Seattle, Wash, postoffire ae secund-clnae matter . on the part of the regents, either ignorant of their BABES DON’T NEED “HIGHER largely of “How to keep doll from th blunder or derelict in their responsibilities, threaten EDUCATION” door’ and “How to save Little Sister from falling the university. a ie es . F down the cellar stairs.” ; ¢ ; ON'T think, just to be fashionable, you've got P Hen sitio wir thie If all the mistakes of the past by which the to train velde three-year-old offspring in spell- — si ” gs tgp d 2, ep’ “We hy ~ university has suffered were forgotten, there are ing and mental arithmetic and making paper bum- small damsel ants segiiaent gh ‘ap sefo e om. unfair new maneuvers that threaten the institution's blebees—just because some folk: ete know have lowe at see ned r ite she won't recite \ inte oy “Twas the Night Before Christma or sing sal lac a3 taken up various “methods” of child culture. ‘Hello Frisco” 1 tee é leafed sleconirsesan Poh The Arena building was recently constructed Your child will get enough “culture” in the anc nut halien eae : ! on the property, It is not a Class A building. What public schools—all that is likely to prove good for Not she. will it amount to in accepted as a of accepting it. That is the reason that the university all over the state are throwing up their hands in acceptance. protest against its been formally submitted to the regents. meet on De will accept as permanent this latest If they do, guardianship over the interests state university. The regents should make Building company shoot square with the university. A Married Man’s Troubles FOR DINNER AND - — 39 years? on the university’s hands—a pile of cheap veneered masonry to be torn down. permanent improvement, and a ma- jority of the regents have indicated their intention scious ward, spindle-shanked prig. very 5 lait They will ped we Bag pans ge 9 ye Ah rT (< at BY THIS time there must be about as many ships “ember 28 cide athe * eC we See & } ree me POTS WE HORE 10 on the bottom of the ocean as there are on top cember 28 to decide virgo Toy age 4 turn him over to a three-year-old girl we know, cn ‘ basi who never saw an “educative” plaything, who THE HAMBURG-AMERICAN line has been fined it will reflect a rotten idea of say “Me fink so,” but who could beat the su- one dollar. No extra assessment has yet been announced of Washington's periority out of Mr. Prig with two jabs of her on the stockholders. ee HELIO TOM, SAY Tom, | WANT You “To HURRY HOME THis EVENING, WE'RE GOmG To HAVE COMPANY It'll be dead wood can teach him on top of the few simple things him in spare moments in his playroom. Baby needs a big backyard to play in a whole lot more than he needs a higher education—at this were a am is. : P PF the olive branch in place of the Christmas tree We're not knocking culture—not a bit of it. shainaninn But we're a big bit dubious about the kind of cul- WHAT A good time Johnny is going to have with his ture that turns a child of tender years into a self toys—after father gets thru playing with them you ‘ THERE'S MANY a poor little kid in Europe this year who will sadly awaken to the fact there isn’t any Santa Claus. MR. FORD'S foreign excursion suggests the use of The company wants it alumni This protest has sturdy fistlet. SHE'LL get along in the world, don’t you forget it, even if her present educajion does consist REAL FEMININE science at Christmas consists in a woman's giving something to a friend which looks as if it cost just a little bit more than what the friend gives her. the Metropolitan By Allman WELL, MISSES DUFF, IF You WANNA LIB BEYOND You MEANS, DON’T BLAME TWAT WAS The FINEST PIECE OF CHINA | OWNED OR EVER EXPECT TO OWN- | SHALL NEVER BE RICH ENOUGH | Doe BUSTED | A DISH, Misses WHY PANSY, WHAT HAVE FROM INDIA THE Mat mea WALKS DOWN § CHAPLUN ST BY HERBERT QUICK When ex-Presid When You're Well KEEP WELL VAnether Article. in The® Star's Health Campaign Being Conducted With Co- operation of American Medical Association SCHOOL CHILDREN tren disease show cronnen ase n the an of the y atte them in eu of a carefully as possible The trouble lies In the fact that many children from many homes meet daily and are in more or less intimate contact, School physicians fre quently find it impossible to discover hidden diseases until they have developed sufficient HERBERT QUICK SAYS: { Less Than 800 at West Point; Them to Handle Large Bodies of Men | camp under thelr command, ly to be dangérous to others. ler ent it h t n exposed to al communicable ease—and thir includes .easles and whooping cough—It ehould not be permitted to chool » parent hol child app fall her, Fi There are few human beings that are “just naturally puny.” Physical deficiency usually has @ curable condition underlying it if we will take the time and trouble to find It. y for Held | practical SEATTLE PEOPLE GET INSTANT ACTION | West, Says Charles Edward Russell, 1s Going to Be Art Center Yet U. S. Tries to Teach ties Hike; Where ha EDWARD RUSSELL cx Den successful write e from? uts by CHAS Charles Edward Russel! u ento a aN that we got thru looking eas rout lif n iiterature has Bostong . notte aadPggtnesnr Nat iubpinredial i. nd Cambridge backed impulse te ORTORS A people with a sense of beauty so advanced and so ex traordinary will inevitably lead tter As to ¢ now hings t ation the t above et : " OF oe te | all the world in art. The next f th Rigg sy | 25 years will see the worid’s IS STRONGES' { t rogress is made. > the oa greatest painting, sculpture. GREATEST ANI are desirable Pe were, 4k Ja the We 5 | music and literature produced This reverses accepted formula in this country, and the cen ters of that production will be These young men are study but is Hite ly tn ing the handling of large bodies : Fag bie of soldiers. All the men they ype on ae Levee it in the West and Northwest can actually handle, however, ie pward deaf arrow’ | ——______—_—_ bod Lipa cr) Se liew Sree arn part of this continent go be-| bar ie a ond anything dreamed of in the} pbb Ae ai hated ast. Make any com practically is, therefore, lees Washington, of | Wai We Hien # capital, is a A full nr con . Washin | of those re than amy stitute of that old-time uncouth 8 4 an rventiness that the Western city knows nothing of . ree | Take civic spirit and the r Prices Ordinarily Charged | nal sense. Practically nobody in New York cares a hoot whether | e consists of thre the city looks well or ill, makes| ON ALL CASKETS regiments of infantr f DRO LR. CLARK progress or stands still It took pn each; one . , 1400 men, ment of light artillery regin seven years of prodigious effort to ret the money to build the simple little Washington arch and 14 an i) What Better Gift Could We Manufacture and | A full brigade, therefore, consist You Give Than to Pro- | years to build a tomb for Gen.| Maintain Our Own of from 6,400 men of all arms up. Grant. Riverside drive and Morn-| ward mote Good Health ingside park might be made the| Two or more brigades constitute! And there in nothing you most entrancing apots on earth.| a division New York lets them slide. | The division commanded by a ma keneral; but there are not three United States major generals There wouldn't be a cent of profit in beautifying them; the stock market wouldn't go up a who ever commanded a division— oint or probably ever saw one as-|* Wbre ucinGva: Givie apinieaioaa A COMPLETE FUNERAL sembied. one of 500 Western cities Ike Se-| [J $47 50 The brigade is commanded by a attle than in the whole clty of New| i briga r general; but there are York, the overplayed “metropolts” | Including the use of our private pariors and the use of our own private crematory. CREMATION). Because we are manufacturers of caskets, not three United States brigadiers who ever had a full brigade in of this nation | (NOT A PAUPER COUNTY Go up to the top of The Rim at Spokane, or of the high, rocky | and because THERE 18 NEVER A FULL)“ point that overlooks the city. te We own our oWn modern crematory {n our own building, we REGIMENT OF CADETS AT not that a wonderful scene stretch are enabled to give this remarkably low price on a complete WEST POINT tiled out before yout fo much of funeral So that neither before graduation | & A agute: A Che poRiaet We invite you to visit our establishment and see for your- nor after do our officers get an noble a 8 of the self what we furnish Lractice in doing what they must! ‘4 all, Eure not {te like, BLEITZ-RAFFERTY UNDERTAKING AND CREMATION CO. rae boulee Of chen. sia + rE RH 3 Hee? 617 Kilbourne St. Lady Attendant. Phone North 525. If they learn it after war breaks you can tne | out, they will learn it at the ex that There is nothing pense of loss, reverses and pogsible \: Kast fit to be mentioned tn Gefoat. the ne same day with such vistas As much ar possible this lack liom What, O complacent, uninformed | yuld be made up at West Pi t|Hasterner, dweller in hideous| If there could be 10,000 apartment houses and dull, somber | there all the time it would give ' avenues of brick, what do you think a chance for r of miles and mil f satreeta lav talion, regimen . } ¢ 0! » sider ¥ W 7 " 5 4 * * talton, ri n ‘ hi ned mn hott 1 with Reserve your tables for New Year's Eve We do) uioccneen AU OGO ae aay iron ve daha Tosar b ie No admission without reservation shall need, with an army | who did the work the street, turning the the Reserve now and get your choice of locations reased in size, more than 780. be r into one lon bewilderin bowe ’ os inetead of having them di th What do you think of every st Tate’s Cafe, 1415 Third Ave. as suggested by Mr. Taft, \ boulevard, and every boulevard | ° ° need thom in one body tor the| Regal Dental Offices | Hofbrau Cafe, First and Madison St. Dr. 1. od of the 4B we have sehool, Twice as many would give four flowers? Europe rich in the colora of ahrubs and 1405 Third times | has nothing to say to x s

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