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STAR—SATURDAY, MARCI! 3, 1917. PAGE 5 PBLetters Te Custhin. Grey WILKES PLAYERS TO RHODES SURE T0 Feds We ctie gra satiny oe teow _ PRESENT “SHOW SHOP” BE RE-FLECTED very pratiotic (7) remarks arouse|patient and “slow to anger” | | | my ire. | think he must be the! optimisT, | very man inquired for by the poet,| | the man “with soul so dead, who| ANSWERING LETTER | bead Gotierciat Clad my own, my native land." Perhaps! very close friend offered me some mln the 1 this is not his native land. | hope of her money to use in a business Ar bullding | 7 so. If it is not, he had better 90) enterprise. i told her | would write ne open you! HO back where he came from, as dent Albert J. Rhode her when | was ready to accept the ‘ either he nor those like Rim are a) proposition, and would expect her Vice Presidents C.J. Sinith blessing to this country, There is! to forward the money. | went ahead h id pac Po no law to hold him here i ¢ 4. Brace are unoppore ighteer t d and got everything ready to use the bo ill be elected out of 24 GOOD TEKRTH—GOOD HEALTH | |, toe, belong to the laboring class,/money, and, of course, wrote her in » € ndida Onl ae mibe ae No. witereit se that good #™ getting old, and have worked| regard to her promise, to see if ev : who have paid th $ Health is impossible without good all my life for a “soulless corpora: |erything was all right before | went nual dues, were ent tion,” one of the largest of them,|further, She never answered my and of course, have not always|letter, and so | sent a wire, and ru i|found thinge Just to my liking, but| asked her to anower at my excence, Ra BELT LINE WOULD « that has never taken away my love| This ashe did not anewer. Then | of country, nor my feeling it is the| wrote her as kindly as possible, to best there is. It isa country of high| at least let me learn what the diffi ideals, and | am glad and proud my) culty was, and sent her a nice ancestors fought for its birth. Christmas gift, just as | have al He thinks any other government | ways done woud © good. | don’t think so.| She didn’t acknowledge my gift, In th untry, at least, we have and a few weeks ago | asked her to some say as to how we shall be gov. | kindly inform me if she had receiv erned. If we let unworthy people |ed it, but still no answer, | know govern us, it is our own fault, The| she is well and living at the same government ia all right, but it must | address, for | have a sister living PUT CITY TO FRONT Tam f operated bel water front system and degree own pre docks from uinahip line and ship | the trouble In any plan for improve-| replying to business letters? ment You must still deal with) PERPLEXED, a5,.00 0° administered by human beings mext door, Kindly tell me what you t 5.00 With all human faults, Therein lies! would do to get an answer from her, » eliminate the ‘zo y the trouble. And there would lie, !# there any excuse for people not hich railre pil | to 815.00 ive switching charge adding cost of living to extend our ma is only common courtesy * letters If misunderstand human nature, It ls human nature A not our plan of government, that | ( needs improving, and there is work for each individual, for himself, for the family he is r 9. To purge| es human nature of | aft, greed, selfishness and falsity, and to en courage high ideals of service to “re others. In this, and in the educat - « ing and improving of himself, to be| FROM KIPLING 'C fit to do his individual part in car. Q.—Will you print in your column rying om our government in line| the name of the poem by Kipling " with Its best ideals, lies the oppor-| which contains the following lines 2 Insure § tunity of every working man, and, “The sins ye do by two and two, (1) Margaret Owens, in “Katinka,” coming to the Moore, (2) Sadie the very doing of it would take| Ye shall pay for one by one.” | Burt, of Whiting and Burt, Pantages. (3) Teddy Lorraine, Palace Hip.) PAINLESS A DENTIS and distributing d invite um whip more ¥ 1 you can ern rest as they 4 ra,|away much of his restlessness and READER, | (4) Walter Spencer, Oak Gross ation A Oita te'ttey NOE | Ae to “war delirium,” has any | “Tomlinson ALHAMBRA | Pacific, establishing itself by its he Orph.| fre “8 and charm at the Alham-| pel qualities, immed wnday matinee.) American heart od by Prank WILKES PLAYERS teal diversion. Alac For the week start ! Sadie Burt in) matinee Sunday the eaten Deca | Two CAMPAIGN MONEY Q.—Wi!l you please settle an ar-| Qument between two farmers? How There's [much money was contributed to/and vers |President Wilson's campaign, and She rn how much to Chartes Hughes’? < Songaay aly figures 1} 1|_- Eat hen He Opposed Submitting the $450, 000| [Rice Ae ethes ain aad) stereo, girt and | had an ar Belt Line Bond Issue to the People, Be- gumant over the twe classes of pes-| dance ba ts wiih t ple, as we ca the rich and the ring ¢ cause This Nation Must Spend Hundreds ocr. i mean thove who can’t have Obeks Bancay & of Millions to Arm for War, Which Means |i oe olen thes ante kobe but my friend assures me that it and his players at the Oak theatre, |2099 W. M is manners and character that /extr count. Now supposing if some| Miss LaV } rich boy or girl gets acquainted a come c ber calle with some girl or boy who ’t | Regtn “ p |as much money. The people who d th abe 8 | In addition to the musical comedy of losses think as | do would say the poorer! ody, alk >| dill, two “series” photoplays are|Tibbils’ a }one Is inferior to the rich and It! tion, “Get th ” 1 f.| being shown at the Pearl|above ad *, burned, was dis | would be incorrect for the two to|Oxden and Benson, young men fron fs rl o the missed by Police Judge John B. | associate. My friend thinks that/ the Southland, are to appear in « Gordon Friday afternoon Test A few weeks ago Port Commissioner Robert Bridges <lagees are based upon character |p ore $ moay tetroficed showed that Osier| advised the other “members of the Port Commission to| What do you think about this,| plays ra on Chinese, |the law, and in danger of | g or withdraw the Port Belt Line Bond Issue proposition, be-|Mis* re? MYRTLE. "leso and American instr “Argonauts” to Have rested and convicted for blackmail | Reach & Co cause war threatened, and the fesources of the people naire Last Showing Tonight Ji - | (TODAY'S. MARKET ntitled “A Basket F tion been » - ne firat Florida new Should be conserved to meet the demands of the Gov-)i?%y¢ | ernment for money for defense. He spoke as a patriot. | ctatty tr } i here yesterda gator pears or eterminatic ere Friday “c| BACKS UP WILSON rump card fox PAID ADVERTISEMENT nm Vaud rical—b The Chorus L This play comy Woodrow 00 to the umpaign fund iblican national commit 1 $2,445,421.19 {r listed as a » an indo 6 the Univers iticlam |{neton, and also to the “OSIER FREED IN BLACKMAIL CASE Alex Oster, al-| cted $150 black-| Anna V. Tibbils,| st. as a settlem: tained when Mra nt house, at the The ¢ the Tatlor" w o next leged to t eck's offering of Monte Carter|mail fre i Since that time the war danger has become more acute. |» War Threatens and Seattle :: he test can fe ¥ god to bow down. Of cour tted that the life of the Argonauts” will be itan theatre tor in order} ristocrat a dozen nnot Afford Any More Debt ‘°° i pelle ' As a patriot, you should vote against the Port Belt ” See vb SRE PRETTY! TURN: ane i pp rnd a Line and other bond issues for the patriotic reason given rr i lapiraamige Maha ad aes) : GRAY HAIR DARK . by Mr. Bridges: an We should conserve our credit and resources so that |. “ id * of the DK a t ivia nd Dag a are b le oun i ed we may be prepared for any emergency. ffort to put a portion of|an Ziegfeld’s “E ® Ribbon Pair") Cook Young! Nobody Can Tell If vpnae Wholesale Dealers for You Use Grandmother's Simple BRIDGES WAS RIGHT » \PMMMARMONND TO [STREET -runcme| ee ee en cls deta. or an Las r r { tle, will f Almost every one knows that Sag | oe @ pounded, brings back th natural . @ AGAIN Omer “gt | MooRE lor and luster to th ir when |¢ ~ 5 Tina Lerne’ earing RY links,” the latest t al he « y ixture When he declared in a public interview that the burden ‘*" tre, to t I nr-| presented ut . of developing the Port of Seattle is too great for the o: jer bot gReponigmegr ag Ae cieys a . ' ‘ district to bear, and that the State of Washington should | a herself, she in a , er be induced to take it over. eK “ | Figures prove how right Mr. Bridges was. The). oieteaiiota beleter bod 1 stay gies! p12} bonded debt of the Port District is approximately) shares her mother with 4 le sibly tell that ay | Be 285.000 Mm LAP had tr faeae peer zore ACHES. AND “PAINS von Wetore | $6,300,000. White to kategn and © ou dampen a sponge ‘0 tnee the P ‘strict was forme — | In the orchest of the pro: Yon't negle or soft brush with {t and draw this|F 50 __ Since the Port District was formed, the taxpayers of| Ip the orchestral p: ai i ero eur nina out through your hair, taking one amall|Peepers : King County have been taxed approximately caret dered. Haydn's D strand at a time; by morning the] qt enit dri | = : p i 1 af | : 50] “ : c paren Mi ae ype Bie |gray hair disappears, and after an | ,000,000 for operation, bond interest and redemption. ‘| ike these. detionena | eee pplication or two, your hair|f Y 06.085 | , . . . : omer peautity glow The Port District has levied a tax of $381,000 for this |‘ ches by | Ippolitor mex beautifully dark, glossy, ; : ar because they estimate that the revenues from the}. te ‘ mbros ee Maat tet ‘ " ‘ : 4 e A " yound Is a ightful toi ‘ 4 wharves and warehouses will come that much short of | Tigmay, overt a iiatoal a bite for thoxe who desire dark hatr | region eed meeting the operating expenses and the bond interest) reer into three distinct periods, the De citelee ee ene ce leet sek aT d in the}! and redemption due this year. sagging p last, to which belong many of his tion or prevention of disease. | st and most successful works rRurs Boule cabinets make fine writ. | Grapefruit Jing desks Yes, but what is a} ©"! 4 BOND ISSUES nt res ORPHEU Taeaae | delegate to congre begun a ight against the issuance of a cer of election to James Wick n, independent republican Candidates for the City Council and present territorial dele Telephone Main 5106 WEEK STARTING MATINEE TOMORROW WILKES PLAYERS and for the same reasons we are supporting the men who oppose these bond issues as ul | ‘Prtecs, Paid Producers for Ress, WHO ARE DALE, CALHOUN AND PHELPS It is expecting too much of the average human beings to ask them to rise above their environment and forsake their friends, even when the public good and general welfare be demand it. 0 aN It is evident that Messrs. Dale, Calhoun, 4 Phelps and R. H. Thomson really believe that the common people are the legitimate prey of the corporations and that fleecing, ex- ploiting and robbing the public is still looked upon as ethical. A quarter of a century has 4 gone by, but these men still live in the days when ethics were bought with dollars and re- ligion sold by the pound at Christianity’s © Junk Yard. But ethics today are being meas- © ured by the yard stick and standard of human life. Christianity means more than a noise, with a bad odor, expressed by cunning words. 7 Laying aside all feeling and prejudice in the a matter, we are forced to conclude that the ‘ friends, the chief supporters, the ardent advo- e cates and champions of Dale, Calhoun and Phelps are Seattle’s enemies. If Seattle wants to pay $1,600,000 fortwo © streaks of iron rust running through Rainier \ Vall If Seattle wishes to allow the Traction Company to refuse to comply with the terms of its franchise to pave the streets between its tracks; If Seattle wishes to lose $62,000 each year that the Traction Company pays under the terms of its franchise as 2 per cent of its income; If Seattle wishes its city car line prospect 7 killed by the Traction Company ; i If Seattle would have its city light plant turned over to the city’s competitor; If Seattle desires the Renick law, that costs the people $50,000 per year loss in interest alone; If Seattle believes that arterial highways for automobilists to drive over are more valu- able than a Port Belt Line with which to d handle the commerce for the great Northwest; If Seattle feels that the Food Trust should have its pound of human flesh and that the working people shall not have a city market; I say if Seattle wishes to turn all its most valuable possessions over to its enemies, who are the people's exploiters, Seattle must vote for Dale, Calhoun and Phelps, and take the advice of R. H. Thomson. If, however, Seattle wishes to be honest, fair and true to itself and to free itself from the clutches of corruptionists and become its own. boss, Seattle should vote for LANE, ON AND HESKETH. EDWIN J. BROWN. The canvassing board gave the elec 4 lor oO € m by J »| Poul , Veal and Pork ee * Aer Sana Canin ees tala ‘Take everybody into their confidence and show them eed j j Salon distilot Sone edieedee 4 the “inside workings” of back of the stage, in pring Chickens roa Urick. 43) Aifalte Moet cece ‘ sued an order commanding the can ’ nee: 4 Yoard to refrain from count “The Show Sho 93 ittogices am ing the ballots from the precincts 26 48.00@ 49.00 PoP erp ydpredt plihet dei an pe The big Broadway satire on theatre life by James sar t MT Te and to if ue a certificate of election Forbes, author of “The Chorus Lady.” “40.00041 | . . PHELPS The Barrier of the Footlights Let Down : One American woman who mar. YOU BECOME A PART OF THE SHOW YOURSELF Wide Maen aad Cines | (9 ep Ma eaanee oT Volunteer Dale, Calhoun and Phelps Campaign cies a forsigne: tts into, trouble Nights: 10c to 50c; Mats. Sun., Thurs., Sat., 15¢ and 26¢ ° bi * (ivices paid wholesaler? ‘ She does it in Stevenson's novel, | tte ° - ©