I Every^ Saturday Seattle US'a

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I Every^ Saturday Seattle US'a Property ot Periodical Department Seattle Public Library VOL. X., mNO. 12 MARCH 20, 1915 PRICE 10 CENTS 'own rier Every^ Seattle i Saturday US'A " The man who invented it partners had it a grudge against the human race." Abe Potash and Mawruss Perlmutter, philosophers, humanitarians and cloak and suit mer­ chants, welcome their friends in person next week at the Metropolitan Theatre, commencing tomorrow. 3111V3S '10 M00IQVW y Hlt? 9t-9-T Auvaan onand 3iiiv3s COKING PURNACE COAL SELECTING If ycu know how to use coking coal in your furnace and want to INVESTMENTS cut your fuel cost and get more than the usual satisfaction, order Many business men are so occupied with the care and details of their af­ fairs that they have little time or opportunity to make a study of se­ POCAHONTAS STEAM COAL curities. Mined by the POCAHONTAS COAL & COKE CO. in King County. The of fleers of this bank are con­ stantly in touch with investment con­ New Mine Careful Preparation ditions and are pleased at any time to place their knowledge and experi­ Sold at Retail by: Wholesale by: ence at the service of customers in J. P. McNamee Elliott 4347 Pocahontas Coal & Coke Co. the selection of high-grade securi­ "Wainwright & McLeod-Elliott 1218 509 White Building, ties, combining unquestioned safety Edge-water Fuel Co North 1681 Phone Main 5001. and a satisfactory interest return. You will find All sorts of finest Imported and Northern Bank & Domestic Delicacies at no wasted time in our .school work. Jacobi's German Delicatessen every student is busu a/l the time. Trust Company WE KEEP HIM BUSY, mat's our system. Fourth Ave. and Pike St. and Lunch Room SEATTLE, WASH. M. C. Jacobi, Proprietor. Bookkeeping HYATT-FOWELLS Shorthand Sausages and Luncheons Our Tna\mt-U ancl pine Specialty. 1224 THIRD AVENUE " OXFORD " Corner University St. Phone Elliott 5043. SPECIALIZING The Seattle National Bank in BUSINESS MEN'S SUITS Washelli SECOND AT COLUMBIA at $35.00 TO $45.00 Cemetery RESOURCES: $17,000,000 in years right here is your The only cemetery in the guarantee." state of Washington having uniform care perpetually with­ Oxford Tailoring Co. 711 Third Ave. New York Blocfc out extra expense. ORGANIZED EFFICIENCY Single graves ^J^J.UU PROMPT SERVICE Lots, 3 graves and C7C f\f\ more $ * >J.\J\J and upward. (f 1C f\f\ We Are Pleasing Others We Can Please You "Safety Space for urns: $/CD.\j\J This property is under ex­ pert management, and arrange­ ments may be made to pur­ first" chase family plots on deferred The First National Bank payments. Call or phone El­ Established 1882 in food is more im­ liott 2619. PIONEER SQUARE, SEATTLE portant even than it Capital and Surplus $400,000.00 is in your contact M. A. ARNOLD, President American Necropolis D. H. MOSS, Vice-President C. A. PHILBRICK Cashier with mechanical dan­ M. MCMICKEN, Vice-Presdent A. R. TRuIx ' AssSt Cashier gers around you. Company NEW ACCOUNTS CORIALLY INVITED 601 L. C. Smith Bldg. Your first duty is to your health and that of your family. Gentlemen's Hats DOMESTIC STEAM In Cleaned & Blocked. Panamas made COAL like new. All work guaranteed PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. 109 Prefontaine Place Main 8040™ Phones -Elliott 92 Opposite City Light Office Maplewood Brand LARGEST FLOATING DRY DOCK EQUIPMENT ON THE PACIFIC COAST Milk and Cream you have the abso­ Completely Equipped Shops for Ship, Engine and Boiler lute assurance of pur­ ity-safety. Have these prod­ REPAIRS ucts delivered at your home every day. I BARLOW MARINE ELEVATORS I Phone Ship Builders, Engine Builders, Boiler Makers [iron Founders, Brass Founders, Lumber Manufacturers j PARSONS MARINE STEAM TURBINES YARROW BOILERS Pure Milk Dairy, Inc. 1514 Seventh Avenue. SEATTLE CONSTRUCTION & DRY DOCK COMPANY Main 2545 Elliott 4344 •'7 THE TOWN CRIER VOL. X., No. XII. SEATTLE, U. S. A., MARCH 20, 1915. PRICE, 10 CENTS. Official publication of the Northwest Music ing up to the present war; the teachers invited ments of old, that any portion of their burden has Teachers' Association. Official publication of the Seattle Fine Arts So­ to contribute to the current educational courses been rolled away, for where, then, would be the ciety. Published every Saturday by at the Labor Temple can give good and helpful jobs of the professional exploiters of public grief? WOOD & REBER (Inc.) service, and doubtless most of them will. * * * 703-4-5-6 Northern Bank Building, Seattle All of which, by a roundabout course, leads back Telephone Main 6302 Faithful to the End James A. Wood Editor to Professor Hart and his public exhibition of E. L. Reber Manager exclamatory peevishness. There is no reason why Ever since he accidentally joined the council­ MIOMBER WASHINGTON STATE PRESS he should not have had a hand in drafting a bill manic brotherhood at the city hall, Mr. Ira D. ASSOCIATION. Lundy has been the noisy, reverberant echo of Entered as second-class matter at the United for submission to the legislature; nor is there States postofflce at Seattle. reason why the legislature should adopt the bill Councilman Oliver T. Erickson—just that and SUBSCRIPTION: One year, in advance, $3.00; if its members didn't care for Professor Hart's nothing more. To all of Erickson's thoughts, say­ six months, $1.50; three months, 75 cents; single ings and doings in municipal affairs, Lundy has copies, 10 cents. Foreign subscriptions (countries in plan. The bill, by the way, had no relation what­ Postal Union) $4.00 a year. For sale by all News­ ever to the state university, which, under the given extra sound and volume. Suggestions and dealers. advice from any other source than Erickson have Payments should be made by Check, Draft, Postal terms of his employment, is supposed to be Pro­ Order, payable to THE TOWN CRIER, or by Regis­ fessor Hart's chief concern; and yet, according gone in one of Lundy's ears and out the other, tered Letter. there being no intervening substance to prevent; For Advertising Rates address Suite 703, Northern to published report, Professor Hart took advant­ Bank Building, Seattle. Inquiries within city limits age of the first opportunity and "bitterly scored but suggestions and advice from Erickson have of Seattle, made by mail or by telephone to Main been barbed or dum-dummed so as to stick or 6302, will be personally responded to by a repre­ the legislature, Chairman Sims of the rules com­ sentative of THE TOWN CRIER when requested. mittee of the House, the religious organizations spread and become attached to or a part of the Unsolicited manuscript must be accompanied by attenuated mechanism that serves as Lundy's men­ stamps sufficient for return if found unavailable for of Olympia which honored Sims with a banquet, publication. and the employers' associations of the state." tal apparatus. Lundy has been Erickson's man, Printed by R. L. Davis Co., Arcade Building. his alter ego, the ready and reliable seconder of Until at least a few of these many animosities all his motions and the supporter of all his have abated Professor Hart had better get himself schemes. Unduly Excited back to the vicinity of Fifteenth Avenue N. E. Strange, then, is it not, that Erickson and Lundy Professor J. K. Hart, employed at the University and stick to his classes. Friends should point out should come to a parting of the ways? And yet of Washington, does not seem to be content with to him the fact that the welfare of the state and they did—for a day or so, anyway. Nothing could the opportunity for usefulness afforded by his its people does not wholly depend upon the statu­ be said or done to induce Lundy to vote for Erick­ position as a member of the teaching staff. The tory adoption of his personal opinions. The brief son's choice for president of the council. For Professor has broken campus bounds and has been and erratic course of one "Professor" Herbsman many months Councilman Charles Marble has been downtown this week rcasting the tar out of the as a political sky-rocket should be compelled upon one of Erickson's faithful band, in consideration members of the state legislature because they the attention of Professor Hart. More time de­ of which Erickson, at some time or another, prom­ didn't see fit to pass some bill which he had a voted to pedagogy and less to demagogy should ised to support Marble for the presidency. With hand in drafting. "I feel too keenly in this mat­ help in his case. the recent election of new councilmen came the ter to speak coherently," declared the Professor * * * toward the close of an address in Plymouth time for Erickson to deliver—and he did. Through­ Church. The pity is that he did not admit the On the Job out the course of much balloting he stuck staunch­ ly to the candidacy of Marble until the last faint lack of coherency at the outset and let it go at Here they are again! Scarcely a week has hope of success had gone glimmering. that; but he had to take time to tell that "labor passed since the people's chosen law-makers fin­ And where was Lundy the while? Refusing to is now at the mercy of employers," through the ished their work and scattered to their homes, respond to the voice of his master—as some may failure of legislature to pass his bill. and already we are called upon to revoke, repeal, think—he would not vote for Marble.
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