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Prob Member of the United Pree Mebed datiy by fepreerar bir mnie Vhe Star Publian tag Oo > | COVERING 45 YEARS | THE SEATTLE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE SOME WILL BE PRETTY AND ony Reracksi PeoetRameasny 24 OTHERS NOT QUITE SO FAIR 1 t t. I 1 ! } ) : * . ‘ ' . ne x J tl nite " { t ‘ te} | ts in t ny HOWEVER, THERE WILL BE Al ihe ove mere man who te goapon| firm it BIG BUNCH OF GIRLS TO ible for thelr coming Dungombe | There is a rea irse, OAnd vanity SELECT FROM. started the newspaper contests | ‘ : . ' | whieh have reeul in the girle| i . dye their hair to} the 4 . | bolng seloctod for free trips to the| t n n busine ind gray hair]. Twenty-tive hundred girls, rome | 1909 fair, Incidentally, he has beou : : = Pretty and othere—well, not quite) reaponatble for advertising the A turns state's evidence against Man-Growing-Old count ‘em, 2,600, from every nook | yp. ition in thirty-five states States | Thi wndition appl to the fv ho is doing |@!4 corner of theae United States} and Canada, Alaska and Hawai, BOM. CORGINON. ROP alnly wie She “wh Sand some other places, are comiug| where newspaper readers have for ; clerical or office work on a salary of $70 to $100 a month to the AYP, exposition thie sum | months past been reading about the i mer ax the to of 260 news| hig tf 1 voting for thetr favorite ay } ir begins to tut ounger men in the] er ae the ig fair and voting for thetr favorite a4 As his hair begins to turn gray, the younger men in ae tee eee ge eee ties, | oe fale Be 4 office bevin to “Mister” him. ‘There is a little restraint about] represented by Mr. D. f. Dun! str, Dancombe Is fetog the prob i * ; combe, contest manager, ts going) jem of entertaining the girls with : yh " ire iperiors, feeling the in : " t ving i 3 having him around, His younger suj aaie’ | entertain them, And they pay considerable equantmity of spirit, | stinctive respect for age, deal moge gently with him He doesn't/}him a salary to do it! What dolfor be haw a long waiting fist of fit perfectly any ger in at herunning machin | They pay Duncombe a salary to | ——e business entertain the 9,600 girle from 260 i sata vs he is let out and his|!#adnx cities, and Bune, has the WINIFRED CODD, t i And so when a good chance comes h t and nerve to state that hie will be the Colfax, Wash. t place taken by a man who is at least younger | king inont re job on the fair ites +S RS — H He may be a good may, too, but—well, } The representatives of the fair The newspspor contests have 3 } t pure! n » com out been #0 arrangdd that there will be t r€ s a tragedy in those rather sha 1p sox will commence to come abou! ; here's a trag . ie , fune 1, and they will be comtag all delegations of visiting ladies at the t at the drug store of the Man-Growing-Old summer, They are coming from exposition continuously from the If he is wise he will keep himself looking as } I} Jacksonville, Pin, and they are opening day to the ele girly from ; . jcoming frara Nome, Alaska. Hawall the nearby cities of Northwest as he can, He will act young, keep alert, He wil sist OM) wilt wend her fairest, and Maine her native daughters of Callfornta i i F rd t | Coming From Everywhere. |'‘Yank om No gland i will shave off his mustach when that treacherous friend begins) * t ¥ hens t thel very day will be indies’ day for ‘ , ‘ | Girls from all corners of th sitact Sah ee hr 1 tales—tales of something he doesn’t want kKnown—Or} coun, eatile | Contest Manager neon j to tell ta ale f nething he y | country will pour into & atte and Hat ua bose that bé bas had as thought of j fall into the care and keeping © Iperience in this business and 1 ‘ } ' tr OS a ye he eceptions coon It's a terrible for aman ¢ is married, | manag ‘ a ie ptione as secee ~ j His children have arrived at the age of the greatest expense) tanta, For we Want the poube ladies smallest entice hey are at school, or, if girls, are to go away with an opinion of Se Ene Ane Sineiiont tevenne : " sci - ‘ | attic that will be ax big an adver receiving callers. They need clothes 1 clothes, expensive leleement ao th wapaper pudiie ones. A man in this fix begins to v the dollars he squan-} ADELIA WITT, lity all over the country has been. dered in youth. Jeing out of a job at 45 is much more serious than at 25 Very much more serious. At 25 one has always hopes and pros- pects, and few expenses, At 45 he has fewer hopes, fewer prospects, and is topheavy with expense This hair-dyeing discovery is a sign of the times. Young] it in relation to the future, In youth} | men will do well to think o you must strike your blow—if ever —————___~— Then again, it may be that Mr.| morning would make the lawn take Bouillon is satisfied with being a brighter interest in life right, irrespective of the good —_—- opinion of his fellow members on the board, The toy flstol ix already abroad, | and the tetanus bug ts beginning to | | grow fidgety, with the & month distant ‘The fact that those Omaha train robbers got away with $125,000 ought to make our local members of the profession strive for bigger things. As everybody knows, Mr. Hilt ta| giving Mr. Harriman entry to the} Sound because he likes Mr. Harri | man. | When you consider bis embon-| parohant in Beattie will soon be point, getting caught stealing poses | 4. inriting as paying taxes if the! fa very nearly as exciting as side | | Stopping the impetuous rhinoceros. | | And the sad part of It is, Senator | Some of last winter's rain be! Norah talke like a man who knows | tween 12 midnight and 6 In tho what he ts talking about visiting teams keep oo losing | es DIANA’S DIARY Asan Amateur Hawkshaw, Miss Dilipickies Gets on the Trall of « Kidnaped Chee iid. BY FREO SCHAEFER, | “IN FACT, SHE'S AS BIG A MYSTERY AS CHESTERTON QUINCE DUBARRY.” be Chesterton dlaguised a led her into police headquarters fol- lowed by 16 camera men and others but was stung again. She was a} lout child, all right, but she wasn't a boy and there wasn't no reward for her. In fact, she's an big a mystery as Cheaterton Quince arry him self, because no one olaims her, She said that two days ago her folke sont her to the grocery to get a pint) |bottle of milk and moved away be-| fansom, but there was so many to- |fore she got back, and she'd been Itv- | mato cans lying sround that the|ing on the milk and sleeping In the) Kidnapers couldn't find the right| woodshe Nobody n discover one, although the authorities lent| where her people went. They prob them a locomotive headlight to|ably haven't missed her yet, because} hunt it. #o the ohild ain't restored | they've got 12 others. yet. : All of which twn't finding Chester Thad another narrow escape from|ton Quince Dubarry and getting a finding the lost darling. The de-| 95,000 reward. All I get ie black mi | ‘The chase grower hotter. That is, those who are chasing the kidnapers are growing hotter tp the collar. It looks like Cheaterton Quince} Dubarry will not be found unioas he! in located Last evening the father left $60,- 000 in actual money in an empty tomato can on @ vacant lot as the scription sald he had squirrel teeth, |looke for finding somebody who and 1 saw @ tacky dressed girl of 6| warn't wanted. on Main st. and thought she might (Continued) Dog Has Appendicitis, G. P. Ball, It has been operated on for appendicitis The dog ts a blue ribbon winner and all that, but those things are common. He was taken sick a week ago, and the physician who was hastily called diagnosed the disease as ap. pendicltis, The dog was taken to & hospital, opera on and will od (em recover. BONHAM, Toxas, May 26,--The proudest dog tn this town is a}, Are you looking for a lodging half-grown bull pup owned by Rey,| house? See our business chance | column, on Fourth over |f} Boys Coming Also. There are a couple of other ex eursion partie ming to the fair that will put a straln on Mr Dua combe's managerial tact and un ruffied deposition, and these con Harrington, Wash, Beatile bachelors for his entertato ment committees, They are all wilh ing to help, Steamboat men have red to run bargain day exour je of hie friends should ons for the young ladies, Theatres | sist of fifty boys each, sent to the ful that they don't drop by dl are bidding for thelr altendanes,|fair by the New York American xy Everyone Is going to coutribute a|and the Chicago American, The Any & mas ‘ little to make thelr Seattle vinit ajiucky boys have won trips to the Jum’ (vik jw m ravie one, and tf the girls |falr in subseription contests on his. ded. don't have the times of their young | those two metropolitan dailies, and wigwag-—My wife said to | ives at the A-YoP., it won't be the | will come in special trains. They Ing she would never ap | SYLVIA HASTINGS, } fault of D. B. Duncombe, the A-¥.| ought to make things bum for a "NON oid nowt tet mel Milton, Ore. 1P. or the young men o at tie | few days along the Pay Streak what you dia hd — ae - ~ oat =a lf | } | | WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS—By F. R. Leet A STORY OF THE, UNCERTAINTIES OF A A SEAFARING LIFE PICKED UP BY THE MAN WHO HAD A THIRST FOR MILK. al lone ; | Rae, Les AOE ro THe Counter, Away FROM HE WOME AND weit. OF THE CITY we'ls GET CLOSE To RATE AMO GET BETTER ACCQUANTED J ~ >» \ at the off BY DB, C. HAMPBON, te Cap, they told me The Jeannie arrived in port on that you bad a letter for me. Givr jit me, give it me quick, Cap, & Saterday the Lord's sake!" She was 16 days late because she “Mase ‘er, back ‘er, haul off broke her tall shaft off Port Btches, | little, mates.” sald Capt Jense Hitchinbrooke Island, and had to | “Just get on the starboard tack be towed n by the Tyee, but) bit, There's « dairy over Uemoe that fe another story | bow aed when we make (hat. has On board the Jeannie the etew-/ber fll fix you fellows fieis ards only serve canned milk to the there!” Officers aod crow so It Was no Wor Would Know the Worst. der that when | met Captain Jensen 2 - A and Purser flurry | found them Once in the dairy, two feveri«’ wildeyed men surrounded Capt anxious to get a glass Of fresh | h t ilk at some dairy. There are lote|Jeaeen, and, much aa they wee = parched for the refreshing Iscten on First a¥,, so we went into one 4 finid, they would none of it ttl! thet Then we came out and looked for | tame were ah vent: another, a6 It is not good to spend) 4 m™ : all your milk money in one place.| There,” said Cap, “there's | wireless for you, Amith, and there's Trouble Begins. lanother for yoo, Diek They"ll ative We had not ge three yards! rou your bearings and tell you you down the street when we met 4) new anchorage.” wild-oyed, wild-haired and wildiy| With trembiing fingers the twr geaticulating man, who fished up men took the two envelopes and to Captain Jensen, shouting tore open the soala. Where's my home? Where 40) ‘By golly,” said Smith, “my wife I live now. [I've been all the way | hae bought the Monticello hotel at to Fourth and Cedar and my wife | 7th and James and she is waiting ls gone and my house is wold ap. | for me now, I'm off!” Tell me, Cap, where do I live? For) And “Dy golly.” sald Dick, “my pity’s sake, relieve my awful sa® | wife bas bought the Voigt House pense!” jat Piret and Cedar Bo long “etter get bim some fresh milk, | fellers.” 4 too,” said Purser Burry, then he Hunted for His Home. H whispered to me, “It's Heary Smith, “By gosh,” sald Burry, “that's | the third mate.” ‘ , queer. They've pulled my old We turned around to go back 1 | aes down for the regrade at Sth the dairy, with Smith plteously be) Jo4 siowell. { wonder where I seeching for Information. live, Guess I'd better be finding Another Home Lost. ont.” . It took fost one step to run into} Capt. Jensen is the only bachelor Richard Diek, the second officer. | on the ship, so he and | had another Redeyed and yelling bloe murder, | glass of milk for luck. he waa, It occurred to me afterwards that “Capt. Jensen, for the Lord’s| there was probably more money tn sake, where do I live? Give me my|a seafaring life than in newspaper address. I've been to my old home! work. At least I know I will never and there fa vo one there, The! be able to buy a hotel. house is abut up and deserted, and| 1 don't think that too much fresh heaven alone knows where my wife' milk agrees with one, anyhow. seer ES a ee? } markewoman but Venus and Cleo patra in lovely combination could hot hold up the Kansas & Pa J/ | olfie.” That night, with lanterns and t muffied stakes, the surveyors ways By Stuart B, Stone slipped down upon ee the necessary —o When Walter Kenney and his} bronzed, soiled, surveying gang set their flag poles and steel chains upon the strip of green prairie, they eame upon @ slip of a girl in a pink dress. The girl balanced upon a spick-span wire fence and pointed long, shiny gun barrel at a much surprised engineer “Go and bolld your railroad some- where ole,” she instructed i won't have coal trains and Fourth of July excursions puffing through my quarter section and searing my pontes out of thetr senses!” | The engineer, three months out of | college, and impressed with the| girl's pure beauty, bowed profound: | ly and stopped short on the ribbon: | like line the Kansas & Pacific was pushing from prairie to ocean, but Walter Kenney, noting the disturb ance, walked to the front and coolly path the long line on toward the distant ocean, but a great dog Ene Laat has Bites fa, batt howled in the darkness and the red |g, Kenney started his gang lantorn that the first man cartied | trom the weatorn edge of the do spattered into a hundred pieces a8 | giraq quarter section ‘and let th the unerring rifle spoke again. | matter drift for a while. But h T can plek you off one by one,” continued his visita to the Cornell he aaa home, coming as often as the way was open to come. Myra Cornell was gracious and charming when not on sentry duty along the K, & P. right-of-way, and Kenney forgot the right-of-way squabble and surrender ed himaelf by dearees to the girl's }plquant charm, And by-andby joame the day that he staked his | heppiness on one impassioned plea {and proposed She Iastened to his declaration with Httle red spots coming and go ing in her cheeks and & half smile pon her lipe, When abe answered | yoked the pretty obstructionist her volce quivered the least bit over. But the right-of-way?" she de What's thie?” he demanded, "We manded, “Do you give up all idea have the right of way, you know through You can't stop us.” of putting your railroad my little farm?" The girl smiled at him rather sau ‘Oh, yeu,” promised Walter Ken y, yet grimly ney, with a sigh. “The Kansas & “Can't I? she asked, “You get Pacific doesn't wage War on charm. back!" ing women. We'll go around,” “Stuff and nonsense!” laughed The girl laughed, In allvery rip. Kenney. “Here, you man with the ples, as if greatly Yelleved. “You flag pole! Skip over the fence and she asked fur run ahead.” The man with the flag pole, grin ning, prepared to clamber through | the tight stretched wires, Zip! sang — the shiny gun, and the shattered o¢ , . ‘e flag staft fell trom the dated man'sl and’ betting aoa torent give up absolutely ther. Absolutely,” assured Kenney "Then come with mo,” she Invit r “CAN'T I?" SHE ASKED, GET BACK!" “You roe“ LAUNDRY COLLARS 1c, 2c, 2: t fel and, baffleg and beaten, the chain hands. Zip! wont the rifle again,| bearers retreated into the night and Kenney felt the deadly breath| ‘The next day Walter Kenney | of the thing past his cheek called upon Mise Myra Cornell anc ‘Can't 17" the girl repeated, han. teringly; and Kennoy answered, 4 1 | offered her the K, & P.'s good gold, | but to no purpone. | he led his beaten gang away "No," she refused, “it you had bo | BECO \ (UNS. 4 OLLARS For a bit you can, my pretty haved prettily about it In the tit | Heiser SHIRTS 8c AREY “ ' | | i quarter section and prepared (n (mensmmemcssnee meee TD y mall, months, fered mt ae ae ‘n Prine fighters ain't out trade, but tntroducin "Pationos is a virtue,” quoted the ou “ a the Sim |" M re often it ia a ne-| owsity Diobbe—Marduppe is in lowe with |" , two girls and he « p ble up & walking for hi ih when he le f Rare Concessions on Cut Glas, 3929929922992 5393995 Piain Tailored Sui AL 7 $15.00 HE $29.75 for yerges, Panas ing 40ingh URD Solid Grays, Rose, Reseda ; nd Copen. Stripes hagen; Fancy Checks and § A Large and Varied Assortment for Wedding Gifts Ice Cre ani, Cake or Cel $5.00 ‘ $5.00 | , Special 10-inch Berry or Salad l, special ,.7 Cut Glass Sugar and ¢ Cut Glass Water Bottle, special Wiegs—Did 1 ever see two girle! Cut Glass Olive Di h, pe l, we od kine Wage—That doesn't pr « C C Wire sah SPC bees orset Covers at 33¢ Mise Antique you think there] 4 -- 1 art att oe man te justi ONE FROM SCORES OF SPECIALS IN OURE ‘Mie. inne Me surediy; for in- | UNDERMUSLIN SALE 4 how old { thought. you wore |" Garments that fit, that retain their and that arp ) In order to dog « man's footatepe |G finished as well as expensive style ntily tein 4 the detective must firet be given a y pointer with embroidery, insertion y and rulfle, (: ages « rent wine ie == | A’ man can truthfully say he ts out A 25% Discount on going to the @ should be very pop-| ae upine t bas 0 |B areat many & The office-secker who ts Town Amt You Wit yeu Baan or (> Pou paupe ? (we 2 eo Cl K im TORN Corry Paqnria ed, and Kenney followed her Into the green fields. Taking up a light ax she attacked one of her fresh cedar posta, and, thletic as she was, soon hewed it down. “Now bring back your surveying wang,” she laughed. “I merely de sired to win my polnt over” ‘Over whom?” demanded Walter Kenney. ‘Over my future husband,” mur mured Myra Cornell, blushing But Kenney, when at last he saw his surveyors driving the sharp stakes through the much desired quarter section, wondered which of them had really won Traveling Bags MEEK TRUNK &@ BAQ CO, 010 Firet Ave. ed Alaska Sail Loft See Us Refore Buying. Awnlpgs, Canvas Goods lumbia Street, Seattle, i: Main 8204. 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