The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 12, 1910, Page 4

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— ase ene nen enc ere SOAR | 4 Hi it + Ratlard Agent—Pat Mutton Rallard ay. Ballard 806. Ry Agent—Geerge Ferris Summit av Stretch YOUR Legs pleted a 4,0004nile walking trip to San Francisco in 77 days Qae day he covered 75 miles ayson Weston recently made.a similar trip in sn't make you feel, some bright morning of hat YOU could walk five, ten or twenty mile ‘| make YOU realize th God mad een ul byways, the fields, the trees, the flowers, feet—and that man-made streets and hard reads, autocyeles, and automobiles are not such a t them after all g not only the most healthful exercise, but able and fashionable as well t ma YOU ride to the city limits, alone t husband, or a friend, t y 1 n| e bywa an he green ¢ ot an | YOU fill your lun with the only air} mtry a and send your blood b i your veins | sn't 4 1 like « you tit Gi friends > a walking club—~— Then West have walked in vain | they only did a vat stunt | But we think you'll prove they preached n by fol-j lowing aple eer namneeiintenctanp | The endorsement of | Where are those promised edt man Humphrey by the Tammary | torials re Senator Be ige congressman, Joseph A. Goulden, of | and Col elt out of the re New York, who was also a sup | publican pa porter of Speaker Cannon, ought to remove all doubt of Humphrey's} Regulating the Western av. com party regularity mis business by legidiation te —— pr ly much more popular Seeator Jones went. a long way g legislative candidates now toward repaying the obligation he| ‘haa it will be next win owes to John L. Wilson when he eee oe a permitted himself to be quoted as} Gov. Harmon, of Obio, Is trying} saying he considered Wilson quall-| to establish a closed season In that fied for the office of United States/ state for AntiSaloon League de senator | tectives Many political complications would be removed by Commis ers Abraham and Rutherford righting the wrong done to Deputy Sheriff | Matt Stearwich. Carrigan succeeded on January 1 in having Star wich’s salary reduced to $1 a month, so as to punish him for standing by Sheriff Hodge. The other two commissioners were parties to the @eal. Starwich is tae most popular peace officer in King county, and in the South district has a personal following that is daily demanding | that justice must be done Starwich Starwich {s new in Mexico City, and bas taken no part tn Injecting his troubles in the political campaign. His friends, however, Geclared that the commissioners must rectify the mistake. or some candidates who are favored by the commissioners will suffer at the primaries. Senator Knickerbocker, in his fight for renomination, the Starwich entanglement a serious obstacle in his campaign. Kaick erbocker is tied up in the same politics! organization that made Rutherford and Abraham. Starwich’s friends are in the preponder ance in Knickerbocker’s district, and they jhave demanded that Star wich be given a fair deal before they align themselves with Knick erbocker. It is the general opinion that Knickerbocker has the power to adjust the matter, and bis failure to do so bas lost him much active support. Frank 8. a hand in the matter, an’ wich gets his just dues. and looks to Starwieh's frie accordingly taken up the qu ship for Starwich and as a is finding Griffith, candidate for prosecuting attorney, has taken | made it a personal matter to see that Star-| riffith ts a loyal supporter of Starwich, ds for much active support. Griffith has stion, both as a matter of personal friend: | question of political expediency } County Assessor Parisn will have no opposition for republican nom- | fmation. Parish's campaign for an equitable distribution of taxes has made his renomination a foregone conclusion. One or two republicans | played for a while u disposition to oppose Parish for the nomination, t a canvads of public sentiment convin them of the hopelessness of making any headway against Parish’s strength. King Dykeman, president of the Young Men's Republican club, {fs making active preparations for a monster rally in Woodland park the latter part of this month, Dykeman promises to have his pro gram completed within a few days. Senator Piles and Congressman William E. Humphrey will entertained at a public be reception tonighf in the rooms of the Seattle Comme: 1 Club. The reception will be an informal one. The project of inaugurating a campaign for further irrigation and waterway im provements for the state will be discumsed by Dr. N. G. Blalock of | the National Rivers and Harbors Congress and by W. Walla Walia. After six weeks’ confinement to his home with injuries received fm a runaway accident, County Commissioner A. L. Rutherford Is again able to get down to the meetings of the board. Rutherford will have a hard time finding much rest, as a host of political workers have been camping around the court house to have a talk with him about political conditions in the county. Aithough Rutherford is not a can @idate this fall, his support is anxiously being sought by other can- didates. inia. They are Washington, Jef 8 be lerson, Madison, Monroe and Tyler. | “WMat's the man charged ‘with,| jofficer?” asked the court | | axaulting a pedestrian with a| your honor.” much worse | New South Wales will yield 28, | 500,000 bushels of wheat this year. The butler was polishing the brass name plate on the nt door I up to me,” he said, “to do my share keeping the family name fre Employes of kosher bakerie: @ union. “Th’ only thing that says "Ls eutting’ when it shuts up is a pair | tin o” scissors.’ i Id like to luring the ight on work mmer.” n, my boy. Ye if time now.” only halt We with to arrange for an ex-| | change of prisoners,” anriounced the| An English physician has placed : on reo: ‘On what basi? asked the leader sere 6 whieh of the other side. remained “Usual baste, eight generals tor al yw ~ fe hen President Taft cannot find oo oe - anyone else to play golf with he chases hi vilitary aid, ¢ ytaln The French government has de-| Archibald Butt, around the tins cided not to apply the old age pen-|From which it’ would appear that sion law until Archie is not only the Butt, b the That civil service board fatled to the Ten Commandme upset nts in| There are 28,947 Soteret employes ps a " ™ \for them is $31, 541.225, . There is one thing to be said England's total exports and im-| favor of the “muck writers"; Battine ports for the past four years are| ger doosn't like them valued at $21,275,000,000, a: Canada exports about 220,000, What aid yor 1en To! - ae ie asked you to marty hha?” 7°™| pounds of butter and cheese annu “I shook my head oe *“Bideways, o p and do ad wayn. oF and down I wouldn't marry the best man Five former f the) t don't of the don't want to be the best man; United States a in Vire- 11 want to the bridegroom.” 7 Mombor of the United Press |HOOKS DON’T “: THE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE Published daily by HURT WORMS IN FISHING HOW TO MAKE AN ANGLE WORM STOP WIGGLING, Curl the worm ba the palm of the left hand and bend the hand into a cup shape. Form 1p Shape with the right hand and then clap hands smartly, not permitting the centers of the where the worm Iles, to The worm will be killed concussion of the alr, and ot wiggle when it is put hook worms Wiggle, huh, when y mut them on the hook? lod frogs jump and kick and would if you The star GELES DON TGOUNT THE STAR Poblishing Oo. were run through with a hook? Ne Go abead and fish Fe the wiggles and the kicks They don't moan that the worm and the frog a iffering, says Pro te F. T. Herrick, head of the biologica ment of the West And this goes for the fish, too, he | a No matter how much a fish PROF. F. H. HERRICK flops and t it ian't suffering Worma, 1 fishes never ta my friend bt the same | know Ape © of pain, as we and when we got it into the/ vert know ft," saya Profes found that my hook was tn aor kK. “Pain is an emotion fish, and had torn peculiar to mankind and the higher badly, so that they were bleed vertet *. However much a worm jing. Thfe fish, after being torn, had may twist a ho he ia beyond [continued feeding od frox may not Anoth friend of mine once t not suffering aught a shark, cut out dts Hver and pability of fish to sed it. He put the liver on al ain, let 1 you a fishing |heok as bait and began to flab 1 was fied “ff Martha Withtr t he i, and ¢ » , caught a fiwh, wh pro to tt wh. It strugeléd for « long hark that had just been bereft and then got a king the of its tt hind n caught with ook with ft. Within a few mo |a pi of ite own body j eeeeee oeore ooo Seereeee ; IN THE PUBLIC EYE . Seococe eeeoreee When Pope Pias X refused to ac] cept. the resignation of Cardinal have} — | Merry Del Val, papal secretary of | | state, tendered him a few days ago, | {he caused a sensation in Catholic | efrcles all over Europe and »| jelally was this trae In Rome Merry Del Val, as anti-modernint |has been opposed moat strenuous! by the college of cardinals, but probably the 1 cause the op | position is the fact that he ts not an Italian. Most of the members of the college are Italians, and the office of papal secretary of state had, previous,to Merry Del V, j CARDINAL MERRY DEL VAL. | appointment, been held by for several centuries. Bestd he is young and has been fought on that ground. He is but 45 now and is the youngest cardinal secretary of state since the first incumbent of office, Carlo Borromeo, in the Italians D. Layman of | 16th century Until the Roosevelt visit to Rome | and Merry Del V # Tefusal to ar range /for an audience with the | pope for Roosevelt, without certain assurances upon the latter's part, opposition to the cardinal had ap parently died out or was kept care fully covered up. Since then eral events have transpired to start ft all over again The cardinal’s action — “THEN IT HAPPENED” in tender (Our Datts ontinued 8 isi7 Hor Enovew FoR. You Everert? | The sun beat down pitilessly The mercury rose and rose and rose until it spurted out of the top of the thermometer. The so heated that the jtown smelled of burned sce leath r. Ag the result of all this an idea took form in the head of ©. Percival Smartweed. He came to conclusion that it was torrid | The first person he met Everett Troe, suffering intensely from the weather, But ©. Percival | was possessed of no guardian an }gel at that moment. Therefore he rote pavements wert addressed this remark to B “Is it hot en Why are mother? lis tolling, was ing his resignation was not unex pected, for it was well known that | he really preferred the work of a/ ministering priest among the poor | to the office that daily threw him in contact with the diplomatic world. It is not probable that he will be allowed to resign, for the pontiff has sald, “I would rather renoun the papacy than lose the services of Merry Del Val” | Cardinal Merry Del Val has been in America once, visiting Canada and the United States in 1896. He was born in Eng | parentage, and by many ts regard led as the best diplomat in the ‘ehurch today 1 POINTED PARAGRAPHS. |. Tact f tery s high-grade fat Its better to kiss a miss than to miss a kb K ks world will join in the anvil ch A thiek he multitude of thin ideas It's easier to get on in the World than it ad is apt to ger yrate a atiently awditing the advent of wirejess politic rmerly the people burned witches. Now they roast” goliti clan Occasionally the with an eagle eye proves to be avul tur Some men don’t know enough to get married too much Remember, $17 hat-on a 17 and some others know sirls, that pinnfhg a cent head doesn't in rease the value of the head. A ernzy son thinks every one else is Insane, and love is blind be cause it imagines everybody else ts. REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR, Either a man is always wronging somebody or somebody is wrong ing him. The way to make any nonsense sound r sonable it Into a song or a love letter. It takes an awful lot of money to convince people that they can af ford to act as if they didn’t have any A bank account is a good thing to keep a woman from having a balance 24 hours after her husband makes a deposit for her. The only thing & woman regrets about not being @ man is how, if she was one, she could pretend she had too much brains to understand TUBSDAY, JULY 12, second olmas mntter .jly the young Mr. Glavin to a girl is to put} 1910. of ot tty — A your, Of) @ tered eed | FROGS DON’T SUFFER WHEN | ON A HOOK RULES FOR FISHING. Use only ene worm; put the hook clear through It Don't give a long jerk when you get a bite, A tiny, short, quick jerk, with the hook mov ing only an inch, i# better than a two-foot jerk that 1s Iikely to pull the hook through the fish's gills, or pull the fish clear out of water Keep your fieh Tf on it Don't get time; the more t ing Don't let your shadow fall on the water Don't heavy new of a Hght color line taut when a Take fish your the excited bigwer the sould give 1 him t drink aleohol while ft ue8 & line, or I doubt whether crayfinh suffer when they are used as bait. The obster, when caught by one of its lelaws, will quickly amputate fi whole limb by « peculiar pr whick while a of the ue » in don't Ike the the fish, it By hr ever, if is ouny to kill ther the potnt ef your of the frog you ean Fishes nay hook into th Ink the brair t quiet i thus pier produce be similar petnt, or you can grasp them and with « quick snap killed with tail FROM MISSOURI Secretary Ballinger bas declared himself out of-polt he is vot out so far that he fot feel privileged to attack Re ntative ndexter of Waxt m, Mr. Bab linger’s state, becaw Poindex ter, an insurgent to be & candidate for the d States senate, Anything that Mr. fallin \ger may have to say fo opp to Mr. P try to understand that Washington has at feast one «: at | torial candidate who is the right] sort, the sort that docs not please! thé secretary of the interior, whol does like Mr. HKoosevelt, Mr.) Pinchot, Mr, Garfield, and especial who saved the clutches of the Kansas City Times; Alaska from Guggenhetme atiens- | When Senator Burrows Kalamazoo, the kind-hearted peo- | ple of that tows t a good deal | M perfectly goo: for fire | works, If a iit for fire- | ject there in er reguiation regular ra——An ings 330.7. T wal; j KF intere: may | and w ment saine A. CHILBERG President her wife amounts to $82, terest earned by the Savings Deposits and paid to the Savings Depositorsin this oné bank. naturally the growth of Savings Deposits to amounts that earn these a little from each pay envelope amount to much.” We invite you to open such an aceount with us. Statement of Condition At Close of Business June 30, 1910 | Showing Amount of Deposits Each Year From RESOURCES | the Start Loans and Discounts ..... ..«.$ 7,301,598.88 | May 31, 1892 ..... aes sion Seg yo Real Est 6987 May 31, 1893 93,079.07 ea ate ; és 76,957.93 | 73.5. Fu May 31, 184... 73,539.28 urniture and Fixtures re, 35,000.00 | ; . * May 31, 1895 .. 117,216.38 Warrants, Stocks and Bonds ... 1,29 ‘ of « 52,241.16 Cash and Exchange .......... 2,683,814.92 oncaeid pe $11,342,608 55 May 31, 1898 Peis Nr ESR | May 31,1899 . May 31, 1900 : | May 31, 1901 ian Tastee “bane Capital... .$ 500,000.00 May 31, 1902 Surplus see aaees a ee 350,000.00, May 31, 1903 Undivided Profits ........ ‘ 249,962.91 May 31, 1904 Demand Deposits. $4,888,841 .03 | May 31. 1905 Time and Savings . 5,353,804.61 May 31, 1906 i saan May 31, 1907 Total Deposits ........... 10,242,645.64 May 14, 1908 ——————— | June 23, 1909 $11,342,608.55 | 1910 NOTE- regularly on May The Scandinavian American Bank Ly T% ill a Few More Sna ———_—_: FLPSTOrsT Recalled Renters are still coming in, and these inst 's, together with the several taken in on exchange for Pianola Pianos during the past week, offer a splendid assortment from which to select a first Piano at a most ridiculously low price, and which can be bought on terms to book. These o reasonable that opportunity. “it your pocket. but instruments that we “Club” Pianos, if you are are not can sell you at in need of a Piano in r he € You cannot prices afford to overlook this Here Are Some Values for You to Think of —Come in and Satisfy Yourself by Inspecting the Instruments = Maker Description Price Was Price ice Now PRVEER (os ics vancequn’ j y case *' $250. 00 $185.00 rIFFANY ty Mahogany case, hand 5 $300.00 $159.09 | panels @ TUBLIseRa bears _FVcrexvit.iszss—z— LESLIW ...sc-c- sansa in ahoean | $300, 00 $168.0 (NOHR ae ee $350.00 $125.01} 2 FISCHER ...02.0- Ebony, good practice piano * KOHLER ‘| Walnut case, art style $375. aa AUTOPIANO ........ ...,| Mahogany cate, latest. de $650. 00S The above prices on player pianos include 25 rolls of music and six moet a tn’ oe library. All of the above instruments are fully guaranteed the same as new instruments, and all are subject to our Exchange Agreement. Kotlere INC. 1318 Second Avenue Interest Distribution of $82,730.07 The last business day of each 6 months’ period is the big interest day in our Sav Department. The interest credited to dur Savings Depositors on June 9 730.07. On the previous big interest day, December 31, it was 7. 8, and on June 30 a year ago it was $73,705.24, making a total of $233,76600i8- | ESTaBLs Le 1850 ” he bank is a little over 18 years old. In earlier years it didn’t pay so much interest, became arge sums has been ust as gradual, in fact, as the growth of that man’s deposits who starts to save and and sticks to it. As we said early last week, “A single rionth’s- Even the single deposit, though it be a fairly large one, call But the steady putting aside of even a little money will surely bring success Any sum from $1 up will start you. Deposits Comparative Statement ‘or it’s the HABIT of saving that counts st doesn’t amount to much »¢ sent by mail for less than street car fare. June 30, Up to and including May 31, 1907, reports were rendered to the state department 31st. Since that time they have been called five times a year on irregulat ¢ have taken for this statement the date of call that came nearest to May 3lst. ‘The state of May 3ist, 1907, also included our then branch in ‘Tacoma, September of year became a separate bank which J. E. CHILBERG Tv. B. MINAHAN Vice Pres. Vice Pres, ALASKA BUILDING, SEATTLE, U. S. A. J. F. LANE Cashier

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