Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
: ; ' Published Lo. Press. Publishing United The Star Member of Daily by > Page Will Be There from ection of Vermont, is a standpat United States the senator } Carroll’ D. Page assured of another ternt by recent ¢ BY MARION LOWE, I is a very wealthy man His fortune was founded on] “How doa it feel to be a real lfiskin He is the greatest | Candidate? Do you feel any differ bent cory piers jent?” I asked Miss Mary G aliskin merchant in the world. | O:yfeara, democratic nominee for This is fortunate, for as sen-| county superintendent of schools ator he can see that in any]. “Yea, I feel different, and I've {f changes the people who] ad more fun, Hven if I am not sashes die ary elected, 1 feel that I have had a merely wear shoes will not get the best of the leather trust Page is president of the sav-|ernment at ings bank back home This is i. sea as he can help guard No Spoils of War. The office of county superintend ent does not carry much patronage Just one deputy—so ward heelers and dollarahead voters don't camp trafl, Besides, that deputy hold a first-class teacher's and not every political broader opportunity.” Miss O'Meara in a teacher of gov Broadway high school been taking a course fortunate, the nation against any of the postal savings} unwise extension bank experiment. Page is a director in the | on her St. Jo & Lake Champlain} has to railroad, This is fortunate, as | certificate a {follower has one handy he can see that folks who/"no* Me oe treat you respect merely pay freight and fare do} puiye 1 asked her not slip one over on the rail I grew up in the West,” says Misa O'Meara, “and | think that CARROLL D. PAGE Page is president of the national bank back home. This is fortunate, for he that no currency bill is rigged up against the national banks who rent out money, by the mer chants and mechanics who hire it He is director in a trust company. This is fortunate, for he can set his face as flint against any kicks on the way the big trust companies are used in financial juggles. course, to be a real thing a deb He is treasurer of two lumber companies. This is for-|egate, she had to be in ucus,” tunate, for he will not be fooled by Gifford Pinchot's non Men Quit Smoking. t “f And what do you think those e cons tion of forests to c 4 € against about the conservation of forests for the benefit of all as against} | OOM tous assembled did? Re the dividends of deserving lumber companies quested that there bo 8 emeking, He also makes Page's Poultry Food. This is fortunate, for]and did it in all good nature, too, ft produces | roads nee. There is more n in the less com makes a diff equality of men and wor Weat, and women are At that convention, Miss O'Meara had the unique distinction of being a delegate by virtue of her candt dacy for county office, and, of can see not aa if they “had to” and resent od the presence of a woman ard shelis. Some Kinds of Rottenness some manor delegation who -!Miss O’Meara Is a Teacher But She’s Learning ¢ “Did you have to trade your Vote, | says Misa O'Meara. and go into a deal and dicker WIth }yerter government and public ad THE STAR—MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1910. Government, ot About Politics MI86 MARY G. O'MEARA. believe that.” Mine O'Meara in a teacher in the Broadway high school, and during her course student at the Uni of Washington was an a* took me into polition,” “I believe that ment that jon of affaires in to be F wouldn't stand by you unless You | prought about by education In cit- versity The men who work up the biggest indignation when some | "teed by eat ‘dial tae sa | ena. not by party revolutions. sistant in the department of edu red-blooded human boldly criticises rotten courts, are the men}, * one ing of the kind.” said| rq rather not be elected than|cation at the university, She did hi ct thei ial lege t rotected by rotten} ore eara, “one MAN COME\ win by o partisan fight. On my special work in civics, She is a who expect their special privileges to be protected by rotten around and asked to see my bal campaign carde | have ‘School of quiet litte woman with simple courts. “What right have you to 40/ficos whould be nonpartisan,” and [' tastes Rotten business makes rotter politics. Rotten politics | that?" | asked him " ienneens " : Thought maybe you didn’t] makes rotten laws, and needs rotten courts to enforce rotten! now how to mark it or didn't} laws and declare good laws unconstitutional yw how to vote,” he sald. Mise] Pawed-Over Flirts Meara told bim with her knowledge on both points, It all depends upon the point of view A man who has grown rich because rotten laws have been } A 1g | and n, bel o enacted by rotten congresses, legislatures or councils controlled a bin a. | by rotten political bosses, naturally has a profound pocketbook] When the woman delegate went platform to address the con stion as a candidate, that Whole | body of men arose, 4 and waved their hate Was Well Treated | Doesn't sound much like London! reverence for rotten courts that will declare all this rottenness | to to be constitutional And that man will declare that this country is going t demnition bow-wowg if the great mass of the pe robbed by this rottenness e nerve to ¢ injustice of rotten business, rotten politics and i* etting, does it? | ; g nension was over Let some human judge, however, hand down Y es Naan smacks of human justice, and protects the many from robbery | hearted sald to her: | |"You didn’t argument for woman euftrag fact that & woman who can s speech like yours should joled the right of suffrage Whatever “¢ phon there may be in poli reform” Mise O Mew [knew about before she t, the haren’t any new ght of political wickedness to lehock her, She knows « thing or by the few—what the Criticism of the cor Judges are two-legged human Courts are what these human thing An honest judge commands and gets the respect of all hor men for his honest court. A rotten and ought to get from all honest men the open tempt he commands by his conduct There’s nothing supernatural or divine about a tw« judge who wears pants and socks. J mention the er atest | the | ts by th be de i need of} makes a rotten says she ¢ is divin the 1 two about what's what, too who helps make law spell injusti | Retnech’s Civil Government, a It is proper, wholesome and fo ¢ that|textbook ase@d tm the county all honest men have contempt for contemptible courts {| schools, carries a at by . Miss Mary G. O'Meara rr Pais SE aah ts Political Student “It was my stadies in govern Little Things ‘The barber, the hair cutter, the weed plow, the street car conductor, are all after little things—a lot big things. The child who learns to save the penny always has the nickel, and finally la the man who has the bank roll, the automo the fine home Nor is money the only reward. Th clean, his hair brushed, his suspenders slouch, is the man who gets position can make good, he wins in life's battle The boy who smiles, who has a ready help tell a 1 le or big; and who knows that reaper, the of which make | boy who keeps his face uekled, and who doesn’t without n trouble; and if he who can, but won't a snake la leas dan gerous than a cigcrat @ beggar, a bum, or a bloat Little things do no. ‘ey they gr A fellow could move a mountain wi a teaspoon; they are connecting oceans with a shove 523] (PTY pes Wag kage SEATTLE OOESN'T NEED whi lime. +ash it needs chiorid ot et eS 36 THE VANDERBILT CUP RACE was the investion of the killer. fool “i yore a eeu yT TITTY”, me es Ce aaa THE FIRST MEN MISTAKEN for 4 4 i, Vieji?*,* boxes. or are beginning to arrive —in es IF A CERTAIN CHIEF OF POLICE only knew ft, this fs the finest kind of quitting weather “ete yaar WANTED—A HARRY ORCHARD. Ten thousand dollars reward. Apply mayor of Los Angeles o 0 °o OR. MATTHEWS SAYS GOLD Is at the root of the city’s vice. Did the good doctor think it was altruism? °o 0 © THERE WILL BE A THOROUGH investigation of the w Hampshire disaster, if that is any consolation to the relatives of the survivors = 7 Why Not?— BY REV. PERCIVAL H, BARKER Pastor of Firat Congregational Church, Maywood, Chicago. The mother who permita ber I6yearold daughter about the city In an automobile 2 o'clock in the m with a counterfeit sport of weak jaw and weaker morals the front door to grief and disgrace. If you don't know what company your daughter keeps, or what time of night she turns in, your roar when gossips get busy will sound a’ as pathetic as the # se of & r It is more diffi of a girl w as been pawed ° by every than it ts atten sheep on neappre i they come to If ns altar, they as sume the reap of wifehood with the enthusiasm of a one-legged man a society club dance, for they have Mirted away their hearts until they are incapable of truly loving thetr hus bands Flirting under the home; and when home life, with Its sanctitios, Ite calm and deep joys and sorrows, ceases to have its charm for as in America, Ue greatest breakup and catastrophe in history will fol Fitrtation is the first step toward self degradation The man or woman who flirta is hatching « serpent’s brood nd wting; he is rearing and rend that will one day wake into Ii wild beasts of prey that after bim. Shake it at {ts birth far more than they broaden him him garity h do sor » at pre t to t beauty and diminish the power of American home life, degrading marriage to the low level of a convenience and to the still lower level of sensuality, Flirta ster the social evil Matt . A anything or personal malice motive. anybody so long as is not your || George Platt and the Children Inthe Editor’s Mail. ovgeen vei: \ ‘ wear clothes If Short letters from Star readers will be printed in this column | ete te ay when they are of sufficient general interest. You may write about You cant dy Ma le eal whe ¢ Editor Star Since our county | for a sincere and effective effort in George. fas af ms oy + oe spn Hitors have assumed the patri- behalf of law enforcement in thi pad bes pe nild on. Was sepied rehal authority of grantin the | city, and th mder ext: iif ven “~ aan ene privilege of marriage, or withhold-|ficult and disheartening ¢ a nae vhs = saig nas + ing it, according to their own sweet | stances. His letter in ‘Thurada “ae tag Payton Mer Le will, how important that this offi-|evening’s Star should remove the | ree’ *",," ey" Me cial should be ted with the last lingering dc as to his sir ee Sree» ny app greatest care—that he be possessed ce at least DH a” | fascinating Ia ot | fn enanene of broad sympathies, free from per | after a rt talk. Then. h Sood Sudgment. cod of always be-|ee too peeu rather read it than] Do you know, I've a great mind ing provided with an all-wise raler,| some bloodthirsty sitar it sy = to steal you and take you home & despotism might be a most ac:\It would make a lunatic Inunlé ty | ine et ate | ceptible form of government read about Gill and War bs 5 le Answered the wee maid. “Really, MAB LOUIE, kno . not} { don't think you would want me t Va ut gambling going on. | nd, When I'm at ne I'm a m talk of a gambler) perfect little devil. I make a Editor Star: Y r ha ' sakes one laugh| racket all over the house, pull the been so consistently ently me Wit ama aia. aus nning ‘cat's tall and on rainy days I break and #0 successfully ampioning | a cilmen, ssloonkeeper ages the crockery. One time [ put a the cause of political and commer 1 tatirant men, wi P ra hotel | whole jar of blackberry jam in the celal righteousn t 1 am im-| gambler (hilar igor dhonor se | ae rcoed nig Yo ria abr, cys were wear THE DIAGNOSIS. . ing @ ing frazzlea on their panta a short What is the most prevalent trou magnificent batt he 1 on thelt pants a short}, “What is the most p ent trou. Wardall ¢ ' az s FANNIE EDMONDS They have more time and money . credit 316 John St an they know what to do with,” he wear clothes like this ta.be comfortable on the beach; convention this to be comfortable 4m tW® parlor. Convention say all right 4, like this) on the beach, if you don’t intend to go | water else when you don't intend to go in the water, Now, isn't conven Two-Minute Vaudeville BY FRED SCHAEFFER, 1p—So you've written a new play? I'm surprised Yes, I'm proud to say Ihave, But why are you sur a? lap—Hecause they say it's a new play you wrote, What do ou nll We? Thud The title is “Under the Apple Tree lap-—Oh, a sort of a windfall, eh? What is it, a comed Thud—It pastoral play—all the pastors denounce it. How ever, the main 1e represents the Garden of Eden. And in the garden w ha ci egetab lap—Does th roperty man furnish Ut Thud—Oh, no audience furnishes t lap-——It has to do with the fall of man ell, not xactl Ad a doesn't ¢ i { up. ¢ n take w th fy Np vr t p sends uve up, a1 1 then takes away the ladder n he elopes lap~-Why does he elope with the cook Thud-—Because that was the only way to keep her from leay ing Tut tt all come out right In the end. Slap--How go? Thud—The limb break nd Eve gets down out o: arr Pa ot, and Eve gets down out of the tree with Slap--In your version, Adam doesn’t suffer a bit, eb? Thud—-Sure he do when Kve fell, wasn’t his rib broken? By Mail, out of elty your, $2; 6 month, 26c. Mntered ate” ba Wash, Po 4s nocond-clagg fenttle, wr IN LITTLE OLO NEW YORK NEW YORK, Oct 3.—Pvery ;means nice list to this Baron cers of the Capiig }time a stoopshouldered, spavined | Hans, as he tells it e <a Include a foreigner comes steeraging {nto 1 had heard much of the be vor Here te the 7 this land of the free, with a title|of your soclety women, the & to be hetas regular ning, October 4thy at pect st. Congrey con 19th and 20th ay, a whom I had seen in 4 into the bility, led me Kure impoverished no that may or may wash and no | th more money than a man back from | marr hia vacat at one thing n, there's somewhat to do he can do, and gene ly does--cop|the stories, 1 came over here ston or Di out a nice, good-looking, home |find out for myself, I found ma a Bourne, @ brewed heiress and take her and| beautiful women, but I found no Pye rie |her money back to Hasenpfeffer-|at Newport ow to fight to a fr jon the Khine or Alela Mortgage | 1 would put birth, breeding a and frolicksome ty | Quite often we get the girl back | education abeve all other requi st erin baci aap after the money has been tossed|for my ideal woman, and many tom. tan | broadcast over the face of Kurope,| American women have those—but . or ' or microbes not the women of the aristocracy but, of course never te th jsame again, and hor parents have | to do the best they can with her} as damaged goods. | STAR UST om, among | | about $100,000,000 in German marks | the working girls, o inds beauty, | JOSH WISE BAYS; and thalers and things, and who | charm, goodness and intellectuality trange though it has got the signed papers to show |I do not want to see more beautiful | thin people may be ‘ona for his noble ancestry, And what | creatures than I found lunching at does he do? You, what does HE do?|the restaurants throughout the | Does he marry some Newport | commercial district of New York } belle, whom we could very nicely | ali working girls, all perfect except | me spare, and let her « bia mone for the too great alr of indepen at Monte Carlo and other pia fence that comes of giving Amer where they remove it paluigesly|ican girls too much freedom. and without chloroform? Maybe the baron will come Talks About Society Girls. some day and take a nice young Sie: fhe ween bach to Werlin Ma-letensqmagher or tmabicure’ sit) CCULOMT Geum | gle, and he says things about our|home to Berlin with him—if his|4 ™4!d_ whose fromt gamy society Indies which are by no! folks will let him Grayce, summer rayee; Sirk eaten But she failed to wig Because she'd no “te And another drawback fayce ANOTHER FAULT FOUN Mr Recentmarrle~-Thig | good, dear, but there seems | good many egy shells te it, Mre Recentmarrie—I'm John, but I used three siete the sembes ab tanto ome It in time to cali a halt on this}, Mr. Recentmarrie—The jconstant blaming of women for | *e recs ames aif Mre. Recentmarrie— | you Americans bave built up around your moneyed people Working Girls Are Best. | Then again comes @ real one,| “Undoubtedly there are nor like the Baron Hans von Bleich-| benutiful and good women tn Ame roeder, of Berlin, who Is heir to | tr In your middle el UNDOUBTEDLY Tryp fer—If we could Me a8 fy future as we cam tite thy what would be the resguy 7% Him—Oh, it bi . woul stactory, ; Pear just as un back | ease Mi As a “MAN” BAYS FATHER VAUGHAN. SAYS IDA HUSTED HARPER. “WOMAN” | Women no longer want the trow ble of rearing children. Children sve as |the recipe says to use mem) interfere too sertion that wo.|! three eggs : much with their) men do not want) plessures, their] the trouble of THE TEST, figures. j reering children- Mrs. Lamlie—tI think you I think woman | that it interferes |Goler an injustice when jy never exercises with their pleas-| she’s unwoniaoly her «reat influ ures, thelr plans Mrs. Daubster—You @t ence so sweetly, strongly and sub- iimely a9 when she lives as the mistress of & home, the darling mother of her children, and the queen of her hus band’s heart ent|you have never seen Bagg of the childless | gain sale—she doesn't marriages are due | cited to the determina tion of husbands not to have thet) Mrs. Puryear own pleasures in| : terfored with; an-| nunded' women’ Tre aa other large per) yr r aa cent is due to the | Puryesr—a Fully 50 per HER PRODIGAL, farliy loanen ber power tn the triple/ «mall per cent to the physical ail « for which she is most fitted ts of wives which they cannot| Peckem—Ne Gi, T In the arena of public life won| help, and the smallest percentage | ‘he same mistake tree, That's tummy; for tit i u The sew és sterility of hus | ait meet goto for tt mand of woman onnay, Bical a 7 aan anda because of | him a piece of ber for equality with inahdéek bolero of! a men will neces SSS “s - after marriage; a Not aul ' en haven't got a chance. bees a of all to the desire of women to| Meeker 7 | ot mentally and physteally!avoid maternity for the sake of! Tied a second time 7 j cannot compete With! their own pleasures Peckem — Ob, that j The vast majority of wives long |®20ther mistake, | it 1s © Rrand Lneee J to) for children and are willing to risk an jace a woman taking fn be He | comfort, heal.h, life itself for moth TOOK EMERSONS: | Bhe's far be than her rhood. Young Uppson roused laistera who spend their Ume tak | Women also are sick unto death rage of the constant deification of the | When he wed a bessty al men I think {t ts unfortunate that! wite and mother, and the ignoring | Thus he vaulted wmen have to work outside the women jot women in ali other relations. And “hitched his } home — |- ee YOU CAN INTEREST HIM Any Man Over Fifty. | You can interest any man over fifty years of age In anything that will make him «el better because while he may not as yet have any witive organic dis he no mee th buc cy and vigor of tw five nor the freedom m aches and pains enjoyed in ear : le ears, and b very natu e nea with interest any pr Jand preservation of his bealth He will notice among other things t ® ch of fifty ts « 4 re cordi mae ; aa oe ca tre GP ng Madi You are cordially invited to atte ORRE oe t twenty-five That . ~ 2 sreateat Sng coruisd ae our exclusive dis; of the latest edicts to w in tn 4 how much of ee E ; it and even with the ‘beet of care of fashion in Ladies’ and Men's wear asing digestive cing yea ables Tomorrow Evening, Oct. 4, 1910 From 8 to 10 P. M. The purpose of this event is to fami 1 be tne woakness with ad perfect or im and as ation spoxition to ery man of fifty man, Woman ar yecause the whole se health, good 4 ia to have whol her A iarize you with the newest fashions to be er , i uniae oe worn this season. All questions relative More shaky nerves, when a weak to our Modern Credit Plan or any others < ple hing the dally ba wea tear of the from @ you may see fit to ask will be readily ar na of fermenting half gested food swered Excellent: music will be fr ivenirs will be dis Jand in no round about nished and suitable s it wants direct, unmistakable a tance, such as ts give one or 1 Stuart's Dyspepsia Ta af nc " M hese tablet cure stomac Children || ‘This Will Interest You | who will bring boy | ‘The plan of ates { Pr his or her parents will receive a novelly r ‘pre : wd ages in ce toy—a whist Be sure and come nee tried en knows, tt eore Closed Until & P. i T a used by ev body who ts troubled any way with poor di > uae tan awe || Eastern Outfitting Co., cin ts advertid or is word tn drug || 1332-34 SECOND AVE, NEAR | mark it must be a humbug, wt tg “Seattle's Reliable Credit House” as As a mattor of truth any druggist who servant k yw that § jart'’s Dyspepsia Tablets have cured more people of indigestion, heart burn, heart trouble, nervous pros tration and run down condition n jerally than all the patent medicines and doctors’ prescriptions for stom ach trouble combined. |