The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 8, 1910, Page 4

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Published Co, Press Publishing United The Star Member of Daily by You and Your Hated Rival An Ohio judge has decided that a young man engaged to a young Woman has no le ight to assault any other young man whose company she may accept. In deciding a case involving such an gw sault the judg id An engaged Woman has the right-to go with others, The fiance may bave an action against her for breach of promise, but he can have no action against the third party After marriage the third party may be sued for alienating the wife's affections, But an engagement is merely a promise to enter into the marriage con tract. The engagement, of course, should be held sacred, but just the same the lady has the right to accept the attentions of other men For the engaged young man to submit in peace may be law, Dut it ts not human nature He is apt to regard his dimes spent for lee cream and bis dol lars spent for drives as a tangible Investment which he sees endan gered and feels called upon to defend As the Obto judge says, the law gives him no redre ao he ta forced to rely upon his own cha: with the girl or his fists with the other fellow, ently he finds his fists more effective than his charms. Resort to viol be morally wrong as well as Hlegal; but what else is the engaged young man, with all his affections and cash tuvested In the girl, to do in & ? If all such young men were to sit while young men coolly walk off with their flancees. would no! long until en Gagement would be held as lightly as marriage itself If the engaged gir! has the right to accept the attentions of all men, it follows in all fairness that the engaged man fs Ikewlse free to pay attentions to young women, Of he complica tions may be simplified at any moment by calling the engagement off. t sensible way after all No dout his fists to keep , Fo eng 1 man who must w the engaged girl him before marriage will not find ip Matrimony an end to his troubles UL uck | 4 A north-bound Frisco passenger train stood widin the Ora Many of th a were at late akfast in diner Just as a w t 4 little woman, she sa at ay ing, “I se t it, and the passer « woma: said, “It will Now P ar Clover leaves, rabt et, bur e6. “ other inanimate th not bring But when a fellov for that f he is ex es, by K ax al heart-beats; 4 he works he looks happier e speaks cheer he is therefore more attractive to others, and he hits the old world harder, and makes {t give down its milk Did you ever see @ calf getting its dinner? You know how it butts if the cow doe: sn't down the milk? Well, the stronger the calf, the hard more milk. So the leaf makes us Dutt harder, and we win; hence, we call it lucky. Maybe it is! j (F JAPAN doesn’t shut up on her wal talk, we'll give ber the t Philippines. ° 0 © THAT second edition of “Maria's” letters seeme to have skidded blazes. o 0 © “WHEN I get foot loose, I'll—” says Ballinger. Who's a holding <> you, Dick? o.. 0% AVIATION has {t over automobile racing in so far as it only killa -Rhem one at a time. i © 0 Oo gs PUTTING the family name on a recall petition is one way of ii making the family proud of you : °o ° o AN ASSOCIATION of Innocent Bystanders Surviving the Vander- bilt Cup Races would be apropos. o 0 AS THE “UNDESIRABLES” pay Johnny Clancy their rent in i advance, it isn't so great @ hardship for him. : ° oO e pes fi MAYOR GILL has sent in a general slarm for his friends, but q most of them are too busy to come—just now o o oO WILL SOMEBODY sugeest to Wappy that now Is a good time to resign and begin doing his Christmas shopping? ° i °° i SEAITLE doesn’t like a restricted district, but if it mutt have i one, it would like it denatured as much as possible © 0 0 BY using the cable judiciously, Mr. Hearat sx retis ‘ia ing a place on the New York republican st tleket befo: was asked ° e © 0 6 i FRENCH designers are putting out hatpins with heads three finches across. Ach! why not arm ‘em with razors and be done with it? © © o GRASSHOPPERS are eating Wisconsin's tobacco crop body will holler if you smoke grasshoppers instead of those arets, however. infernal cig- °o 6 © “STIR a tittle love inte everything you coc says Mra. Mary Chapin, Boston “new thought” woman. Whew! our turnips just reek with tobasco already © 9 oO AUTOMOBILE makers expect to turn out 200,000 machines in 1911. And your real jan is the one who runs for order of mortgages this » °° “GET OUT OF HERE! i don't care where you go, but you'd bet ter go to the Hillside Investment company house,” {s Mayor Gill's command to the undesirables. ee ee ROCKEFELLER «) earth tap well to f Tou s he “likes th don't catch old sohr air either, after the NO ORIGINALITY at all about T > THE STAR—SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1910. Who Is Judge Black? Marion Lowe Sizes Him Up for the Benefit « of the Star Readers — | ee ee eleieleihd doletehttiks * MARION LOWE'S IMPRESS. & |* ION OF JUDGE BLACK, * * * * He's no politiclan—he just * * talks * *% Looks fike good husband ® * and father. ~ *% Absolutely square between * man and man . }® He doesn't go much on & ® “dog.” * * An odd mixture of farmer, & | * lawyer, candidate, neighbor. & * Has a balance wheel of hu * | ® mor, * l* * [RR Re BY MARION LOWE When a little man with whiskers who looked like a prosperous farmer ame into t editorial rooma late yesterday af nd asked for | the editow I checked up on the hats, | coats and pipes and found | was the only “man” in the pla so it was What can I do for I asked in my best rep A lawyer, who emed to have the little man of the whiskers in tow, apoke up This is Judge Black cand! f tn } So this was Judge Black, of whom I had read tn the papers and about or had wondered A Real Candidate Here was my chance a live po litieal candid ay Very lam pot a suffr I don't are a rap whethe I ever vote or not. have always d that I'd JUDGE BLACK. rather scold the men into doing | sadainuiaes toutes — po. al i than to get out do it myself, 1 would fust find| running for judge of the superior | priests, We don't choose them that J out about this man, and If he wasn’t | Court his managers had to take him| way now, and I don't belleve in all right, expe him to the world, | off tn the corner and tell him to) making a display of pewer. Sit down and tell me all about | keep out, | ,.!, Gent believe in the ‘divine politics,” I said. He wasn't partieu- | Just Told Truth. right of kings,’ nor the Infall larly congresstoval looking, and 1/ tn managers,’ ity of judg 1 don’t care much aptte of his Judge Black went around tel! the people the plain truth, In much the same way be was talking to me. and, bless your heart a0, about the exaiting of authority And | find that lawyers are just as anxious for a ruling in their favor as if | wore a rob was curious to know how he hap pened to break into politica, for ft was evident to me he never SLID | tm wasn't slick enough. when ele , 2 let him talk. Smile and appear! day’ came the people elected him, &|,, ve he ther Gani wen) interested and any man in the world | emoerat, in a county that was fly eaiges pol * will tell all he knows about himself,|toone republican. And that was | lected Judge, corporation repre jsentatives and wire-pullers ned him with dinners and sup and more than he xnows he's tell | Roosevelt y too i™ Comes From Pennayivania. mean something. Mtieal game | Uhazarded a guess to mynolf that Do you wear a robe on the} Black comes from Pennsylvania, |ho’s & mighty nice husband and bench? I asked him. He didnt|the state where they eat sohmeir-| father “Te got two of tte finest look as if he did. kase with apple butter and plant boys in the world,” he said 0,” he said, “not as long as 1/ turnips in the light of the moon. this time he was talking. The don't have to. He's got fost enough Pennayivanta ith him fidgeted around un. Heald I have some principle} Dutch in him to make bim stub and finally interrupted with: about it The wearing of robes) born about hanging on to « prio see, the judge doesn't know | comes down from the time when | ciple | ical game. When he was! judges were chosen from the! “I believe I'll be elected, : 4 wy | SAYS. “Ith & ROOd your.” The thi Nightotthemoon faith that THE ZEST OF TRAVEL REMOVED e's a right time for things | ps vise dn't be surprised if he's right ‘Your Good Looks | should be @ source of pride to | Sallow skin, pimples, itches pen eruptions call for immediate attention. It should be your aim to get rid o' these disfiguring signs of impure blood ~ qeahiy, cormainn inexpensively, Ne ou! application wi | your blood. = cha BEECHAM _ PILLS help naturally from within. cleanse the system and enable Stomach, liver and bowels to wor! ear~ate intended. aly & fow dorset and see how quickly you will be rid of impurities, aed bow your blood and your looks | will be benefited They our as cow “Pauline,” when he might Just as w Thoroughly tried given her some eclat, or there abouts | lo proved good this family remedy Is © © Oo | AN eastern muckraker has found that grand based on morders, suicides and such. Maybe that's why on pend | e e Operas*arouse that yearning to kiji—something | ° | HAPPY rices for the et een ta Beauty's Aids Payne-Aldrich tariff, for which th ek bs guteetie conte, 7 Mrs. Knott-Quite: Don’t you find it a dreadful bore to go E ° 4 eo abroad? ‘of females, Bee ham's ee IRONY of fate-—we os Phan ab enitert cis Gbtue } Mrs. All-Thare: Positively unbearable »w that one cannot \ sultable. fee preset dehd ape ecg De Lele idea fo ving-am Blonn te Api th = smurgle in Jewelry, there in really no inducement for necking ree- |. scans it to hang hime hrough ¢ rab g aving ~ tnt, to éa | “> perase ane wes NER pa shee: ° 4 | | ° SOMETIME some w here be as much care | Mrs. Georgia Wayman, who | jMieeiemeeeee eee - ken at dynamite ay a ale of po 3o- |elaimed to be the original of f ame for c as that at Los |Charles Dickens’ character, “Little es |Dorrit,” is dead in London, She ° ° | was 81 years old. OR. TURNBULLL f one of Lucky Baldwin estate claimants, says he is t eth the next time he visits | Great Britain produces about half California, It may se kidna but the thing that’s eatin jthe meat her people consume. that t a you w r J ’ deepest, strongest, hard est a Wh ou want real wealth of , r a wer, Portland's the place | You do not hesitate to use your credit I how I f 1 today,” said Mr. H Humphreys’ Seventy - Seven | with the groceryman, and in other dif i] € at the Hittie window ou won't m | . ‘ see t tc 1 tf your gas at once,” calmly re Breaks Up Grip and | ferent ways, but yo cannot appreciate s Cla 4 ek Ticker,” by J. D. Rockefeller . e. ae the full convenience of it until you use it THE LAST ndY smuggler seized by the N. Y. custor ft a's $8,000 Worth of jewelry in her stocking and | to keep better dressed Che fact that tt uy# Wore them there, She was from—well . . ; id d uot ane Maavee” That weer teee ae the prices remain the same for cash or f oe menoe “The Earlier Stage” credit proves to you that they are no yb Rage ry rod Se na Every one knows they have taken higher. We could not sell for less if we nt it with ® Sneeze sal uae Cold after they begin to Cough and| old for cash. Come in and let us ex- But # long kirts aren't ao long | Sneeze she n i a0 long ain this way of b 4 Svs ow 2a ow Yorkers take to ‘er There is an Harlier Stage of las I y Of buying to you Savas dad j itnde and weakness; if “Seventy JEROU | FOR A FEW DAYS MORE | geven" is taken at this at fee S 0 U; il i De nash ated, 8 Joven” ts taken at thin “first tefl tore Open Until 10P. M. Tonight “1 wish all might know of the| 0%!!! sell wall paper at these! ing,” it will break up the Cold benefit I received from your Foley’s| house, 1 ne to clean Seventy-seven” breaks up stub Kidney Remedy,” says I. N 7 ASS ’ ‘ aper Now Bt Wel. on Colds that hang on Farmer, Mo. His kidne and b idera and Wall Paper Co.,; y Net E t . der gave him so much patn, misery | 1314 First Av., Near University St A small vial of pleasent 5 astern ut tting 0 Inc Ay aes cade aot work fits the vest pocket, At Drug Stores 1332-34 SE vt ° nor sleep says Foley's Kidney | rT ” 32. COND AVE. UN Remedy completely cured him. Bar. Star ‘Want Ads Are Humphreys’ Homeo, Medicine “Seattle's R. NEAR ION ST. talivinoug-Giaves, anakes-eve..6 Business Bringers Wiliam and" Ann stron, Now eattle’s liable, Credit House ing when they started to loak |‘ eine Dene Tea. | for the judge to ran for judge, thay | Pr: Inted on tatinanen aa ‘ain ot He sat with his hat on, but he has/found him working peacefully on }o°) 0) ood man serving the public good, but] a hat of lifting it from his head | his farm. W. W. Black's sense of the ridicu and I saw the Ja} since that He Poagro = jdiclal head. Above that farmer's! Snohdnish county have sort ofl iney cut cut tha eatertainine’ best | jface and inside that derby hat ts ayheen tn the habit of voting for Judge jness. He didn’t seem to appreciate ger Sas ab tee ee ee ale mind hie | {28 & good club dinner should have | D ne Ol Nef stinctively you say “your honor,”| frank way of tollir om what 2g | tirect Dearing on a judicial desl jand you know that man's deci na ' thinks and his ignoe © of the po THE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE @ INQUISITIVE Jaw peak, Edwin Vhat'» that you've got on?” “This is my new dress, Edwin. “Oh, | thought you were ted! around the feet to keep you from) running through paw’s money. Are you going to wear it?” “Why, wure, ny boy. This is the style, It is called a hobble skirt.” “Uh-huh; mostly hobble, much skirt, a maw and not “Oh, Um not kicking “I didn’t think you could, maw When you walk you move like a caterpillar,” You are very rude to compare me with a caterpiiiar.” Toat's right A caterpillar would have more senee than to wear one How many of th ould you cut out of a pi alip I'll come to you in a moment young man, and thrash you for your Impertinence Why, maw, you couldn't catch me with that on if you had hold of me. | guess that’s a fall sult, ain't it? “You; certalr Does it hurt when you fall with it? “Ob, do go on, you little plague, I wieh to read this very interesting article describing, “How to Trip Down Stairs in a Hobble Skirt on & Banana Peel,” do! maw. But——" “Not another question,” How do you get it on, maw?| Does the dressmaker sew you up in jit, or do you craw! in through the neck? | But by this time she was in tears land Edwin went out and told the other boys that his maw was con |fined to the house, unable to put lone foot before the other “THEN IT HAPPENED” (Our Daily Discontinued Story.) “Fotled, But Not Baffled.” was the ;oame of the play the village dra- | matic club was staging In the second act Augustus Cus tardple, the comedian of the piece does the foiling. He fires a blank cartridge at Martin Marmalade, the | villyun, : at the proper moment Augustus ired Of course he was wild with grief when he realized the cartridge waan't blank (The End.) || We Are Ready For that Fall Suit or Overcoat, | J. JESPERSON, | Merchant Tailor. Room 106, Your | | x Pees Requires a bank which is wait ing for you, |] you waiting. 408 Marion St. bot one that keeps Accuracy and Promptness are big factors in handling lar; commercial ao A business house must have a dependable banking con nection, that the cashier and treas not complt- institution ts The State Bank Or STATTLE } Mutual Life Bullding, First and Yester, counts, one of its |] urer easter, makes work more cated. Such an Bogardus Again | | Hits the Bullseye | | This world famous rifle hot, who Jholds the championship record of 100 pigeons in 100 consecutive | shots, is living at Lincoln, I, R | cently interviewed, he says: “! guf-| {fered a long time with kidney and bladder trouble, and used several | well known kidney medic all of which gave me no relief until I started taking Foley Kidney Pills, ! | Before I used Foléy Kidney Pills f| had severe backaches and pains in my kidneys, with suppression and a eloudy voiding On arisin, in the morning I would get dull headaches Now I have taken three bottles of Woley Kidney Pills and feel 100 per cent better. I am never bothered with my Kidneys or bladder, and Hi again feel like my own self.” Bar |tell Drug Stores. Quaker Drug Co. | of raw ellk at the rate of about of olty month, Wash,, Postoffice, By Mail, out Henttle Josh Wise Bays | the roofs « “Bill Henbrooker disturbed a den uses to GUI alrog, 0’ blacksnakes while plowin.’ This The carmel « is one o' th’ few times Bill ever dis. May disappe turbed anythin’ plowin'.” man, Genera It doesn't follow that every time | Again, they may note Booker T. Washington picks up bis pen he write a black band letter it is pre ted that Londoq have a population of 000,500" “Lysander,” said his wife, sweet-| 1960. ce b ly, “do you remember what day thin tn? Shing Why, of cour wald Ly It's] Court anniversary. of our wedding y Vaccine virus @ ren No, it iwn’t, ether,” sald his | tutely pure by radium peated. wife, frigidly, “It's the day you) @ccording to an italian selention promised to put up that shelf for me in thé kitchen.” |, “Give a ‘ll the Credit ty de where would pon} More than fifty native languages | be” are spoken in india In the 1 h e.” "See hore, I thought you sald you| France is systematically refers were a tailor? You're rea al ing its barren places, y. butcher it you? ‘Oh, no, I put the tights on the Charley Taft wearing ‘bis firm sausages.” |pair of long pants. Will tga Japan is inor ing Its production 20, Police patrol boxes In Low Angoigy are to be provided with aon and bandages for first injured In Germany it is planned to letter ALWAYS SOMETHING IN SEASON Friend going to do? Chronic Hunter: === iain Ab, but when deer are becoming fewer, what are jy Shoot more guides ; t . “Vot ine der matter mit your brudder Owgoost, who pat Me a hand against a circular saw? ! “Oh, be hase circular insanity.” 7 “Und your der Ludwig, who alvays cries himseluf to slg, ‘ vot mit him iss los?” é t “He bass stupercus melanch olfa.” ; “An s wrong mit your brudder Emil, who iss crazy lor stab ' ing a hotel on der American blan?” d “Yous, sure; be hass dementia Americana.” 4 “Und you, for why are you digging a cyclone cellar?” ‘ “Me? I haf brain storms.” f ~————— 1 e t t t or ou Can Hear ff : s ’ : the World’s Greatest Music ‘ In Your Own Home : -% Always ready when you } : aR want it. Keeps on play- t a ing as long as you want. ‘ No end to the pleasure and satisfaction it gives. $1.00 Brings a VICTOR to You From the greatest stars of grand opera clear through to “Bones” and “Tambo” of the Minstrel show—on the Victor In vaudeville sketches, band between there’s charming ra music, sympho- ic songs, ballads, and orchest “wr3eren efesewnteoowene weecece nies, special dance mus ic, cX sacred selections—everything that the heart 4 ¢ desire a 8 And all played and sung in the world’s best iH way, as the Victor alone can them. ts The proof is in the hearing. We will gladly t ; w play any Victof music you wat ) hear. re in And there’s a Victor $10, Others or cents to $7.00. Vic Easy terms if desired Reco up to $2 Ya

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