The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 22, 1910, Page 4

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t THE STAR—TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1910, Pe > ehh eae Dehiie : By Mail, out of clty—1 yoar, $3; 6 month * i SL a THE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE Sia thal one Daily by The Star Publishing Co. fionttle, Waah., Postoffice econd-clane mation 7 o: i ‘ Ps th er . i. M Best Recipe for a Real Home OBSERVATIONS His Ancestors Held Jobs as Titschkas at $2.50 | §TAR DUST “Wha entials for a home FOOD PRICES tumbling, save those on exes, Let's @pit ont W k B t L B F Ww P. d t U t B R | JOSH An ymen comprising the ial Eco-| '98 eggs and show the blamed old hena that they can't sefon us! ee ’ uu OW ung 0 asse 1 Pp 0 e a ” over “There's sich a thing noeaes , ’ 0 0 Oo pe a <a STENT = RETR RR ASAE Nate ald dorn eluherate. Ak top nomic Cl ‘ this question for half a day, STANDARD OIL COMPANY pay liv f 40 ent a |p : ave ter 0 iran doesn aad reac! ; yoar, and John’s share the other day was $2,600,000, Nioimelon! | 7 veggie Na om heserediohrr ridin’ ‘britches tap ad reac > un op uey ‘arlors ; c o °o oO essentials are a good temper, a COUNT BON! DE CASTGELLANE was able to borrow $100,000 Have a Nice System of Pay- - moth harce he fir 5 raised debate.| on the mere rumor that he was to marry Pierp Morgan's daugh ing Their Bills Every Night, | One of the fr good mother and charge of the finances. raised a d tor What Prone taiet wit wife : i tvery Night, of the Irresistible jmpal Or said the man and wife are joint sovereigns, and that] jan’t rh sushi Phaeel we bemiacinene rr a But the Waiters Don't Be- first to 08 bir heal ea id have an appropriation of the family money j ie ae long to the Union. if they get map z sa Age \ lg sof thal WIFE OF A Philadelphia millionaire has eloped with a bur ay peyenn ar One y sted that the man is the heac ec glar and started a boarding house, Alas! none of ua millionatrea i house. Anoth¢ ested that a good husband is at least one} fe safe in these times, If the tax collectors don't get our gout, Filo A ag 2 SATE cogget gh: I understand my son {9 ramaigg > the burglars do. i e is o! ol e quite i h you," i of the essentials. None of the women paid much attention to] ‘ ak SAT | ancient town of Liting Fong ina to the tele 27m sald: th ae his suggestio Fietsux' thay Ye » husband out of their cal-| CARRY THE NEWS to Now York, and drop it off at every His great grandfather got the job e) wre you ‘ th nm. Eth “03 they left the husband out ’ intermediate point! San Francisco has voted for the initlative, | When the honorable first Titachka |right.' ‘There mete ‘tsa all culations or took him for granted referendum and recall, and it's go » be Vox popu 7 turned up bis honorable toon and h a Sp: g . going to be vox popull instead of - A minister who happened in was asked for his opinion, He} Vox bigherupa! pete | pee Pag pM aproagy |, 2iad to bear it. I wast yous ° ° o te uke me @ sult aid, “A man, a woman and a cook stove. oi Pista WAS given until December 1 by Taft to file his the generation, i : i d these women applauded, not thinking, doubtless, that] brfef tm the Cunningham coal eaves, Gifford ought to be able ut Low Bung Fow was a sor Towa has 216,807 fa t Cod. San hapa ad at ae Rings he fi | to get the election returns from Ohio together by that date. of Chinese Bayard Taylor. 12,000 than pring i @ man, a woman and a cook stove may constitute a dive as well es When he played with | fan-tail lat thees nts a Only ay \ es & home HON, WILLIAM F. HERRIN, S. P. boss of California, Ex, | Kites in the back doorways and | ee \ eho ‘ : J says the trend of government is toward socialism. Being go well |Parrow alleys of old Shanghat he Umbrella r f | A husband who came to take his wife home volunteered] posted, Bill will be able to get off the track long before the engine | dreamed of the great land that lay |the pivot nae are oles —_ this: “A man who provides, a woman who attends to her own] comes along. under the yellowlh. sea, where the rusting 1) I t na 10 pt he ts ° ° ° sun went to sleep every night Be } business, and supper on time SOME TIME we may have a real nice economical president Low Bung Fow landed in Seattle p t This was hissed, though in real substance it is the same as| Who'll make Thanksgiving come on Christmas, Two holidays with. |19 years ago and has since pur ‘ar Dust: Now tha , . na ; in a month of each other are too almighty hard on turkeys and | Yeyed choles bita of boiled duck has lished all tithes, 45 } the minister's a led answer papas, chow mien, birds’ nest soup and ‘ who bought se Fin ingest won sresent ventured: “A man, a| oom = = ——— ,|#0 of, to the Elect, and plebeian t thelr money feat ‘ _ chop suey to the slummers and woman and a baby chop ne This comes much nearer the true essentials, though there QOCIETY MARRIED LIFE. ae owls of Occidental per mel 1 ; are good homes without babies, The baby may not yet have} We gathered all this from Low “I understand your cousin maf’ come to the cozy nest that has been softly lined for it with love. | Rung himself, |ried & struggiing young man? ’ The baby may have gone, leaving the heartstri of the man} It waa he himself—the proprietor | “Yes, he straggied all . , \ om of the Chinese restaurant—who | he couldn't get away from her* . and woman kuitted together more securely in common grief and | greeted us when We élintbed the | anon ‘ r | sympathy. The baby an 1 other babies may be growing up, and} stairs These are the és € | in every day of growing making the home more truly home.| 1 like this Chinese junk,” ob. | delight ees The babies may have homes and babies of their own—but veel The Star artist as we slid Wilson, Harmon and Diz : ; nto ebony Came where is there in all the world a home like the serene home of amet. eae ame out on top on election fg : ¥ specias y | ‘Nec night; grandpa and grandma? Its old floor is polished by many hurry Whether I do or not remains to lposine nee Harmon and Dix, > ing feet. Its old walls are decorated with a thousand treasured | be seen,” I said, not being par- fn Boiss ‘8 who “hit the f- ; finger marks, Its atmosphere is sweet with a million tender | ree sree a nee, fo Sas HIS GREAT, GREAT GRANDFATHER WAS A TITSHKA. Blected themselves and (0 rast dtm memories | guises and under more or less|> ies Solhibad Gals we cramer eee — noon bomy tl ee oes bs the " in 4 j » re rice without salt or aweet-)t vis «great-great grandfather) Standpatters at W: The true answer to the question is a simple one | agreeable conditions j ening | ree ved a peerty wage that equals fully jarred ashlagton tright a Narrowed down to three essentials, the true ingredients of You will find that some of our) Instead of refined white walt, the/ $120 in American gold for being} By Wilson and Harmon tn Da. areal home are these: — Pope hoe ss, natd aond Chinese uses a dark brown lquid/ Titechka of old Liiang Fong. Fol- i : A man and wife and love ung in choloest academic Eng-|that in mighty tasty to Occidental | lowing the custom of the old coun-| China held her first | Lah. For instance, I might get) palates |try, Low Bung could have snc-| tional exposition last cura | you up a little repast that would | “T'm going to bring bottle and) ceeded to the job from his father, we cout me $9 o plate to produce | borrow some of this liquid salt the; who moved to Shanghal “Did you have a hard time: Ignora nce Well, t tackle that to-/next time we come, whispered | But what self-respecting Chinese|taining that country omg axe ati: night, old man,” said The Star) The Star artist rane yp with a thirst for travel| yours last night? ; Se i ae eer 4 oe i Whereupon the Chinese manager! would consent to stick around the| “Rather. He doesn't blacksmith can do what the professor of mathematics é Bat & you @ lor ¥| presented us each with a small/old place as a mere Titschka at/smoke, chew, play an placksml e Di Vann Clubbe—Aw, these newspapers are a doocid bare. I've —, dane ellehadt WK aa | Tank = ge Ainsiage It's extraordi-| $2. yf. week when he can get folks | about his neighbors, * . : vad he s “i “ ung offer choice| nary how those to give up good hard silver for — Which fs the more meng te the world. the art ot black- ve jem all and found only one little paragraph out of the ordin- | variety of things from noodies fried|can hear a whisper at 40 feet. Per-| fried noodles and birds’ nest soup?| A fruit grows in ni smithing or the art of adding up columns cures? be Lnndee- kal Wid Was tind ht te? in eas, omelet fashion, to clear/haps they have an acousticon fit-} What is a Titschka? | called the “hung-kuo,” The woman ‘rag can cook eatable buckwheat cakes quite like- Van Clubt A th nation + partion ras anh 6 me e chicken broth with a dish of boiled| ted up in the booths. Pshaw! We forgot to ask Low) crabapple and tastes like ly cannot paint a picture ait petal ds . bec od er Of | rice on the aide ow Bung Fow has figured out| Bung Fow |sauce. The United saat | Perhaps you woul chevee the. pletare Fl sgainet the back. ,., Swine Dawes si ES Nip ade: phot We voted unanimously for the} -: -- ment of agriculture ae oo wheaters, but at ‘ agers t ane e ist have eatables, eo |= = = - | noodles and managed to stow away) I» seh lit im this country. » bot which of the two, Mr. Married Man with a wife and stx chil ih 0 Soumiecenene snaee rr Phat pd nen Bec ningit my silencio: Saeed rete big ep dren, which of the two had you rather have in your stable? place the muazie agaiast Bis breast.| 15 fouriahing in Seattle. The Why is it that the more people | polygamy was dead? Whe. all ‘ Within a few years a new dictionary will be printed which - ees a pein one ey noth-| waiters do not belong to any union. lagree with us, the more we value|’ a a shall define ignorant people as those “who are of the least comfort ne happened. oncene that he got or This is chiefly due, perhaps, to| ltheir opinions? Are You Well informed? and assistance to their immediate associates.” sant neen tes Odie te ectutl ons ook the shotgun into the! rac: that each walter owns a| Women do a lot of things them-| lg Wi c . . t ° ctual jail yard to see if it was loaded, ‘ | 7 sine silileaiibiaiinis ts m, yes. Well, give the And then the hard-working housewife will shine far brighter t share in th selves that they would cut their " ; Hfe as well as on the stage te vouch.) and both charges explodd@iiedbe firet | Certain are in tho enterprise. answers: #58 than the society leader rege _ ‘ time 1 pulled the triggei® Profits are divided every morning | best friends for doing. Pittsburg man has invented an| Which ts higher, the 7 The man with the dinner bucket who oes straight home [¢d for by Frank Conley of Deer) land no debt is permitted to rua| eee embalming fluid which you drink monument or the eapitel after his day's work, to dandle Jimmy and Suste on his foot whilst | Lodge, warden of the Montana sitniapallabiidiicciantgiiutitpids more than 36 hours. They even! Somehow, witty, sarcastic girls| before death and afterward it cakes) Who was Vasco de Gamat s he smokes his pipe, will be called wiser than the silk-hatted gem- | state penitentiary for the past 25 lhave a little box in which they are not the ones soonest married.|the remains. All that it needs to| What is bensol? eS tleman who dines in the grill room, arriving there io an auto | years. He fm at the Rainier Grand FOR new, modern turntehed roome at drop the rent money every night ch, ined make it a go is flavor ike 10-cent Is there a $3 gold plece? which bears his coat of arms. | “I saw a man rush up to a fellow! | Instead of bread, the Chinese, An experienced old bachelor of| whiskey. | What is a micrometer? | -_— an os — oom — — _ —— ——— pat tie UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY 4 VOL. 1. SEATTLE, WASH., NOVEMBER 20, 1910 i 5 es 2 — iisiehenems 3 ‘ Se a ee ————$$_____— sii HE T CONDENSED REPORT j of : RANK OF SEATTLE BANKS, ACCORDING 10 DEPOSITS Seattle National Bank SEATTLE, WASHINGTON (United States Depositary) Seattle in December, 1896, had only nine banks, with deposits aggregating $3,372,000. The Seattle National Bank at that time was at the bottom of the column with $74,739 in deposits. Today The Seattle National Bank heads the column with | Bank ‘LE, WASH., NOVEMBER 199 RESOURCES — Invites Your Attention to the Accompanying | ' Tabulation and the Splendid Show $15,730,909 in deposits, or five times the total held by all the banks | ing Made by the Banks of of the city in 1896. oe ee are ey pe i ane sy th i X E j . Onds anc remium . ti It is significant of the financial supremacy of Seattle that The ES Pariacend Mawes =. f 7 Furniture and Fixtures ...... . CALL OF NOV. 10, 1910 Seattle National Bank holds greater deposits than any other finan- Cash and Hiuchange ---... i essen ame mma cial institution west of the Rocky Mountains and north of San : OFFICERS Francisco. LIABILITIES | E, W. ANDREWS, President. The relative standing of Seattle banks, November 10, 1910, fol- | Capital Stock ea ' i J. FURTH, Chairman Board of Directors, lows in order of rank. se van Undivided Profits .... ; J. W. MAXWELL, First Vice President. rE. G. AMES, Vice President. Deposits The Table Is Made Available by Courtesy of Mr. John E. Price s aeintideneniennmiammmndneall F. K. STRUVE, Vice President. a3 ” i - ” — = = CS ED : Annual | | === = = R. V. ANKENY, Cashier. { Cash ~~ dDivi- f | ‘alt ; cus re Nat Loans and Cash and —- Reserve. dond.| | GR S. Cc. L. LAMPING, Assistant Cashier. NAME. Depostts Discounts. Investments. Capital Stock change. Per cent N i ; Q : 4 . Seattle National Bank «+ + $18,730,909.00 $ 8,929,048.42 $ 2,896,713.22 $1,000,000.00 661,705.24 36.00 20 | | vit H. C. MacDONALD, Assistant Cashier. National Bank ot ¢ jommerce coeces 11,742,935.82 8.469 7 1,940,001.28 1.000,000.90 3.742'871 80 33.00 18 Deposits increasing more than 2,400 /5m eat E m * ‘ — ¥ 5,43 200,000, 0¢ 7 ‘ 7 } C. L. LaGRAVE, Assistant Cashier Scandinavian American Bank ....... 7089 500,000.00 ren re My tg ot fourteen years tell more graphically than manye } . F yton Trust & Savings Bank ., 6,346,204.42 911 1'590'833 pa Seattle s i | WM. S$. PEACHY, Assistant Cashier, | |. $ Cnnedien Bank of Commerce ....... 4649;401 $00.7 aes Sees age | ee Sete ee ceed bon te . . ’ First National Bank 7 2,271,180 200,000.00 1,404,324.72 : ~ res financial centers of the country, Here are thed . sits in all Seattle bam? Union Savings and Trust Co ras $,004,223 455,405 ; t P+ Monies « Fie shin: sieht a ad agg ings Bao) 1,973,931.70 100,000.00 10 at the last call ‘of each year for fifteen years; lank of California ssoclation 1,951,514.36 200,900.00 7 : DIRECTORS wont Trust & a x 14d oae.40 eat 900,900.00 December 17, 1896 ....:++++ $3372 Bs nt se Aig 1,118,601.06 509.10 100,000.00 ; | “ 15. 1897 4,904,000 E. G. AMES, Northern Bank & Trust Co * '760/026.9 118.00 rete! aeretian “ 15, 1898 . 7,579,000 ‘ ; Commercial State Bank . 689,615.07 07 900'000 O( Bi 578.48 “ 1a E. W. ANDREWS, Citizens National Hani 493°104.97 ry thie 300,000.00 89,616.17 1, 1899 Deo R. V. ANKENY | aireantils B can Ban 366,721 $24,790.03 14.06 000.00 19.476 54 hd 13, 1900 16,464 ANKENY, | Moroant le Bes) B44 418.8 440,607 46,083.14 100,000.00 68,917.34 0.00 “ 10, 1901 19,669,000 r s sa a 1 . . $42,929 ‘ 291,045.66 »7 72 00,000 > 903 3 HERMAN CHAPIN, University State Bas 250,287 196,046.49 "10,880.25 76,000.00 ‘en ee ae November 15, 1902 ...+++++++2hQ@08 . i 5 Jank 71,594.30 7,100.00 § 0.00 999 é Citizen te Bank of Georgetown 144,644.06 iW beer ty Hees | 80.69 36.60 8} | ” 10, 1904 28,821,000 S. P. JOCELYN, Japanese Commercial Bank 82'528. 99 29'460.0 : ie 20.40 > 190 35,850,000 Green Lake 000.00 62,149.04 39.10 | 9, bie ‘ et ; me 61,708.24 49,856.35 000.( 31,713.25 > 7a YANIEL KELLEHER | Rainier Vall 14,961.69 29,248.30 26,000.00 Tealeae “44 be 12, 1906 . DONE J. W. MAXW ELI. Seattle Totals $60,725,786.25 $12,408,457.23 $7,265,000.00 | November 27, 1908 63,296,00 F, } TRUVE. | “ 16, 1909 Ty

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