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THE SEATTLE STAR Phone: Private Exchange Matin 9400. ” aR OF THE SCHIPES NORTHWrsT EEAGEE oF NEW PRR Lt per having full lensed wire mews service of the Unit second-class twa aix mos $1.80 tice © six moe. Main 9100. Try It On the Baby Well, well, Dr. Harvey Wiley, our old pure food friend, is father of a 152-ounce boy, and Harvey has got it all figured out how that boy will be raised, “Our child,” bubbles the doctor, “ literally. He will not be weaned until he is 15 or 18 months old. He will not be given fruit until after he is three years old. His clothes will be very few and very simple. One of the earliest lessons will be on thrift, and he will not be allowed to spend his pennies.” Ob, Doctor, Doctor, how familiar this sounds! Papa always starts out by resolving that sonny shall have naught but pure food, and every sonny manages to consume his portion of mud Often, often, we heard announcements that baby wouldn't is to be a pure food baby I And just to think of no fruit until three years old! vetoed that No orange, no banana, no taste of preserves, Why, Doc, we'll bet a No. 8 nursing bottle that you'll be beggin for “just a little bite” of fruit for that blessed John Harvey Wiley before he’s two years old Very few and simple clothes, too. Oh, man, man, you see the many and elaborate duds it will take to “ j clothe” that youngster But the lesson on thrift is.all sound policy a yard wide, doc tor. Make him save his pennies. Get him one of those eute little banks that no one save papa can open! It will come in so en LORS wait till)” properly . 7 ¥ “| a e house to | until you've been shown te your pat when there isn’t exact change in the house t pay the milk- soomiran then Tt can't be Waipba? man or the laundry lady There is positively no trait that} should be more rooted in children than that of putting their] Letters, pennies in a bank that they cannot open We have own ae Ce oays he is 6 man of tt parents to foolishly neglect this, to their great sorrow | Motts—Sure he is, Hoe is M T, But seriously, doctor, isn’t your angelic theory of raisin he is N V 8, he is O D 8 and he fn! kid a good deal of a hoax? How were you started off? You EZ. have a fine mind, a courageous heart, and a great big, honest, j Get Whee. wholesome body. You can take and give hard knocks. Life, We envy men who've risen high, accord to the doctors, is pretty much a strug for immunity And talk about thelr luck; from ms of one sort or another and the wonder is that so ~ Ae rn ¢, too, if you'll try— many prove fit to live. Would you be what you are today,) poate: Papa Wiley, had you been cradled under gauze, been pasteur ehh and sterilized and formaldehyded to the lin and filled * * ales and rot + shen rer / * THE WAITER'S REDUKE, # pacer * Sime—While in Paris I pa Blessed is the lot of the man who can look upon his new! 1% $3.75 ta tipe alone , gon, raise his right hand and swear just how he is going to feed, : — Pye me sno him for con't $60 pn the Salona) COm)i~% Walter (sesisting bim on * . . 4c ane a 4. « _ breach of promise balen to beautify our cities T" « with hie cont) You must clothe and fashion him. Beautiful are such castles ot fnther- 1" iasle—Vens the peer em ‘niet “fm decp into tt niready pyle Non, eae cot a , hood, but just a few whiffs of time and those castles fall off into/ot a diamond, and she sald it was| wife haa painted a spray of flowers |® years, sir! —Tit-Bits * the unknown like the gossamer seed pods of the dandelion.}#o sudden on our ash barrel.” * * Infant human nature is anything but a machine, and it takes a HER REAL VEARNING CAUSTIC COMMENT Pee eee eee ee ee ee h mighty busy papa to make it go as suc Who is this Dr. Spitzka, anyway ? nights weighing mascu and fen avers that “the female brain is usw i smaller frontal lobe,” f which ne brains and characterized deducts ily he shrewdly that “women will never be the equal of man in abstract mental con-/ ception 23 That is the reason, perhaps, that you sometimes see a lazy] ‘Pusband + COrner grocery, while his wife is engaged in the concrete propo- “sition of taking i in washing to support him ee RR KK tk tk ee ® | narrowly escaped a water famine a *\ few months ago. * “% NEWTON JOHNS, ig errr rrr er ery * Have the members of the council THE BOY WHO TRIED bod on are playing with our Uves and property already forgotten that? Years were spent by engineers of undoubted ability in testing and | Wonde: tu! stories we read and) ening n It ts time now to butid Of heroes, who lived and died. et Suh an be Gackreated But | co not sing of the heroes old, *E sing cf the boy who tried; Of the bey who tried to do his best | Him crea report of the three engineers waa | ageinet the present site. pe a noe end. death were | . This fs not true, They reported Who, ‘pia ging Into the waters | that the site was good and that the | type of dam being built (solid) masonry) was all right These were the only que ons |they were asked to decide, but they went further and said that possibly | Risked rt life, thie lad so bold. That others might not die. ‘Many a home is glad today, jan earth and rock dam at some| {With loved ones side by side jother site MIGHT do and MIGHT i That would have been dark with! pe cheaper, and recommended that sorrow now ‘ . another expensive comission én HIE this brave boy had not tried. | Sestigate these questions which| May he always and ever do his! were really all settled long ago. But a brief delay now will mean |a whole season, practically a whole} | 8 This we with the heart of gold, Im the bottle of life may he staand | year lost in construction, and dur for the right, ing that another flood may | TH the better country greets his!dq what last one threatened, | “ jbring us a real water famine with! In the iand were they grow not old.) its danger to Hfe and property AH. | ‘how good his motives, , | any vho makes delay now. is Editor The Star The present! taking bis chan Cedar rver dam is getting old We the dam NOW Lowest Fares East VIA THE “MILWAUKEE” FROM ALL POINTS IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST Atlantic City, N. J. $111.00 Philadelphia 108.50 Boston 3 $110.00 Pittsburg 91.50 Buffalo . 91.50 Rochester, N. Y. 96.30 Chicago . 72.50 St. Louis 70.00 Detroit .. 82.50 St. Paul 60.00 Minneapolis » 60.00 Sioux City, ta. 60.00 Montreal .. - 105.00 Washington 107.50 New York ; 108.50 Winnipeg, Man. -e» 60.00 ND MANY OTHER por THROUGHOUT THE EAST. TICKETS WILL BE ON SALE June 1, 6, 7, 8, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 2 », 27, 28, 29. July 2, 3, 7, 11, 12, 16, 16, 20, , OL. ; August 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 12, 15, 16, 22, 23 September 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 11, 12, 30. All tickets good for return until October 31, 1912 Liberal stopover privileges and choice of diverse fered. fares routes are of Return may be made through California at slightly higher For adidtional information fares, routes, sleeping car res train service, call on or address A. P. CHAPMAN, Jr. J. L. CRISWELL, Gen. Agt. Pass. Dept City Ticket Ag nt. Second and Cherry, Seattle, : THE NEW LINE IS THE SHORT LINE, regarding rvations, CHICAGO MILWAUKEE 4 pYGET SOUND “The New Steel Tra” pewritiig-& Bookkeepin ‘|: theltvatl To wells School: Tourth & Pine ies. | Re weaned until 15 or 18 months old, but something has usually no nibble of apple | He has been sitting up solemnly | by a} discussing abstract problems of the universe at the} THE STAR—THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1912. Apthles osm, \/SE. Het made $500 out of the “Dees your course of home read- chicken business ing inelude the profane authors? She—Did you? “No, I don't need ‘em. I belong _He—Yes; I stayed out. to a golf club “THE FAN'S MISTAE NATIONAL CAMPAIGN “The Becleysport House has solid walnut bedesteads in every room. l¢ | However, you don’t find this out The Vital Question. | | Little Beasie-—-How will I know when I'm naughty? Mother—Your conscience will tell } You, dear. Little Beasio—I don't care about | what it tells me—will It tell you?— | Chicago Examiner. Knew Him. Bacon——what would you do if I sent you a message by wireless? If you nent it, | suppose I'd to pay for it.-Yonkera States | ehhh aa teks thee e * LONG NEEDE ® Knicker-—So Jones bas a H ® great invention? * * Bocker--Yes; an umbrella & % that retains the finger print — * * Now York Sun. CREASARER SHREK GEN. MILES WRITES STORY OF ‘BLOODY ’¢ MOST DREADFUL YEAR IN NATION’S HISTO} (Editor's Note: Thie Decoration day marks the semi-centennial of | He tinaliy cronsed and gue the most dreadful year in American history, bloody "62 of the civil w but the renuit of the The 1861 preliminaries of the great conflict were skirmishes; 1862 | disaster to his army, hea brought fire and death and woe to North and South and filled Ar lost 12,000 mem, the cometeries with the flo of the nation’s youth, Gix great batt 4,000. Two days later te a total toll of 132,000 dead and wounded, The camps were filled with |army recronwed the river ay men dying of exposure and disease. Gen, Nelson A. Miles, in the follow. into winter cenriane iets ing article, written especially for The Star, tells the story of the great wide was replaced campaign of that fearful year.) Hooker And #0 ended BRR RR Re me # |i bloody year of * WHAT NORTH AND SOUTH LOST IN ‘62 *| * The combined losses of the North and South io killed and * & wounded in the big battles of 1862 are as follows * * Shiloh (Pittsburg Landing), Tenm., April 67—~19,927 men, V stom . Seven Days’ Battle, Va., JuneJuly—-86,739 * * Manassas (second Bull Run), August 24-30-—19,200 * * Antiotam, Sept. 17—22,891 * “Ask You ) * Frederipksburg, Dec, L114-—16,638, * ' * Btone River Tenn—18,772. * , pesto: * Total, 182,167, » | Afraid to use hair * * | Don’t know Re ttt Then why not doctor? Isn’t your it? Ask him ad he Ayer’s Hair Vigor hair, dandruft, fale jap and dressing. : in his advice, knows what is best, BY NELSON A, MILES Lieutenant General United States Army. (Copyright, 1912, by the Newspaper Enterprise Ass’n.) It ts just a half-century since the desperate and bloody campaigns) of 1862, when the civil war became a terrible reality to every man and woman ip the nation. The generals of the North and south had passed early winter in organization ot the fall of 1861 and the and in laying plans, When the campa opened, the Confederate lines stretched from a., in the Enet, across Virginia, Central K across the Mississippi and through Missourt to the 1862 West. The Confederates had two main armies, One, commanded by Gen. Joseph FE. Johnson, in front of a Washington, with Stonewall Jackson In the Shenan doah valley; the other, under Gen. Albert Sydney Johnson, in Central Kentucky The Federals, under Gen. Me lan, occupied the defenses of Washington; while Gen. Buell faced the } Confederate position in Kentucky. A part of Gen Halleck’s army was near Paducah and Cairo ‘ Gen. Halleck directed Gen, Grant to take his men RetailE and some gunboats, under Commodore Foote, pro ceed up the Cumberland and capture Forts Henry and Donaldson. The comb bined land and naval forces attacked Fort Henry on February 6, and after « short engagement the fort surrendered Grant instantly moved across to Fort Donaldson After severe fighting, Grant was asked for terms of surrender. He replied In his famous note: “No terths Opposite | at ' except unconditional and immediate surrender.” The a GEN, MILES fort, with 40 guns and 11,500 men, surrendered, Mat Gea. Grant then advanced up the Tennessee river to Shiloh. In wepptie ey: Rote the meanwhile, Gen. Halleck bad been placed in supreme command Phone M. 16% in the West, He directed Buell to join Grant. The Confederate Gen. i Jonson, having united } forces with those of Beauregard, decided to attack the Unio my before the arrival of Buell, With about 40,000 jmen and 100 guns he marched towards Shiloh General Johnson was killed; the|Lee was assigned to the attack was for a moment checked, |ate command. Confeder THE LIQUOR but soon renewed, and the Federals} Maenwhile Stonewall Jackson, in wore at last driven back to the bad begun bis campaign in CURED iriver. During the night Grant was Shenandoah valley. He moved . theavily retnforeed by Buell, Helrapidly from one point to another thelt lives sues a i forward and finally drove and strack and defeated the sca!-|and indirect peter the Confederates back tered commands ot Milroy, | Habit than from war, General Halleck joined the army | Schenck, Banks and Fremont. His tile The ravages soon afterwards, and raised it tolsuccesses spread consternation in| White Plague has 100,000 men. He then began his|the North. [tire nation into @ migh advance against Corinth, and Gen-| Lee moved across the Chickahom-| stamp it out, yet the Lee eral Besuregard withdrew, surren-jiny river in June, joined Jackson,| destroys many mone jdering the most important ratiroad|and assaulted with success the| year than does Tul running at and weet that the/right wing of the Union army at} Confederates then held, The with-| Mechanicsville and Gaines Mills { drawal opengd t Misslasippi to|These and the following desperate WE Cam CURE You THE LIQUOR HABIT DRUGS - Federal gunboats as far south as | engagements were what are known Vicksburg as “The Seven Days’ Battle Before In July Grant relieved Halleck | Richmond,” in which the right and the Confederate army came|flank of the Union army was turn-| Come and see us. C under the command of General!ed, tts depot of supplies destroyed, Bragg, who moved his forces tolits line of communication cut, Its] SWICK “S Chattanooga. base changed, and the siexe of A cavalry force under General| Richmond raised. Lee had, with| 2815 1st Ave, Morgan cut Buell's railroad com-| munications north of Nashville, and, the same audacity which he after- wards so often displayed, boldly raiding through Tennesses and) assumed the risk of crushing disas- Kentucky, reached the Ohio river|ter in order to defeat his enemy and spread consternation in thejon the field of battle. North He wes one of those great indlgcetloa tts Rosecrans relieved Buell in Octo- ber and moved towards the Confed erate forces near Murfreesboro De- cember 30. During the three suc- captains who have realized that success on the battlefield is the one military essential on which depend all other considerations. dyspepsia. One dose of Scotch g the impression that the} Caroline-—-My! I'd just like to Pathetic. see my name in print “You cant alt up with my Pauline—-Yes, expecially in the! Slim—lan’t sho a dream? daughter after eleven o'clock.” marriage Heonse columa. Slam—Yes, An idle dream. “Would you mind telling her that, sir? I have been trying to get TRYING TO OBEY ORDERS home early for six months Life. He was a budding author, and his wife, determined that his train = of thought should not be trammeled by domestic worries, said to the Her Education. |new maid; Mra. Dashaway--How long had Now, Jane, If you want anything, always come to me. Never go|you known your husband before to Mr. Bookmaker unless I am out.” A few days Inter there was a knock at Mr. you were married? Bookmaker's study| Mrs, Goagge--1 didn't know him door, and in response to the usual “Come!” the new maid, fresh and/at ali. I only thought I did —Phila- | pretty, appeared. “Please, sir,” she said, “Mrs, Bookmaker said I was|delphia Record ne ver to disturb you unless she was out.” “Well? said Mr. Bookmaker, inquiringty, “She's out, sir.""—-Lippincott’s Magazine SERRE RR ERE RHEE * * | — * THE BETTER PLAN, * RRA RAD Re RR ee |e “Gind we met you. Our boy * * #|* Stanley insists on marrying * * A SUGGESTION . #|* that chorus girl, I shall cut *® * One of the hundred or more poems about the Titanic & | dim off absolutely, and you * & aster recelved by The Star voices the rofrain that there are “no #|* a” tell him so." *) *® icebergs in beaven.” It may be suggested that there are no ice #|*% The family lawyer: “I know * & bergs in the other place, elther—-Kansas City Star, #|* 4 better plan than that ris * SCHRHKHRKAHRHAHHHRAHHRAERNKRAD |* tell the girt.” ndon Opinion. * EEE “How in it I never hear you say a word about your old college da: OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE SAY, EVERETT, MAYaS you HAVE A BOOK COULD BORROW. 1 HAVENT A BLAMED THING TO READ. “The college I went to didn’t have & very good baseball team.” ville Courier | Louis. venenel . AT THE THEATRES THIS WEEK. Moore—Dark Seattio—Dark Metropolitan—Blanche Bates in “Nobody's Widow.” Orpheum—Vaudeville. Emprese— Vaudeville. Pantages—Vaudeville. Grand—Vaudeville and motion pictures || Clemmer—Pholtoplays and vau- I] devitte. Melbourne—Photoplays and vau- OH! YOU WANT ANOTHER BOOK OF MINE TO FREEZE ONTO 00 You? Why Waste Time With Impossible Methods?— Breathe Hyomei and Ca. | tarrh and All Its Disgus ish, There is only one way to cure ca | tarrh, | Reach the raw, tender membrance that 1s infe: inflamed sted with ca- structions for use, costs $1.00, Extra bottles, if afterward required, 50 cents, at druggists everywhere, “It would be a good deal mi “to out it up into billiard ball © profitable,” John," said Mrs, Dorkins, —Chicago Tribune, - ing Symptoms Will Van-) tarrh germs, and destroy the germs You can’t reach the nooks and| | ere: with liquid preparations, jand water won't «o down the wind. | plpe—you know that, ‘There ts only one way—breathe the antiseptic germ killing air of HYOMEL (pro. |nounce it High-o-me) directly over the infested part HYOMET contains no oplum, eo Jeaine or other harmful drugs; it in | made of Australian eucalyptus, thy. mol and other Listerian antisepties, - a lane ———-«/ It will end the misery of catarr SOL ID IVORY croup, coughs, colds and ¢ rama “Yes,” confessed Mr. Dorkins, “it serves me right. | enga Geathoss, St-used as directed man to move our goods and | forget. te ask hin how much ie or Shai om be py, a + ik np edgy ae charge me for the job. If ever "bottle of HOMIE ces eee can have my head fora football” |” “won ® thing again, Maria, you a bottie of HYOMEI und simple In: joowding days the two armies were Finally, at Malvern Hill, July 1, Re tlocked in the mutual embrace of the Union army was drawn up in a sanguinary battle. Neither side|strong defensive position Lee} w : won decided advantage. On the|again attacked, but was repulsed. | Yul ,c°pe indigeetinns ie jfourth day the Confederates with-| Richmond should bave been cap- Ouse OF jdrew and went into winter quar-/tured the following day, but orders ters. Rosecrans occupied Mur|were given for the atmy to fall| {2 het eed |freeaboro back to Harrison’s Landing. and guarantesd In the East McClellan wan or-| Lee moved northward towards SCOTCH dered In the spring to move against | Washington, fully appreciating the | Richmond For months he had/| moral effect victories would have jbeen perfecting the organization of|on the North. General Pope was the Northern armies and studying|in command in northern Virginia. |plans of campaign |Lee was upon him before he could | When within seven miles of|be reinforced and crumpled up his Richmond he was attacked at Sev-}army by a series of maneuvers and 50c RE AT Per sooo 8 en Pines and Fair Oaks, but the |engagements in which Jackson dis | Confeder: were defeated, and /| played hia ius, Marching entire- their commanding general, Johnaon,|!¥ around Pope's army, Jackson was severely wounded. General/captured the Union supplies at sn cacilitiitinniyidiitilaaietiat by istol and Manssas, and joined ® on Pope's right flank. To- y wn The they presented a united Sock Ke mt to Pope's scattered corps and 74) won an easy victory the second At Fountains, ¥ or Klnewhere | Manassas and at Chantilly. Get Ge ‘rederick McClellan had the ae : Junusual luck to get Lee's pls Original ona Genuine pty Blac oe HORLICK’S ©" 14 and again at Antie MALTED MILK tam on the 17th, catching Lee [north of the Potomac. This was| the bloodiest day of the war—more jmen were killed and wounded on | that day than on any other day of lthe great conflict. The Confeder- Othathare Imitationd jntes had exhausted their last re. The Food Drink for All A; es serve, and nearly all their ammu-|f} Green Lake, Rich Milk, Malt Grata Bxtract, ition. he ater owder At this point McClellan was re- Milk T i} liesee 40 command by General Not in Any rus’ Burnside, who marched to Freder- +“ be » |icksburg here the army halted, Insist on “HORLICK’S’ | on ‘the north bank of the Rappa Take « package home hannock awaiting pontoon trains. There 1s no worre danger when < the kidneys are wenk than the big| Ofte Acid Causes Some of |. to am family of “uric acid troubles,” and| the Worst Aches and | Midzess, ‘© ain os J |80, when you notice that the kidney Ills of H bl ome Persons having & te jsecretions have been much disor-| bs umanity. to form unusual 1 for a time, do not be surprised on begin to have rheumatic uscles and joints, nerve pains and acid should try Doan’s, of relief in many rheumatism, ™ Mh nervousness, headaches and dtaul ‘ lumt ste., that ness, heart weaknes nd dropsy, hoo crentennale . attacks of stone and gravel, deaf Doans K’idney: Pils peas and poor eyesight 4 people po endors py 8 le The filtering of uric acid trom ontorest the system falls upon the kidney EATTLE and if the kidneys.are inactive, uric S , acid overloads the blood. Instead Mra. A. Cones of nourishing the tissues, the blood road, Seattle, Wash, 9 }Starves and irritates them ment I gave for | Uric acid has the habit of attack peat? 3 ns ing the weakest part first, A brain recomsseaeeaa Pills, after they had sh worker will have nerve trouble or rheumatism. A strong, healthy ap ber of my family of pearing son will be lable to still holds good, The oat | gravel, or stone, heart trouble, drop. took this remene ay or gout | he and has Acute uric acta attacks with awful oe pa of pains often follow exposure, wet plaint. Doan's Kidney weather, overuse of alcohol, over depended upon to © [work, ovérexercise or excesses of S ties arising from any sort, | “1 believe 1 shall faint!” | neys. @ ; When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name” DOAN’S KIDNEY PIL Sold by all Dealers. Price 50 cents, Foster-Milburn Co,, Ss albaaae N. Ys ey