The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 22, 1912, Page 4

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h ms ua t ‘atte —! “THE SEATTLE STAR Phone: Private © — NEY Nour ; full leased wi e of the United mm - —— Fat ~Beatile, Was aaa mater six mow. $1.8 Pach ¢ Main o400, mail, out of olty » lished Datiy by The star to be loved, but to be told that enough beyond IT am the I like not only loved; the grave.—Gcorge | Beyona 50 Years of Age | Students of the subject claim to have discovered that the ‘age woman grows more intellectually after reaching 50 than eph Cook and Prof, Shaler were among ations appear to con is large silence ave the average 1 those who thought so, and recent inves firm their opinion As women under 50 give their time largely to the rearing of children, it would seem natural that their best intellectual growth should come later. If their conditions of life were some what more ideal, perhaps everyb« at on the years beyond 50 as the period of intellectual prosperity an. Je y would ¢ Why not? The work ought to be out of the way by that tir The foolishness of youth is over, or ought to be; the time for reading, study and mental speculation is at hnad. The other side of the picture is this: That habits are fixed long before the tury line is reached, and that the man who does not kn the world of thought before 50 is unlikely to find it later; and besides that, the average man has to scratc h for a living about as hard in the tail end of his life as in the be ginning. a ROOSEVELT and Wilson Bryan and Cummins! Wilson and J: of these combinations, and a few others of a similar make a fat gentleman who plays golf feel like crawling through a keyhole? Wouldn't it? and Bryan! Wouldn't any nature Roosevelt son! Fading of a Hero | In October, 1907, the bulwark of American liberty, the New York tock exchange, shook like a reed in the wind. Brave mon turned pale before the prospect of national ruin. It was feared (hat the sun would cease to rise, the tides to ebb and flow, the crops to spring from the ground, ff anything happened to the stock exchange At the critical moment a hero stepped forth and planked down an f@mount alleged to be $25,000,000 (on good security) to save the na. tion from the threatened devastation, The hero was J. Pierpont Mor Pop—Well, Johante, how did your fame come out? Cholly—I came up here for my Johnate—Well, we beat ‘om 106 health. to 27, but we could have had seven| Hoelen—This t# not ® healthy more if de umpire hadn't favored | place for a fellow who hasn't a lot }'em. tof money. IN FAT BERTH Towne—No; Grafton doesn't work at all now Browne—He doesn't? Why, when | knew him ho seemed to be a Young man with considerable push Towno—All that's chan; now. erable pull” and doesn’t have to work He's “a young man with consid Catholic Times. 1 — lee RRR RRR ae HIS SECOND CONTACT “This isn’t the first time you have come into contact with the police?” said the lawyer sternly, to the witness. No, sir,” was the reply “What, may I ask, was the result of you “1 awoke him. He had gone to sleep on his beat eee ee eee former encounter?” Tit- Hite, Seteeeeene ee es THEY CARRY THE SIGN “1 don’t think it’s fair,” said Mra, Knagger, “that one can tell whether a woman's married or single by her title, while all men are called mister.” “Well,” answered her husband tinguish them from single ones. “married men don't ne th All you've got to do is jus ai apt hty cheer shook the land, “Bully fer Morgan, savior ot! ot Yem."—Judge. Now comes this pestilential money trust t igation, and what} UNKIND . } UP To 8i8 @o we hear? Why, Mr. Cortelyou, secretary of the asury und Roosevelt, testifies that Uncle Sam deposited $29,000,000 in Morgan's Banks the day before Mr. Morgan loaned the money (actually only $18,000,000) to the stock exchange to save the nation from utter ruin Good Lord! We could have done tt ourselves. Any time the United States ry will deposit $29,000,000 with us, we will be rea tickled to death to loan Wall street $15,000,00 on gilt-edged security. ‘And we won't ask a word of praise for our heroism, surmesimeaits CUT out the words, the theories, the side-stepping and compromising, and the c of progressivism is seen to lie in recall of the judiciary, which is packed against all progres-| sivism and in regulation of the monopolies by Uncle Sam as & competitor. Here’s a Good One--On Us Congress votes to allow American coastwise vessels to go through the Panama canal without paying tolls. Sounds good, doesn’t it? But behold the joker: All coastwise steamers are owned or controlled by the gailroads and operated in sympathy with them. Did you get it? Well, you will—IN THE SAME OLD PLACE. AFTER all, there will be a good deal of consolation for] Many insurgents in the nomination of Taft. They'll get the time of their life to swat him some swat in November. They'll miss that fun if the Chicago convention turns down Taft. Wilbur Wright’s Prediction . Never was there a closer mouth than Wilbur Wright's. A few jweeks before his death, however, he talked about the future of the hiydro-acroplane, the amphibious thing that cavorts both on the water @nd in the air. He declared that the advent of this device opened an era of safety and usefulness for his invention. He thought it likely to be used to great advantage fn naval and @oast work, including the life-saving service, for mall and light ex- — to put belated passengers aboard ship and take off those in a ry to land. He suggested it w Bess man to pull his d Over the blue waters or Mountains or by the sea be common enough for the tired busi » into his hydro-aeroplane and skim off gh the air to his summer home in the n thro He is going to do his fl @dly as he now does his motoring or motor boating,” said th pw of the fact that Wilbur Wright talked so little and will k again, it is rather interesting to have his vision of the com $mg utility of the fying machine, HARRY THAW is having a hard time recalling his In- Bane verdict. °o o °o WAIT for the big show at Baltimore! @an put up a fight like a confident democracy, o other party ° Oo ° CONGRESSIONAL judiciary committee votes unani- mously to impeach Judge Archbald. Next! eke ° THE Taft walk over at Chicago will be nothing to com- pare with the walk over Taft by the people in November. Pie SD IT’S up to Jakey Furth to extend his car line service. If he doesn’t, the council is likely to extend itself and put over @ few short-line allops. C..0O: 6 NOW approacheth the period when we try to inculcate national spirit into our 10-year-old by substituting soda crack-| ers for the firing kind. ° JACK JOHNSON, it se can legal retainers just now than pugilistic dicted for smuggling jewels. O° 0 IF Jakey Furth doesn’t come through with these street car extensions, it looks as though the council itself and come through with a few short line oe 6 TALK about patriotism! Mr. Lillian Russell No. 4 spend his honeymoon alone in the Chicago political Sta, Gosh! there’s a fellow who would enjoy red wasps, perhaps. te lees ) ° ms, et more of in good out He’s retainers, might extend convention. shower of a wedd IN THE EDITOR’S MAIL : | _ Big Sister—Willie, T want you to Dorothy—My face ts my fortune. | calla tonight. Hesaie—Who would want « bank-| Willie—All right, Dat will rupt estate? worth about two baseball Uckets, WOULD CHANGE HIS DIET “You!” snorted the rich old man; “you marry my daughter? Why, you're & beer gursler, sir!” “Yes,” replied Nervey, “bat after my marriage I'd stop all that. 1 expect to be able to afford wine then.”--Catholic Standard and Times. SOME SOCIAL STANDING “I suppose your boy at college will be home pretty soonT” “Oh, yes, we had a letter from him today. He's awfully prowd of his standing.” “Somewhere near the head of his class, eht” “Oh, no, his social standing. & seventh on the waiting let for the Grease and Gristle society! What do you think of thatT’—Cleve- |iand Plain Dealer, UNIMPORTANT Marion (Just from the tolephone)—He wanted to know if we would go to the theatre with him, and I sald we would Madeline—Who was speaking? Marion—Oh, gracious! 1 forgot to ask. —Judge. SO IT GOES “1 thought you had a trained nurse to walt on your wife’ jo I have.” “And now yon're looking for more help.” “Yes. 1 find that I have to have three or four maids to wait on the trained nurse,"--Detroit Free F WHAT GOULD HE EXPECT. | — # | He-—Then it is all over between! (¢ wife fr r your jus? in basebn | She—Why, didn’t you just tell) Frank—Sure. She put on a ball }me you had spent all the money| gown this morning and asked me | you had on me? ‘to take her to seo a ga ARISTOCRATS “Is your mother home, Bub? “No, sir, Mother is at the polic “What is she doing there’ “Furnishing bail for our chauffeur, who was arrested while taking her to town this morning.” Is your father here?” 0, sit, Father is in court.” “I see. He is helping your mother to get the chauffeur set free, “No, father has been indicted for destroying books that the govern ated in a trust busting case.” you the only child yiur 4 “No, sir. I have a sister. ents have?” “Is she at home “She's out at one of the country clubs, entertaining a French Editor The Star—1 want to cail)pliment you on the manner count your attention to the fact that some| which you a manner {n “Well, it is evid that your family belongs to our most aristocratic of the employment bureaus of this 4 you are reporting the Chi-|circle,”"—Chicago Record-Herald. city are an outrage and should have|©®6° Convention. You give th mg - — thelr licenses taken by the city, as! people the first news of anything PROVED AN OLD SAW the city has a good free bureau of of importance that happens there William H its own. Some of the private bu-| And you also give the same news|mérce banquet. ee tee oe ee eR Foous charge se such as one-third fa, s few words, while it takes the| “One time,” sald Mcllroy, “the report was circulated in a small Bhd ae teak ha ape « other papers column after column|town that Jim Smith had married for the fourt time. It caused a yen ought to look into his and to give the same news. No wonder| great deal of comment among his neighbors, one of whom said: op it, BRT ADONIOUS, | your circulation is so lar “ ‘Well, anyhow, it demonstrates the truth of an old saying,’ HENRY VINCENT ‘How do you make that out?’ he was asked Editor The Star—I want to com-| 823 Denny Way he trlumph of falth over experience Albuny Journal, ATHL NOTE,Miss Blanche Krie valedictorian of the 1012 ETICS TELLS GIRLS HOW TO WIN record during all the TeUp ed her high 6 class of the Broadway high ps pr course, ! * school, is an unusual kind of a Genter girigt on * place M S valedictorian, 80, at least, bal team schamplonahip thinks Miss Anne Paula Hur vette And she witz, a classmate of hers. Miss Re ve tennis, } Hurwite Interviewed her for loc oat oxhauat hep I The Star immediately after the cotter m.. was one of w| Graduation exercises at the ; fe tk the |The “God of Things as They Are. Coliseum Wednesday night. bts sean Se bears Tis a orwel, cruel world,” By Anne Paula Hurwitz. | ‘The sted te clang A shopper said oue day Voledictorians, if trae to reputn- fair to pen 4 costly trimmings tion, should be very serious and hehe 10 on dae the | On my bat are just plain hay, ahould take th ae or. | They should even take t ; a os Rut then, they're very stylish, Gictory addresses seriously, | And I'll leave ‘em on, 1 guess, Wherefore this ts quite refresh- (i For even if they're ‘phoney, ing as a departure from the beaten 4 | They're @ fine match for MY! pain of valedictorians dross Don't ever take too Iterally dre Th - what any one Kays, especially what bound. She Jack Binns, Please Write. & valedictorian ways. j mistaking that, Yep When the piteher and the cateher| That is what Miss Blanche Ina | says, “Don't take @ tae are thirety, is that a dry battery? (belle Krieger, valedictorian of the | dress too seriously," edletory If the sume pitcher and eatcher|1912 class of the Broadway high | How did she may . > t in the rain, would it be) school, said on the night when sh | these Uhings—end ‘tot a% tery? appre | eclve 4 her yaledictory addreus.| j well? bons And if they took that pitcher an: You see, Miss Krieger is an us| | Here i ; catcher to the warehouse, would|/ usual kind of valedictorian, A} | tion: + ys that be a storage battery? slim little maiden, a mere lip of «| 5 rere “1 studied —tt ‘ - frolicking about in the care| BEARER, RE But it mustn't PR manner of a freamman, you | ~~ Pee RLS “| gether. Take part would never dream that she was|is not only » cheerful, delightful,| pleasures and “Local |port House fer 25 commere The task for Christian art to establish brotherly orner of the! union among men.—Tolsto! youn find} Circle members. Just mi | That ke Morning, That Is the An hour We all be| Joy and pain, and sunshine and in, ral And G Life te such a cox sade up of days And never change their ways we Such a commonplace affair such a common thing— glory and some grief; And then the withered leaf— latay tn the parior wheo George! Mut just because it's common carrying with her such a big store) ph of learning as to give ber first place| ian, but in ao clans of over 300 high school sant girl, although a valedictor-| ing part in them je realty, she is also @ students’) education in ites” favorite. Which is also quite un-| And if that ts true, Slag jusual for a valedictorian. Besides! certainly hag arquired ms : ie: i, But that is not all, Mise Krieger! maintaining the highest scholarship! liberal education, i\Circle Talks oo Talks by Uncle Jack—Their Interesting Nature. you had better Some- Boys and giris, | keep an eye on the Circle. thing big Is coming off. Get your friends to join the Cir Just call their attention to it and they'll never forget to look for trade eats at th’ Booleys| ie | cents @ meal, but Over 1,000 con 80 conte tributions are re-| celved to each ontest. Contests! are held weekly. | the farthest | They all belong to it. | in one family! that take The} Star, and who} have five chil! Gren, every one} ef the children have membership) cards to the Circle, The Circle is the only column of) that's all| its kind in the country. ft oftere| cash prizes weekly to boys and girls. Write to Uncle Jack, In care of The Star, for a membership card. mit is 16. There is no charged. ‘py on in « circle and night © know road we go. of happy springtime can live « bit 04's love over it CIRCLE Next Contest on Circle—$1.50 Prize Offered. What is the Circle? Why do you! | like it, boys and girls? Have you fany suggestions for its improve } ment, tf It cau be Improved? If you jcan answer all these questions, Cirelo members, you're a likely didate for a cash prize of on lar and fifty cents LEONA LANTERMAN. A photo that was awarded a prize in the Phot Conan z closed last night. This pretty miss is an Anacortes it given to the boy or gir - IN A EAT LITTLE PINS po best manuseript on Circle. subject. To answer t ee WINNER | BOY PXVELOPEALL SCENTED WITH | yo att know, or should bt HERE’S WINNER | BOY WINS ONE ° le | ; a | re PERFUME CAME A NOTE TO bevel ior k ae the This Girl a Prize Winner—is One| Buckley Boy Wins One P THE EDITOR; 1T READ, WILL | | not cuch @ nap. There of Brightest Members | Photo Next Week. 4 You KintDIN TELL ME, IF THE | |! ths great, great world tt be-|_Let us introduce Mary Ann Mac-| One of the three pra |yond improvement t the great! Donald, an enthusiast ar Circle! photo contest was Wom NSTERS GOT STEWED WOULD] ost of heads can get toge and} mber living at| Robertson, jr, a Buckley Bor }improvement is ensily beyond 718 " 3 ¥ to. ‘this THE CoRN- seer? » ~ | 715 28th ay, S.| was unable to publish it ‘ them. The third question is of the} Mary Ann te one} but It will be printeddneall a more {mportance. ybe Uncle Te en winneral enchec:” Se GET out AN extra! Jack's way of viewing things Is a ar Chres|has been snail ae s og that runs out of harmony with offered for] mn ny er © his con ened Holes Thrown In, an test it al boys and o) stow much Swiss cheese do 7 There are many way to “josh” 9/8! e and send your clos.| sell for twelve pfennig?y q }bachelor, but to get a real langh|*mendments and answer the other She| “Fifty grams.” ‘ from him gay “marriage testion The letters must And for fifteen eos e not contain over 150 w and Also fifty grame, bat | In Pawn. jmust be written neatly in ink. Be ard for|a large hole besides: | why are you crying, my Mttle| | eee Lobe dopa pau Pau ion many months and ac | “My dad has gone home.” | ey nce gue her yl aca yanks high| Pennsylvanian bas torent | “Well, why you go after] *riday event moe ‘ Hbutors,| trap nest that tells which # him?" | 9-YEAR-OLD | Ann is 13 years of Hor| hens lays which eggs. Get The waiter w let me go; my prize is awaiting her at The Star| Well, then, the trap Rest / aad, alee forgot to p eggon WRITES POEM octftice. eact nthe hen that lalé | The poem which ie printed be Contract Not Yet Awarded. tow was contributed to the Circle Soctety Reporter—1 hear that you| by Miss Marie Happy, a nine-year Tested the Whole Worl ' © mak s to get married in|old Pacific schoo! student | . a w his « | WHat | Love and through three generations Beecham's Pills are Count Nogoodsky—Ah, what shall, j.16 to wander on the grass in| versally looked upon as the best preventive and correctiv® | say? Making xo plar No a : | of disorders of the organs of digestion and elimination evet | ae what you| And hear the dbws that soft winds known, They give speedy relief from the headaches, souf Sbay—taking se entizistes Judie, bring stomach, indigestion due to biliousness or constipatia® | I love to wateh the white e in| [eR RR ee ee! o sky ] 5 * |) And ol the sweet breeze as it] | Juror'’s Nap on Train Causes *| s by * Mistrial of Lawsuit. w ilo mell the flowers # NEW YORK, June 22— {19 an ee are no experiment. They are too well known for “= Doe Pert lootin iaeer is nrerint. Sit love to ave the brooklet flow, — | and their mild and gentle, but sure action om * case ew x, we c Through field and wood and{ bowels, liver, kidneys and stomach, too well a nal case In Newburg, went to * i A * sleep on a train and was car *| meadow If you are out of sorts take at once this amos * ried out of the state, he caused %|! love to see birds in k remedy and you will endorse the good opinion cof thot * a mistrial and the case will be #|And watch the squir run swift he—-ou aie Ss hy Beecham’s Pills so & Scart caste | > ow | sands—you will know why Beecham'’s * Mr. Graebner was permitted #|1 love to go to the woodland bov:ers | R F too ‘home Retureing vee AlAud watch the lets aot wane! Mave Unequaled Reput * terday morning he fell asleep #/ flowers. [9 Sold everywhere, 10c., 28, The directions with evare box point out theroed * on an Erle train and was car. #|I love to hear the Little broo’, sing | , * ried to Paterson, N. J. As he #|As it tells of the beauty of glorious SULTS ; * had been out of the state, & spring. S 7 7 ES! * under the law the case could & MARIE HAPPY STAR WANT ADS BRING RESUL — * not go on. * - ——— * | Ta ttssenesatnay/HONORABLE MENTION | lotel Milwaukee Ho Struck, Neverthele Seven on Hanor Ref in Picture oO e ‘ 4 “I met your father last evening , esbion aia A Now tMotet, © entratly Hecated { and spoke to him about our being] Although not winners in the|fl wot and cote Over 490,000 ‘Worth of Stab Gale ” married photo contest, the following boys aunee Did ho strike you favorably?” |and girls’ contributions are worthy|f xtecteie Lente mee “Well, not exactly favorably, but}of honorable mention - Single Rooms, per week . .. ong 4 rather accuratel Judge “3 Room and Bath, per week f ¥ vuce@ Evadne Sephton, Edmonds, IN complete* 2 é Henrietta Cameron. rveny e Inspect thts hotel — Everything 008 © Swedish Club's Annual Mid-| Bessie ay. BOOM beautiful lobby and correspondence summer Plenie at Fortuna Park on] Albert Hansen, . ; i Sunday, June 23, will be the event] Betty Cameron. CORNER SEVENTH AND KING of the season, Hverybody in-| Hugh Moore, Woodinville. $10,000 Dining Room In Connection Phones: Ind ove | vitea, Grace Jones, Eyerett.

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