The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 11, 1912, Page 4

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jeaitla, Waals pe y, ike per a to ale moe. The talent of success is nothing more than doing what you can do well, and doing well whatever you do,—Long fellow, | Sarrounding Him “When a question is up,” says Nominee Woodrow Wilson, *f listen to all the arguments and then argue it-in my own pind.” : j * We imagine that these few words describe Mr, Wilson's tharacter pretty thoroughly, and why isn’t his plan a pretty good pne for all of 8 who haven't such a big thing as the presidency Btaring us in the face, but who are apt to decide our little per- sonal propositions on impulse and without analysis of facts and ronditions? It means to think before we act, but most of us pass upon the small details, which really go to make up life, without con- pideration of circumstances or results. A fellow, maybe a per- Bon whom we dearly love, says something that we do not like, fand we at once try to “give him worse than he sent.” A busi- hess associate seems to take some advantage of us, and we re- ve to “lay.for him” ever after. Things go wrong in our house, nd, instead of trying to set them right, we storm and cus Nothing is much truer than the saying that most of our troubles never happen. Yet we forget that life is pretty much all con- fention and that the best way to contend with things or people fs with calmness and sense. The fellow who hears all the arguments, the $n his mind, and then decides as conscience dictates feels satis fied even if he sometimes has to feel uncomfortable, chews COL. TEDDY must have chuckied over his paper at breakfast this morning when he read that the lowa state convention had left state re blicans free to vote either for him or Taft. If all the other progres five states do likewise, the new party may gobble up the old one before the race is run. “LI'L ARTHA” JOHNSON, who opened a gorgeous Chicago cafe fast night, may have some road to travel before he'll be acknowledged Bs a champion restaurant proprietor. Bigger Than a Senatorship Massachusetts now has the senatorial primary, and Louis DP. Brandeis is talked of as successor of Murray Crane. The two facts go together, Without the primary, Brandeis wouldn't even be mentioned. It would be impossible for a man of his Rype to get any votes in the legislature under the old system of machine rule, with the machinery owned by the interests. It would be a good thing for Massachusetts to send Bran- Weis to the senate. It is not, however, of great consequence Yo Brandeis himself. As a private citizen he weighs more than @ carload of Murray Cranes. Anyone who has ever heard him hurling the thunder at a public hearing, with Crane and others of his kind shriveling up im their chairs before him,| must realize how little senatorial toga would add to the Stature of a real statesman, patriot and lover of his kind. THE prohibition party may not be able to win out strong at the }just before the | Mise Dillpickies Bullds a House v Just at present a look Into our home at the family around the evening lamp reminds you of © called meeting of bank directors bank |s going to fail We are trying to figure whether we can pay for our out new IN CHICAGO ie, but it has as lovely a time in convention as any other political nization. Clinton Howard, the “little giant” of the party, roasted ‘Taft and Wilson and Roosevelt so well at Atlantic city yesterday that he’s being boomed for the presidential nomination. G. O. P'S new meaning: Good-by, Old Work World. Party. —New IT is a wise that knows his own party.— Columbia State. WOULDN'T the Colonel make a dandy um; home team?—Memphis Commercial Appeal. republican WHEN Tom Platt made Roosevelt vice president he cer- Yainly had no conception of what he was starting —Chicago News. co ‘She is a mean, hateful thing.” “How sot “She looks down on me, just be cause she Kets a fow dollars more a month tn alimony than I do.” OF course there will be some objection to a third party| #% ‘on the ground that two is all the country can stand.—Detroit News. WHILE political conventions are seething the real saviors ‘of the country keep busy in the factories and on the farms.— Toledo Blade. THE present desperate illness of the G. O. P. elephant is easily attributable to being overfed with peanut politics. — Kansas City Star. IN the interest of public morals it is to be hoped that our puthorities will not permit an exhibition of the Chicago fight pictures in the movies. THE Man on Horseback was an important personage once, but he has left his job since the Man on the Steam-Roller put in &n appearance. —Milwaukee Sentinel. SENOR OROZCO will tell you that nothing is more dis- fouraging than to have a personally-conducted revolution com pletely overshadowed by a mere presidential contest.—Los An- geles Express. J. PIERPONT MORGAN paid $10,000 last week for John Bunyan’s copy of “Foxe's Book of Martyrs.” flew weeks.—Kansas City Star. : I He may find this} more cheerful reading than the political news during the next | “War is bell.” “Well, don't ra! here.” MENTAL RACE SUICIDE » any war around Seattle, Mon. and Tues., July 15 and 16 Tents Vitehed »* wourth Ay. and I anchard <1. Nene Washington Hotel FREE CIRCUS STREET PARADE 10:30 A. 9 Bands, 250 Horses °°" ante eae 400 people of all climes in native costumés will be shown in parade, Percy Pettipate--With me wish was father to the thought Dolly Dill--Your wish has a very small family, the Signature Covered a Lot of It Two shows daily—afternoon at 2, night at 8, doors open de Naa 7 p.m, Waterproof tents. Admission 25 cents to yes Advance Seat Sale at Gaten’ Jewelry Store, 1320 Second Av. om mornings o formancen, ‘ “Who was John Hancock?” “One of the early space writers,” | THE STAR—THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1912. After Mer Own Design, Showing What a Bright Giri Gan Do When She Has Full Swing, BY FRED 8 OHAEFER, “What Style of Architecture lv That—Coptic or igorrote?” }house without mortgaging the fur juitore in our oi4. The new place is nearty ready and we have already on eongratalated im the local pa per on our “palatial d@welling on Chow Chow street, which will be soon ready for occupancy by the owner, Mr, Briney Dilipiekles, the well-known fron molder, and his intoreating popular family.” Outwardly we may be choorful and the envy of all, but in our bosoms wo know it Is going to be half ra Hone until we snake up for the “ex tras” on the house, The extras are the things you didn’t think of before the builder set bis price, They are bunched under + head of “Ad denda” on the specifications. While he shack waa building I pat on enough Addenda to have made a palace on the Rhine eligible for an apartment house. Moat of them were suggested by the sub-contract ore—the cement worker, the mason, the plasterer, the tile man, the hardware man, the electrician, the painter and the plumber. And the house needed them, too, because sotnehow I hadn't thought of every: thing whon | was drawing the plans. After which I also had to have a fence built and « lawn I came near being Mattered about the house, though. A wealthyJook ing gentioman fm an automobile topped and stared at the house bard as can be, Secing mo out he politely asked, curiosity, Mies, but who the architect of that structaref* “Of course, I was too modest to say the |design was all my own, and sald that the drawings had been given us by a friend, “Well.” be sald, | what I wanted to know te, what style of architecture is thet—Coptic jor Igorrote?” I always thought tt was some style of arehitectare, bat I hadn’ guessed either of thone two. Odd, linn’t it? AT THE THEATRES THIS WEEK. Moore—Thurlow Bergen Players in “The Lottery Man.” Metropolitan—Dark, Seattio—Dark. Orphoum—Vaudevitle. Emprese—Vauderilie, Pantages— Vaudeville. Grand-—Vaudeville and motion pictures. Clemmer—Photoplays and vau- deville. Melbourne-—Photopiays and vau- deville. How to Keep ane | Young and Attractive! The way to ward off old age is not to fear it, not to allow one's self to be oppressed by the dread of advancing years. Use only legiti- mate preventatives and avold try ing experiments with preparations not indorsed by physicians, An en tirely safe and Very effective way to keep the complexion young-look- ing and beautiful is to apply ordi nary mercolized wax at bedtime, using it like cold cream, waatitng it off tn the morning. This gradually absorbs the withered, faded cuticle, which is replaced by the more youthful, pink-tinted underskin. One ounce of this wax, to be had at any drug store, is enough to completely rejuvenate a worn-out complexion Wrinkles and flabbiness of cheek and chin, the first signs of advance. ing age, may be lessened by a sim- ple, harmlews preparation made by dissolving an ounce of powdered saxolite in a half pint witch hazel. It {9 nsed as a face bath.—Advt Ralph Krows Electric Co. Retail Everything Electrical. 316 UNION STREET Opposite Postoftice, Main 1634, Fans Fans Fans Sell you a new one or repalf the old one, FLATIRON REPAIRS “My heart, dear girl, ls all on fire for you,” Ing voloe the ardent She answored: “Henry, much prefer A man who early hustles out of 1 would And lights the furnace-fliames of heart and soul Don't warm the feet up like a bunch of coal.” “I can't go to the masquerade, 1 atutter too muc! “Well, Just make up ke a soda fountala. Kipling gets $10 a word for his stuff.” “Well, I once got 200 pounds for 4 word, but I didn't know It, for my wife only weighed 120 the The Herald, a repubiican paper of Dighton, Kan., was forced recent- ly to use « whole page of eulogy about Woodrow Wilson because a ow blockade delayed the arrival of the boilerplate from republican hoadquartgrs, Mr, Finger Is a grocer at au Lac, Wis, and he has daughters, Iva and Pointa, Fon two Mary Figg and were married ree ingtor, Ind, please write? Thomas Lemon ntly at Bloom. Will Luther Burbank BUT NOT PRECLUDES We quite forgot that frosted cake Prechudes the festive stummick ache. Pate-cake, pat-acake, Roll it and rub; Baby is hungry and Yelling for grub. the musioal comedies and impro sing upon them, and working them over in such odd and sprightly ways that their society friends said, Stone kide are a whole show ake the mournfulest dirge ever written and wet it to rag time of the kind that sets your feet to tapping. One day, only a little while tthe Btones’ telephone bell The manager of the Mt pheum theatre was at the ott of the line, Marmion, who ar ed the bell, couldn't at first t what the man wae about. It seoms a train had been snow. and, One of his acts had fail show up, He was at bis wits end, Ho bad heard that the Stone youngsters could sing and play a bit, Would they come to the res ene? Would they? In a family con lelave the matter was threshed out. WA. & was inclined ‘agninst the idea, Mrs, Hl. A. was of the same mind. And you know what effect the paternal objection generally bas upon the juvenit mind, The more father and mother objected, the surer son and daugh- ter became that their hearts would break if they couldn't jump slam bang Into vaudeville. They did. And they were p booked over the Orpheum cireult And they are here this week } Most people, when they ser Paul Russell Stone Marmion lone” on the bill, jump to the con-| clusion that they are man and wife They would reallxe their error it} . to vote PAUL STONE Paul Russell Stone and his sis! ter, Marmion Stone, belong to a] family of some social importance in|), St. Paul, Both sing and play weil Their musical talents were not se riously considered, least of all by themecives. They had a happy knack of tak ing the newest and best songs from IN THE EDITOR'S MAIL July 8, ‘12. [practically afi of the democratic Editor Seattle Star: 1 have just |states, fs a reactionary party. Even | beard the results of the Baltimore |in Washington the democrats in convention and have no hesitancy | many counties, in primary tions, in declaring myselt for the election | declared for ( jark, the politician, of Woodrow Wilson. My one regret against Wilson, the progressive. In fe that I cannot support William) many republican states the demo ompt- | | Long Branch, Wash Tonnings Bryan instead. Bryan jemonstrated again in this conven ition that he of the grentent [it not the greatest of our statesmen, land the most tremendously effective Do your “world series ticket buy-| practical politician of his age. His me ere speech ta COnVED the epur of the mo- Stuff him with jam till hie Face is all biack; Telephone father to Bring Ipecac. te one valedictory” tion, made on ment, ts an com} ape In suppor tn this cam paign, I shall refuse to be read of the republican As ha been well naid, “Theft dovs not make regularity,” and I deny the regularity of the thieves who m nipulated the Chicago convention. Tam an insurgent. The repub oan party .as demonatrated in practically every primary eleetion this. year and in practically every jrecent election i the great repub-| |ifoun states that ft is » progressive iparty. Owing to crooked mantpu-| lation In secret and bold highway robbery in the open, ite members| |are now asked to support for pres- | }ident @ messenger boy of the stand. | |patters. For my part, I refuse to! |deliver my vote at the bidding of | | the crooked politicians representing crooked business. I believe there jare enough republican voters sim. “Ke a delicate compliment ter a|tiarly inclined to give the crooked | visitin’ baseball team, th’ Beeleys | borses in November the lesson they port house served fowls an’ fish |deserve balla. As fer files, they're ailus| On the other hand the democratic on the menu.” by Ite conduct in - with Lincoln's } atorical masterpiece, | eratic party, in its rank and file, |progressive, and I believe this |true in Washington, but I attribute this fact chiefly to the influence of the progressive republican oppost- Hen. | Therefore I shall support the pro- kressive presidential he democratic party, but continue to affiliate with the republican party, which, generally, is the more progressive organization. Thanks to the wording of our state primary law, the individual voter in Wash- ngton is pormitted. to choose his fn party, despite the desires and forts of party leaders to read him candidate of | las at ‘ “Why, Paul Stone, ye be ashamed of ft. ' to tell father the minute w home!” he “Aw, toll him. Ge om him. You needn't think § gan repu local can candidate {fee who dase stand-pat convention which, by force and the republicans of Wi honest representation On this point, boweves, Judgment until tater, however, movement on the part republican voters to cal candidates who do would materially Washington tn the publican column, A FAVORED “There goes Jipsom. telling bow unfortunate Be 1 Thats so. And Jet, whisker crop ts so fig doesnt have to ‘ three umes a week." Age Mei Special for 54-inch White Serge 54-inch White Whipcord 54-inch White Herringbone We make Buttons, S; ponge We do Accordion an This Wee $1,508 Dress Goods and Cloth, Knife Plaiting. We sell Silk and Satin Lining, Ladies’ and Mews Dressmakers’ Supplies. Get our prices for we save you 20 to 25 per SHAMEK BROS. 227-235 Lumber Exchange B Corner Seneca and Second Av., Formerly in the BEM: A Genuine Rupture Cure a Don’t Wear a Truss Any Longer After Thirty Years’ Experience | Have Produced An fiance for Women and Children That Actually Cures base ; If you have tried most everrth' ise, ‘come to me. Where others fal where I have my greatest book on Rupture and its cure, show- ing my Appila and giving you prices and names of many people tried it and wore cured. nt relief where all other mber, I use ne salves, n no liow. trial to prove what T say You are the judge and once soon my Mlustrated book an You Will be as enthustastio nts whose Fill our read as my hundre letters you oan free coupon below and well worth your thm you try my Appliance or not, Pennsylvania Man Thankful gE Sires, a j ft will interest you to know that I have been ruptured six eara and have always had trouble with it till I got your Appliance, 1a Vory eaxy to wear, fits adapted itself to th p body and seemed to be a part of the body, as It clung to the spot, no mat= ter what position 1 was in. It would be a veritable God-send to the unfortunate who suffer from rupture if all could procure the Bre Rupture Appliance and wear it. ‘They would certainly never re- wrot it My fupture is now all he and nothing Appliance. o hax heen curt ity presents tts ruptured, w word for your Appliance, the honorable way In which you with ruptured people. It is @ plea ure to recommend ‘a good thing among your friends or strangers tr am, Ingrippe and coughed a great doal but it help all right. Words cannot express my gratitude towards you and your Appliance, Will recom- mend it to all ruptured peapte. Yours sincerely a Yours very sincere? JAMES A BRIT 80 Spring St., Bethiohem, Pa. ‘ON. B. LONG. Bald Prairte. x8, Others Failed But the Appliance Cured Mr. C. B. Brooke, Marshall, Mich, Dear Str Your Appli for the ittle | cured him soun him wear it for about year in although It cured him 8 months after he had begun to wear it. We had| tried several other remedies and got no relief, and 1 shall tainly | recommend It to friends, for wel surely owe It to you. Yours reapect= | guly, y No. Recommend From Texas Farmer} Mr. ©, B. Brooks, Marshall, Dear Bir: I feel it my duty to Jet you, and Jalso all people affiteted as T'was | know what your Appltance has done for me. have .been ruptured for] | many years and have worn many | different trusses, but never got any | relief until I got your Appliance, T put It on last November, but had | very little faith in ft, but’ must may 1 ain now cured. [have laid it away i f for two woeks and of farm work with a8 Wearing It I had ne did atl you clatm and more, for it and well, Wo lot 1 WM. PATTERSON, 447% Main Bt. Akron, OY . Hrooks, inventor of the Appliance, who cured him- m v3 him today, Cured at the Age of 76. Mr. CE. Brooks, Marshal] Mich. T began using your Apptiance the cure of rupture (1 had bad case) I think in May. November 20. for have not er used ft am well of rupture 4 rank myself among those cured the ft 8 Discovery, which considering my age, 1 re-| gard a ¢. oly yours: A. HOOVER age, 76 years, * High Point Child Cured in 4 Months 21 Jansen st Towa Mr. C. ¥. Brooks, Marshall, Mich Dear Sir:—The baby's rupture is altogether cured, thanks to your Ap ¢ are so thankful to Md only have known little boy would not fer near as much as e your brace @ little over four months and has not worn it now for six weeks. Yours very truly, Andrew Eggepberger. Dubvaque, ha to he did. He wor You Should Send Rupture 1 It is absolutely: Pilance of the Kind on ! today, and in it are emned Le that t after for years The Appliance fort re cannot be @ teing an alt 6 sbber it clings closely. ( never blisters OF Unite the is, used in other hersome or w Tt ie @mall, Appliance do in the least ore are nO. ppliance to u and bruisin All of the materi Appliances a vest that mi Beane My reputation for joaling ts 90 by 8 the A 1 my, Appia what T sal Peers and mall to id Free Informa 1 and. fait infor Apmiance for the Name . RIND,

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