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24, Sse } a THE STAR—TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1913 MEMBER OF (THE SCRIPPS NORTHWEST 2Q Matn 0600. Private exchange com. LEAGUR OF NEWSPAPERS. Telegraph News PHON: Bervice of the United reas Association wecting with ail @epertnante, Entered at the postoftion, Seattle, Wash. aa second RA By met, Aatly, one month in advance, elas tter, Published by Whe Publishing Phe; wx mos, 91.00; ane year, $2.28 Company every evening except Sand By carrier, im elty, the « month, ~ . —— [DaILy HEALTHOGRAM] oie = SF 104, ae | ras THE PROUD FATHER i a | ONLY A WOMAN’S FACE |. ject to headache from poléoning of the system by these substances Tea, coffee and tobacco poisoning often cause palpitation of the beart also, BE MODERATE. It’s Going to Make World Better | Centralia, Sept. 7, | DITOR THE STAR: Aunt Sarah Elwell has gone over the hill I'd report her ag | dead, only there's some folks, like that good bishop in the story of Jean Valjean, who never dies, but keeps right on livin’ long after their bodies is in the cemetery, and such wag good old Aunt Sarah jf RRESTED in a Western hotel for being in the HELLO "Long about the close of the war, the most beauteous thing on earth was young Sarah company of another woman's husband, the yones? Elwell's face, and the next most beauteous was that same Sarah's figure, and just nine of es . . . . POOR wife of a Chicago broker grew very indignant as she (gee st a : (ONES) [gare pe exclaimed: JONES 19 “ ry 2. Y WE GUY ‘Tom has no right to do this. We had an agree- | “Gay Hi Ar ie) { © five milch cows and ten acres in potatoes, or more, was just desperate about Sarah Why, every one of us dressed in his best and took a bath Saturday night, whether it was his tum |to go sparkin’ or not. But, the terrible fever came and Sarah went stone blind, and was left lan orphan besides } Well, the very first night that Sarah was able to be up, I puts on my best and goes |up to ask her to marry me, and on the way I meets five of my rivals trudgin’ along for home, silent and downcast “! What d’ye think Sarah said when I popped? Just that with her affliction she'd never |marry any man she could love enough to marry She would bear her burden alone with such courage as God sent her. Poor child! She didn’t know that all her folks’ sudden death had left her only a mortgage coverin’ the little farm and all that was on it. But we ning | young bloods did, and we started a yarn about oil bein’ found on Sarah's place, and made |her believe it made her well-off. Doggone it! we used to sneak up there nights and pour kerosene around her house, so Sarah could smell how the country was becomin’ a great oil field, with hers the biggest well jin it. And now she has gone over the hill to the old cemetery, where the scrub oak, alderg land blackberry briars line the fence, unknown that for over 30 years her old lovers, as God | spared ‘em, provided her with livin’ and comforts and that oil was struck in some other | county. | Yes, sir, her easy rocker in the sunny place on her porch, where the hummin’ birds | probed the honeysuckle overhead, and the zinnias, verbenas and hollyhocks breathed upon her, is empty. But, day in and day out, she has sot there, with faith, hope, patience and courage written on her sweet face in the Lord's plainest handwritin’, a livin’, movin’ bless lin’ and inspiration to all who looked on her Why, in '93, when us farmers was all crawlin’ to the bankers for extenshion on our | | notes, and taxes and interest was makin’ us gray and stooped, we'd go ‘way around by Sarah's place to see that blessed look of patience and courage under big burdens that her | |face always had. Then we'd straighten up, shake the gloom off our shoulders, and talk to | jthem bankers with a “1 will,” instead of “I can't.” Yes, sir, when mother and me had to part with the little boy who used to hold onto |my big finger through the wheat stubble and tell how he'd do the chores and help wash |the dishes when he'd grown up and we was old, we drove back from the cemetery by way lof Sarah's, and we got our best sermon on bowin’ to the heavenly Father’s will, that day, from Sarah's face, full of faith, love and hope. | And today, if you'd seen her face as she lay smilin’ and content in her coffin, sort of |listenin’ without speshul objection to the parson's darned silly remarks on the Lord lovin ———_————— | the most those whom He licks the most, you'd ‘a’ sworn there ain't no death, but just a THAT op youRs! Pe young Western bloods, comprisin’ about all the bachelors who could aspire to havin’ | | ment by which I was to have my friends and he was [ ‘ones TMARRY to have his.” —? It’s inconvenient, she is discovering, that such pagan agreements artn’t recognized in law Are there many them? Is it to such ends that modern restlessness tend With divorce shattering one marriage in seven, with the courts clogged by domestic scandals, and with old-time restraints going one by one into the discard, small wonder that the elders scratch heads in astonishment and ask them selves what the world is coming to. A Southern visitor to our largest city, noting his im pressions, recently wrote home Everything in New York hinges around a sex-passion or a money-thirst.”. Of most cities there are times and places in which the same seems true. fi Don’t be deceived by surface scum Human society is like a pond. You've seen a lake “work.” Midsummer heat, reaching down, starts to rot aS the submerged vegetation. Small bubbles form, caused by released gas. The water looks turgid. Fishing is bad. Y can detect a mephitic odor But soon cool nights and pu i s come, The ying bree gcum disappears, decay works itself out, the water clears the bad smells blow away and nature regains a wholesor basis We're in the thick of such an experience, and if you| lack faith there are plenty of symptoms to warrant pessi | truth | mistic impressions. But take cheer in the hist that such periods don’t last Normally nature is wholesome s r | fiage as the cloak for license. | Normally women don’t want to wear the livery of mar ¢ — | partin’ and a steppin’ over the hilltop for a glorious welcome of those we've loved and lost Normally men are not seducers THAW AT MATTEAWAN }a while. oe : : ; ‘ uy bs: s WROTE POEM ABOUT Mr, Editor, I ain't sendin’ you this on the proper mournin’ letter head, maybe, but there’s And the normal time is most of the time BROADWAY'S LIGHTS | | 4 big band of mournin’ around every heart in Centralia. JASON PIXLEY. MATTEAWAN, N. Y., Bept %—The following are. verses | written by Harry Kendall human relations; another swing of the human pendulum ‘ £ | Thaw, in his room at Mattes wan, and found in the waste toward greater freedom, greater democracy. In politics it} Tegisters itself in insurgency; in industry in strikes; in so-) ‘ H’ KICKER AN ‘Hs Joe enh npg ta anol att — domestic unrest, and for the moment the vision is H 1S SOON PARTED There a ¢ lights aflame on i ° roadway '- But the outcome will be worth the cost, for it) ‘andions; will be a bettered humanity. To doubt that is to) What is happening is a large-scale readjustment of) | | Our Precise Artist and lives There are debts. of sin no man use my best efforts for the passage misread aching: pas! Broanee | 4 all the t hi s of the t. Improbable Stories | A Milkman’s Choice. And Broadway hates the sun. | | satel | A man who had decided to build WANTED—A lowdown’ milk | Th | | What Would You Do If You Were | » hang it where my son of eight | A LONG BEACH, Cal., minister confessed to indiscretions, but his|a new home for his family drew up cart. Call or address Robert | mati F vain regrets on Mayor? years old may see it every day. | : jehurch committee has acquitted him, on the ground that when he con-/8 set of preliminary plans and took | Foster, West Rutiand.—Adver. The om cand ' Editor The Star: The opportun. With God's grace, I will help him % | feesed he was laboring under an “over-wrought conscience.” them to an architect. Usement in Rutland (Vt.) Herald. | neg are secret sighs and lities you give your patrons are not only to understand but to rea | The scientists had better hurry up and trap the germ that causes “I will spend $10,000 on this ec ths kd Fr aon | via at lize its true meaning. Fi Bhat aliment. house—not one cent more,” he et Affinity Earle, the only man in ‘or one must smile as well as certainly appreciated. | It has expressed my thoughts 5 | —_———_—_——- plained to the achitect. “I will not | the world who has had more wives If I was mayor of Seattle I would | most perfectly but I never could 4 |have put them into words | © any charges for ‘extras.’ |1n a given time than Nat Goodwin es I am not acquainted with you, of an ordinance for the probibit-| ssp eaitor, but thinking perhaps’ ing of dogs running at large in the a word of appreciation might be| city Mmits, putting them on the | accepted, I am, yours truly, “YOUR SIGN LANGUAGE is beautiful,” said Uncle John Rockefele ris archite fer, as he stood at his church door, in Cleveland, and shook hands with would be ore 200 deaf and dumb people, with tears in his eyes. Any language that cine ny: promised the house |*"Y8 one wife is enough for any ted for the sum his We have regard for Mr opinion He had to have; can’t be devoted to loud kicking on the price of gasoline Is apt to touch =. th ‘ » fo “ ~ - me A Six months later, when the last | three wives before he found it out. | p, a | John’s heart. oy item of expense had been pald, the cee Dance at Dreamland tonight.—Adyv. my basis “* cows. sieed, Sone MRS. JOHN A. MUNCH, | DOWN” D* 0 Oe can souls mike ais | the | AD totaled up his check stubs.| Bare ankles and low shoes are} rE : cauee Garth gutciats ettett wena | Mt. Vernon, Wash. | AND OUT. u ake any Impression on the The house had cost exactly|the latest things at Atlantic City, | be one prohibiting the very preva | eity dads even with a load of bricks. What a hard-headed lot! 99.97 Among the women, of course. lent custom of street car men Still, it’s not so strange. Councilman God him - 0 an’s? “da «ea eget ig at epee vig Georgette bonnes i nai Wolke P ; ‘Who'd want to look ot 8 man's? | ° |throwing all their waste paper, lew York man committed eul- | |thousands of torn transfers ete, | cide because that state has sc many Fritizi Scheff is a bankrupt, ow le ines jete., off their cars daily on the} laws ‘or the life of us, we can’t see ing $149,465. We understand ¢gasily | | public treets f ure as ever. 8 ROOSEVELT GUARDS have changed their name, What difference it makes how many enough how an actress can b | R'LONG TIME SUBSCRIBER, | on seo ened th is “a dead one.” laws D York bas. hey aren't|® bankrupt, but {t defies our gray | est ee pb si 7 | jut it will never be entirely safe to go to kicking Teddy until he’s enforc are they? matter when we try to figure out eee | : &@ buried one. Pha iad where she finds the people to . Appreciates Star Editorial. | EVER Before Have You Had — George Ade, just back from Eu-/Whom she can owe that much| enti lated Editor The Star: I want to tell so Many to Choose From— We Now Have Them ina Large Variety of Case Designs }you that in my mind the "Editorial }to School Children,” in last Wed-| Mio ining Room | 92522. 520 ES eine | | NOT THAT It is important, but somewhat newsy, it | rope, suggests that cabaret man-| money, nounce that Willie Hearst is disappointed as to all parties, and is go. ®?'* follow a custom on the other 2 | Ing to create “an hon: sincere, radical” party wherever there is none. “ie by letting the guests sing. It's Anyway, so long as the Thaws) a fine idea. It would drown the| fight there's no danger of William dust as of old, it take only two to make a party. Boone llndlast 9: nk ie noise of the eating T. Jerome going to the poorhouse i - | Finish MORE CHICAGO PHILANTHROPY! Mrs. Mollie Neuberger, own- Ate a th Cit byloatell Alama ngeie er of the Big Boston store, has paid $10,000 for two giraffes for Lincoin ;,9'9" In window of a Seattle sec-|_ Are you fond of rhetorical s m eu y i h D . park zoo. The few-dollars-a-week department store girls can walk out ei nn ee cay in Town In de Mart peg hag teat ig PR e ay s ‘e Beat Eve vd ‘own says r is a Col, Selle * to the park Sundays and just look and look at those giraffes. Paying for Second-Hand Clothes,” | with peacock feathers, a Bevenuto Best Stories man has sent an 84 ‘ellint with yellow jacket, aron | NO DANDRUFF—25 CENT DANDERINE ®is'stionz'sitnattsane iscns i, "MYA 8 erent bat RE a Ss a cane to the president? eee | Patiently the old gentleman had | Which of the foreign powers will| been sitting through the or | hearing the voice-culture student | The ashes of man who died) be first to recognize the reigning | mated in Dover, N. J.,| ew York state? in the bed-sitting-room below prac ticing with zeal which left no roo.a ve been sent to his parents in ened jermany by mail, Some ivory for criticism, but with a t . means #0 kindly d r e beaned mail will probably a You Will ly, he crept softly down the (FRY THIS! DOUBLES BEAUTY, fesides beautifying the hair at a OF YOUR HAIR AND STOPS jonce, Danderine dissolves every 1T FALLING OUT. particle of dandruff; cleanses, pur- aa liffes and invigorates the scalp, for Your hair becomes light, wavy,/ever stopping itching and falling Muffy, abundant and appears as) hatr. try to steer them to the dead letter ott, lustrous and beautiful as a| But what will pl m most young girl's after a “Danderive hair | will be after a few weeks’ use when | fice : stairs and rapped st the door ot cleanse.” Just try this—moisten a/you will actually see new hair o + « njoy the young woman's room. Gloth with a little Danderine and|fine and downy at first—yes—but| ,,,4 Good Recommendation. I cant come im he aaid, 1s carefully dray: {t through your hair,|really new hair growing all over | FOR RENT We have | twenty G d F d Srey caine to ball on friad MEA ca, goeall straua ato tiene vane r srowing all over apartments furnished for light | simply came to tell you of a friend p._ If you care for pretty, 00 00 of mine who would, I know, be will This will cleanse the hair of dust,|soft hair and jots of {it surely get | boUsekeeping, partly modern; some Girt and excessive oll and in just|a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Dan-|08@ “lways moving. Inquire 1622 UT ing to pay almost any amount of @ few moments you have doubled derine from any druggist or tollet 16th. st.—Advertisement in Moline | - ell Cooked money to hear you sing.” { (1) Dispateh | Overwhelmed with joy, the lady . the beauty of your hair. counter, and just try it. is e% RATE begged the kind old gentleman to When you hear a railroad asking} t write his friend’s name and ad ; + |the government for more money e | a dress on a plece of paper. When he | If you fully realized the many pleasures the Bungalow Player |] | for transporting matls, look behind had gone upstairs she looked at Piano has in store for each member of your famtly“you would have the mail car and see If there isn't R bl || the slip of paper which he had/#/ had one long ago. . an expre It of it? dod *k to her inscribed anc PUR IC M RKET |S express oar just back OF it easonabdie Sparen rps to her inscribed and | With it, you, yourself, can play any musical selection you | L qT {AR oe-ch~N | Color Needed P. . it read, “John W. Jones, Asylum |} si as eae Be f for the Deaf.” ou can accompany your daughter on the Bungalow Player 5th, 6th and Pine / rices dea ae | | while she sings—or your son while he plays the violin, eee RR TRS — ¥ oo in —-—-9| You can roll up the rugs and put aside the table and chairs BIG WE STAND BACK OF OUR Work AND IT WAS |]}| and play for th® dance with a sureness of tempo, a swing, and & FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTER sien ——@|}| rhythm that few pianists are able to play. George W. Taylor, representative e trict 4 a, | from the first district of Alabama, /T} your own home, and play their own interpretations of their won- A | f ll 50 took a friend to lunch in the House . ae Or, you can close your eyes and hear the good old melo jj You can have the world’s great master musicians with you in Wednesday Specials The Largest Distributors of Pure Foodstuffs on the Pacific Coast dey not longvago, It was a finei a as ce t 1 play th a! % re 7 ies of years gone by and play them instinctively with a tender For Stall Numbers on Specials Below See Bulletin Boards 0 rowns an p ay the talsles After tay watt the ness that will surprise and please you. : Eee | dining room Taylor suddenly came Y a 2 10c pas est Sods 15¢ A ibe: Glous Stasch .. 260 ri ewor an cea gaa Taylor suddenly cam playeePiene. jo all these things and many more with the Bungalow ag anata 25¢ | 20c Wax Beans 10¢ B dg K $3 d Up rece ee 40 Colfee, 3 is “81.00 aN (he Bare ‘Cate Made : The New me?" he cried, ened tor| There Is No Reason Why You Should Be New omb oney, each J|...... : ‘ .$1.00 i ll § t | th an Wi J ward ithout One ; 20¢ ‘ With order |] eis ee Up Wi , “Who paid the check?” thun- The prices offer the breatest waluss ever given, Thane 4 -++-0€ | 25c Baker's Premium Choc- ‘ ing Ss dered Taylor. within your reach and you can afford to own one. THEY RANGE Dry Green Peas, lb. ...5¢ Jolate ........... 15¢ R Migle ha Wik Tal pou thes dae “De other feller,” said the waiter. |] PROM $485 to $675, including a Player Bench and §26 worth of 4 Ibs. Cream of Wheat 25¢ | Best Cider Vinegar, gal A\’ paaue Lhaw tha nike eoulalie He Cafeteria i PR ce A me bea music. 2 10c loaves Fresh Bread ]...... ...e000-- 30¢ | ted #0 pertestly until they had us do angry, ; SPECIAL TERMS OF PAYMENTS can be arranged and you OSD eet thes paiate Bb Hest. Pickling -Apices, 16 Pas tha etle “Why, Ah hands you de check, nine nS i oppgrtunity slip by. i 4 Ibs, Italian Prunés ..25 % ne es ha I B Mistah Taylor, and you ain’ done DE IN YOUR SILENT PIANO—We will accept your oll BGT isang cenvers . 25¢ Any work that doesn't prove sat Ss etter nuffin wif it, and de gemman jes’|f| Piano in part payment toward a Bungalow Player Piano and will aatrge N Potatoes ; are ce « Z Isfacto: 1] bé@ repaired free o t fs " ne New Potate te Assorted Spices, cap .. 5e me | sates Gk aey ime a t ; nachally tek it and pay fo" de bill," |] &lve you # liberal allowance for It. OS ieee 5¢ | 10 bars Laundry Soap .25¢ : . h E “Heavens!” gasped Taylor, ‘that Hear the Bungalow Player Sweet Potatoes, 4 lbs. 15¢ Teas, with purchase Come tn SOON—today, tf you wish an ver will be all over my district in a Piano today * sure—do not ‘ Fancy Tomatoes, lb. ..5¢].... .. Haven O for,FREH examination and eatt week, Ho was a@ constituent of|}] put it. off. If you cannot : 1 ‘ ke i : ‘ , o 6 ediately for fu ae ed RRR Gas price Ls Uppgy- recs us, how did| 12-Year Guarantee to All 1 t d’ ° did!"—Washington Star, particulars, ¥ pasning Pears and Peaches | Assorted Buns and Dough- Topsy—Wal, de editor said this Free Examination + st an nition Pils the teeth—banishes Tooth Sold ony ‘on the Coast by i De Aree (Sooo gee get ak foal ok pd Itor th he teeth—banishes Tooth. ‘| i owest prices nuts, 2 doz ret pleture needed a Uttle color, and gor raity St. 84 and University ache—Butlers Liquid Tooth Miimer,|f| CHICKERING DEALERS. Third and University + here Pim is BL, Opp. r-Paterson Co, Druggists, 25c.—Advertisement, — ‘i