The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 29, 1915, Page 7

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; SHE DODcES WOLLEY HIGH IN THE SKIES Nixola Gr Greeley-Smith | Special. YORK, June 29.—Helene chevalier of the Legion of | large title ot | tiny young Frenchwoman Just reached New York | the American people of the deeds of heroism in war ‘of the aviators of France Dutrieu herself took part the defense of Paris, flying her fm biplane well over the German to make observations of the ny mov nts, which she re- pe to the French militar: ‘the was chased by a Ger. Taube. she just managed to @ death-dealing volley @ pursuing aeroplane armed with mitraiileuse. fiew 150 kilometres 94 miles) over the bat- ‘of the Marne, later mak- @ame trip by automobile Many times to pick up the Ger- ‘wounded ehe had sighted. speak of these exploits dismisses them with a that seems to blend impa She's Modest” Herel Heroine “What else would you have had/ Go?” she asked me when I saw her hotel. offered to my I have—all I hav viator. ldden for women to be the military service of but I was given a military that I could make @id this every day in the of September, descending in @ Aviation (the aviation Om my return and reporting officer where I had located airships so that armored | She was chased In mid-air bya German Taube. Helene Dutrieu, woman aviator, who took part in the d flowers, fragile blossoms that had i 3 survived that terrible devastation! And then a great NEST of wound. a and and the dying seek the solace of| companionship. wards each other JOHNNY O'LEARY WINS TITLE IN 20-ROUND GO WITH BURNS: with dead For the wounded They crawl Johnny O'Leary, the fast little ttle Se) Elke’, 1 selves over the found dying like themselves and so died? to-|happler because a comrade beside them would broken see men blinded and) limbs dragging them- ttlefield till they wounded and other men too. Billy Wright and Geo. might be sent out to) atrie lightweight, won the Canadian) Engle will mix ‘em in the main tithe Monday night at Westmins' | Junction sheer cleverness ing In Battlefield. fish I had words to describe what | saw when | mad: an| flight three days after! som the start te of the Marne over that @ field, which saved the day 150 KILOMETRE: ers to O'Leary wasn't there when Burns’ mitt came down, the Seattle boy's part won him a/ jusual from Charley Burns O'Leary had the best of the tight] Burne, with bis) will fall on with Twenty rounds of fast fighting on r)event at 136 pounds by} are anxious to be at It let-‘em-beat-me-up-I'I-land-| 133 pounds | sometime methods, couldn't find a) Kreiger, at 1 | spot large enough for his haymak-|Earl Conners, 1 any effect.jand Charley Davidson, 115 will help make the affair worth go- ing to, Doth fighters EO PINKMAN and Hattling Wolfe appear in the seml-windup, at Ad Schaffii and Henry Leo Houck and and Billy Vetro pounds, CORNELL TOOK the honors in! place in the hearts of British Colum-|the big intercollegiate regatta at bia fandom. O'Leary home again. meet the winner of tonight's main/ event at the Elks’ smoker. ZOU feel better, get more solid tobacco comfort from a small chew of “Right-Cut” than —. big chew of the old kind. od is cut a new way—so the taste comes even. After you use a ‘understand why men Cut” began telling their friends it is the only real tobacco chew. very small chew—less & arr one-quarter the old size. It will be more satisfy of prdinary tobacco. Just nibble on it until you find chew that su Then let it rest. See how easily and evenly the real tobacco taste comes, how it satisfies without grinding, how re to spit, how few chews be tchacco satisfied. That's why it is The why it costs less in the It i « ready chew, cut fine and short shred s0 that you won't have Grinding ‘candied tobseso the ot much loss you Chew. That to. on it with your teetl you spit too mach. be. “Retice chews of the old kind. Hotel or ne ie! HOTEL COURT 85 4th st., at Mock-| — Eile. and Mar- || Direet cars. || re ‘min. to Ex; New, Fireproof, | | - Sapertor. Rate $1 per day wi ICOLN HOTEL @ AE naslek season doce no need to be covered w ‘salt brings out the rieh tobacco taste i \ One con chew takes the place of two big Rates, Kurepean PI Take Local fans are anxious He to see| day, 11) Hkely | T. 8. IT LOOK Poughkeepsie-on-the-Hudson yester. with Stanford a close second WILLIE LEITH of Tacoma and Gallup of Vancouver were tied like a good card at the for honors In the Potlatch golf tour. |ney at the Seattle Golf club, when they | this morning. opened the second day's play They made 36 holes in 154, last | been arth. ou ever did fro: uch you will ot use ‘‘Right- Nye Frisk Moc 4 than « mouthful you. Tuck it away. | Bol row take to ‘eal Tobacco end. on ordinary shin Abst BUSH #T., AT sTOCKTO “Im the Heart of Everything $ § Minutes to Kizpo, Direct Line || site Up ‘miversal Bus MEBBE THE New York | Kinsella, the Savoy, hints it BLONDY BUTLE cue work in mate! | House parlors, where they finished Butler Vancouver— ” | Brinker, ef MeQuarry, Brown, | Ariett Rrown - Mruck Bases on baile to Raymond to Abatein Brown WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY | hours SO Union Square, New York BUY FROM DEALER OR SEND IO¢ STAMPS TOUS Giants come here next spring. Dic their scout, stopping at did some nye his pocket billiard h against Maturo at the White night 1,000, The final score Maturo 887 was Purse, TWENTY-ONE OF the speedient| drivers in Burnam, Oldfield, Cooper and oth-| oe ers, have entered their cars for the) Combine cm | Tacoma races, July 4 and & the country, including} WE ALMOST won a game yest ‘dy | If we'd made one more score ituda a tle, As it was, we didn't | make any, and it took 10 innings to | get what we got we mighta done if they hadn't stop- ped the game as soon made one score. Y'can't tell what Vancouver Seartio Smith. Raymond, se it stein, 1b ltay, ef Totals *Ran for Guignt in Batted for Hose in tenth tenth. ABR rf 1 th ae mecctand wen co-ou> p Totals © by innings Reattle | Vanco Summary Brinker, Hacrifice fasrificn fly Amith, MeQuarry, Rose 6, by Ariett & Off Rone 2, off Ariett # Gutani to Morse to Abatein: Kitifiay to Hob Brown to Roy Time of game? Roy out—By Umpire WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS SU Par A HIG ROOT Peer Bae ~ BULL BROS. Jusi Printers 1013 THIRD STAR WANT ADS @AIN 1043 BRING RESULTS moaned, STAR—TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 1915. PAGE 7, a Weman Aviator Has Hairbreadth Escape When ( Chased by a German " Taube ADVICE TO JUNE BRIO MME. SCHUMAN Don't Be a Traitor | BY MADAME 8CHUMANN.-HEINK MARGIE'S MIND |S RESTING IN THE BALANCE | | (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper | Enterprise Association) Yesterday | looked lintlenaly {from my hospital bed. A murmur Jof volces had penetrated my grief | benumbed brain leaw Dick and Aunt Mary in jconsultation with the nurse. | “She must be made to notice something or I fear for her mind,” IT heard Aunt Mary say, and then the nurse held up a warning finger, | for sbe caught a new expression on my face. Dick came quickly and, putting his arms about 1 pulled me up. You are better this morning, darting,” he said. Am I?" I asked “Margie theart, yo live for me,” he whispered | 1 looked at him in a dazed sort of way and then turned my eyen to Aunt Mary, on whose face was 4 troubled look, altho her lips wore the same sweet smile t you to get | we can take you home 1 wearily closed my eyes | “Don't you want to go , asked Aunt Mary i If you want me to go, I'll go. 1 waid, and then I opened my eyes and looked about, for even to me my voice sounded utterly lifeless all joy, all hope, all anticipation had gone from it For a minute 1 wondered tdly what had happened to me and then jl knew—oh, God, I knew my baby was dead. “Put me down, please,” | I sald to Dick and then turned my face to the wall, The sight of | them hurt me. The sunshine | streaming into the room was ke molten lead burning Itself into my heart A baby cried the corridor. 1 clinched my until the nails fairly selves in my thin palme it all came over me that do nothing—except to try not to suffer, What was the use—noth ing mattered—my baby wan dead Margie Margie. exclaimed Dick, “look at me—don't you love me any more? I raised my eyes to his. I tried | to think if I did love him, if there was anything in my body that was alive enough to respond to the word) love. The effort was too much,| and, with a sigh, I turned again away from them all—I wanted to be let alone, I wanted to go out] into that space where my baby was. I wanted it in my armas, oven if it was only by ghostly arma 1} must clasp it to the wraith of a Union Dye Works to my b sw must well, so that sald Dick home?" | somewhere down hands buried them. And then 1 could Piast Offiee | TH AVE. AND BE, UNION | The Dental War Is On Seattle’s Dental Fakers By Kéwin J. Brown, D. D. 5. Tid Firet Ave. When few weeks ago and b gan to make arrest innocent men in my flee under the com- bine’s old law, enacted for the purpose of | keeping Dentists out of this ate, I decided to expose the scheme, * 1 he © many Umes before The alleged Dentiat Dr Bark, wh wears youth's clothes and a hat to large for a mustard seed, began to make silly and slight- ing reference to itleal prinety in advertise His fake was to profit jat my expense by creating prejudice | agalnat my office | L GALL The nerve of this Dr DENTISTS” Bark aston plutely the} hat should} Dentint 6 rights, | years in vio-| law, and ts, He now ne's tent and but he doe questions Dr. Bark, if js no Dental |Combine, why did you have to plead for your Dental certificate? if you love the law, and highly, why did you vio- ny years before you ry in Seattle many lation of what he ca hiring unregistered Dy : | Dr. Bark, if the examinations are proper and easy, why did you have to take the examinations #0 many Bark not made if the examinations are difficult and improper, a Dentist who is competent should Pass the first time, think you not? Dr. Bark, are you not ashamed to admit that you are caught in your own fake trap? Dr, Bark, is it not true that after you had failed many times in your Dental examinations, you told me that you were so disgusted with Dentistry you were going to atart a wa ‘Answer these questions and 1 will buy you a sult of clothes ow, Dr. Bark, you had a 6 to be & gentleman own business, but yelled “Wolf” to the public once too often, You slur my political faith and 1 forgive you, because your con- ited {gnorance precludes the posri- bility of your perception and under standing. You are a mistake impos sible .of retrievement. Providence was kind to humanity in keeping you out of the saloon business; it would not have been so paffiful on mankind but mortality would probably have been higher. Dr, Bark, after affc ple the highest class able in Dentistry for fourte in one location and under name, while you have b changing names and offi ating for a@ fear of busine suffering from in good and mind you have che your ding the peo ory ntal n years my own injury fantile egotism Phone Main 30640 | very | she | this The Famous Diva There ts another kind of secret liveness that fs even more osnential | than that of keeping your own or friends’ se and that is your crete Ey keeping your hus band's and the of life. Up to t you are mi my dear, sweetheart red you above all women and you have accept ed his hom a queen ac the loyalty of courtier. ou have taken the beauti ful name of “wife” your husband's honor {# in your keeping To no one—not even your mother—should you treason in the way of recount: ing hie slightest fauit It is a hard fact to learn, must not of man or woman and no mat- ter how well you think you know] secrets your married day rried, your hon but one heart Then it came to me that at this moment millions of women were thinking—grieving the me as I, but I could not feel sorry for | them. I could only feel sorry for | myself, How long I lay there thus I do not know, whispered voices again my consciousness. Let's give her thinking but finally that little book was always writing in and she loved so much,” said Mary, “perhaps the sight of} repository of all her secrets will awaken her,” Do you know whieh Aunt where it is | asked Dick Yes, Margie sealed the books up in the box in which she has always kept them and told me to give them to you ff anything happened to her. I am going to bring her the box and ask her if she does not want to have a talk with her old est and best friend (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) RICH, STAYS AT HIS JOB; NOW HE’S DEAD PORT ANGELES, June 29.—Loutr Brandt s dead today, a victim of unsympathetic fate. Brandt fel’ heir to a fortune of $30,000. He chose to remain at work, Friday he was scalded in the wreck of a donkey engine in a lumber camp} near here ITALIANS MAKE PROTEST A meeting of Italians was held Sunday night in the Workingmen’s Circle hall to protest against the entrance of Italy Into the European war. e€ Escrows ——————— Verbal agreements are the cause of most of the misunderstandings that prevent the closing of real estate transactions. Depart- writ- instructions, thus the danger of consummate a Our Escrow ment ten avoiding failure to deal according to the de- sire of every party. accepts only This is the only office that can safely and satis- factorily handle a_ real estate escrow, for it is properly equipped with conveyancers, of- fice maps, etc., and is in immediate touch with all public offices. expert records, It assumes a responsi- bility to its clients that no bank or other concern could undertake — be- comes the direct agent of all parties to a transac tion and safeguards the interests of each. The interests of a pur- chaser or mortgagee can be protected only through an agent possessing com: plete title-records. Washington Title Insurance Company secrets | lyour own an remember that perfection is| penetrated | ee (Hi BO, Ul NeHEINK, THE DIV A to Your Husband | the man you are going to marry you will find, when you live with | jhim from day to day, unexpected traits, and he will discover name in you. Do not grow thee of r noyances into the easy p counting all the little an that between mm” and your husband, even to your) her, as the retailing of them | ly makes them seem worse | Remember, as long as you come live | with your husband you two are on jand when you discover his short comings to some one you discov well of the dearest women I ¢ lived a life of unhappiness her husband was a drunk One knew becaus ard Yet, even I, thru long years of a most intimate friendship, never |heard one word of complaint about ‘him. While there were times when this woman thought her whole life |had fail yet there came a time when, looking back, she knew st had kept her faith and her hus band bound to her with hoops of steel, because she had put all cur |fonity behind her | To be a successful wife you must be blind as love, paf as faith and ® sympathetic as charity, | (Another Schumann-Heink Article | Tomorrow.) (SEATTLE WOMAN DIES SUDDENLY SAN FRANCISCO, June 29.—| Mrs, Mary Henderson is dying as & result of injuries received when| she was thrown from an automobile in front of her home after a fast ride to the home of her sister, Mrs,| Elizabeth Langford, who dropped dead | Mrs. Henderson was in Santa jc ‘ruz when she learned of the death | lof her sister The breakneck automobile was made safely over the mountain road to Los Gatos | Everything went well until the apartments were reached, when the jear skidded and turned over. Mra Langford was formerly manager of \the Hotel Sorrento of Seattle. WOMAN DRANK, WAITER SAYS TACOMA, June 2 29 —Two Martini) jcocktalls each and three bottles of! Mrs, J. L.| and a before she ran! Jover and killed A. J. Olsen, an aged rancher, according to the testimony of Le Roy in th manslaughter trial on here today Mrs. Warner, who, it is alleged, | |drove her automobile from 20 to 35| miles an hour while in an | jeated condition, disappeared two weeks after the accident She assumed masculine clothes | cut her hair short, and moved away | |from the Derby hotel, Seattle, of which she was landlady. Her defense will be that it jan unavoidable accident (GIVE FUNERAL TO HUMAN DERELICT EVERETT, June 29.—Tho he died a derelict, there will be a dignified funeral when John Dahl, a police character, is laid to rest. Jailer Bob Hickey solicited funds for the funeral. Dahl, who was 70, at one time was prosperous, and was noted \for his humorous sayings. In late years, however, he was “broke,” jand lived most of the time at the elty jail. an ¢ trip rough |wine were consumed by of Seattle |companion, Warner woman shortly Herron, a waiter intoxt for was How They Stend In the Leagues NORTHWESTERN— Aberdeen 8 Spokane 5; Tacoma 9, Victoria 3. AMERICAN—Washington 5, Phil adelphia 0; Chicago 4, St. Louis 2; Detroit 6, Cleveland 3; New York 3-3, Boston 2-6 NATIONAL—Cincinnati 3, Chi cago 2; Brooklyn 4, Philadelphia 0 New York 3-5, Boston 2-3. FEDERAL—Pittsburg 8, 5; St. Louis 7, Baltimore 6; 10, Brooklyn 5. Buffalo Chicago NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE Won, Lost “a 86 a7 oat a 38 a2 oat a8 m6 44 AGL 4a a8 Phiindeiphia NATIONAL New York Rrooklyn Cinetanatt FEDERAL LRAGUE Kaneas City . St. Louis Chicago Pittaburg s Newark Brooklyn . Buffalo Baltimore : LEAGUE Won. Salt Lake City ... 4 fan Franciaco ...s.+... 42 tland Angeles . Oakland . Venice COAST | EMPHASIS. | a “boob, | his Dear Miss Grey: Tell “J. A. P.” that books upon EUGENICS for preparation for husbandhood and fatherhood |ie beside those on do mestic science in public Iibraries! And please tell ail “J. A. P.’8" not to write you again until they have read that soul.gripping book, “Prob. lem of the Sexes"—-by Jean Finot, in the Iibrary—and there learned that eternal feminine and universal | masculine are an organism. IT 18 WHERE WE PLACE THE THAT COUNTS IN LIFE AND LIVING! And we em phasize scientific soclology—“that top landing on the staircase of ed. ucation"—for its appreciation of GREAT NEW THOUGHTS OF GREAT NEW THINKERS. “Ap- preciation is the finest word in the English language.” “J, AP.” fails utterly to distin- guish between fundamentals and mediocre, materialistic misoneism; between CREATIVE IDEALISM and his PHANTOM-LIKE Ideals falls to know that any premise may be proved by analytical philos ophy with its preconceived set-up | notions—but not so with science, | paralleling fact with fact pragmat-| leally. “J, A. P.” “ghould “study, ob. |serve and analyze” personally the | magnitude of women's club devel opment in NON-SELFSEEKING for SOCIAL JUSTICE and its unphan jtom-like Ideal CIVIC RIGHTEOUS. NESS. Put yourself in the other fellow's place; the Golden Rule of Sci- ence—and mine. It is the one sure cure for ingrowing vain conceit. And pot mustn't call anybody's ket- tle black—for even remittance men at the university find it impossible | to live within a $250 monthly allow- ance. Miss Grey, “Idealist” hurled as a brickbat by “J. A. P.” fell a | a bouquet upon the head of a long For have we not Emer- son—that GOLDEN NAME in) America, saying: See that your faith comes from spirit, spirit (spir- itual in science), and never from Tradition. Cordially, MINNIE B. FRAZIER. time wife. Dear Miss Grey: My answer to “J. A, P.'s" first letter was not pb- lished, but | am not disheartened, $0 am answering his second. No, we do not think “J. A. P.” is even if he does write like We believe him when he ays he is “merely a man,” but like brother men, his v |comes limited when he good qualities in women. Like all men, he Is go filled with self-love and vanity, he cannot understand how a woman can have any other interest in life than serving him. It is this same selfishness In the matculine nature which causes men to make statements like these. | feel that all “J. A. P.” has said of himself is true, but one thing. He is not of an “observing nature,” else he would have observed th hardships and trials of tne avera married woman of means. She might find life easier if she could have some of the me- chanical helps for housekeepers which are now on the macket, but YOU are moderate | which are beyond the reach of a wife who must make both ends meet on $75 per month. A mother's life is often one big sacrifice, and the less money she has the greater the sacrifice becomes. Even Kip- ling, who never saw good In any- thing feminine, tells us: “A hard life is always hardest for the woman,” In a more kindly spirit, let me say, there is no better reward for virtue than a marriage between two people who know how to love and forgive and whose hearts are united by a family of happy, healthy children. But we workers out In the world of men have heard and seen so much and have absorbed so many of their ways that we, like them, have become a bit selfish and do not care to lose the ease and en- joyment of single life, but feel as Marie Corelli expresses it, that, we'd “rather risk single ed- ness than united cussedne: A HAPPY SINGLE GIRL, Q.—What is the German popula- tion In the United States? What | is the population, including Amert- can born Germans? CURIOUS. A.—In 1910 there were 2,501,181 persons in this country who were born in Germany There is no such thing as an American-born German. All. per- sons born in this country are Amer- icans, except the children of per- sons traveling here, or of those at- tached to the diplomatic service. The total number of foreign-born nts, according to a census re- port of 1913, is 8,817,27 Q.—I have written to you several |times, but you do not answer. Please answer this soon as | am at a loss to know what to do. 1 am going with a girl 18 years old and | am 20. | have tried to get her to overcome her bashful- but cannot effect a cure. She refuses to accept an invitation to a icnic or other places of amusement. When | speak to her of my love, she laughs; and when she speaks of married folks she thinks they are unfortunate. | have been keeping company with her for the past two years, and yet she shows no indica- tion of her love for me. What can | do to make her realize that time is valuable, instead of keeping me in suspense? You will help me solve a puzzie if you will print an answer thru your paper. BAFFLED. A—There is nothing puzzling about your case, Thetyoung woman shows very plainly. by her attitude that she is not contemplating matri- mony, at least not with you. The only thing for you to do is to find another girl LEADING DOCS SEE SIGHTS IN SEATTLE Fifty-five of the country's lead- ing doctors are being entertained here on their way East from San Francisco, where the American Medical Fraternity held its annual national convention. the hardest man in the world to please. You are downright finnicky —mighty particular. But you know what you want. Have you ever tasted a cigarette so “Utterly Different” that you voted it—right on the spot—the “‘bulliest ever”? Man, you just smoke a NEBO plain end, the “Utterly Different” ciga- rette. If the first one doesn’t “utterly” convince you — then we lose! the Guarantee. Read => GUARANTEE — If after smoking half the package of NEBO plainend you are not delighted, return balance of package to P. Lorillard-Co., New York (Estab- lished 1760) and receive your money back.

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