The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 16, 1915, Page 4

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Member of the Scrtppe Northwest League of Newapapers Published Daily by The Star Publishing Co Phone Main 9400 SHE SUFFERS, ALWAYS NLY the faintest ray of hope remains that Charles Beckér may be saved trom the electric chair. As his chances to evade the extreme penalty for his crime fade away, one by one the few friends who have aided in his fight for life desert him. Now his attorney, admitting the hopeless- ness of his appeal to the supreme court, has with- drawn from the case. Becker is left almost alone to meet his fate. Almost alone, but not quite. Thru the darkest hours one has clung to him, lovingly, bravely, devotedly—his wife To the wite always falls the onus of defend ing a husband’s name when accused, his life or liberty when forfeited to the law. Hers is the real anguish ever. When the death current stills the heart of Becker, the criminal, his punishment is over. That of his devoted wife, the innocent, goes on and on and on. America’s heart beats in deepest sympathy for Mrs. Charles Becker, however it may feel toward her husband. STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1915. PAGE 4, IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE W'! HAVE been noticing things this week, dur ing the sojourn in our midst of the Nobles ot the Mystic Shrine And we've come, to the conclusion that it pays to advertise Boosting is typical of Western. cities It is especially typical of Seattle. And when we boost our city—when we lay ourselves out to entertain the visitor within our gates—we're advertising, that’s all. Of course it gives us a warm feeling in our hearts if we can make our guests’ stay a pleasurable one, But we know that we're really doing it for the sake of the city we live in—the city we want to see become the metropolis of Western America We have seen, this week, some concrete re- sults of this civic patriotism on the part of Seattle people. We talked to a delegate Shriner from Min- neapolis. “| never before saw a city in which I'd rather live than old Minneapolis,” he said. “But I have seen one this week.” We ran across an acquaintance in one of the patrols from Kansas, “If I wasn't so old,” he said, “I'd never go back. I'd wire for my family and my furniture, SSS TSS and stay right here. Every man in our delegation has been impressed by your hustling city. It look like the land of opportunity. 1 wouldn’t be sur- prised at that if a lot of our. Shriners should come back—the younger one A. L. Tertsagian, who lives at the Y. M. C. A., found a souvenir postcard on the streets yesterday, and called us up to tell us about it. It was signed ‘I, H. C.,"" and addressed to a man in York, Pa. It evidently had been written by a Shriner. “The boys are having a great time,” read the message on the card. “This climate is the finest in the world. Everybody is fat out here.” Said a delegate from Texas: “It’s great the way citizens of the city are helping Nile temple entertain us. Why, all we have to do if we want to take an automobile ride is to crook our finger, and there’s a machine and a driver waiting for us.” Today most of the 29,998 Shriners registered for the convention are leaving. And they'll carry into every corner of the United States a boost for Seattle. Yes, it pays. THE OVER-WORKED quest ek i Is th the 1 for all ar weather ual weather 'A Married Man’s Troubles GooDp MORNING, MR, TRUS. Ive COME IN To SSe You ABouT—— A sear, PLease! t%.. Be WITH You IN Just a Momenr. Tf WANT TO GLANCE OVER | A LITTLE BIT OF MOST ANYTHING } ¢ Gifted. Doctor (cheerfully) —You can't} ~ Tourist—What sort of a landlord|expect to get well at one jump.| have you got here? | You will have to regain your health |. Native—He's the sort of a man| gradually, day by day—sort of on| he was put on an uninhabited! the installment plan, as it were. fsland, he'd stick his hands in the) Patient (brightening up)—Well,| Pockets of the naked savages and| doctor, if this thing keeps up much| fob ‘em of what they hadn't got. /longer, I'm afraid that you will/ § heal have to collect your bill the same| > Nothing to Work On way * The jury considered their ver- Bict; they were no little time over} it * “Can I assist you in any way, Kentlemen?” said the judge, at last becoming impatient. | * “We are almost agreed,” said the) foreman; “but we can't quite un-) derstand what the doubt is the) prisoner wishes us to give him the) benefit of.” | ‘ oe : Some Relief * Patient (gloomily)—I don’t seem to be gaining very fast, doctor. | | _ He—Girls are queer creatures! | They marry the first idiot who | asks them, as a rule. I suppose | you'd do the same, wouldn't you? Helen—Jack, this is 80 sudden! | ae | A Jonah Jitney As the Sunday-school teacher en j tered her classroom, she saw leav. ing in great haste a Iittle girl and her still smaller brother. | ‘Why, Mary,;you aren't going, away?” she exclaimed in surprise to go,” was the distressed reply CUT PRICES ‘Jimmy'th thwallowed hith col. jection.” FREE alg EXAMINATION eevee wait Doctor's Wife~You wish to con sult the doctor? Couldn't you come tomorrow instead?” Patlent--Why, isn't the doctor! in? | Doctor's Wite—Oh, yes, he's in,| Full Set. of Teeth. but, you #ee, you're his very first Porcelain Crown... patient, and I want to give him al Gold Fillings surprise tomorrow, because it's his Silver Fillings. birthday vertised. eae A Topnotcher “I hope you like your work, my lad,” said a benignant elderly per son to an errand poy, as they waited to cross a street “Men who take pride in their work are the men who succeed,” “Oh, I'm a record breaker, the manager says,” | “That's the way for a boy to talk. | Tell me how you do better than} tet and Pike, Opp. Public Marker | other boys.” | Laboring People’s ventists. | “I take longer to carry a message ‘than any of them.” ‘Stella and Gertie We A RS, ' > WOW, BUT THS ISA HOT DAY, SHES GOT OLIVIA ABOUT yy Heim! OF COURSE HAD ToGo oT SMOTHERED IM ONE “Too -|!'S AGO? Now TWIS WAY ~ | WANT To see AND WEAR "THAT PUR COWAR “THE PooR aiM's AncKk AROUND WER KECK — | Dow? T 1S ALL RED PROM Weamn? | SAID | CouLD Misses purr SEE HOW She STANDS IT ¢— THe Thins — RAVE De AFTER- | heehee oF MUR IT WELL. RICHARD. BO YOU CAME orrice eh> ME RIDIN’ BEHIND { a STELLA WE oraz /| WHAY | SAID apouT DAY? wi rie || THE GAS Bikes! BLUFF him THROUGH — TAR MERELY A SUGGESTION NHEERS for the Sons of Colorado! They would have all Colorado, on August 1st, anniversary of Colorado's statehood, engage in three minutes of silent prayer for peace in t Irope Good thing! Good thing! But why not make it out-loud prayer and tag on one minute for the owner of Colorado, the meek and lowly Rocke feller? WISDOM OF YOUTH ROM the mouths of babes there oft come words of wisdom. There’s a lot of 20th century high school lads at large who can give their dads cards and spades and beat them out, As an evidence of the advancement—fools call if precocity—of America’s youth, we mention the class motto of the 15 graduating class of the Mena sha, somewhere in Wisconsin, high school. It’s a gem, original or not, and worthy of idoption by any grown-up; ‘The elevator to success is not running— take the stairs!” MEDICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE announces that those who have cared for pneumonia patients cg the deadly ms in their mouths for fr m 10 to 40 days, ISTAH DUFF, ALL RIGHT PANSY, Comm OuT | | HATES To DisaPPowr YUH \MISTAW DUFF, BUT A PUM Son To Bt ovT oO? | lon gMALE Leave THis douse MIGHT AS WELL BE DEAD AS | WHO ISN'T ALL WRAPPED UP IN A ? YES, INDEED. THASSA GOO BOY, KEEP ey O YHEM DANGEROUS EVER SINCE 1SEEH You YUMBLE OFF STELLAS GAS BIKES. FLUBB, I'm GAS BIKE AN’ CRAWL TELLIN’ RICHARD YO KEEP GhY O' On All Suits and Coats. Reg. $12.50, Reg. $15.00, Reg. $19.50, Reg. $24.50, Reg. $28.5 Reg. $34.5 Reg. $38.5 1-3 off... .$8.35 1-3 off. ..$10.00 1-3 off...$13.00 1-3 off.. .$16.35 1-3 off...$19.00 1-3 off. ..$23.00 1-3 off...$25.70 1-3 off $32.35 1-3 off. ..$39.00 Reg. $48.50, Reg. $58.50, Special prices for C begin at $8.35; the Suits at $13.00 and up. J. Redelsheimer & Company W. H. Fisher, Mgr. First and Columbia eed Speedometers Now OUR JUNIOR FFIC NOTE ICE n. y, thursdy—1 had to laff purty| tion, inkwires the dentist |loud this a. m. when { herd tell of! no it wasent you big stiff, and }@ guy who thought he cood pull|the guy starts to beat it |by a dentist fe! without having) wait a minit, said the dentist, |the hooks throwed into him jyou owe me 1$ | this guy who is surely slick his-| for what do | owe you 1§, ink- | self had a tooth In his face that he| wires the other fellow, dont your | wanted yanked out & so he hunted| sine read that its free up one of those “paneless extraction, yes, replys the dentist, that ts! jof teeth free” |troo, but only the paneless extrac-| 7 seconds after he landed in the| tions are free, the kind you had| |dentist chare he started to holler) comes to one buck and pleese settle {his head off & when the old tooth) without no more talk or { will have! was out he started to bawl the den-' to nock the rest of your teeth tist out because it was no paneless down your throat with this bunch job of fives & 1 wont charge you a ©, 80 It wasent a paneloss extrac-| nickel for it eether johny Keep Off Her Feet His Meal Ticket | Percy—Aw, isn’t the hestitation,| “Jinks doesn't look lke a Hterary aw, delightful! man, But he says he makes his Miss de Peache—Yes, but I wish| living by his pen.” | you wouldn't hesitate so long when| “So he does. He raises pigs," you step on my feet. Baltimore Amertcan, THEM Small Mind Healthy é “Now, the boy I want in this & | She~I hear you and Grace quar/ ao. must be honest, bright, clell reled last night and healthy. Have you He—Yes, I was angry and spoke! ojty?” my mind. | “Oh, no, sir, I've never had any She—Yea, she said you went away thing but whooping-cough without a word, | mumps.” Against Ask For Substi ’ _Substitutes HORLICKS Round Package THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made In the largest, betta a sani ovine plant in the Wedo not make“milkpi * Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, et But oaty HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL MALTED Made from clean, full-cream silk ied 4 on view extract - goleet to powder form, : water. Best Food-Drink for All Age® Used for over a Quarter Century Untess you say “ you may get a B&F Take a Package Ho

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