The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 27, 1915, Page 4

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Member of the Bortppe Northwest League of Newspapers Published Daily by The Star Publishing Co Thame Main 9400 DOES BEING “PLACED” MEAN “STAYING PUT?” BOY who asks for a job at the New York public library employment bureau has_ his troubles. The placement clerk provides him with a vo- cational guidance application blank containing 86 questions. “Does your mind concentrate or skip around?” is one of them. Our mind has both concentrated and skipped around this and the other 85 questions, but it in variably circles back here: Is it better for a boy to be “placed” in a job some expert thinks he will fit? Or—is it better for him place in the world? “I'd hate to see any young fellow do all the things I've done, make all the mistakes I've made,” Says J. Leonard Replogle, $15,000,000 steel mag- nate, who went to work for $3.60 a week when he was 12 years old. But it’s 50 to 50 that if J. Replogle had been “placed” in his youth according to vocational guidance rules, he would not be explaining his phenomenal financial career today. There’s a fatality about accepting other peo- to make his own T DON'T WANT MY SLIPPERS. I've GoT To ATTEND A LODGE SLIPPERS, MESTING TONIGHT— DEAR. nee Policeman in St. Louis denies he |@ | Bhot wife, but is held in jail. | New York navy yard foundry to| Billy Sunday tells a sto ) Feopen after shutdown of five) a pious woman who conf. ‘years. to her pastor that she had | Chinese railroad man is buying| | yielded to vanity, looked In the pment in U. 8. glass and thought herself | pretty. “Go in peace,” said the pas tor, “for to make a mistake Is no sin!” Levi M. Kagy, Panama land com ‘i missioner resigns position be-| of {ll health. | French liner Bankdale at sea, re. ported with fire in hold Petrograd announces eruiser Frauenlob {ts sunk r John Speedy Rush has been | kicking his way Into football | fame on the Princeton team. | (He oughta be a good one.) German |6 got Heine Schultz, German deserter, : Violet urviving member excluded by U. S. at New York by | of Gec fami pvr customs men ward Roberts 1 uncle Lord Kitchener confers with! hy Jy Ttalian army heads at Rome $450 orth of val Wipple Creek Lumber Co. at tlh Fg Blon Spge no | RUT mother says one’s edu Ridgefield resumes operations ne f. Harris, 314) cation is not complete without British arrange a $50,000,000 loan knowledge of such things, so 1 with New York bankers, Frank G a Uberal amount of such Strikers’ agent killed {n Arizona. at Snowhil k won't harm mo Blaine Murry, Donald Burdick tes $45 1 es a | > and Fred Havel, university stu © dents, hurt in auto smashup at r Tivili burns in Chesa|Write Story on Any Puyallup. peake bay. No lives a mM kde mm mna |, Hndon suffragists revolt against leadership of Mrs. Pan st e Twenty dead and 60 hurt in Ar 4 kansa Jo. A COLD? LISTEN! THE OPTIMIST AT THE FRONT 3 1 8 bloon “Pape’s Cold Compound” Ends Severe Colds or Grippe in Few Hours, j Your cold will break and all | grippe misery end after taking a dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound every two hours until three doses are taken It promptly opens clogged-up now trils and air passages in the head se stops nasty discharge or nose r tad ning, relieves sick headache, dull-| jgas n feverishness, sore th Cc VR imines Sneezing, soreness and astiffne Kent ranch ars old, died i Don't stuffed-up. Quit t k ur th t that | en world gives such promp t Patel te formed te “Pape's Cold Compound,’ Portian | costs only 25 nts at a Lee arrested here for @tore, It acts without assi oplum sr tastes nice, and causes no fr Wat re raised 1 Weuleuce, Accoyt ao substitute, America companies, -« “from top to bottom STAR—SATURDAY, NOV. 27, 1915. ple’s judgment of what is good for us. It robs us of power to judge for ourselves. There's a fatality about being “placed” by somebody else. It inclines a body to “stay put.” BY THE WAY | ARTHUR BRISBANE is an editorial writer and works for William R. Hearst. eyes, One of the favorite,;themes of Brisbane is fle loves to tell those who read his stuff that the really big men of the world have blue eyes. Brisbane DOES take this stuff seriously. And, tho we are not so silly as to imagine that the mental caliber of man is determined by the color of his eyes, we offer to those born so unfortunately with brown or dark eyes this in- formation: Abraham Lincoln, Julius Caesar, Robert Louis Stevenson, James A. Garfield, McKinley, Pitt,, Wordsworth, Harvey (the discoverer of blood cir- culation), Goethe, Pope Leo XIII, Beethoven, Raphael, Dante and many more men famous for famous things had dark or brown eyes. By the way, Arthur Brisbane has blue eyes. PAGE 4, BUILT THAT WAY PEAKING of the possibility of Germany doing it, an economist says that “when a gevern- ment takes over the food supply of its people, a crisis is approaching.” This, like all other attempts to apply general izations to Germany, is pretty much drivel. Ac- cording to the expert economists, Germany ought now to be standing at some cortier of the world begging for bread. Before the war, Germany im- ported, annually, $1,250,000,000 worth of farm products and food. By the laws of figures and theory, she should have been starved to death three months ago. She wasn’t. The people of Germany are so organized, amalgamated with and absorbed by their govern- ment that the latter can take over their finances, food, family relations—anything that the govern- ment requires for the government’s purpose. It will be “a decided reversal of form” if the German people refuse any sacrifice demanded by their government in the business of war. OPPORTUNITY NEVER knocks at the door of the knocker. NO WONDER that China's president monarchy, He has 31 children, 16 of them sons. favors a A Married Man’s Troubles HELLO There OH, HELLO Tom — | WANT" OUVIA! WHERE ARE You GOING & eas today Mra, Daisy Miller |Dollar for Best Essay Is Won by. * a Girl Circleite ene Arlene ( ing her home for the Baughman, 11, of 515 . Is the winner of the ar for the best 150-word essay on her occupations after school and Harriet rane 4) m; SAY, HOBBS, | CALLED YOU WER HERE To TIP You OFF ON SomE- THING ~ )F You'RE WoNDERING WHAT TO GET OLIVIA FOR. CHRISTMAS, | CAN ts ng tried on the charge of burn insurance Harry |_JUST ONE BLOCK DOWN ON THE OTHER S102 OF The STREET, THEY HAVE A SWELL SBT OF ERMINE FURS IN THE WiNDow AND SwWe’s CRAZY ABOUT THEM - In One Part. months, By carrier, ety, the h. Entered at Penttie, Wash,, postottics ae second-class matter HILLSTROM’S DEFENSE UST before he was Hillstrom wrote: “They demand that I disclose the name of the I respect her lose executed at Salt Lake Cit pure woman over whom I was shot. honor and that of her husband. | refuse to di name.” This pure woman sees an innocent man exe- cuted rather than come forward and save him. Maybe there’s a sort of purity like that, in the magazine stories. We never saw it, in the flesh. If there really is that woman, the animosity of Hillstrom’s friends is due her alone. If Hillstrom did not have a fair trial, so much the more reason for this woman’s coming forward. If Hillstrom’s relations with this wife were such as to wreck her purity or honor, there should be no general mourn- ing over his being shot by somebody. her ALBERT DAUB, candidate for election to the port commission, qualifies as the prize bluffer in an article in the morning paper, when he gives the reader to under- stand that if the port belt line is voted for, Seattle folks will tax themselves for millions. Mr. Daub ought to know better than this. They won't tax themselves a cent. The money is already provided. By Allman WHAT DID You yy, | SAY To MR. HOBBS? WHAT | Dip YousaN ZN NorHin?=]/ MULLE TS DAUGHTE LEARY L SPors EM A SWING SEAT When You're Well KEEP WELL V Another Article. tn The 8 s Health Campaign Medical Association Oe Wolfe, Flora E Mount Wash Har 62nd at Chartle Vernon, Walters, Edmonds th Yak r, Route 4, Box oppl Blaine h ave 24 Tenth ave. Anna Rar Walt Seattle; Hedge 5 n. Barstow money is ready at the office Following {# her story ° . ° WHAT | DO AFTER SCHOOL By Harriet Baughman Sa ° Say what you will about the use fulness of girls, but it is my opin fon that a me without a gir would soon come to grief. She ts always tn 1, always expected man things that have to wash the diab and the chickens, 1 ted to be ready to! in on errands at a moment's no am ri ti always expe And Saturday! the day, Ah, Saturday's with the house to clean When mother s, | have to wash the pots and and play the part of scullery ba Subject Next Week; Girl Suggests It Harriet Baughman, 515 Kenyon at, Seattle, suggests the Circle contest for next week in a letter to | | I would ke Jack the And € r forget the Cirele-| the conditions of the} Write your ens on any) but be mre not| r than 150 word ¢ wide of the paper alde ur name wish, onl write neatly address and or girl over the age e other of 16 npete. | GREENWICH, Conn, Novy 0 wy by eras hice ep Ahad TRIAL AS ARSORIST "corny the oddest Hieenaay party in all histor Little Ad Close, daughter of Nov The last'E. B. Close, was 7 years old, Her resulting from Portland's cam-|mother just had to do something vaign against arsonists is in prog-'nice to celebrate the great day; so PORTLAND, Did Any Little Girl Ever Have ‘So Grand a Treat; a Circus to Herself for a Day ADRLAIDE B, CLOSE Little Adelaide Close, who had a circus for a birthday party FRESH AIR Don't try t air. If you do, alth will suffer. and it is cheaper and bet os ter to keep good health than it is ito try and regain it once lost ' Cultivate the fresh air habit; walk in It, sleep in it, work In It, and live in it. It will put bloom on your cheeks, fire in your eye, and sharpen your wits. Why more fresh air? Your blood reds the oxygen In it, to feed the s in every part of your Your tissues need it to with stand the hostile attacks of fierce m enemies dn it optimism are {n th of the alpha bet The lungs give off poison with ation, When fn a room which {s not constantly receiving a supply ¢ eh alr, one must. re R ibreathe this devitalized, befouled air a and again 8 d think, before the cold weather really sets in, and brings the diseases of closed he Jand bad air—pneumonia, tubercu }losis and colds, Then see that you bedroom, living room, street ca | chureh, hool, theat lodge hall Jand office are provided daily with | aay |Humphreys’ Seventy-seven | For Grip, Influenza, | COLDS The suecessful use of seven” has made many Homeopathy ectally following sugp seventy prts to en | served | To get the best results, take he had a full two-ring eireus, with} “seventy-seven” at the (rst. feel clowns and animals ar Jing of a Cold—lassitude er d pink nee rh If you wait until you b n to give a matinee performance ' nd Adelaide: wont apa An in} ¢ gh and neeze, it nay take Marce most famous of clowns. Was there, and everything from peanuts and candy to the w in the 80-foot tent w free and ex elusive for the little boys and girls who were Adelaide's guests. A small vial of pleasant pellets, fits the vest pocket 260 and $1.00, at all druggists or mphreya’ Homeo Medicine Co. 166 Wiliam t, New York, mize on resh far disposition | ge the | stion has been cb-| \ due to the fermentation ef un- digested food In the bowels, with the formation of gas. it is due to the food being unsutt- ed to the digestive capacity of the Infant. It can be avoided often by diluting the feedings with water. —_——- ~ || THE REPLY OF A GUILTY CONSCIENCE ! | stopped In a country hotel last Mon ind when | regis- tered | ed the landlady if there was any water in my room. “Yes, there was,” she replied, guiltily, “but | had the drain | fixed.” ! { n. y. fridy—a furnishure maker is buying autermobils and a summer home on long island & purty soon { gess he will have enuff dough to| lone some to the pore alleys, enuff to make up the billiun dollars & a short t a go this feller was so inere br that he had all his wife's | pools ook a t him on the sunne st ' ob t 9 out of 10 handsomer on there left than they are on there rite he had gone neerley busted on making of them twisty sofas but he had been making them so the peeple sitting in em had the rite sides of there faces brought to . 4 that was th es what looking 1 as he got this hunch he e side twisters up ome new sofas which is shape the letter S and he fixed em so when peepel sat in it you look at the left side of the other feller or gurl and she your left side & they went like hotcakes the feller says that not only he m dough b he fs 8 of so. y by vry body to see side of evry body else tare and all allowing ¢ Ithe better | }fresh air | Open the windows and dress a bit |warmer, if necessary, but get your . |full share of fresh air | —— Colic in babies is commonly Public Opinion Indorses this family remedy by making its sale larger than that of any other medicine in the world. The experience of generations has proved its great value in the treatment of indigestion, biliousness, headache and constipation. BEECHAM’S PILLS relieve these troubles and prevent them from becoming promptly clearing wastes and poisons out of the digestive system They strengthen the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Mild #nd harmless. A proven family remedy, unequalled For Digestive Troubles Largest Sale of Any Midicine in the World. Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10¢., 25e. | | | | | rious ills by | |

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