The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 6, 1916, Page 4

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STAR—SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1916. PAGE 4. Member of the Sorippe Northwest League ot Newspapers Published Daily by The Star Publishing Oo Phone Main 0400 Seattle Papers and the German Note A Show-Down Wanted ELL, now that we all have had a chance to read the German note thru T IS about time for a final show-down on the Brandeis appointment. carefully, and digest it, we all know which of the two Seattle afternoon + Square-deal folks are getting something more than impatient. Pop — papers was right in the original reports early Friday of the mature of the = Clary committee is reported to be deadlocked, or nine for, and eight against, kaiser’s reply Mr. Brandeis. : . rip OME The Star’s report, of course, was the right one, Good enough! One is a fairly comfortable majority, under the circum- The opposition newspaper was wrong. stances, and amply sufficient to put the proposition up to the full senate. The opening sections of the note, with their bitter invective against There should be no further delay. the United States for its attitude of alleged hostile neutrality, gave The Star's rival newspaper an opening for its jingoist tendencies. Now Will William Take Notice? Either thru this inherent jingoism, or thru sheer carelessness in not perusing the note more thoroly, The Star’s rival issued its early editions with UDGE RICHARD S. TUTHILL, of a circuit court of Illinois, has ren- screaming headlines, announcing that a break was at hand. The Star reported dered a decision that Francis Bacon is the author of the works of William the note’s contents as a concession to the United States. Shakespeare. ; : : Ft The town had a laugh over the ridiculous difference between the two We guess that will hold Mr. Shakespeare for a little while. reports. And now, today, the town knows The Star was right. PE Re ASE Reo CRairens Ste The Star does not go off at a tangent when “big news breaks,” as we say in newspaper circles. Cross Him! ; ’ * Then is when The Star is most accurate. iw THERE is any such thing as an American Cross of Honor, right here Then, more than any other time, The Star endeavors to weigh its and now we want to nominate one Arthur Gershon, of New York, for the words carefully. ‘ shiniest one in the lot. You've got to read The Star to get the news—RIGHT. He has invented a method of deodo' zing gasoline. OUR IDEA of the height of futility Is defending THIS the day of nationalism. Woman suf. Shakespeare from George Bernard Shaw. frage is of national importance. e an tor e JO cok aera Ta ILLY SUNDAY has started in to clean up Kansas City. If successful, THE FLOWERS that bloom In the spring, tra-la, GEN. FUNSTON insists that the co-operation Uncle Sam should send him‘ after Villa) Any man who can talk those — re rite and battles and raids. ne ee ia s attempt te take Kansas City sinners up to the bar of repentance would find it easy to cajole MILWAUKEE MAN got divorce, Said wife had jump too hastily at conclusions. Maybe the rf ; a ae t habite—b 'd movies, Didn't say which Carranza etrategy is to let Villa run out of Pancho right into Pershing she he ejected tx steph ”. Mexico at the other end. NSHINE JANE” Ait Feature 14, by Little, Brown & Co. 1 me, and I sald to myself right off, ‘What fine lines!’ So I went right r and shook hands with her—" He said he feared maybe he'd made a mistake,” interrupted his wife, “and 1 said—'If you speak to me again, I'll call out to the con ductors | “And Isaid: ‘Madam, excuse me, |I'm only a harmless crank as is (Continued from our last Issue.) | controvertible. yout doors and fied to the little; with rampant gray bair. Mrs. Beam-) “No, Matthew, you tell it, and/trying to help folks as is sick or od | } -TER V No,” said Lorenzo soberly, “l)or wan Matilda. IT help anywhere I can.” trouble, and you look like a woman | Leen dha Bagend edgy “eating age bne yh don't think that Jane ought to take Hut what a changed Matilda!| “Well,” mid her busband, “then/ as could tell me of some | could) The Most Wonderful Thing Ever opening windows, brushing up and anybody's money; she ought to pay | “Well, Jane,” coming forward and/ I'l! begin with saying, Sister Susan, | help, maybe!'” | A Novel a Week | “SU paper. Ne lowe watts; a full tmetett (6 0 By Anne Warner—Copyright, mest will come to you every day. || NeXT WEEK—“THE CRIME DOCTOR” BY E. W. HORNUNG Happened building the kitchen fire. It was al- the debts with her own money, but holding out both hands, “how's my| Niece Jane, and young od = “Then I thought of you, Susan,” | esitated. ways a pleasant hour, for she usu- 1 can't see why she can’t trust and | sister?” I'd better tell you wi am, firet/said the sister; “you see, I'd been | sete be sald impatiently, “pe-|aily filled it to the brim with work | know it's coming “She—oh, she's all right.” |of all, because I'm the only one of looking out of the window, and the| ; "» = | weil done and thoughts sent strong Because there's no place for It) “Up and dressed? the kind In the world so far !| view was so pretty, and it kind of me from,” said Jane firmly “You.” | know.” ; leome over me how awful hard it an began to get back over "And you, Jane, how are you? That is true," interposed Ma-| was to lio in bed—and—and I felt “| wonder if {t would be right |ly and happily out over the coming to be quite frank with you?” | time. “What a 7 oday this was change I'm going tn about Oh, I'm all right. Shan't 1 call Ulda, ber plain face quite meta-| Kind of bad, and his face looked “Go on. tics crervintes, ie Pays bite yg eo wee Ge te * sh 4; “the trouble auntie? meperes 1 1 | kind, and I said: ‘Well, sit down. my right.” of her usually sunny calm. Finally,| ¥ith us ts we al! need hot coffee “No: we'll go out and have break-| | You see, I was eae a mae. or 1 do know somebody sick.’ ” “Why is {t your right?” | garden. When she was out of hearing the! fast with you. We had one break-| @!nar ee yon Sng Se nneee | “80 1 set down,” went on Mr “Because I love you, an¢ you| And Lorenzo was there! two young people remained stlent fast, so as to make {t easy for you oi Dh pred waa t a4 : so aw, | Beamer, “and in just a little while tmow it.” He looked very blithe and happy.‘ for a few seconds, Then the man/to have us have tt with you.” | fat tired or things oa Ther Sane \ghe let up like everybody does, and) Sho started violently, then turned “Weill,” he said, “have you thought | spoke. ]_ “Do come right out to the table”! y &° I told me the whole story.” j think | '=e and 1 used to wish everything wan different, and then one day, te, #1 of a sudden, it came over me, with a shock Hike lightning, that “But what come next was just! like @ story, too,” Matilda said.) “When I got to Mrs. Camp's at last, very white. “Don't say that. I've it over and decided that you're always thought of you as engaged right, after all?” | h wo vinings She was talking to| She was panting, and surprise| I've found Mra, Croft's will. She/ Ne | “Dear,” his voteo was very gen-|Jane led the way. “IT cm | tle, “I want to tell you something. |what Aunt Susan will . ver mind what #he sa m, thought—I—" She | flooded her face with color, “Oh—"|left all that she had to whoever be just right. Everything always te. 1 found Mrs. Camp so changed that Ipaposd. cute aon. she gasped, “oh!” and then: “Right| took care of her the night she died. |Come, Matthew." Then Mra, Ma|jet'ck. Guigs, different (heli 1 hadn't met Matthew on the “You misunderstand her. She’s|—0! course I'm right!" It appears that she had a good deal | tilda Beamer led off, and Mr. Mati sng that if you've got the brain to| ‘Tain and got something to hold on | " t {nm love with one fellow| He approached, his hand extend | more than any one supposed. It's |thew Beamer followed, smiling) seq what's jacking, you've got the|t® | couldn't have stayed in ane ed. “Right in believing, or right tn/all yours, dear. Now you see why |cheerfully. He seemed to be a very! body to turn to and help fill up the | 20Use an hour.” eet Oe thee et cer than 1 | mistrusting?” |you should have trusted.” cheerful man hole. The very, next day read| “Why, what was the matter with | against. ora ths = | Jane stared. “How can you talk; (Concluded In Our Next Issue) “Perhaps I'd better go first and/ about a doctor as set up some| “ts. Camp?” Susan asked anxtous-| on. so?” | |Just prepare auntie,” Jane suggest-| purses —” jt bested y Then Jane pressed her oe to} “1 talk eo because I know 00. CHAPTER VII | 04, hastily. “Oh, my goods Susan cried,| “Why, all Mra. Camp's family is gether and interlocked her fingers. | py arything’s coming right for you.” Mrs. Beamer | © need. She always yelled) “bear that, Jane! | married now, and it seems rhe was ““T can never marry T never think | You're crazy,” she tried to laugh.| When Susan king out of the w she saw me snddenty, and) as was to spread sunshine, | #0 lonely she's turned Into a social of it. There’s money to be paid, I've heard people say that of| ¥indow, saw the two whom she this time it will be for joy. Life/and I thought that was a good/ settler or some such thing, and her| mobody to pay it but me, and 0/4... Nor that it matters.” | left behind coming across the |{s going to be all joy for Susan| idea, only I couldn't see a place in| nice, quiet house where I'd looked way to get !t except to earn It. "She stood watching him and con-| £784", she knew instantly. now.” ft for me, ‘cause I wasn't young |to rest was one swarm of Italians| Lorenzo looked almost sternly at sidering bis words. “I wouldn't let ‘They've settled it somehow,”| Jane turned the button of the|and wasn't no girl to go ‘round her. you give me the money to straight. | *he exclaimed in supremest joy, and dining room door. “Auntie Susan,/ spreading nothing For an hour they argued, but). out my father’s affairs, even if|¥hirled to whisk the bacon off the/ it's Aunt Matfida and Mr. So I figured out that being as Jane maintained her position. you were ever so rich, you know,” | *tove. Teamer.” 1 was a man, I could maybe help Finally sho lifted up her eves in, said slowly. “I couldn't.” “Auntie,” said Jane, from outside) Susan justified her sister's views| make the sunshine, and then any | and they were beautiful ey big “L know it.’ the window, the minute after, “I by forthwith giving the yell of her|ON¢ could slather it on that pleas. | and true—and ‘epee tote gl ga “And I wouldn't let Auntie pay Lae oot gn ‘ ner| NRO life, “Ma-—tilda!—And Mr. ed. So 1 os ragieg ban abest for ing softly fort! “Tt wow! 80 - “Auntie,” sald Lorenzo, over her) heamer'—" some sunshine to make, and the See .cide't peak. He felt mi now." ssh li pt ee ar an Wome te OS Ber, Sree era tae kis ee tou moka: ba, A ; june. er, gave her a good hug and a oe Bt ; was also “so wonderful, 4 “ mercy!" |takes,” sho said, with a big tear in| *round. ¥ 4 4 derfui as if he hadn't lived with it “—_ #0 neg ~~ ritapie|, “YeR, dear,” sald her niece, now| each aya, “but somehow it was writ-|D&Fd to break. up in life as hard night and day ever since the first} “I'm not joking: I'm @ veritable |i, the doorway, “only Lcan't believe lten that I should be allowed to| limes around mouths, So I net out “ le of joy. I'm as happy as I Y ” low fields of e minute of knowing her. “I think | *postle it. think that {t's a dream. make them right. Susan, this is|t?,plow fields of hard lines, T'd better go,” he said very gently, | can be. “Come straight in and help me|Matthew. Sit down, Matthew. Sit} He paused. } realizing keenly that he must not| She looked at him with real won-| cs aij this on the table, so that 1 a users a? . Do go on,” Jane whispered | press her in this first blush of the der because his appearance cer-| nan listen with a free mind.” ad softly t new springtime. tainly bore out his words. “I wish} gusan’s appeal was pathetic in the Bagong , a ee up ebatrs) Well, whenever I'd see a hard Jane was left alone in the|that I knew what you meant.” extreme, “Where did she get it, . oon - 2 down. man «sitting alone, I'd go up to him kitchen. He dropped the rake, came to| anyhow?” ly Fee ee ciahes.”}and hold out my hand and nay, “He said he loved me!” she her side. Then he ught her in| “Oh, quatie, {t's the most wonder-| antes aimed, hurrying into the}-wel, 1 ain't lald eyes on you, I thought over and over. “It seems | his arms and kissed her. you eve of.” oP one 90 don't know when!’ That wasn't ] 50 wonderful—the most wonderful| She screamed. To her it was the persed Std ve meer ui tee Matilda” Susan looked almost | no tie, and ‘most always we'd get ' thing that has ever happened since| greatest shock of her life, for no| way ready to faint Are you-@r@/ataiking. Then I'd say, ‘I'm a the world was made. He said he/man had ever kissed her before.| “1 aid it all, except 1 didn’t pro] in, ma fod.” wald Matilda, “1 {Armless crank that likes to go loved me!” “Oh—oh, mercy!” vide the money,” sald Lorenzo, and i ecg soar round making friends, and I took don't know what I've ever done to 5 She went upstairs to ber own| Matters were not helped much|the next minute th deserve it, but I'm married, It's room and shut the door softly. “Of|) by Susan's looking over the fence | od y were all seat a fancy to you right off’ It was , tly. “Of he could tell the whole story. |¢ het baciniten ro wonderful all T come up against. | course I can never marry him." | just then and crying out abruptly:| Susan didn't scream, She sat atill,| Sor wes inthe worth and wee | Why, the hardest folke was just | she whispered sloud, “but he did | “we, 1 declare!” a bit of toast in her hand, listening t ? a | come to tell u bo " aching to sit down and explain that say he loved me. Oh, I know that ra. Ralston,” sald Lorenzo, not | breathlessly. When Lorenzo bad| gy"? gon gall about It. nothing so wonderful ever Was I) even blushing, “you're the very per-| finished, “Ob,” she murmured in an this world before f | son we need this minute, I want tojawed voice, “Oh, my, but I'm hap- The Tata Cust aaa saris marry Jane, and she won't hear to|py! Why, 1 believe I'm really in al Weil, what next!” for gold-brick man, and it give at the text foreihg, he it because of her father’s debts. The|burry for Matilda to come back, Just Matilda «miled quite radiantly.|™me a fine chance at the Jaflers and Geind herself suddenly metamor debts are all right and everything's so I can tell her Think of that—me/“we met on the train the day 1] Some of the men in prison. Pretty —facing a new world—two all right, only she won't believe it.| really and truly anxious to 80 | left here,” she began; “it was right|S00n everything that turned up 1 wish you'd climb the fence and) Matilda again! My, you Sunshine) ofr. He took me out on the back|#eemed to just come along to give ¢ , in fact. | a. Mas, the world of Lo-|2¢lp me persuade her, for altbo 1| Jane, you—what a lot of difference! piatform of the car and opened|me a chance to make a little sun- ; ” know she'll end by marrying me,| you've made In me.” yes to life, and hine, Py y 7 ctually 1 her, which | * otha .| my eyes to , and we just suited,|shine. Pretty soon life was all oo gl od moe which she|!'¥e Just set my heart on convert ‘When {s your aunt coming$"| didn't we, Matthew?” nothing but sunshine chances, would surely awaken, and then|!n& her to her own religion first.”| Lorenzo asked Jane 3 “Tell it all,” said Mr. Beamer;| “I was on a trip when I see ice was that second world of n swung easily over the| “She went for three weeks,” said |“tell the beginning.” Matilda sittin’ across the aisle from wonder, the world of her own|fence. “You're just right, Mr. Rath,|Jane; “it will be three weeks next - poeindee <ricom atoartancllncatattnnaenthicba 2 : voriad { hich she |¥Ou ought to marry her, She's the| Thursday.” she had trusted, and wondered if|house that I ever saw; she's far||t seems like three years!” observed | ft could be possible that what she|too good to be a nurse. How much | Susan. “What a lot has happened Commencing Sunday, May 7th, the “Milwaukee” will run its popular daily train between these points on the Susan exclaimed,| they wasn't hard at all It was “Jane, come back! Think of |the most interesting thing I ever other romance, and Matilda, too! | ot hold of. I got arrested once believed firmly and preached #|did your father owe, you Sunshine| There’s Jane—and her Sunshine— dently was really true Jane, you? Maybe I can pay it,|@nd me up and well—and you, Mr. “It isn't setting limits to face|1 will if I can.” Rath—and then you and Jane and what must be,” she said over and| Jane looked at him and then at|®0W this money i ‘over to herself, “and I must pay|Susan. “I couldn't take your I can’t believe any of it,” said} poor father’s debts, and there i#)money, Auntie,” sald she, quite Jane, “I try, but I Just can't. 1 no possible way for me to get the|gently, but quite firmly. “And Her aunt started to reply, but money except to earn it bit by bit.”|then, too,” she added, with her| ¥8* stopped by a gudden loud The statement had gone to bed|roguish smile, “you've left it to] ns outside. ; PB with her, and {t rose with her when| Aunt Matilda.” Goodness, what's that?” she ex she rose: {t looked indisputable, in-' in maddest self-defense, she rushed | “ied. The flavor-tight tin, with the foil seal top, preserves th following new schedule: Leave Seattle...4:00 p. m. | Leave Raymond 1:30 p.m Arrive Aberdeen 9:25 p.m} Arrive Chehalis 3:30 p. m Arrive Hoquiam 9:40 p. m. | Arrive Centralia 3:45 p.m Arrive Centralia 7 Arrive Hoquiam 1:45 p.m Arrive Chehalis 7 m Arrive Aberdeen 2:00 p. m. Arrive Raymond 9:45 p.m. | Arrive Seattle ..7:25 p. m. sald Susan, solemnly, “that's a young man in a million | Think of his finding that will. My, but he'll make a good husband! ‘I Just can't realize any of it,” sald her niece. She seemed to be totally unequal to any other view of her| present situation | Lorenzo stood in the door. “It wasn’t a burst tire,” he explained, | briefly, “It's a new kind of siren they're using. It's friends from out Mr, and Mrs. Beamer.” ve got the wrong house,” Susan, “I don't know any ee me high-class service, cafe observation car, etc. For full information, inquire at the company’s Ticket @f- fices and Information Con sansd>> FOLGERS Bureaus | Second Avenue and Cherry St. Jackson Street Depot Phone Elliott 4812 Phone Main 6933 Bone s lone ’ ti) || CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE 45c Coffee 3. A. FOLGER & CO., San Francisco 45¢ Quality room she. found the visitors —Mra Beamor, tall afd of large build, with | a handsome motor costume, | Mr.| Beamer, also large, very wiry, and’ & ST. PAUL RAILWAY ahe dancer, has gone to England) wiches \ ‘trips; Matthew and I didn’t ha Finding a‘ sensible cigarette is just plain, common sense Ry mall, out of ity, one your, $1.50; months, $190; Be per month up rier, tty, 266 & month, Q.—-16 it true that Vernon Castle, croquette with pea ett and joined the aviation force in the coffee; lee ere war? Wasn't he an American citi: Or nerve meat loaf and zen? CASTLE FANS. potato; roil lly, o A-—Vernon Castle 1* a British lee cream and cake wubject. He was born in Norwich ' and. He volunteered for mili QI am a girl 18 years old, whe tary service has been studying stenography for six months, but seem not to be able Q—Will you kindly tell me|to operate the typewriter correct where | can get @ pattern and di- ly; that is, | do not use all my fin rections for an old-fashioned “log gers. Do you think | will make @ cabin quilt? | have tried at all the Success of it? art stores and was unable to find ALMOST DISCOURAGED, anything like it EVA. A—Ift you take dictation acem A.—Perhaps you will find some rately, and learn to write neat, ag very handsome examples of this ceptable letters, you will succeed, style of plece-work at one of the Your speed will increase with prae homes for old Ind and some one tice, no matter how your work fg to tell you how to make one of the produced, Many very good typists same kind do not use the touch system. Evem tho their speed is not the greatest, Q.—1 am divorced from my first they are acceptable operators tq wife and about to marry again. | many offices. Accuracy and abMity have one of my children and their to spell and punctuate are put mother has the other, The chil-|above speed at typing by many em dren visit h other frequently. | ployers. They call their mother “mamma.” What should they call the new) @Q.—How Ie It that eo many lew wife who is coming into my home?|yers break Into public life and be PERPLEXED FATHER. come public figures? H. P, A—Take the matter up with) A-—From the beginning of our ir fiancee and let her decide/national Mfe, our statesmen have what she wishes to be called. |come in greatest numbers from the |profession of the law. This is per Q.—My daughter is to be a June ¢, natural, since the lawyer is bride. We are in very moderate an advocate, or representative, circumstances, but my daughter is From pleading the cause of the indi popular in our town, and | wish tol vidual, he often wishes to advance serve a wedding supper to about 25 to plead the cause of the public. Be friends. Will you please suggest |ing accustomed to public speaking, one? MOTHER. |he naturally finds public life espe A—Creamed chicken, or chickencially alluring. learning English and girls learning |lovely bright September day, Mr, sewing, and women asking advice|and Mrs, Beamer and Mrs. Susan and such a chaos of Bedlam you|Ralston walked quietly into the never dreamed.” | village church and sat down in the Ob, Aunt Matilda!" Jane's face | front pew. Shortly after the clergy- was radiant |man and the bride and the groom “Afternoons Matthew came with |Came in, and the clergyman map — an auto, and he'd take me off with | Tied the bride to the groom. the back seat full of children, and| Then they all went out together, we'd hunt hard lines anywhere they |A mice cold luncheon was spread looked ikely.” jat Susan's, and the cat was walt “And then, of course, we soon got |/2& scratching hard at his white ” bow while he did so. married,” said Mr. Beamer. “Yes, and that’s all,” said Ma-| After luncheon Mr. Beamer, big tilda, “Now did you ever?” ge! ee vere sister .PTER “Thing of me traveling!” Susan. eee jovted ecstatically. “Oh, Jane, may autumn, She didn't have any trous-|“*,T Rathod her pret smile, and sean or any bridal trip. It was linen after the last wave of adieu, | new kind of wedding, because 80 \she ‘and Lorenzo went back into much about her and her way Of | the house. ‘ looking at life was new to those| This is really very funny, about her, that even her marriage | now,” said Lorenzo; “first 4 bad to match it. will plan our future.” “My clothes are always tn nice) “y, Jane said. order,” she said to Susan, slightly) But they failed to do elther. appalled over the non-existing| Instead, they left the dishes and preparations, “and I love to sew the future to care for themselves, and will make what I need as 1/Going straight down into the gar need it.” den, climbing the two fences, safe “I don’t want any presents,” Lo-/ly secluded in the little, growing, — renzo had said decidedly. “I don’t|blooming inclosure, Lorenzo took want any one on earth to groan be-jhis wife in his arms, and sald: — cause I'm marrying Jane.” “Oh, my dearast dear, how rightest “I don’t think much of bridal /right everything is!” THE END. one, 80 I know all about the: said Matilda, who now had her! “THE CRIME DOCTOR,” the standard and never lowered it for|next novel-a-week in The Star, one instant; “those bothers are just | brings to light a few new wrinkles about over for sensible people.” in criminal solutions. Begin the So itall fell out inthis way: One|story Monday. Will it allow you to — smoke as often as you'd — like to smoke without any mean after-feeling ? Fatimas aren't the only cigarettes that answer “yes” on allof these points. There are other sensible cigarettes, But facts seem to indicate that - I a yur

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