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Pepitonea natty by The Bea Pobiiay in Newepaper Ba- ferprise Asan. and United Presse Bervion The Seattle Star mall, ent of city, bte per menth: B months £1.60; @ months, SLTS) roan, ed Trek te the state of Washington, Outeyte of the state, Ste per [earns $8.00 per rear, DP warrter, ety, be « ment. 44.80 for € months, or The Final Mystery What does it feel like to die? This question aroused intense curiosity in Thure B. Wagelius, brilliant young chemist and psychic investigator of Brooklyn, N. Y. A daring scheme to peek behind the mysterious curtain of death occurred to him, Locked in his laboratory, young Wagelius rigged up an apparatus that dripped an anaesthetic drug into an inhaler attached to his nostrils. This had an automatic regulator. drop of drug nearer to death. “Then, coming out of his stupor, he wrote down his experiences. ““T am on the verge of discovering the great secret of the hereafter,” he told friends, ‘Finally, the drug carried him beyond the curtain, showed him what lies after death. But death is a one-way door. No one will ever know what Wagelius discovered: He has been buried. * 8 # s 8 s 8 & The mystery of death has been a matter of deep thought by every intelligent person who ever lived. ‘Haller, philosopher and physician, watched his pulse on his death-bed, hoping to be able to speak a message an instant after death claimed him, His last words were, “My People who don’t like the Each successive experiment, Wagelius went one The world’s a stage. show are out of luck. Some say jazz is a passing fancy; others say a lingering infancy. Gun that wasn’t loaded isn’t in it with the liquor that was pure. LETTERS ic EDITOR that the while ’ ni Geath cleats the door on mortal What’s Record Hen’s Egg Size? Gemsciousness and opens the way | Extitor The Star: the longest way and seven and one tate the unknown. Please let me know the measure | fourth the other way, weighing six ‘People have an instinctive fear |™ents of the largest hen's eee laid! ounces Your truly, that you have on record, if you have @E what they do not understand. (iii: any account of it Mra FIUGH KINKADE, og ahaa arene I have one measuring nine inches R. D. 1, Box 140, Enumelaw. can remove e $a But explain the giass eye . Mirisstge ane bs teeas toe Corner Grocer’s Version fear. Editor The Star Pye to get others to me — i } hey aay it is a blow at the Jap;! egesegrepegh-engglioned tree ine Denetit of the grocer whe} io noe the Jap, but it la the corner] ‘Would die of fright they could F grocery that ts worrying them; and to Life and see our movies, ssa ga gg mega bow: neither le {t for the people—it is for ihe a Gee oe OO | thetr own pocketbooks. Some of our If they succeed to force the ttle! nosineas men dant hesitate to hire og . a feblows out, the biexer thetr plle| Jape if they can saves few nickela we could leck into the future | Want I live in the rear of store, and ff tt is not as clean State os snes te Groen becrepany irs tho towing Progress is slow because the be [1 want to know, as I have been ‘mma brain cannot stand too rapid | few myself; also worked in them. change § (Curtains of mystery If this ts pasned, 1 will send out of | where I shield sanity. town for my groceries, and will try D1 am with you, sotth the EdRor The Star: n ity." f) Hosts —Hagoai teh A fow days ago there appeared ta| Englishman, F. W. H. Myers. Mints- i oe ¢ Pacey Wie Setter 0° ethics tors of religion would find this im. TD te that worestics with ws |” ah amy the | peceably scientific book a great aid tographs of the human spirit during | believe in a soul, but whose Intellect sicep, Would you be #0 kind a» to) cries out for proof of a tangible sort. print this request for his directions | 1 was axtoniahed when I learned that! for the process? Does one merely | there was such a book obtainable, to net the kodak in a sunny room and think that it Is go little known, when €53 our skill. Our antagonist i our helper.— Burke, Man gets 10 years for shooting | Senator -in the arm. Violence docen’'t seem to de the proper | Wait until the subject is sleeping be it means so much to humanity, It is method. fore opening the shutter? And how) true it is a very formidable looking long a time exposure is necesmary?| volume, but #uch careful observation Also is a plate machine needed, or | and deduction necessarily meant very will ordinary film serve as weil? much detatied writing. ‘This matter is of such deep inter Your “little croup of serious thinks est to many persons that I was glad | ere” (whose deliberations afford much | }to see it discussed In a newspaper. | interest) are yearning for a truly | | If those who are hoping to find ma-| Alaskan book. There is one on the} | terial proof of the existence of a hu-| seven-day shelf at the central library, THE SEATTLE | THE CAT HAD TO GO AND THROW BR ei - THURSDAY, MA STAR . \a } ANOTHER FIT} Pa \ made by them (except the traffic manager) would not have any effect Upon securing traffic for this port. I do not wish to criticise any of! the former port commissioners and | traffic managers, but 1 do know the! Dresent commissioners and traffic! managers have gone and are doing constructive work from « traffic and transportation viewpoint, and should | have the cooperation of Seattic’s| Onancia! and civic organisations, I do not know any port that ts tn| ponttion to give free service and the facilities to the shippers that can b had at the Port of Seattle, which due to the efforts of the present ad ministration, and this with only a lmill tax for 1932, and conditions bad | in general. In making the fouryear compar. a — UIUVVNUATAUAVAHUGAAEAUNV ATE and San Francieco, but Vancouver, where, during the past 20 dayn, 27,000 bales of hemp from Manila passed thru to U. 8 points, That waa con. writer mentioned the taking of Pho | in comforting skepticn who wish to| ‘led by a Seattle operator and} siven to Canadian rallwayn. Co-operation and constructive mug. | geetions (not criticiems) makes business a muccras, Yours truly, CW. HOLE. Advice for the Physici clan Editor ‘The Star: A few words to the physictan | Whose neverending toil ts 24 hours ie what | | Turkish women are going to an- @eil their faces. Great chance over there for a sunburn cure. Poets do their apring training German Brewers Fearful German and Swiss brewers held ®@ secret convention. Minutes of the meeting leaked out and are published in Bertin. What do you think the brew- ts talked about? “They fear prohibition will sweep - Americans started something in- ternational when they knocked dobn Barleycorn thru the ropes. Princess Mory's mother reduced for the wedding. Her father was so reduced. Man says he has a wrist tele~ Phone; but may be talicing up his alecve. Wouldn't tt be atoful if some pro~ gle were as bad as we think they | aver “Too many supporting the gor efnment expect it to support them. “The two sides to ali questions @fe our side an wrong side. Rich bachelor who married his }) c00k wow has a fiveices cooker, man soul could have a text of this| called “Alaska Man's Luck,” which|a day, who is an outcast from hu sort, Tam sure its success would do/| lacks all the blood and thunder ele. | man society, and whone life doea pot much to comfort them. For those|ment and still succeeds in reflecting |seam to be worth living. of scientific turn of mind who prefer | the real spirit of the North. And as| I was business man for over 20 to follow only where the steps of rig-|a book it ts “distinctly different.”| years, five of which was «pent in idly careful investigators have led, I) You'll like it, Sincerely, Beattie. I was a persistant worker can recommend the volume on “Hu- WILL GROW. and was successful, in the world's —_— way of putting it, but one a How About “In God We Trust”? Pa awoke to the fact that my busi ness was not absolutely necessary Editor ‘The Star: [livee—their all—for it; the govern: |to the welfare of the general public In a letter to the editor March 8, | ment founded on “In God We Trust.” | However, I think just as eanential note a man from Big Lake calls it|And I am satisfied that this gentle |aa that of our doctor friend; at any bunk for a newspaper to print quota-|man who objects so strenuously to| rate, I bought a «mal! ranch, and ons from the Bibie. | seeing a quotation from the Bible tn | left the city and the business, and I count myself a true cfittzen of | the newspaper would not al all ob | wot real busy on the farm, where the U. 8. A., and I believe in the) ject to a cartload of “In God Wet work 12 to 14 hours a day, and honesty of our forefathers, who ac-| Trust $20 gold pieces coming his|aing and whist as I work. Bvery cepted the constitution of this repub| way. Respectfully. . lic, and many of them offered thetr! J. EGEBERG, 4057 fist & W. moment of thom long hours ta a Business for Seattle Port real joy to ma, and while I earned from $6,000 to $10,000 a year in my business I never lived as well an I do now. I have two to four hours Editor The Star: Joperation or offers a food construc-|@ day for reading and recreation. I have developed traffic and sold | tive business suggestion when it pub-|and elght hours to sleep, and the transportation with success for 25/|lishes to the world that the traffic |beauty of it Is T sleep. years, therefore an art on “Port- | thru Seattle has falien off on account| Now, if our friend the phynielan land Gets Port Business by Big / of alleged politicians, when the fact| wil! retire to a few acres of God's Effort” is very interest remains that our port commissioners | green earth, and settle down to hard 1 do not think the paper which | were elected by the people on a non-| work, he can eat three rousing meals published it shows very much co-' partisan ticket, and the nts |each day, have them exactly six have his firet and even his secon ples will reet peacefully until ¢ lare not cackling at that time, and 1 can nsmre our friend that his knowledes of medicine will not tn eapncitate him from wielding a hoe or milking a cow, and he will be able {Sr your CRAP BOOK wi. sons from the fruits of his labor on abwence from the city will not ma. terially increase the death rate. rom the Boston Post THE RAMBLER BY FREEMAN FOSTER BURR labor matter, as T do not heliewe tn long hours in factory, office or shop. I understand we have an eieht-hour statute; why not enforce it? By rippling reach and by sweeping bend, A FARMER, By the brook in its bed of stone, ae cere . az a I've rambled far with a well-tried friend, And I've rambled far alone, LEARN A WORD I've swung my pack from my weary back On the heights where the free winds blow; Thru tho wrestling gale, on the mountain trail, I've fought with the driving snow. EVERY DAY Today's word in ARCHAIC, I've Inia my head on a baleam bed, Where never a sound could be heard accent on the second syllable, But the lonesome cail of the waterfall, It means — old-fashioned, antique, | Or the song of a dreaming bird. out of date, belonging to a past age It comes from Greek—~tarch-aikos,” And I've found that wherever the path may end, old-fashioned, Or whatever the day make known, It's used tke this—Many people It's better to ramble along with @ friend like to fill thelr homes with archaic Than to ramble all alone, — furniture” | to relieve and nourish as many per. | the ranch as he does with his hyper. | dermic needle and his pill baw. Fis | | T wish to add that I admire the} |wtand of The Star on the 12-hour! It's pronounced — ar-kay-ick, with | | | ——|hours apart, and the family can all | eat at the same time, and he ean| sleep undisturbed, as hosey and the | o'clock In the morning and the hens | HVAT | | | RIGHT AFTe 1 HAD CLEAMeD The HOUSE UP For The COMFERE: GUE you said about it " ee sis the “avridge mann” ts ta h peeg but might be won hing "7 thro raw Christian apirit and neigt shen If you mean business, ge 1 blene you 7 $ CARL TL Veazty 2 Dear Cart The thing I chiefly have tn mind, t# af the multitude wy who want to live their lives aright, and need a steagg fing, light, but find beyond their mental reach, « lot ef tip ne churches teach. It 1 believe in God above, and treat my fellow mam with but can't subscribe to all the creed, altho 1 feel religion's why must the church's door be slammed, and 1 be with the damned? For 1 have always understood that God ts loving, ind aaq) good; so bow can he condemn man who tries to live the he can? It wasn't scribe or Pharisee who said to all, unto me!” We each are told, beyond a doubt, to “work omr own —_T AWRIDGE MANN, Dear Avridge Mann your notice of my Thanks out’; and tho we follow different ways in seeking God or praise, it we but keep ® common aim, we oll will get ther, the same. entienstte ma ae age FOP PRE RRSD SREB E SREB EERE SE Ee 1 must raise money, and I shail save you le dollar for every \Gotiar you pay me for your @ental work | ewe BRown | PUUUVNNUUUYUEENUULUUUUUEAOALURE AAA Setting a Precedent IN MILLINERY Popular Prices Smart Spring Hats—the Latest Modes From the Prominent Design- ers and Makers of Hats for Women —at Unheard-of Low Prices. _. sll Specially Featured $2.45 to $7.50 | This collection includes sev- eral hundred Hats—Hats which ordinarily are priced at from | $5.50 te $15.50. They are street and sports Hats for the most part, smartly trimmed and of- fered in the new colors: Corm flower, Periwinkle, Henna, §) Canna, Poinsettia, Pumpkin, Tile Blue, Tan and Sand. Included are a number of GAGE Hats. Specially Featured $5.95 Hats you would expect to pay from $7.50 to $12.50 for. In- cluded are dashing sailors, close- fitting turbans, drooping brims and clever off-the-face styles in the season’s favored fabrics. Trimmings of flowers, fruits, ribbons and feathers. Shown in all the new Spring colors. Very specially priced. Selling for Less and How We Do It— One of a Chain The Millinery Emporium — Seattle’s newest Hat Shop—and associate stores, continually buying in wholesale quan- tities, are able to give their customers the benefit of this tremendous buying power, both in price and variety of selec- tion. An Innovation in Selling and Displaying Our method of displaying and selling is a distinct innovation in the merchandising of Millinery. It will appeal to you, and save your time. It helps to lower the overhead of this shop, enabling us to sell at extremely low prices. We want you to be the judge! Come in and examine the ex- quisite Spring models and be convinced of our sincerity. One of a Chain—Low Rent—Modern Sales Methods MILLINERY EMPORIUM| 416 Pike Street IAQUUUOUAYEUUEAGUOUEROUCUOUOUOUAUUANGOUAAAHEAUEUAUUAOUAUUAUUHEU ALAA