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Publilaning Ce. Mate The Seattle Star 4 United Pre - months, $1.60; € months » tal Representat The Stadium Pays Dividends Seattle is just beginning to obtain a full view of the benefits which may accrue to the community from the University stadium. That, no doubt, explains why the Montlake bridge was so enthusiastically indorsed by the voter t month, For instance, people are now going to have a chance to hear Theo Karle, famous tenor, in concert at 50 and 75 cents a seat, thanks to the great capacity of the stadium. They usually-have to pay three dollars when he sings in the theater. More and more we will find uses for the big bowl. Americanus week, for instance, is going to be an attrac- tion of major importance to us all. The stadium is pay- ing big monthly dividends of civic entertainment, recrea- tion and delight. THE BEAUTIFUL ROAD TO Selection of the Milton route Should not mean the abandonment of the High Line road up Julia's Gulch. That highway should be kept open. The connecting link between the High Line and Milton should be constructed so that it will be in SeattleTacoma highway meet with with the There's still another route that deserves {uverable mention, Some day the road to Dash Point must be extended, It should te made the scente drive from Tacoma to Seattle. It can be done with going to too great expense by improving a small section at a time, The road to Dash Point is good now. It should be paved all the way as soon as possible. Then the county can build ahead and pave as money Is pro. vided. King county can be persuaded to do her part, And the tourists will choose the Dash Polnt road every time, for it will pass along the shore of the Sound, among the trees, where the clear view of the Olym- ples cannot be shut off. It will be the beautiful road to Seattle, The fact that a woman will turn a man's head Is the cause of many automobile accidents. The richer they get, the more they hate to pat en heirs. At Last, the Perfect Job A fellow over in Idaho has a soft snap of a job. He is employed by Dutch scientists to go forth and capture truckloads of rattlesnakes to be shipped to Holland laboratories. All this fellow has to do is to go out up some dark, quiet, rocky gorge, where the rattlesnake families have gathered for a camp meeting, or caucus, or something. When he finds seven dozen ripe rattlesnakes, clinging from ledje and root, all he has to do is to pick them up, THE THERE’S A COG LOOSE la HOW Do You DOT, BROWER ©) LETTER FROM V RIDGE MANN Dear Avridge Mann The action recently taken by the city council of Seattle In dis- pensing with the vociferous rooster, has brought forth many com ments, and Lam sure a word from your prolific pen on the sub. ject, elther for or against, would be appreciated by many WM. M. JONES, Bremerton SEATTLE SOMEWHERE STAn SCIENCE Fur Seal Vanishing. Only in Alaska. Herds Slaughtered. 80,000 in One Year, Ing, the’ at vey of its vertisin tixing: of the store's © propriation, while M: ineas averaged only of the week's total this the lad of the n Sunday Ads; Monday Sales WOMEN’S WEAR (N. Y.) OF MAY 26 FROM rKIDAY, JUNE 8, 1923 | nt in all the y local stores. rmining on the vertis le a thoro sur ales volume and ad. The survey Sunday adver was 30 per cent y's bus per cent When known, sales condition became BUD'S CHOICE Donny’s« mother evidently told an addi arness of DVANCING with its ubd mbitions strivings he made yery happy if only good health accor panied it, and the basis ‘of go health, ag, ever one learns u reaching the of 60, is the r lar daily mov ment of the bow- els. If it can be effected through the food you eat the water drink and the ercise you. ta so much the better. But if nature will not operate it must he nasisted or sickness will follow. Neglected constipation causes the blood pressure to go up 28 per cent, and that is the forerunner of hardening of the arteries. It makes rheumatism and gout worse, too. age The ideal constipation remedy for people of advancing years is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, a vegetable compound of Egyptian senna and pepsin with pleosant- tasting aromatics. It js gentle and mild, and does not cramp or gripe. It is a mistake to think you need a violent salt or powder or pill, calomel, coal-tar drugs and such things. They. purge and This Laxative Works Fine on Old People ANY FAMILY MAY TRY IT FREE Thousands of parents are asking the! “Where can I find a trust- (he weaken you, and their reaction tends to make you more consti-~ pated than before. ry Now try the milder method. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin does not lose its good effect with re- peated use, and increased doses fare unnecessary, Mrs. E. M. Burgess of Enfield C., who is 7 of Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y., wasted fifteen years and consid- erable money on other remedies before finding steady relief with Syrup Pepsin. Use Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pep- sin yourself the next time you suffer from constipation, bilious- ness, headache, sleeplessness, in- digestion, piles or night cramps. Many thousands of elderly people use nothing else, and it costs them less than a cent a dose. Druggists haye sold it successfully for 30 ears, and it is the most widely bought family laxative in the world. Se dump them in a sack, and when he gets a truckload kn 1s bat fur “ee apeareet pact a tion to the fa “Which would he can drive home in the cool of the evening and take Dear Bill Re ee re it easy unti] next day. Next morning, he arises early and, Anything to be accommodating: Former taking each pretty little captive behind the ears he opens ‘gibrrioreeptnh gas theiy\ge cE ke aM its mouth, extracts its poison fangs, and then he ships Good-bye, He-Hen! Your noise annoys—dt isn’t fair to city boys! the blessed little pets on to Holland. For when the day begins to peep, we start to get our last night's This seems like a right nice, easy chore; no sowing, sleep, And how can anybody dose, when you begin your plaintive no planting, no getting up at dawn to milk, no worrying “Over taxes, or interest or investment. All you do is to Stretch out your hand and partake of the bounty so kindly “provided by a thoughtful providence. Tn an hour recently this Idaho loafer picked up 47 rattle- Snakes in one bit of a gorge, near town, and it wasn’t mear the richest diggings he knew about either, but he tas lazy that day and didn’t want to go too far from home. A nice hot lunch at your own fireside has a peculiar appeal, ‘they say, after a morning spent in doing the tango with —count ’em—47 rattlers. There is a source of wealth right at hand, indeed right “under foot, too—a source that has to date been largely unutilized, except by the lowly Piutes, who in the spring feel a yearning for fried snake and boiled dog. There in the desert stretches are tens of thousands of square miles of country that grow nothing but the rattlesnake, and him to a perfection elsewhere unexcelled. A natural Tesource that has been kicked about and beaten over the head, and generally discouraged, while hundreds of active, il workers have wearily tramped the city streets look- in vain for a job. Come West, young man, and catch snakes; there is room for all; no predatory corporation will interfere. Uncle Sam, as yet, regards snake catching as within the law, and it is a job that has no deadly Monotony to bore you. you rather have, Don, a girl or a} “The | Here ts something either for a furneal (Arctocepha on the islands The jant recently an a 7 . Fi ore were slaughtered as Judge «<s« Jhe family laxative »- 1902, except 6 survivor, now in moaned a se arewen the San I Zoological gardens. which was captured alive, It was & Dyear-old female Gaudeloupe fur-! seal, and quite different from the Alaskan species. As many as $0,000 were formerly killed in one year on the Farallon iwlands, and now this valuable spe. cles will be extinct, unless a male ix found and several years of protec. |tlon afforded to th RIEDA’S OLLIES It was her first chance on the screen. | A friend of mine had gotten her a try-out — He had refused me MIS She was absolutely devoid of ex perience. Nothing but her prettiness would | earry her thru Her bump of dimple. sun | aanistance, | I consented to make her up. | | | lus te off the " re's inn't any chot a girl, It's got} coant I'm tired of washing | dishes crows? Farewell, morn! He-Hen! You weren't born to greet the early city We've heard your crowing long enough—back to the woods to do your stuff! Go sing your song of dawning light fo folka who 90 to bed at might! Adieu, He-Hen! A fond adieu! Our city We is not for you! Your wives will miss your loving touch, but still they'll cackle juat as much; and still they'll stay in city pens—we've grown xo used to cackling hens! 80-long, He-Hen! Go hang your hat in Bremerton and towns like that! The reason why you're now “in Dutch,” ia just because you talk too much! You stole owr atuff—you've got to go—and let us human beings crow! ay Ae \’ GINGHAMS wash them Ww 1th talent was a never refuse to be of BY HUGH I’'ANSON FAUSS: From “The Condemned and The Mercy of “Tt was as if upon my soul there dawned | | The first bright morning of created time, |physical, why normal men and| And with a shrill surprise I saw the fields women in thix country should not All starred with sunshine, drank the spray of song Jcontinue in effective, happy career | From the woods’ green waves, and knelt to a nodding flower. juntil they round out the 100th year Within my brain the quick thoughts chased each other of their span Like butterfiles in the limpid air of June, | A generation ago men began to Life danced in all my limbs and in my heart lthihk of retiring and giving up Made music with the murmuring melody when they reached 50; today men | Of winds and leaves and babling streams. I seemed jot 50 are likely to begin all over, | To walk on air, and load my hands with stars.” and, bringing to their new profes. | sion, business or job their years lof training and experince, make @ pronounced success; indeed a man jcan come nearer starting right at} and joba that are not man-killing in| 59 than he can at 20. D. 8. thelr exactions, and with a mental | ~ wrinkles; a generation ago grand-|life that keeps the spirit of man; Many people watch the Want Ads |B |mother looked 90 at 70; she gave eager—aye, eager Is the sole answer | for odd jobs that need to be done. | up, sho quit, and sat by the fire-|to the problem of happy living—|I¢ you need anyone just place a lit- side and waited death, hour by|there is no reason, mental nor|tle ad to work for you. hour; today grandma acquires a keep the home fires burning And grandpop is woll nigh ex- She never got another chance. Malekulan brides have two front teeth knocked out, which is hard during watermelon season. “There are too many bootleggers,” says an official, falling to mention how many is enough. _. Some men think twice before they speak, white others speak twice before they think. It will soon be time to decide where you are going on your vacation besides broke. Our Young Old Folks |Editor The Star; It is no longer fashionable to grow It is easy to keep things coming your way H you are going theirs, f ' Ss About 20 Is the stone age; bigger ‘the stone, better she likes it. All of us brag about how bad we were before we grew up. Mourn Not the Dead Mourn not the dead that In the cool earth lie— Dust unto dust— The calm, sweet earth that mothers all who die As all men must; Mourn not your captive comrades who must dwell— Too strong to strive— Within each steel-bound coffin of a cell, Buried alive; |tinct; every business and profession jwill produce numerous examples of |men from 60 to 80 who are better men than they ever were, and who are keeping the young fellows | humping. Some of thi is environment, a jlot of {it is mental attitude; our |bodies get better care fiom youth up than they did; our environment is easier, we do not wear ourselves out with hard work, the machine is better oiled and kept running more smoothly, but chiefly this ac- tivity among the advanced in years fs due to the new philosophies of life that {terate and reiterate the doctrine that one is an young as he feels. There 1s nothing inherent in the human body that requires its. shelv- ing at the age of 70; the body is a machine and {t can do its hundred years efficiently if it has half a chance; with the abolition of Plagues, and other great contagions; with sanitary, comfortable homes COSTS ONLY SOc BUT MY, HOW POSLAM HEALS! Poslam 1s so concentrated and acts so directly that*n very little of It goes a long way, Its medication Is 40 gentle that It cannot irritate the most delicate or inflamed skin. Eczema, rashes, sealp troubles, pim- ples—they slmply cannot resist Pos. jam, At all druggists, 60c.—Adver- tisement, There's no need to cook luncheon on these warm days, when Shredded Wheat Biscuit can be prepared in the cool dining room with a choice of many delicious fresh fruits or berries and cream. Try this surprisingly economical and convenient luncheon idea for: while. You'll enjoy the crisp, crunch: golden-brown shreds of real whole wheat, prepared for you in their But rather mourn the apathetic throng— The cowed and the meek— Who see the world’s great anguish and its wrong And dare not speak. —By Ralph Chaplin, a political prisoner, WHITE KING The Granular Soap GINGHAMS—Nothing so popular. WHITE KING—Nothing washes ginghams so well. Choose any color for your lovely gingham dresses, they can be safely most appetizing way—in biscuit washed over and over again with this new granular soap. The many form. small soap particles work quickly and without harm to hands or And you'll note the improvement fabric. * in your health and comfort. WHITE KING not only washes CLEAN, but brings the colors out fresh and new looking. It saves clothes, saves time and saves money. You can use this ONE soap for every household purpose. ° Use it for dishes—it keeps your hands in such good condition, “Many of them (political prisoners) would have béen released by this time if it had not been for the illness of the attorney general, who had been giving these applica- tions his personal attention. I asked him to do so and have not been disposed to annul the request.” Daugherty is back on the job now—has been for sev- eral weeks. The only news of his activity on behalf of prisoners asking for clemency so far is the following Berea etentes of Paul and Fred Wolf of Quincy, lil., convieted of war frauds, have been commuted by President Harding to half their original length, it was announced ‘today at the White House.” _The Wolfs went to prison because they were caught cheating the United States by selling the government worthless materials. For them, a White House pardon. The political prisoners were sent to prison because ‘their opinions did not agree with those of the majority uring the war, for most of them a case of honest differ- ence of opinion. For their opinions, they rot in federal penitentiaries. Love thy neighbor, but be not too friendly with his garden tools. __ Fruits orberries and For Best Results Use as Follows: «+44 cupful tablespoonful Average family wash. Average pull water, . Average pan dishes Average wash basin % teaspoonful »% teaspoonful Not for washing machines only, though called— WHITE KING Machine SOAP Dealers Recommend It. Large and Small Packages. Los Angeles Soap Co, “SPOHN & RUSSELL, REPRESENTATIVES Neyer stop chuckling at grouches until you run out of grouches, We always think up what to suy after it is too late to say It. One bad thing about summer is it doesn’t come in winter. What this | try needs Is a good fivecent sugar, FTA WERT PTAA ARI TRA TP YN VE TRE ANGE RLM SEM TE OA RRS a