The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 28, 1902, Page 4

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SEA TTLE STAR. Ny OTAr THE. PU DL IHN Every afternoon except ° unday, TRLEPHONNS Pustnesn Dept, Main 1060. Mditorial Dept., Matin 1188 B HAZARD WHLLA, Baitor KF. CHASH, Business Mana ¥ OrriICEs Beattlo--110T Third avenue New York--290 Temple Court Mul liding Chicago--S17-318 U. 8. Express Bulld'ng One cent per oy mail or earrt eopy second-class matter Washington, « Bntored at the postoMce at Reattis A FEW SRPLASaty woros = The Star appears in a compact form today somewhat novel to the eye accustomed to broad pages, bul, nevertheless, deatrable from several points of view The elght pages are narrew and easily handled They contain twelve columns me matte than are found in the four-page nine-column paper, with which the tar’a reader have become familiar The news has the front page exclusively to ttmelf, all advertisements be ing oed on other pages With a nine ume four-page paper, the advertisements usus ‘ ' hree columns on the front page, so that the p resent arrangement does not affect tt news feature of that peg at all It has been the aim of the p r a of the Star te make the paper at all times just large enough t prop are of the news and of the advertixements, eo that each should receive proper apace, The effort has been to AVOID PADDING the columns of news and to always present the best and most interesting matter, dis ling all of inconsequential char acter, Hrevity has been pref 1 to i ty and the boiling down of columns and mna of ft every a t the department editors has been f the wt important and diffeult taske which they have had to confront, The fact wan recog nized that the large majority of newspapers make their tr lers wade through many columne of type to eet ato few facta and t most people, In these busy days, have neither the tim n path @ to read #o mitch to get so Mttle, The Star therefore pursued stently the policy of relieving ita readers of what it Juatly feved to be a bur by doing the culling tteelf and elim inating useless lage Bo su 1 hae thie ¢ ’ nm that w fier has no tdea of changing It futu . icles will be more numerous, however on ace nt of the rapidly expanding fac ties of the pa in the news gathering field. The 4 f the Star's news service has TRIPLED within three years 1 © equal of upon the Pacific Coast elegrap! we 4 from all over the world through the allied Beripps- M I her Ane ne, while a stream of dis ches from all over Wa gion and the Pa Northwest are fi into the office The repertorial fore the Star has been grea ngthened, until mow it of Beattle Thin increase in th has brought about an fnevitable congestion. ‘Tr ften has more first class matter to present th t nm put into print, owlng to the Imited epace at ita dinpora The same th « holds true In the advertining de partment. Th iding of new business bas been a natural sequence to the successful growth of the paper in ef nh and now the crowded conditions have become so pronounced th ere is but one recourse left and THAT 18 TO I88UR COMPACT NGUT-PAGE EDITIONS UPON 8UCH DAYS AS THE CRUSH OF NEWS AND ADVERTIS ING WILL NOT ADMIT A NINE-COLUMN, FOUR-PAGE PAPER This expianat s necessary tn order that all readers of the Star may be prepared to ace changes tm ita sine from day to day, It would ef course, be possit to lweue a standard sised newapaper every day, following the usual poll of newspapers of Milng up vacant columns with tragh when news and advertising both were of the ordinary vol- ume, but this poliey is not In line with the Stara Idea aa to the best way to achlewe greater » ran ‘ The Star gives va . ed for all money pald, It makes no pretense of giving @ great mase of matter What you eee in the Star should be there by rig f value GHOSTS AS ABLE ASSISTANTS Rev. M J. Savage, D. D., t ea in ghosts. He frankly admits tin Aine aM and a calm defiance of the heresy hu atrang " shadows when (} fit from place to place but who ca fepended a; ft ar natances, to perform valuable services for the lving, if ts eked According to the do« gxhosts r epirite, have been empleyed by himeelf and his friends, on certain occasions, to do some very neceseary things. He tells how ome ghost went flying through apace after certain information which was 1. returned and faithfu mparted it to his human emp M T lous Instances are related of how practical good hes " t nkind throug? the interposition of ghosts, or spirits I + ae does to k that « ates are as black morally as they have been painted. Th t haunt 1 castles and shriek and howt and fourteh kntver at midnight merely f 1 flendi#h pleasure of making people shake and shiver to the marro They are practi ip-to date, business ghosts, who like to unrave bate court difficulties con nected with the settlement of estates a many other things of real service to thome persona « sth f Dr. Bavage furthermore asserts that the Soctety for Paychi Re search ia £ great work for humanity in tr¥ing pleree the mys tertes of J, and may fine wn ite effort with great dis er fea, whick 1 enable us to open communication, on a retiable baste, with the spirt whi float ar 1 If Dr, Ravage succeeds t ghoste are eich agreeable and @enirabie companions, how f 1d will feel over tte past ab horrence and fear of them. It w be ke the awakening from a long and frightful dream Keep right at it, Dr. Sa ae. Visit all of the lonely graveyards at midnight, when the solemn bella to Get cig p in the garreta of the haunted houses and later the ¢ ge and the groanings. Analyze these disturt on. Try a 1 deserted caation by the light of the fading moor 1 see whether the ghosts all have a pleasant look on their faces Bo far nobody has ever faced them long enough to find out Further researches by Dr. Savage will be awalted with keen Interest a LONDON, Feb. 2% Important mmunications have passed | 3 between Canada Sas Orem Britain within the last few days rela. @ tive to th Alaska b ndar liepute Canada is urging a settle es @ ment of all questions r issue, and is said to have taken a de cistve stand in the premises. She has appealed to Great Rritain @ @ to support her in her present demands nd has called attention @ @ to the recent actions of a stoma officer anes Serr oe has made all the concessions to the United @ @ States posit d de nes to longer mit questions nl t oo @ where the bor Pr-veut le, to influence inlation The reply made by the ministry has not e @ and is zealously guarded There ia a er & @ here that the United States is worth conel involved, which would mean that Canadiar proval and support of England, would States half way Beccccecccoocecoscoccosenscoeecose THE DUKE OF CASTILE JOGCLES AND THEREBY CAUSES A SUENE Beautiful Maidens, Spanish Cavaliers and Even Old Mad- rid Himself Are Scandalized by a Mishap on Railroad Avenue This City A transfer company's big, burly, There was “old Madrid” leaning ut team and dray wer backed pl|against a switch hand! while the against one of the Northern Pacific |beautiful Manganares flowed tran baggage cara containing stage se quilly 1, across the railroad tracks tings of the Viola Allen product A Spanish cavalier, long since sung The dray was well filled with t leath as peeking around the effects when the team evid ly wner of a freight car and wonder struck with stage fright, ran ing whether he'd attempt wading the The Duke of Castile on pa i or take a box ear for it it His Spanish highness looked | enoritas were spread plentifully Ralph the Rover in the face, and one| around some of them with faces of the horeaes noticed it A new mud-bedaubed like what u to be boy said the duke had a face like|the fashion when Ferdinand and what he saw In the “paper When | lkatbella were young Here and the men who were carrying him out|there was a tuft of Spanish moss of the car door jogmied and thejand here and there a atately tree duke's shape wobbled, the teamatart-| Folks that followed in the path of ed the runaways, say they'd no idea They never atopped until they|that there was such lovely scenery atruck the Madison street turntable,|on Ratlroad avenue when they separated from the hind However, it was all gathered up part of the wagon, taking the fore|none the worse for the excitement, wheels with them, Such a lovely|and taken to the Grand, where Bpanish scene happened at thie time,|crowds saw it last night week or twenty Ove cents per month, delivered THE One day Sale to each customer. | (Written for the Star by Hor Su-lof Amerienn homes and American gene FE. Schmitz, mayor of #an/!ife. The exci n law must be re Franciaco) enacted, and euch form as to} bring absolute exclusion to a BAN FRANCISCO, Feb, 12.—The/ Of labor that means problem of Chinese exclusion ts ne Ret ye , hone An g , tutions and to American « longer a problem, tt ts a demonstrat FUGENE FE. a HMITZ n N ne oF the Pa (Bigned) “ who posemes any socla | ateliieunes ét f not The Newspaper Woman | sides fo the questior Tt polier tr NRTeRAtlonalist e 4 for the press } . " As I migh ‘ | wt . f « he 4 how ¢ na lwith cor tat . oir And how to ate sri a war | lamenina . . But she never had done It herself, I iz mucws Those who have a and k Which none of her readers lthens ts shale wative Mat and knew) lequalor, thelr vicious and degener.|O% the t we apent and the flour late vices, thelr barbaric food f we spent ' | treacher s cruelty and their per- And the sugar we wanted like | clous systems of slavery un-| a derstand that thelr very prew « ia | At the heft of a woman who never @ pollution and a source of both mor had cooked ai and physical infectious dincase (And now ng know that she never 4 Yor Sen Franctece And @ t n inderstand Yo other eectior f the Unitedia w an there was, and she wrote | t * the t act with right fair jthe Ortenta imat 1 suffe (As you or I might do) jedt the pres Orter How fa rel to make a chair * has the Pacific coast: and To t ered with chintz and stuff hae beer wed with such an Asia ed with balr ' as has San In|}*Twould adorn any parlor and give no ot? A has wh . it an alr it be * t mpet b (And we thought the tale was eat oF dregs of the ¢ eetial |Oh, the dave we worked, and the nas & I ® a ve worked t eer at off nr hammer and saw and pret f the admis making a chair in which no one jsion of Chinese and In demand of could «it iChinese exelu r I be heed Without a erick in his back jed ne the « 2 plea A woman there was, and she had Cost of Governing (Better than you and I) fan Francisco’e Chinatown sta | She te our recipes, and she never t eto govern than a milar siz tried one led comer American, and er She w te about children—of course jtaile more on the © de she nd ne | partment m all the ¢ San She told us to do what she never ithe « ' an aw t-at to # the (And never intended to try) jeffect « A " A And it twn't tc 1 and ft isn't Ito suff wit? Me slaves That brims the cup of dis (mar f affilcted with car grace jeerous a t 1 asece), busy | It'* to follow a woman who didn't }18 how a day making clears, or know ans lclothing or shoes, or a hundred oth-|(A ¥ who never had cooked jer products that are purchased by any j unscrupulous ers whose selfish te and was paid to fi greed outwelghe their humanity, and space laold ¢ ar ' pecting publ tr corr petition with goods » by la |bor that c¢ not live on a few tx a day. that require nourishing | jand suitable thing » well as ie 1 air to breathe and reasonable Li " to work A whole day spent in Chinatowr will not re the ¢£ nee of a ‘ hinaman dressed in Amer un t t be come America r n-| Police Take Up Alleged raudulent tlor 1 - ! Employment Agent ized, } rea eney, and n r What is b 1 t he 1 t er » the faith of the be a rabk he : fathers arthed by Ryar The moral, effect on the ' W hington ing ty ofa Cr towneand If the M he ima to t ny me down, ea ty in Ar a will| ment agent, is und ite Chinatow cannot b ther A rding to eport of tl f than pern The + n f a\fair made to 1 ‘ eadquart t evil influence files much Mills rented a m on Washington ' treet and tack nployme Chamber of Commerce ffice shing eve ¢ r flebr ' betrayed and t t ya taelf and the mmunits the ’ r lutiona in favor of the ad M ha Lh n of tain classes of Chines« authority to procur ja f discord in the otherwise Rosly al < ar Pots jous demand f the entire a Hoense lowing n West for absolute and most stringent ment ag ) x i ' TY? ahir have ha th 1 “ for year n direct vidlation of the to th t t jspirit « th ex 1 ploy i jed Chine oolte 1 i na ! jerican € 1 that d lend joould be larger 1 merchants who hope t j cheaper cla f labor at tt xpense of their ow pu ing d . astrous pol » Chinaman AN FRANCISCO, Feb, 28.—The hot @ cor untry He |revenue cuter MevCullough left ot hoards his , eate no cde ncorise In sear f t escue of mand for goods, while a white labor-|the disabled bark Northwest er enlarges the market as his pros perity Increa the higher wages lower wages ia to decrease the pur chasing power of the clase that cree | NEW 2-room house; lot 650x100; $3875, ates markets and on whom markets $50 eash, balance $10 per month depend for sustenance To subst! 1000 feet from car tute Chinese, is to close markets al H. B, CAMPRBELI together 72 Tallman, Ballard Against these Mongolian hordes,| STRAYED—Or . stolen black and the American laborer must be pro white English setter pup: age six tected It is not a question of race months; collar on, Telephone Red prejudice, but one of conservation i reward, only, SEATTLE STAR, WASH CLOTH SALE AT “THE QUAKER” Saturday, If you want one, A Limited Number ALL 10'GO0 Al com ($0 Dozen) of Genuine Purki Assorted Colors early. One Cent Each March Ist. Limit of purch The Quaker Drug Co. Sold Everywhere and Always for 5 Cts. one cloth Block. : Wash Cl 1013-1015 First Ave., Globe Phone Main 1240 ie YNIPAT, rr. PRITARY 2, to ——— ys a | some instances the were | #tr ane tinguished be where SCHMITZ WRITES ON © stea. con. CHINESE EXCLUSION In Behalf of Labor He Vigorously Pro- tests Against Their Admittance to America WRECKED WILMINGTON De hirteen persons ‘were end collision at e the N. Y. P, & N. railway yeste fay. A special carrying the Floro jora company ran into a freight rain, which was obscured by a fog Cc. Herr, manager of the com- pany; Charles H. Potter and W arleton, suffered the most severe in- juries CYCLONE) ye _ Cleveland Damaged by Terrific Storm cane struck tt Great da windows, roofs downtowr onten wie district how in the own Into the street Many persons passing on eta narrowly escaped injury feath from flying chim y bricks 1 tiles, and scores were cut timed by id signs A fire broke the was at its he fire statior : of a building It was the wind could r buildings, but not ur crowds ear-stricken persons had gather watching the efforts of the fire he signal station reports tha ie and rain may exper next 244 hours and has tes next % hours, and has arnings which it says the barometrical pressure ever corded In this portion of the s been observed Cooper & Levy GENUINE IMPORTED SWISS CHEESE Usual price per pound, Special Price Tomorrow per pound, 27c EASTERN SAUSAGE sua Special Tomorrow, 14c LONDON LAYERRAISINS Per box of 20 pounds: usual value $ Per box, $1.45 00; Special Tomort PURE LEMON EXTRACT Rest quality; per 200, He 81.00 PURE \ XTRACT BR t t ttle Zhe, 40¢, The 81.40 PURE RI KWH \T } polind sack ihe LOG CABIN MAPLE 8Y i Per ca ROec, Fe, The and 81.40 I 1 awe ar PURF STRAINE! HONEY Per can B0Oc, Tc & R1.25 RLACKBER Per galion..8 Cooper & Levy Who and Reiai Grocers 104-106 FIRST AVENUE tet Yesier and Washington Feiephone Main 162 and ts of stores the hurri- lose low re state | Pevereveverer. —--- - . No Street Bids J arrived ina a in @ e b, E ° ‘ . t ' t q ' ' ‘ : ' ‘ o ¢ style a shad and itges that ane are pecially ean@eoni ‘this sensor We bave an umpsually good j value to sell at L. Adier’s & Bros. Clothing. Any of our $1250 and $68 Suits will be sold tomorre® $9.45 We want to move out heavier weights before th summer goods arri¢e. The Newest and Most Swagee|| & SON Near Rainier-Grand Hotel 903 FIRST AVENUE D. BUCK & CO. Men's, Boys.’ Children's Clothitg Furnishing Goods, Hats and “< 1404 2d Ave., ALMOND COLD GREAM For chapped or rough sktn—large 8% 25e; put up in bib. tins for prale sional use, 50e ~e 6 Sow ews an tigen . » b 264 L t 2d ave, anu Columbia, Tel, Main y Preverrrercrer ° We Carry All Kinds of Teas and Coffees Try Us BAILEY & WILLA Tel. Main 144 222 Pike St POOLS SPOS HNM p a t 1O8es @ 7 ue

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