The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 2, 1903, Page 4

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age AE he fs oh aration THE SEATTLE STAR > BY STAR PU PLISHING CO. OFFICES-190T and 1209 Bev . 8 e RVERY AFTERNOON BXCHPT SUNDAY TELEPHONE Pediat Nuginers 1 ment—Sunset, Main 1060) Ind ni. Dfitortal Department—Sunset, Main 138 on t per copy. six te per week, or twenty-five cente per month, delivered by mail or carriera, No free conten Eiitored at “he Post eat tle, Washington, as seoond-clas M MER . THE STAR POR THE Sl People leaving the olty for their summer vacations can have The Star forwarded to them without any extra expons Rates: 25 cents cer month: payable in advance. Im sending orde olease state correct out-of-town address, the ne the paper ie to be sent wanted tength of t — . STAR PRINTED t WwHy THE moks frequently SOME VERY PLAIN FACTS el Winking mo eo them. Nor dows is wt @f The business district of with t . fu As ar eth ¥ ' ft arnished truth @enceraing the Mansart hotel on Firat avenue, that estat thas « Woman Who condueted It, h the err on aye and pram. fed to obey the law tn the future © Mopraved tastes The tacts reganting ¢ met an's mont we tahed tn an offort at sone m, but purely as & maar duty made mecessary by th indi ttoree Bollce te the existence of the Binguc apot, The Star stepped in when Brlice failed to act and accomplis o and fod the task they gieoted and retuned to perform ‘The Star betieves ite publication of the unpleasant facts thing 0 Belmont resort has been fully justified by the f One of the earty statosmen of the nation he given the cholee of Living Mm a country with try without newspapers ho would choose the (orn A tremendous power to compel the enforcement with the newspapers and the Star wil! never hesitat on behalf of law and decency in Neattle Rat tor Star's action Be running in its Hadith Betmont’s h ilrepute would still Riven after the Star catiod the at wp-town locat Bioa Of the police to the matter theydid nothing, It i idle to supposn that the Star Pad told thent anything they did not know TU have a detective tnvestigate the matter and if the facta are as stated we will close the place,” sat Acting Chief Willard in an interview Then he tokt ome of hs detectives "to drop in and wee what wae going on @t the Mansard the nest time he was up that wa Ynasmuch as that Particular detective’s duty never takes bim “wp that wa in veatigation ame made and Ht is a safe bet that (tC was neve ended by the Read of Se Gepar ™ that one shoeld be mac TA sem ways Seattle's police are the buatest earth Boys who coast em the: rssowalks in winter bad shoot off firecrackers a week before the Weert of Juty in summer are almost sure to be arrested They have no Wome and presumably no pollt.cal imfuence Harmteas hohows whose only ambition tm te to obtatn chee large Gee bunches and as much beer as poenible each day and to keep & saloon hair warm at nigh! are also retentiosaly purvwod by the plies They Rave no friends and their votes are too cheap to make It worth while cod- ing thom. In framing wp jobs on the head of the department and on ench other Brattic coppers shine like stare of the iret magnitude More plots and punter plots, cadals and tutrigues are set on foot among them than in & South Amertoan republic, Hut M newer occurs to them to frame up to do ‘helr Guty by the people who foot the bills and to cated a fow of the ortml- mais who day tm and day out ply thelr voostions In Seattle The Belmont cage ts only one instance of police ineMolemcy and incom- Bateney, if not worse. THE WIDTH OF A SMILE ‘Thin im a statingion! age. Beeeything te reduced to the avetage of Meures. An Englishman of scientific tastes has deve »ped hinself to the statie- A ana Winona sitinne ae we (rina ae Senses Woreriix, each time she smiles Allow ber thirtyestn mation m dur. euniie capacity for twenty-four hours ts 1 Inches In the course of a year Bar face would have been wreathed fe I yards of sunny smile Very geod But what of the variations? ‘There are some women whe do nt smile more than a sixteenth of an her Gah per amily and do not average more than thirty-stx emiles a year. Fou Gapnet measure such 4 atingy amile, It comes off Loo soon Other women. amiie all over thar tacex And they smile early and een. A new Sonnet vr an extra allowance of pin money wil set the Mimnpice (6 dancing and lips to strete hing wo divinely that no Kngiishman een pat the result in figures And there's the Vosges eitian smilie. Let-nn Engtishman tackié that ‘Theee are no held-back straps to that smite. Saverd. hearty. irrepressible. generoun, HAE an ino! Tete ks Wide as & barn door Apalying the Bngiistunans moasu rement. T Seventemn miles a minute PENSION CORRUPTION In the Spanish-American wer in Cuba a total of 243 were killed on eur side, including those who died frum wounds. Only about 20,080 soldiers in all went to the scene of brit confitet Yet. 13,000 claims for pensions have already been allowed and more Wem 6.6) applications have been filed ‘ already clear that the pensions for this little war will tam the war itest?, for, while the war was soon over, the pem Sages for yoars and yoant - Civit war pensioners, 40 years after the war, are avout @ they ever were. Cuban veterans promise an © ager lease for they were picked young men. Fifty years from now It will be @ommon thing, pethapa, for the government to pay Spanish war py: © dependent widows who are Oot yet born it te tke the man--broad- odore smilee at the rate of 20st more ne will It im utterly tmporstble, of course, that 49,000 of the men who enlisted tthe Spanich war, and only 20,00 of whem even got to the front should have been sufficientiy dissbied os (to justify their demand for Brnmons The thing @ becoming « scandal thet Wiotiem and honesty of the men whow & ideal citisens. It je bad enough (> keow that the government is de fPouded, but i¢ is worse still to know that soldiers who might have bravely. had the opportunity been offered, can stoop to auch a aifempt at fraud. ‘The fault is. no dowbt, mostly in the pension department. The grant ‘tg of one false claim breeds mery Other faine clain The ease with witch a fraudulent pension can be secured encoara, men to put in time they would not have thought of offering if sure to be subj) ed @ close and honest scrutiny ‘There je a seductiveness about @ pension hard to be reaisted And tae loonenens of the pension department is corrupting into sneaks and Qerjurers many who might otherwine be regarded an the best men in the mation. It i « fraud that should fave laid upon it the heavy hand. GHARGES A RANCHER |\::’ WITH ASSAULT| T00 SWIFT FOR A seriousty reflects upon ine pa- the nation would like to regard Justice court at Kent this morn While visiting her aged mother on ar O'Brien yesterday, Mrs aabeth Lebrant saye she wae ae mpultedby Charies Taylor Tddings, the! A couple of drinks and @ little nap name, who owns, the property on which |in the Villerd saloon on lower ¥ Kar mother is living Mrs Lebrant)ier way cost Thomas Chapman tH Deputy Prosecuting Attorney | Gbiover this morning that her mother We4 & life tntergst in the property award by lddings and that she had of} Bremerton, $10 in-cash and a $60 |chack on the Bank of Bremerton Chapman told the poties this morn ing that he came to Seattle yoator- een living on the same farm with day afternoon. The first place he then. @truck was the Villard Mra Lebrant wae ordered of = the He mys ¢ t he took two drinks ‘arm by Iddings yesterday cording land then went off thte a dreumntean » her story. She objected and shel siumber When he awoke and look aye Idding» struck her. The war-'ed for his money he found that som fant for the arrest was issued from one had beaten bin f BREMERTON MAN 4° masterioam by the road THE BRADTL 1 a ith whieh comes ‘ by & atronwer hed VI with rhe * 1 t we and fly wan | 1 leave af sf ad mained fi STAR Fe lig — Uns to as to hunt under t add ' urd the} Was hot ™ Rook whieh I me oot] Mid Mot Fanaack «It was unclows. ‘Phey ror my | were a in i burl Wh a blow e pur for} ine t h 0 jwad-| pide nia comm | fighting 3 Gat bn ae eh that | one < aaliont hus ow aod to fino hundred | | stood with over the neck of that | i w womnded V and {trie $3.50 taht before w a have pi tw} to think it « t. hat ta wat |railewtonss If war in vain (hat he| the wisest way, [was ware that the! | [apurred and thrashed tie 8 gunner! umperor Rad no great respect for my | iriver on @ soft 1 Hw Kat flow! wits, and | longed to show hive that ft with te me and hi hatd| he had dose me an in Momtiu rite MRFGADLC Was] Deed Kleamod onahune. | Liat it ttieBapers. And yet Montiu | Prey TH ORVI » what ne atti! heard the hie companions in order | TEMP T RY OE TIE Gee rattle of pwite louder and! to make hie weoup 1 could make | You remain here,” said 1, t and the shads| it was ofeur Ghat) if he had pot ge mrados, Et three hy ~ the abadow) them, dre or other of bin comrades mat any has naw when he turned. with « eursa) had One of them was certe describe them. to you. T his saddie, and emptied both hie] dmd The other d had iaft ha Mh you presente: "Gio | peeeim ane after the nto Vios| witty Trasenu If he oscaped from | » bridie, and § was fytag| jette h «4 rented “ only Violette) 1 hav wounded mye pane me | Cleary” nny lay be arried, ane, At the pale] that (have to step end th ea’ene ace 1 flung myself GH, TANCE MD INO can tali vou the exact 5 {| LT hammered fresh charges into my “ yahed aaide the lackey) times, 1 have bh lt DY mami | ydatots after T had turned thie over j whe would . ped Me, AM | alin, ullete, aad by iret )ip my heed ‘Then IT pat thom back 1ou ped 4) ge # being pierond by! ip the holsters end t mined i jown eabt He and wahor, and finally” by | ittle oh whing her head and | wer ¥ with pencil and Joh was the mont pain-| cocking Ner #are the whil “" phigh Sang lh yep cole et out of all theme biju-| tell me that an old soldier like her an anery frown at my sodden cone eet aaa ar ee 6 oe ee 7, Bet bis face changed o " aime over me wh hor two. The first whe | ieee ‘cea toate bn. b ia Pationt orea-| merely arased her off-shoulder. loay ens Gatent toa earl whioh | had come 9 love more] ing a kin-mark, as If she had lrual | jhe and them, the tnatant the Worl than anything in the world except meted a wall The «= 4 wae more | wap clon 1) What news about tte] iether and “the ge mn elgg BE ow yh | “4 nd tr rena thy | muscle of har newk. bul alroady it hed Pte age Apt. Pe gob nae bak trom Loeaped to bined, 1 reflected that if napeant . fnen red polint: itn kened 1 could mount Mon!ue' a! happened. Mia face was calm, but Libro. 4 “las - euet Moniug 6 [eam the: compass quiver i Mia} ores acroms the flank with = fine horse, | “ sunt recover them, Gerard!” | 24 a Annes at and tt Ine orted. “The destinies « dy- [net miaeed bien. haa a bet |nasty are at stake. N ont | BT OF hie ohaawrur ter Fight to hb | be tnet! Te he to] Pero ideoning bimok a Weil. was all impationce now to me 50 all get back to the others, and 1 had b tre? slahtly at t, but more and maore/ jest given Violette her head. whee | 1 am atrrounded| *!) e¥err bound until ai inet. aver jyddeniy I saw eumething glimmering j with tronmor,- fut they will teke/he went with his font caught in the |i 9 Meld hy the coadeite wan the them to Paria. To whom should they | *°C™e and. Ris shoulders thed-thud-|prass-work upon the r hat arry them but to the vitlatt ‘Taltey. | (ht shone the read, untt) the lwhieh had flown from Montiue’® head. Yen, yes, they are the | {fae Was too much for the tired nore, j and at the sight of it a thought mad fiaken. WHR the three best mounts | T™ttered bridie-chair 1 puted him | Rat fown of With te wetmht in my stables and vi the atires ather. and | would it not have dropped? And her I did hot wait to hear the end of] |" Spurred heel cliaked loudiy aa it} it lo acem from the roadway! OF 1 was already clatter. | [tt course, he must have thrown at an | the etal fam sure that Four -paperet6 when he had made sure that T would five minutes hel Rot pasved before t| [rom my saddie wrertake him. And if he threw it was @alloping Violette aut of the! But eran as I 1! 1 aid stop to ve any more ltown with the bridle of one of the | 'he green bay the fdas sprang from the mare with my heart} nperce’s own Arab chargers in| raw! of the limbs th the moonlight! tenting the pasde-charte You sei jeither hand. ~ They wished me tol! ah that It wae all) wae ail right thie t There, in the jtale three, but | should have never oa-had pastel crowe oF the batiwas stuffed 0 sel ee fated to look nity Violette in the and & Wan enty hie) papers to a parchment wrapper bound again, 1 feel that the spectacle . will which had bald him so | sound with yellow ribbon 1 peiled It ha con superb when I dashed up sade Me Bad ved hardy | our wtih the ane hand and holding the to my rade and pulied th and 1 witt cto Wie justice} hat in the other, 1 danced for Jor ik horses on to thelr haunches in the he died hart alia lithe meoniight, The empirer would rewory Hactit aiwhye the | see that Be had not made « mistake No one haw passed? t Le@penedt | when he put his affairs tuto the oheter | “Ne one tis shit. Thee! of Etienne Gerard hen ther are om the Parte row i. tis Stor} Q ok ip cane aha pelts A of hin (To be Continged) They did nat take tong. Uae “s = = er jncidiers, Ina fing they wore ” ’ |the emperor's horws and their own 'vs:| MRS. CLEVELAND'S jaway We Went upon our baw |t @ the center, Deepienne upon my right, and Tremeau hind. for be was the henvier man. Heay The 12 fly a little b moon, btw [for mite after mite our jaiona the same chequered tracks lwith our shadows im front and our jdust behind. We could hear the [ramping af Dette and the creaking of jahuttors from: the cottages aa Wwe |thundered past them, but we were Jes ly three dark biure pan the rand |by the time that the folk could look jafter oa Tt wes fiet striking mid~ [night as we raced Inte Corbell: but an hoatier with & backet in either jhand was throwing Bila black shadow jecroma the iden fan which wea, [east from the open door of the. ing |. “Three ridets’” I gasped. “Have |they pasand 1 have Hast been watering thetr thorees.” said be. “I should shiek | they a | we flew, striking fire from the ce bicatenes af the little town A gem NEWEST PICTURE dartne tried to stop us, bul bis voice | was drowned by our ratt od ciat | tor hownes slid past. and we Uweaee nm the commiry road again | with ar 20 miles betwee . |eslves and Part Mow could they cacape us with the finest horses tr France behind them? Not one of | the three had turaeda hatr, but Vio to was always @ head and shou! he front. She was. goinn| on hater, toe 9g yer by Padre. Grover Clatetend, since she lett) own - syacigte piayroome for win- of her that ay te wrtte auiet ana | We 80d rainy days Mere the children ti hereeif and the em-/the White House, hes spent quiet SOS! 1 on, satiee neighiberhead hikd Gerth rama would nee the [Raper youre at Princeton, N. J, Wing! ond Visttor Gectares that ; 1p her famtiy of xtrte from the street the + looks Whe has @ frogs werands. @ creat aut for a recom ve them? grow nradem, onl” - etch of white road the moonii¢ht tying low upon horses’ necks, Every instant crew larger and clearet as we upon them f could mee quite plain [Uy Ohat the twe upon either aide were ata lions, 1 in mantles and rode jchastnut horses, whilst the tween them was dressed in a }xeur uniform and maunted upon a roast fro were keeping at any enough to see which te gathered his | each spring that th inter hors® was iar the fresher of Uy three. And the rider appeared to be the foader of the party, for we con} Unwally saw the glint of his face in as helooked back to on between us. : nty a glimmer, then it was cut Across With mustache, and fat amt when we began to feci their ¢ in our throats I cowld give « to my man. t! Col de Montiue'” 1 shouted al In the emporor’s name! | {had knows him for years as « dar-| ing officer and an unprinetpled rascal. | Indeed there Wie 4 soore between wa, | for he had shot my friend Treville at Warsaw, pulling the trigger, as some | \entd. 2 good secon before the drop [Of the handkerchiet Well, the words were hantly out of my mouth when hie two companions wheeled around and fired their pt I heard Despienne give a Cer 2-6-4, OUR STOCK 18 COMPLET® IN ALL sizes. PLAIN DOORS, each 2-Ax6-4, ach 2-10n6-10, each . ERNS ST BROS., GIVES A FLAME FANCY DOORS. 50 iS WINDOW SCREENS, Bach 200, 250, 350, 450, 500 506 PIKE ST. Plymouth Shoe Co., 707 fen Between Cherry and Columbia National on a Saturday will be kept evening and will be closed at noon Saturday Public Fourth of Holiday, our The »pen until to IF YOU WOULD pag te 4 don’t delay. Stander Addition $150 to $300 Each 10 per Cent Down Balance per Your monthly rent will pay for a lot and July, our falling Store Friday o'clock W.L, DOUG 5.52 SHO no ee had their money than th wearers. Free Rent) And live where you can have City Conveni- ences, a 2-Minute Car Service and get home or downtown in 12 Minutes, is yours if you How? and $10 th Men’s Shoes Worth $5 For $3.50 Shoes LAS UNION unice MADE Factory Payroll for bor $29,000 Weekiy If you have be “y an good Wn avery wt $1.00 lems way We the wt makers and retatiers of n $3.00 shoes in the w We make and sell m $3.0 shoes thar other two manufas era in the United Blatos. We produce our $1.40 shoen at less-expensa, because we make many, We employ the best aktiled Union labor that can be ured in the United States ‘The reputation of W. L. Dougtas 12. Bhoes for style, comfort ere throughout the world. They have other makes, because the standard that the wearers expect more for Over 2,000,000 satisfied 4 wear in kr give better ratiafac J always been pl wn everyw jon tha od no hig ey CAN got cinewhere. It is not alone the best leather that makes a first- class Shoe—it is the brains that have planned the best style, lasts a perfect model of the foot, and the construction of the Shoe. It is mechanical skill and knowledge that have made W. L. Douglas’ $3.50 Shoes the best in the world for men. SEATTLE STORE 4th of July — Ati Atrus, 1m Dhie®, Uitte LESS THERE # PLENTY TO BAT AND DRINK ALONG-THE DRINK QUESTION 18 AN BASY ONE IF YOU TAKE AIONG Anti Cate : ALL, YOUR PARTY WiLL PRU» n j Buy a lot i i NOUNCE IT FINE. IT 184 POURR j WHOLESOME BEVERAGE. 13) “TWO DOZEN MAL#-PINT BOT. TLES ® CENTS PHONE, RAINIER 9. DO YOU WANT THE BEST build-you-e-howss. | Zee, orm f° pe, Onr work. tn Take a James street cas, iransicr to a H faclery 2 premioes. Madrona, ride to Cherry street and Twenty- | seventh avenuc, and you will see this addi- tion. You can eat your lunch and do,this in G. BENINGHAUSEN your noon hour will be needed to convince you that this is the cheapest inside property on the market. F. M. JORDAN, SoLe AGENT | N. E. Cor, 2nd Ave. and Columbia St. PHONE—RED 56. Then no nye oui “small Bye defects can easily be corrected, but when JEWELER AND OPTICIAN 713-715 First Ave. Union block, next to McDougall & Southwick Co. more argument Pacific Packing & Co. Express Carrying Alaska Pac: and United States mail FOR VALOES, Calling at Juneau, Sitka, Yaku- tat, KAYAK. fllamar and COOK INL POINTS. §. 5. EXCELaTOR & 8. NOME CITY JULY & SANTA ANA....,.JULY 16 Sailing from Arlington Dock i~nm No freight received after noon IND. 2272 | AuG 1 dangerous to neslect small} the aight fails, it is too Inte. Have your || Oday of sailing, ae = — to at once by our Bye ieoten seaneeaie ar data at call pectaliats, | tng without notice, 1207 Schuchard Optical Co., Re €. E. CAINE, Operating Agent. Phone, Main 1147. Two Stores: ond Ave, 307 First Ave. e#a2 8 en be m De = é

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