The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 4, 1904, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR HY STAN PUBLISHING CO OFFICHS--1907 and 1309 Seventh avenue SUNDAY, NMA BVENY AFTERNOON BXCE TRLOP HONKS Business Department Sunset, Main 1050, Independens is Baitortal Department—Sunset, Main fist The rs Baatern oft 106 Hartford butldtng, Chicago; 63 Hype bene New Tork H. Porterflelt, mgr. f advert LARD BEAR AGENCY--38i Ballard ave. Bun 14k if Gee cont per copy; sik cents per Week, or twenty-five © . delivered by mail or carrtere. No free copies F WATE Week hat” there you te when bacrtp{to your on tho address tabel of each paper, When that date arrives If y tion has not agaln been paid fn advance, your name Is taken from the tiet change of date on the address label te & recetpt es oat =r ner C the Postutt: Seattio. Wastin SHIFTING THE BURDENS OF A CITIZEN ae eocond-clane matter Did you ever stop to think that you are an officer of the gover~ ment? Under our national gonstitution and theory of government when It the presence of crime he is an offictal of the law. ortminal appr ortminis— @ Citizen is in ie bis duty to eee that the law is enforced and handed, Indeed, 1 the fails of this duty he te @ partaker in the crime And old-fashioned doctrine? Yes, more's the pity Bvery good citizen should study our colonial and early history, Oe mther he should study the history of the people of that era, for fiat only is true history which tolla of the people, He would learn that in those early days two books were on the center table of every E @itison—the Bible and the book of law, Whatever books might oc the particops i i RE :7 peise the library ¢ were always in evidence, Moreover, they w cf 3 studied, and as a result of this study— a Conscience waa enlisted tn eitizenship! Im those days of the fathers there was not only the greatest re- , 3 apect for the law, but @ feeling of personal obligation respecting tts 7 Fe enforcement. The duties of citizenship were made a vital, personal 2 < obligation. ; 4 How Is it today? at There are powerful remnantsof “the New England conscience” [3 = tm both public and private places, but here ts the bad tendency: .3 The duties of citizenship are betng delegated. : 3 ‘The average oltisen has plenty of respect for the laws, . hag no personal ambition to see them enforced. He ts careless of his A a prerogative as @ part of the government and neglectful of his op- $ beon held up. It Bay, Just print this your” and the old m of paper on which was written Bome people can't have a good unless they're male reat place, ; for me, will » left a plece time {n’ a lot uv notse, you attending the polloe ourse regularly? Are ture « Have you paid for that easter eky-| piece yet? Nows @ispatches say that John Malone wttl leave Tacoma, We don't Loo know John, but we like his hunoh. Beoms nice to see old Josh Wise back again, doemn’t It? met Heaven help met” she sobbed.| tacie, Me was evidently much T watched ber as che walked| tieueg with the cdutraton “thay | scarcely reached the summer house quichty Gown the coreltam Mex| Soinea before a man with a mask over bis kerchiet was preesed to her) “nut surely, Mr. Khan, you have| * aproached her, He mid a | tears wore streaming from) brought the biood: 06 chow eat] cert We & & weiner Sete! BOYS FAVOR THR SMALL ner gyes, BWatred even stronget| questioned Lady Bouverie was only brokem by Lady Bouverte’s >P b nee La on sobs. 5 ‘ : t * > ‘ A bear ren amuck tn Tecoma | Set me with regard to Mme Sare| treasure for the b ished. Trouble was bruin as It were portunity as an ex-officio executive of the law, ] He argues thus “It ts not my business to see that men are punished for breaking the laws. I pay my taxes. The state hires men to enforce the laws, @ It fs really too bad when one sees the law violated, but tf I meddie in this thing I MAY HURT MY BUSINESS” Is it not so? . Citizens have surrendered the dignity of duty in government and Rave busied themselves {n chasing after the dollars, They feel no 4 call to go to the rescue of the law. ‘They may bemoan the 7 persons q {ils of injustice and wr filme to make a sacrifice. F And there fs this to say Joing, but they have neither the desire nor ‘They aretoo busy to be good citizens! ‘Tho line of this tendency runs more or leas throughout our s0- a ciety. The church member feels that there ts no special call for per- ’ gona! piety, He pays a preacher to do his praying! “Amything to F hi@e personal responsibility. ‘The lesson our generation needs is this A MORAL DUTY CANNOT FE DELEGATED! It f= the motal duty of the citizen to do his personal part in the No sort conduct of the government of which he ft» part and parcel. of subterfuge can absolve him from that duty. The good of society i @epends upon it. The life of the republic hangs upon it! ” “SKIPPY A reader has asked some arguments “favorable to the juvenile eourt.” ' There are arguments galore. Let us present a concrete example. Have read of “Skippy” im “The Children of the Tenements,” by Jacob ? Skippy grew up @ tough and a criminal Hoe killed a man. Speak- 4 ing of the execution Mr. Rils observes: “The papers spoke of bis phenomenal calmoess under the gallows; a padd it was defiance. The priest who had been with him im his last hours aid he was content to go to a better home. They were all wrong. “Pad the pictures that chased each other across Skippy’s mind an the Diack cap was pulled over his face been visible to thetr eyes, they would have seen Scrabble alley with Its dripping hydrant and the pudile tm which 3 @hildren splashed with dirty, bare feet; the dark basement room with its meléy wall; the notice in the yard, ‘No ball playing here; the policeman Whe stamped him as one of a bad lot, and the sullen man whe thought ft had been better for him, the time he was run over, If he had died. “Skippy asked bimsclf if ho wan right, after all, and if boys were wee to have any show. He died with the question unanswered." a Skippy had co show. Therefore, He is “an item on the wrong sie of the ledger.” He was born into @ World that @id not want him and nevew@uriug his life acted as If It wed him anything—not even m breath of pure air. It deliberately schooled him in crime and then hung bim for it Note that item: “The polfoeman stampel him as a bad lot.” 4 That in itself would make the boy criminal, It is psychologically true that you can corrupt « boy by suggestion Say to continually that he is a “bad lot.” Let him brood over the suggestion, He will end by being what you have suggested. Now. rf The juvenile court gives the Skippys of the slum ow. The judse before whom he is brought dose not tell him he ts a bed lot. Ho tells him there is @ chance to become a good citizen, The boy is not put Into jaf with hardened criminals pending his trial. He-is not bundied off to « teform school, confirming the impression that he is « bad lot. ‘The fuvenile court gives the boy a chance. It gives him @ private bearing. His parents are properly held responsible for Bis future conduct unfit or weak, @ good citizen Is named as guardian. foctety through the juvenile court does what it ought to do~gives the him ought Into court and Or, if the parents are chance to reform. plenty of embr yo Skippys who need Its help. _——— Japanese postage stampa are rated} Josh was warmly greeted by} the most artistic in the world Walt} everybody. “Ph’ oid town ain't ¢ for the Port Arthur 2-sen iesue of ue, same totem pole, same mud, same 4 | ol4 union depot, same smoke, and I Russians are fortifying New-| didn't see no Third avenue . Ghwang, but we suppose it is aliee| ner no dollar gas, so I ‘sp e : gama to the Tenshi-same. : in the clutch of the octopus, 4 cons said Josh. F BACK AGAIN, But how about your trip? An ol4 familiar face, set in whisk-| “I dectded not t' say a word about ‘ ers of antique design, appeared at) it,” sald Josh, “but I don’t mind the Star Dust office this morning.| tellin’ an eld friend ke you th’t The bearer of the face and whiskers| I've given it up. I didn't wont t carefully placed his ella in a| got’ Tokto or Nagasaki an‘ get bot- corner, sat down and said, “Me an’ | tied with all th’ rest uv th’ cor spring are back together. Spring’s| respondents. I concluded I c'd do here for only a short time, but| better work at home th’n in Japan. ‘yours truly, Josh Wise,’ Is here to How about Part way.” } “ght et if T hadn't WE CURE CATARRH—WE GUARANTEE IT CONSULTATION, EXAMINATION AND EYES TESTED FRI SEATTLE EY, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT INFIRMAR 45 Haller Block, Corner Second and Columbia Street, I'd be there TOOK NO CHANCE CONE SION, ‘the Pathe: Mourr I How of late Pat bad been Altogither too much be Bald the Priest, “Now listen Bi nd then a tear, Ahetnktn’ | THE SRATTLE STAR 1€ e BY L.T.MEADE TPATIG: Bt COPYRIGHT * 1906 + IY "THE “EWS RAP ER ENTER i dibs find Aoluston ¥ @ curious 4 peopl: “Hut @ pound one,” I answered, She laughed and turned again to her other nelabbor When we joined the ladies after dinner Lady Rouverte crossed over to the Persian and suid somethin to him. "Certainly," he answered, and im mediately left the room, returning jin a few minutes with a dispateh bow, We all clustered about him as he placed it on the table and open ft. A little murmur of surprise ran round the group when he lifted the Md and displayed the contents, A! mans of gorgeous ema was lying to & bed of white wool. It was a blaze of all the colors of th pphires, di 08, many others not know were One by minutes past iz” watch aa L spoke. wether” He nodded. I rushed to my room, put on a ark ah ing and | Jotne my host yinent in | the hall Wo slipped out door which stood slightly open Without a word we crept softly in the shadow of the bushes towards the summer house at the farther a of the garden, which was clearly | visible in the moonlight. What ever thoughts were coursing through TNouverie’s brain, there was some thing about his attitude, a certain forceful determination, which kept jhim from any words, We both drew rainbow.|into the dark rf of the laurels nds, FU-land waited with what patience we ~eyes, ame-| could, | who A moment had scarcely gone by to be} when across the grass with @ light, he Te-| quick step Bhe was wrapped in a dark cloak For one ingteant the moontight fell on her fa ana my heart nearly stopped with horrér It was that of Lady! Rouverie. A N 1 did think T could #98! play was wonderful. Mme. Hare |r hand Pro yen eatiaanal 1am nearly mad. [lingered long and lovingly over/ne drow me farther back into the! has brought you bad) some of the gema, declaring that| darkest part of the shadow, From jst o has ous one or two before, men | where wo stood we could see but not) joning certain anecdotes abou must keep up appearances tonlatt) them to the Persian, who nodded nye mes te an tee | Don't take any notice of me; I will/ and smiled ax he replaced, with nia! ot er a ba aherchiet Her eyes tell you tomorrow. But heaven help! pointed fingers, each in ite receD-| were streaming with tears. She eal I glanced at SYNOPSIS. ¥ Druce visita at the home John Bouverie, whose wife, he Knew fn childhood, She te tn trouble, evidently about her brother Hubert, who has gone to Australia to attend to some bus tor Mme fara, Violet asks Druce to secretly secure the money for bonds valued at 2,600 pound Mme, Mara i a quest at the house jand #o is th sian ambaseador, who has fn his possession a wonder- | ful Dloodatone, the property of the Jahan. Mme, Sara brings Violet bad news of some sort ot Sir Violet, at later through a side Hut f was destined to be quickly undecelved. About and hour later I waa standing in one of the corrt- dors, when Violet Bouverle ran past me, the pulled herself up the next fnetant and, turning, came up to me! on tiptoe, Her face was #0 changed that I woarcely bave recog:| nized tt The worst has happened,” sald, in a whisper What do you mean?” I asked Hubert him. Oh, Mada tidings The worst. What am Ito do? I names I did found there. on ame @ woman. could moved them and passed each round did #0 he gave its for inapection. an rigin, and value, ft to the box again. As Wt description of its v and then return ‘Truly the dis whe! rtues, My firet impulye was to beard (he) As he spoke he pushed a spring tn | Hones tm her den, to demand an Im-| the box, and « secret triangular terview with the woman, .tell ber drawer came slowly out. In tt, new I wondered that Bouverie 4i4 not spring forward, seise the man, and jemand an explanation; but wheth- all my suspicions, and are her to tling tm a bed of red velvet, lay « torture Violet Bouverte any turther.| wonderful stone—a perfectly oval|°r Me wee stunned or not TE sould Hut reflection showed me the ab-| piece of mose-green chalcedony with | "°t SY. Before, however, he made! the slightest movement Lady Bou- | verte herself, with tneredible swift-| |nenms, disappeared into the darkness. wordity of this plan =f must walt, ¢ and watch: ah, yea, I would wate, slucent edges. Here and there in irregular pattern shone out tn TCETESS of the “avail we go to-| pric Blu Black Wax, Mascaro, a very Map THE QUAKER GELLS IT FoR Lege.” Theatrical and Toilet Supplies The Quaker begs the profe erally the arrival of a of Charles Meyer's (New atrica! and Tollet Supplics. Nose Putty, for building none toflet ume, can 4-Inoh [~ for «+. Eye Pa ann wion and to the trade gen mplete Ii York) The per plecd ....... 200 Clown Whit used in clown “make-up,” h, 2he Prapered Burnt Cork, for min- atrel “make-up,” ready for use comos in boxes at, per pound . 250, 500 and The Eyebrow Paint, for stage and be detected Rho int, used in bringing out and enlarging the eyes for stage and tol for totlet or stage; put Fe awe a tubes, i, crayons for teeth, each winace hair, eyebrows all shades; 8b« arillo imilar to Mascaro, or tine .. t une; 26 for blocking atioks 200 Crayons for penciling eyebrows, up 4, blonde, brown in fine blue, tho 200 out he fine article for 4 toflet for darkening mustache; packages for ‘an imported doioring in hand. Theatrical Cold Cream, perfect, + muaranted to stay sweet and fresh In Rows Cold Cream, full pound Adief " L sald to Bouverie FL beth rushed to the epot where|f > OMARL FREE FACE MASSAGE w to ] Moyer's woods tre recognized by the theatri cal profesion as the finest on the arket, A® usual, The Quaker's are conniderably 1 than others ask—1 in fact, than the name goods are sold tor in Waste elton Box of Assorted Grease Paints, containing two sha of flesh rimson, one white, one and 4 color for shading akclon Rogular price $1, The Quaker's PRICO nsaes srecses » B5e Lining Colors— f-inch sticks 200 4-Inch sticks ’ 1060 Carmine Liner— B-ineh BUCKH cee ereeeece ss BOO (-inch sticks 150 Spirit Gum, for pasting on beards and mustaches. 2he bottle for - 200 600 bottle for 400 emoves DAILY FROM 9 TO 5 forme box with brush and mir- ror; per box 500 Exora Cream, in ching pots, tremely o for benutif complext 1 shades slar 0c box. The Quaker’s price. > 400 Grenadine Lip Rouge, in » b handy to oarry,in one shade (medium) 260 Exore Pace Powder, finest made adhesive and will not off; guaranteed harmless shaden— eo box for Oe box for Exora Rouge, fin: diew cheek stage and tollet; cannot be 4 tected . 400 Rouge De Theater (Ory), light medium and dark, per box. 2060 Exora Blendin, Powders, only powder made that wi grease paint emoothly mov joss; in boxes, t. per Ib Se, Oe, T5e ani $1.50 Powder Puffs, ® very superior line at upwards from - +5160, 250, B50, 500 make elf any Massage Cream, size; special ..... You go home and say to Pat his wife had stood—something whit a he dest tet we corona? lay on the ground. I picked it up.|f| BY.An expert masseur. Ladies given full instructions how to remove Pye ttl Me . Penipowir A it wae her handkerchief, Bouverie|{| Wrinkles, blackheads, pimples, eta, and beautify the complexion at snatehed It from me and looked at |g 2°™* ‘ ” HOME ithe tnitials by the light of the moon. Now thin, F yeu sthop yer The handkerchief was sopping wet| Tree delivery to all parts of the city, including Green Lake and abrin kin tears, He flung tt down! lard. all orders fi ; 3 Pinyin’ cards, and lotke o” that; though it hurt him. | ints within 160 miles of Seattle on all or - Tf yea don't, the Father telle me Jreat heavens!” he muttered. 4 He will turn yen to a rat I pleked up the handkerchtef and| 4 4 ; we both returned to the house. | 4 ‘Ot don't b'lave he can Go it, We had scarcely set foot ~inside| The Drug 4 Yer can't make me schwallow the hall when the sound of many Una el 4 that! upstairs fell on our cars| Co bs If, héwiver, I ghrow sehmaticr, Amongst them the Persian’s accenta sf ] Diddle’ will yen watoh the catt* were clearly Gistinguishable. Ter- Phones: Main 1240; Indep. 1240 ‘ KRAZY KRANK. jror fang tn every shrill word. m ‘ Pi a ahh ea dag a leene ME 1013-1015 First Ave., Globe Block A NO | other jewels are mfe, but the blood-| VEL N stone, the talleman, fs gone! What] will be come of me? My life will be 4 the fortett.” 4 prise Association in the Far tire Korean ¥ te tn drydoc merehant company. It was o anese trading ship. The will be pa patrol Ke just now more big batt * oarth A story rahips © yare inch th | easily end the war without tage of an old Japanese superst The missionary sayn that if the sians will make @ dash at the anone. front of the Japs will and rup sixty as that @ plague will fall th ith thé Borrow Your ‘Neighbor's Phone SEE PAGE 6 TO BEAT JAPA By W. B. Solves Spectal Comimie- sioner of the Newspaper Enter- YOKOHAMA, March $—The en one of the western Japanes ports, Tt consists of # dinky Iittle ship called the “Yobungo,” which the Koreans bought a year ago from a *Yobungo” ted up and sent home to ean coasta where there are m anywhere cise on printed here to the ef- fect that a French misetonary has word to the oxzar that he can | bloodshed by simply taking advan- scattering ashes and water tn they belteve East. Jap “I MUST ASK NONE OF YOU TO TOUCH IT.” even as a detective, would not| vivid contrast to the dark green leave a stone unturned to purtue|mumber of blood-red spots, from this terrible woman until her wicked | which the stone derived its name. machinations were laid bare “You.” he said, biting it out with Tt was with « sinking heart that I] reverence and laying it on the palm Grenee4 for dinner, but by-and-by| of his hand, ‘this ts the bloodstone. when 1 found myseif at the long Look closely at it f you will, but table, with (te brilliant decorations | I must ask none of you to touch and ite distinguished guesta, and) One after another we bent down gisnced around the glittering board,|@nd peered into tts luminous green 1 almost wondered if ali that I had | deptha, and doubtless shared some felt and sil that Violet Bouveries | ef the fascination that its possessor face had expressed were ngt parts| must feel for it. The stone was won- of & hideous dream; for the party | erful, and yet ft was repellant. It | waa 80 gay, the conversation #0 full | #eemed to me that there was some~ jot wit and Imughter, that surely no| thing sinister in thoee blood-red mix-| horrible tragedy could be lingering | spots. The thing tnspired me with io the any ition. Rus- Jap- turn | ture. I asked a Japanese about this ands the same fooling that I often have story, but bis remarks are hardly thoughts came to me| When regarding some monstrous fit for publication, The general] jooked again at Violet, At tea! spotted orchid. | sense of what he « was that hel time that evening I had noticed her| “Yer,” said Lady Rouverls, “it ts ped the Russian ald try It. limproved appearance, but now #he| Wonderful. Tell us something of ite W. B. COLVER. |jooked ghastly, Her cheeks were| history, Mr. Khan,” Sout ateaiear dl idaner Masons reag.|Rollow, her eyes sunken, her com-| “I cannot,” he answered, “for the yg yg Pnat| Bloxion @ ull, dead white, Her #imple renson that no one knows tts \ a ist| evening dress revealed hollows in|origin nor when it came into the Pao lher neck. But tt was the tired look,| possession of our court. I could tell 1! for a "Smooth Mike” at Tom| the suppressed enguish on her face,/of some of its properties, but the Williams, #16 First avenue. Have| which filled mo with apprehension, | tales would fall Unbecomingly on the you seen the moone? ee/ I could see how bravely she tried to)eare of western civilization.” | es me be bright and gay. I also nothed! He replaced tho stone in its Rest dinner in Seattle, with Saw| that her eyee avoided mine, | drawer and, in spite of our pleadin | ternes or Burgundy, st Maison Bar| xtirra All Khan sat on (he right| declined to discuse tt further, j beri, Second and James, every eve | 6 724) fouverte—on bis ather side} It was late that night before I re- ning, $1.08 lent Mme. Sara, and I océupted a} tired to rest. I was sitting with ———= | Chair next to hera. Between madame|my host in the smoking room, and and our hostess appeared fight a| we walked together down the ocorrt- most marked and painful Montrast,|dor which led to my room. Mow Puomes Wicket, Bouveria ‘Wa Sat Mine.|of the Hghts in the house were al sate J“S, | Sars, by her own showing) was an! ready out, and I fancied as I chatted ~ 14. wor and yet at that mément|to Bouverie that I heard a door the old looked young and the young! close softly just ahead of us, The A was brilliant, | mext instant, glancing down, I saw Madame'a face a wrinkle was to be ghserved; /on the dark carpet a piece of paper, and bearing traces of having) It was obviously a 14 not Tr make-up was so perfegt that it) ope be detested evemeby the| been folded. rver. Her tout epsemble | note. rance of R wam-| “Halloa “What cried Bouverie. appe could not be a @y more) ts this?” 5. Many a man would bay He ped and picked ft up. At fallen a her wit a & glance we both read Its contents Maney; but I at least was saved that) they ran as follows 1 knew her too well. I hated her] “Bring it to the summer house ex- the had the good taste to addrown| not tell what thought» flashed into him in Tngtiah. Now and then [| thelr brown depths; but noticed that she looked earnestly at} hue suddenly left his face, aving our hostess, After one of these|it deadly white glar she tur to me and said] “Do you understand this?” he ip a low voloe id, addressing me briefly. tow {I Lady Bouverle is look-} ‘Yes and no,” he replied Don't you think #o “Yor whom was this note intend- en,” I replied, she is. I feel! ed?" wan his next remark. anxious about her.” I was silent wish she would consult me,” Druce,” sald Bouver! re you she replied. “I could do her good.| hiding anything from r “If T were you,” I said, after a m ment’s quick thought, “I would at- tend that rendezvous. It is now 26 Put she will not impression, Mr quack because She ts under tho} Druce, that Iam a I do not hold diplo- |not recovered” for that beauty, which effected such | actly at 12:30; but make certain th havoo in the world. | Dixon Druce hes retired. Don't) It was easy to see that Ali Khan ne until he has was fascinated by her; but at table] Bouverte eyes met mine. I ad the rosy! We both rushed upstaira, The whole thing was perfectly true The bloodstone, the priceless talisman of the royal house of Persia, had been ion, The confusion was appall- and already someone had gone fetch the local police, | 1 sholl lone my life if the stone ts cried the miserable spair and terror depleted | “Who has taken it? safe, but the| s been burst open| and the bloodstone removed. Who} has taken tT Sir John, w' ie the} matter? You look strange.” “I can throw light on this mys- tery,” sald Sir John. 1 leoked around me Neither Lady Bouverle nor Mme. Sara was present. I felt a momentary thank~ fulness for this latter fact. “1 saw my wife give a package to & stranger tn the garden just now,” he continued. “I do not wish to conceal anything. This matter must be looked into, When the poll come I shall be the first to help in the Investigation. Meanwhile I am going to my wife.” He strode away. We all stood and looked at eneh other. Sir John's revelation was far more terrible to all except the unfortunate Persian! than the lon# ef the bloodstene, In fact, the enormity of the one trag- ody paled beside the othor, I thought fer a minute. Notwtth- standing the Intenesa of the hour, I would dispatch a telegram to Van- Jeleur without delay. There was a mystery, and only Vandeleur could clear It up, Black as appearances were against Lady Bouverie, I had no doubt that her Innocence could be established, Without a word I hurried out and raced to the post- office. There I knocked up the post- master and soon dispatched three telegrama—one to Vandeleur’s house, | one to his club, and one to the car of the Westminster police station. ing. Persian, on his face. The other gems secret drawer b Lady attendant. HELLER RAPID SELLER WHAT HELLER? HELLER PIANOS SHERMAN, CLAY & CO, : 711 SECOND AVE, SEATTLE Plate of Elnstlofty, Plate of Si isha, : Plate Ever-Pleasing. Plate Never Perplexing. f Perfection Suction Pla’ é Only Dentists in the W: making this Plate, ag Gold Fillings Silver Fillings . Bridge Work Gold Crown . HARVARD DENTISTS__518: All Work Guaranteed 15 Vears. Teeth extracted free, without Houre—8:80 to ¢; Bunday, 9 te 1h and replaced with new ones the me day. COND ay James All contained the same words: “Come special or motor immedi- tely. Don't delay.” I then returned to Greylands. A! the Pact |hush of surprise had succeeded to oe wa the first consternation, A few of} OS art the guests had reappoared, startied| ond be by the noise and confusion, but — many still remained in thetr rooms. Sir John was with his wife. We a We Make a Specialty of Gents’ Work sembled in the dining room, and We have a capacity of 70,900 collars and ouffs and 17,000 shirts per presently he came down and spoke| [> week, Can give you ty tinlsh you desi: left. gi our Main Bf. to us, fice Firat ave, Bell st, or our Down-town Office, ‘ave, near “Lady Pouverte denies every tke at thing.” he said. "She swears sho eee ver tent ner roo. The mat. || Sielete 100 Collars 2c Cuffs 40 | must be thoroughly investigat- stipes | he continued, going up to the Queen City Laundry WE LEAD—OTHERS IMITATE We have suoce: wi f I 0 persons with «): t Northwest tee Yoru & fis ‘b yEP f pope, James er 18,~ » Seattle and pair of glasses FE OPTicaL x Persian. “There are times when a Lary tn poh ynor cannot defend even WORK GUARANTEED. ESTABLISHED 189. in own Ww Meanwhile Mme, Sara remained east ra Sebati. in the Hbrary. She was sitting by i be made rich and p a table busily writing. When Sir Of Interest to Thin, Weak People Blood and Netve Tonle p - John appeared she came into the ody the very pith of what makemy joe eer areke te hum Her face] Tt Is perfectly understood by every | puro rich blood In the moat dire 4 ATT of ayeaceliy. ck man and woman that if they | way, and cures disease by ‘ Was SUn.0F Sympase — an get some remedy that will stop/ strength. This tonic is tn tal % ‘Of course Violet is innocent,” she) the gradual flesh and strength | form to be taken right , said, “I cannot understand your! their recovery is assured. People that | It enriches the blood, r story, Sir John.” are ner and unsteady, have dia- | where there was faintness He did not reply to her, She then|zy spells, with weakened memory | men’s weakness a better r | offered to go up to Violet; but he|and loss of ambition, thelr blood is| never made. Sold by all dru | peremptortly forbade her to do so, | thin and watery. It shows in their | for the per box, or three boxes for |sallow complexion and tired man-|or sent by mail, Write us o ‘ (Continued) soon they commence to gain| your casé, Address Dr. Bosal y - ened flesh they took better and sleep bet-| Co, Philadelphia. Pa, For sal Go to innings for bDicy te re-|ter. To gain from 1 to § Iba, of good | The Quaker Drug Co,, 1618 First pairs. eee solid Mesh per week the blood must | enue, Seattle, paneer | (Re ee, s ee Bun Ora

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