The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 30, 1904, Page 4

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MHE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, MAY 40, 1904 ot amen “THE OJ AKER BELLS IT FOR LEGS.” Money- . Saving THE SEATTLE STAR BY STAR PU BLISHING CO. nc anllatenlidialitnas » STAR DUST BVERY AFTERNOON WXCHPT SUNDAY, TELEP we: Business Department—Sunset, Main 1060; Independeny 158 > Baliortal Department—Suneet, Main Liss. The Star's Eastern offices: 10¢ Hartford Dbuftding, Chicago: 68 © building, New York, W.H. Porterfield, ngr. foreign a Snes ID BTAR AGENCY~-321 Pallard ave, Bw . Red 14k te An exchange says universal pe came here, Things ought to be a ‘One cent per copy; six cents per Week, or twenty-five cents per | is near at hand, That paper never | little livelier in St. Louls than here Shonth, delivered by mai! or carrlere, No free contes. heard of “Rastus” and “The Kun-/in Manchuria.) FO MATL BU RSCKINNE when your subscription expires is | nel,” evidently acai en the address label of cac that date arrives if your suteorty - INCON TESTIBLE not again been 1%, your name ts taken from the let Wonder why Rastus and The] Professor of Logio: 1 put my hat eae labe! te & @oeipt 4 Kunne! don’t take their troubles to}/down in this room, 1 cafnot see as second -c matter | ‘The Uaguet it anywhew. There has been Fels Napth “4 be ————— aaa - body tn bestdes myself, The : aa Talk about getting It rubbed in, | 1 am altting on It, sealed » th A BRAVE OLD SOUL Seattle walloped ‘Tacoma. yexter-| He was ° Wiliams’ Hhaving Sow, 6 anes day in baseball, lacrosse and bow! e —_— ing! Is there any game the Ta I'm satisfied,” said the angry | Be comans ¢ play? tatlor, “that you do: end ‘ They called him “Unelé Tom." mn Che play eae ad adh n't Intend to pay Most persons -had forgotten his other name The late Mr, Jumbo'a keeper com- | All right,” chuckled the happy Uncle Tom lived in Colorado Springs. Colo. He was old—81 years | plains that the elophant’s ghost /debtor, “If you're satisfied, 1 ry Woodlark’ Spices ‘ and bent and had lost the use of one of his arma by paralysis. 1 bothers hi Those press agents | ‘ Abels nd full the Was not “all in." He bad no bad habits and for years he had have much for which they must an-| An Eag-bespattered Indiana au Pr aepeo ge b = convenient * aching swer some day thor when last seen was traveling atreng at up Supported himself, lately by picking up rage ahd paper In the streets in the direction of the Indiana be | fling top tin I 106 And he slways carried a winning amile, Is this elevator perfectly safe? | der as repidiy ae his horse sould] On the merning of that day ‘old, breathed deep, raived his chin and} {> Po" : Uncle Tom was well off once, But he was kind-hearted and help- | she ask jcarry him, The Hoosiers now polat! Corcoran awoke early, When he. marched out of the front door 6 $00 Bul to others, and when “the boom” flattened out he lost all “his Well, it's more or leas safe,/to the bard of Alamo as a terrible! went out to the pump the sun was Father!" called Willie Are T scene - Saohey. But he never lost heart, And he kept young and sweet to | [in win replied the operator, | Warning to other author@ and poets! only just beginning to drive the | you going to drum? : “ # ~ 1 gga : sii , | There's never any danger of {tof the Indiana brand | chill out of the air, Corcoran rub-| Old Tom did not answer, The Yarrita (S anish) fhe last, The children espectally were his grateful friends, It wa* | qropping in more than one direc x | bed the cold water vigorously into| gate clic after him Bath Cabinets | P Bhey who gave him the name of | t tion his short-cropped white heir, sput “He never-put the uniform on be | a | Castile Soap But the other day he found he was growing week and and ap tered a littl with his face in the fore,” sald Sarah He must be Continued for this * erry Direct importation. Costs plied to the court for admission to the poor t tub and emerged at last glistening going to drum | valu $2 cag ce a vt ; Then the old fellow took his I ia t the chit UNCLE HENRY clean, He was more alert than And we'll go, Sarah, Won't we 5 someh atl dk omit 4 t 4 eepagiet et sell. ah erp ge SAYS usual, As a matfer of fact he had | go?” ecnema and ethererust and eens erven Dim—ell-Ris py . ay ielody ever wents gone to bed nober the night before—| “You, we'll go Hick’s Liniment Page fants it is bighly Ene nemtkorching, and started for the poor fer t' get on an empty which had very few precedents iu} he fair grounds were crowded ; aa hal aebee & ps ; wa sding On one of the streets where he had picked up his liv (perhaps bandwagoa,an’ ev'ry- | | his memory jearly in the day, About noon the , : Quick relief; sure cure physicie Our p t stock i 4 ig cuk 20¢ nd Sarah was taking down dishes grand-ste gan to fill, People The $1.00 sine bottle... 650 | Pils old eyes were blinded by tears) he made a misstep and fell Into an body wants t' get on | area w Two hours ward he was dead. one th't's crowded. | and pans for the making of break-| took their lunch baskets there and 5 What of it, you say? | fast when he came back into the ate in groups, spread leisurely SS ree ee kitchen, He stood in the door and| among the benches, As the lunch Be vais <a vncte ‘rom means |CZAR HAS RUSHED blythe old soul was known livious to him, and he noted some-| seats became fewer, Barah and thing like her mother's manner and| Willie slipped up to a far corner un kulped a little. When at last her | noticed in the confused interchange § eyes caught his figure she started, /of greetings and reminisce It was almost the first time that she| They sat very straight and whis # of character and when they call More Men Nor TO THE FRONT @omething, Children are good ju ne uncle there must be something fine in that m. This man did not rail at fate because he faile om n } s ” nd. “You eould misfortune take from him ten . sapohere feisty KOFFATUP, May 90.—The Japan |had not had to pound again and pered to each other ¢ from the oldest and most reliable importing house fj - gan kill us but you cannot hurt us,” said the early Christian mar isa Nohtamae lumi ne tanphting A again at bis door to arouse him! “There's Jim Wilson,” remarked ker is the only retail # Seattle that buys tyrs to the tyrant. So this man was stronger than circum- | To Ot O toward Port Arthur. | from his dult slum Willie, “He used to come to see urce. We therefore do not har as some others stances—a strength that has been lacking in some of the greatest Lae? walk ¢ Savahes | “Where's Willie?” he anke you." ; } “ ed stuff with which the smaller wholesale houses on earth. Broken in body, ruined in fortune, his soul sat serene O8 | pin, as he hurried past me this { nb ge zt yk, uned to play together a usually # y the retail druggists. Ms throne and smiled. morning, “we will win this war in| © JUSTIC® WAS SPEEDY, Hell be have in alnata’’ [Why done cay tellers come to seolh O81 of Coder, ounes Soe 1 Cn cf annie best) ovals... 000 ° ; the long run,” and he kept up Ais _ Mig Bye Shag darth ey gp — ore Cee Ve oy . +. | Otl of Cloves, beat, ounce....260 * Samper é a hike to St. Petersburg | It looks as though toere'll’ never " ae I'm goin’ peda the break- ' es I age & Olcott's highe mrade | oe ee eeaea, bade, Sanne t's where you are mistaken—He \ Gen. Kodakl, of the Japanese |be any more summer girls. ant this morning—the way we used here's no need of your asking of Ol! of Sweet Almond, pint. | PN of ied A vintersreen, best, If you can’t figure out how and where he was rich, you de not | forces, has issued an order forbid. 06, 60 in camp You just leave that, Wille, You know just ax weil ened, Cag 400 fenow in what riches consist, that's all ding correspondents to send any}, 't, hee We'll always have the) things. “ as I do, G Ol of Bweet Al- |, ; nercial Wintergreen, best, . 7 last summer girls Why, father! Same reason why they chase me mond, 40 . photographs, except of themselves, Come, elear out” . at school, | spose,” murmured Wil : ifs | on ore See } c co 1 4 9 page lls ‘ os ve 1 of Lavender, best, ounce.15e | 611 of Bassafra ounce ABUSING HER SEX to thelr papers. The correspondents) ‘The Japanese admiral is at last] “Father! Are you going to—" | lo, and Sarah sighed oa : Se eal Git oe pee ae Sh gre sygp ong = o~ Stock has gone up 8 poate | TRE _& tow regret-to-repery’' eis st clear out! I don't want you} The small boys in the grand-|§ !! 0f Lemon, beat, a a , IS os (Personal to the Biner: T'm oo-(ee fussin’ around {atand were restless by this time ——$_—_— tng to tap off tn « tow Gage ent ge} pee Sarah hurried to the parlor and/They began to stamp their feet, ir ‘ P pomecoge een Dorothy Dix is up to her old tricke—libeling her sex. ore an bc Less cat eo ae ae oh 4 . + eceeets' te lot the} sat primly om the horse-hair sofa.|reguiarly at first and then tn pene calbn ery $9 si aout ogee - + uke aon ols pot oethin oven nited States Steel company ov! shy id not forget to t im in|rhythm. Older be ~ The Ballard, Mail orders filled, and we pay express 0: e chi 1 a recent dlatrit - . She could not forget to be prim in © boys joined tn. The - : 2 nee n Metlmens of'e resent élatribe This war is becoming monotonous. | erett, Mass, on Puget Sound show @/ this room even in the moment of | Bolse became #o thunderous t ip to all points whee 60 Sentiin on Oi ordere. ot Oe SoH emo . “The average woman {sa female Ismacl, whose hand is raised | Not half so many men are being knowledge of geography that 1 ———_——_- a aginst every other woman. With the female, life q Filla scrapping match, ia which she shoots in the dark from behind Drug Slowed windows, add then lifts the scalp of those who fall. A man ' — — one ae be ~ pa sys 4 spice ¢ aa ped his The uaker aa gutinpb aha ee pionl praden tase aurea ous towers| fom There tas balk Co. (which any other woman cares a rap Men stan@ together and protect under their glass case on the man-| “We must remember,” called Mr Phones: Main 1240; Indep. 1240 Other, but every woman's original and unchastened impulse is tel. She looked up to the wall| Smythe, “that the general is com. . little | ing.” 1013-1015 First Ave., Globe Block to jab a hairpin into every other woman who comes near.” above the lowers and ga Dorothy's rhetoric gets the beter of her Judgment. exclamation. Everything was su At last a carriage swung aor 1 4 - denly clear to her. And yet all she) the corner of the stand and came t The arratgnment of woman {s not only overdrawn. As to the eaw an old drum, battered and|® stop. The general descended and mfuste 4 vague-| Mr. Smythe, the master of 1 surprine. Her eyes wander a sort of guer- | Killed as I had expected when 1) astounding ly from the marble-topped “stand,” | nies, who was also the town under with its red-plash photograph al-| taker, burried to the front, looked As * wung € housands, np “Rverage Woman” it is untrue. It is true only of certain women— dented, its sticks framed diagonally | moved siowly to the box reesrved | thought that Set ders presence of) — eta he re y ould w h yer pe prize, ey ged rl eced perhaps the type with which the writer is the better acquainted. above, - with Judge Wilson, his oane rnd a haan to . vr Le thesn, cheered “ther — Sored f | There was no mistaking the | but the ou ” nt swore by| ’ 3 on to describe the woman who refuses to move Tom Corcoran’s drum. High in| ost - seg ogngpornes Svorsthing “# Seltbe tacir. eae ©). Dorothy Dix goes 01 THE VICEROY OF PE CHI LI ISSUES A STRENUOUS PROCLA- | the piace of honor, it was the con-| 8 eral’s erect old figure, the gray |‘ “y wile heé t | quering Fe a « Bomvogd va but | beard half hiding the kindly face.) & The people cheered frantically, not) ected stopping until long after he had en-|esm. They along on the street car and that other sort that selfishly monop- olizes the dressing room of the Pullman sleepers. eatnied aeevien: Whatever oft Tom Pooh! There are men of the same kind. was now, he had given four years of | Its & far cry to conclude that the average woman fits the de- life to his country. Though he hung stor . around the barroom in the hourty .. Dorothy makes that illogical deduction and accounts for | By W. B. Colver, Special Commis: | people. hepe of earning @ drink by some ‘this way: 11—If any person falsely accuse! cag job or of being treated by visit- “Just why women, who are gentle and considerate, tender and stant reminder of a departed take part in the enthust-| loosened. Cities and towns flared had their own secret.| UP in burning and harvests with- tered bis box, where he stood amil-| After each jece they had peered | 1, but on went the army tn blue, Jing and bowing. “Don't keep him| bout, earnestly wondering of .thetr | telling & great cong tor the flag standing! Don't keep him atand-|father. Would he come? Was the | at sakes us free—on to Atianta-— tugi” gheuted ene te another, endl ® i that day? They | and on, with the shadows seur- the notse died out, The general) knew that he had not red his | fying before it—on to the gleaming ¥ with mighty shouts, the victors took his seat and conversed in low| name, but they also kk " } mination he might ha the praise of liberty for the MATION TO HIS 6UBJECTS i drum to sou ner of the Newspaper Enter-| oinern fo: ° | : thers for the sake of reward. they! ors who enjoyed his garrulous re- prise Association in the Far East} Wil! be heavily punished if #uch I) vitals of great battles; though he forgiving in their dealings with men, should exhibit to their own discovered. tones with Judge Wilson, while-the| det ‘i | we chlid ~ 4s t 1 for ceremonial | S¥ffering, of light for th 0 ea @ callousness that is almost brutal, is one of the anomalies of — W. B. COLVER afer Nor doe ono eg er people droned like swarming bees. | woul ot be stayed for ceremonial wing, of light tor theee Who kas >, 4 z a i a oan be 5 It was time for tht band contest | reasons ne aterfe oh gry eee Iife that no one can explain. Perhaps their actitude is the result of | TIENSIN, May 7.—~The following California's Resort her slender fingers with a needle! to begin. A blare of brasses flat-|tmarched away the searts of the two B don sin conse. The general Conditbions of society when every woman's happiness, her | Prociam&tion whie! 7 poae for the food and clothi c e . ouave band| children #a eee ee mene Ree iS ae ae Wa el a a . nag h has been issued | Reached by Southern Pacific Co.'s | fo. to" clothing It scantily | toned the air. amd the Zouave band|chitdnes Sone is coming.” snig|Se¥—0 sriasiod old man holding by | bought; though he was useless, th from the state capital swung arow pleasures and perquisites dependeu upon the favor of man, and whira by Yuan Shi-kal, the powerful vice-| famous Scente Shasta Route, Two the 1 2 /- : 2 : the ful It of} hand a white-faced little boy. each woman naturally regarded every other woman with suspicion |/7 % Perches See nd nS Rope ccwnt i geet lien ol be Maps so gerome illagrehge== Jit an] Pes aaa aE ul lingeriPS °F) The people were still, Sarah sat one creatin ‘ - , bore ert . 01 ‘ order and playing the ashington | her hope. 988 poacher that it was safest to shoot at sight.” alculated to alarse of produce douse] serie on the continent. Rates? Saa| ake had carved his cope. |Peet.” fee ionace ctvode te tront,|. duet then © tmad. ome Selk.on] aon Wen F06 Spat oh caee aaiae Really, the woman's type writer runs away with her. in the people's mind will be be-|-Francteco $25.60 first . gee (try. The drum testified for him. | swinging his huge batoy and yome-| Willie's shéulder. He turned with} | loner seosine te cae to be Man has been emencipated from the savagery of the eave-dwell- ae: : second. Descriptive literature and | When he slung it over his shoulder | times throwing. it high tnto the air) ® start to - me coped pombe jot rs ye were pe . 2—Anyone teaching or learning| tuli information, aleo tickete and|on rare occasions people did not} and catching it as it fell, without|!ng over = oO a ue tm ed ay et but woman is still under the domtaion of the stone age instinct! [mystic practices Hike Boxer aoe reservations at/606 First avenue. 4 jeer. With the Pr oon before him| once permitting’ its . whirling to | stand preg sonantt Seasorne cometh _ (Mam has learned the brotherhood of man, but woman does uot recog- | ures and red lantern doctrines-will] © Bille, General Agent ‘eee | and the two sticks in his hands he| cease. Hour and round marched| “Willie! Willie!” whispered the] iy Tone aaa the Judge — nad mise the sisterhood of woman! So says Dorothy, tn effect. be beheaded. —or—_ was master. Then he could stir the| the players, stopping finally before| old man ms Mr. Smythe and sent him ‘7 7 a Bost! 3—All persons gathering together| Mest dinner tm Seattle, with Saw | blood of men——could do with them |t™ stand and putting @ new acce “What, father s errand, from which he returned = ! for purposes of plunder and forcible| ternes or Burgundy, at Matson Bam | what he would. The respect that|/ energy into their music. T “I want you to fife for me @ few minutpes with ;. ‘The accusation would be gratuitously insulting were it not gro- | disorder will be beheaded. others felt for his drum be felt tov, | Chtek# of the cornetiats were puffe My fife ain't here pratt ‘The Peg egos ——— 4 tesquely untrue. ‘—Anyone -in the government |but he made that martial mastery | Ut like red apples; the clarionett-| “Iv'e got It. Play it the way T1an) ater nodding his Posse eg service, or ¢ fa wi c pew n! 0 the ¢ - u 0 Co on.* pe “a If women appear to be more treacherous toward women than ine Sees ae eee no exctise for his degradation. He|‘*'* Never missed a note; the drum tonem 7 ee nae tb ang | !MStruction, mounted a bench and ny Way. with | rattled: the trombones and great lille slippe i looked searchingly through the | would never drum for a drink, no Men toWard men it is because men are more circumspect and cau- | pe t approved|stid down the scantling ple spreading strange doctrines horns groaned tn the me a1 - tious While women are more fragk: or connected with disorders, will be matter how desire parched him. rhythm, and the leader continued|Sarah ned upright SETS See Rees see ae ve ; 8 ath in a gps ; | Beheaded. Sarah remembered that this @ay/ip, gyrations of his baton with an|bench, awaiting what was t come | C2Usht her eye. She flushed more Somes light pocu' are all-—men and wom- 5—For the harboring of those who was the greatest in the history Of | agiity that seemed almost Incredi ead a ee ee benches to her, the people watching | the town. The were coming. There would ble. At the last flourish the drums; What fas that? Two thousand * and mis- A drum head of the en—made of the same sort of putty. | spread «| Bim expectantly. | “Sarah,” he said. “they can’t find won deat again, and the band . marched |faces amily will be imprisoned for five sham battle on the fair grounds and | proud! mn the fiat | be x roll. Softly tt be-| , years and all the property confis- |@ band contest, and over all would |? “rhe wente % ceed whisperea| gan, then «welled to a great volume | 7°U" father or Willie, bus the gen- ated preside as judge and distributor of | yuage Wilson to the general Ialof muttering sound, ¢ying away| = Want® you. ‘WHl yuu Sissse | 6—If In any family or in any vile! prises Gen. —— Corcoraa's old |the applause herve oun again and bre gently into aj Sue, with, me ae s known to spreaa| | commander. She understood, there-|a doren contes vhythrr A fife pierced] eye’ on, | foreed into a w eatants came army | nes, the head of fore, her father's unexpected mood.| As the next ce oked & little, but got to her t ft “ 1 rt . feet and € >w hrov . ALBERT BIGELOW PAINE « the family or the Tipao must report Just then Willie came tnto the| view there was a burst of cheer On the field, side by aside = pe ~ leaaa = — . @ same to authorities. If this parlor | Loca) pride made the Ie b ed Corcoran and Wiitie.| There was much clapping. The meme “Under the rosea, the blue; oa eae on | What's the matter with Dad?"| popular, and half the people. 1 night to a ponition in front of the! oral took her hand and told her that Under the liken tae ate? covered, ead of such family will] ho asked. “Didn't he come home| stand recognised that it was per:|stand, ‘The buzzing of protest died! she ought to be very proud, and Be we fs . [be ime lor one year, or the last night?” forming a plece new to tts reper-|away before them—just the excla-} honed * . cant af Gaal elite tab dees a of " hoped that Willie would grow up ict, Gs Sekien Soe: Shacbies tor the teen E h « for three yearn | "Sah! Yes. Ho's getting break-|toire. The familiar faces of the} matt It's Corcoran WHS be & Grate ane Pants —: And the Iilies we twined ‘or inn em “It in any place any altar or| fast players stared without recognition | through the crowd. Judge Wilson! nis father nm We have bound tn a - eray, rstor = pd . a ns Ba ed ] “Her at thelr friends and neighbors| whispered a tolerant explanat to} ry, the geuemni mate a Mee And in silence man aching strange doctrines to make Don't say anythin 7 among the auditors, The cornetists| the general, who looked with a sud-| 4 . public demonstrations there x. You know j | speech. He told th nie tha BP ov denon we public demonstrations thereon, any-| | ING OUTFITS FOR }},,. y ae Jand trombone players were not|den light of lection on the ts-| ned tte the pecpie thes roes today. ne reporting the same will be re-| the band contest ts today pare pes ‘ cool oye ‘ ri had heard a humble instrument ? quite sure of their notes, so they{ure of the veteran drummer of his “ ; | warded by the property belonging tol . Ie De goin’ to drum | . A pe made great by genius; that what Over the sew turned sod the guilty porseen being given te ONE - HALF PRICE 1 “1 don't know. Don't say gg Peer eet bug eowrnell to their] o ae finianed his tune ana} te”, D8d heard and felt when Cor- e sons of our fathers stand, hin | thing.” - vse eens Sears anergy ec Pacman nd} coran played for m was a mes- And the fierce old fight 5 ating © teacher of aT aot |] The meal was eaten in silence, |Achronder. who wan also, Rend of | NOT to mction Lite a tive thing | awe, of Dare patriotiom from = true Slips out of sight mis fictrines and bringing L Whatever the old man's mood, he | ‘2° Mite department, waved his ba — tion Hike @ live thing | heart; and when he had finished he In the clasp @f a brother’: hand. him author will receiv D 4 hugged it close, eat.ag reflectiwely, wie ae re a i oes not #0] free i from sharp wg It swept! placed the prize of one hundred dol- |a\reward ut Sov aclsorn ioce eel Dabney Hitt Gltant Giuaces ott of te win: | iuch, te cztrommen, ‘The new yel-|everyihing efare itn a, conquer” | tars in gold tm the hands of Sarah Sab the <6 dened lett @ state 0 tari for any five followers of }dow. When he pushed away from|(ne “snuent. The 5 ve in]ing advance of sound until It en-} As Sarah slipped out of the fair That the new has washed away, heh same. Those giving such in- hake table he wont tole room an coseinty at fret... Presently eue otiing there and oendte fe warts | Sok en ete eae tye Megane yen tion as will enable the au-| Woodhouse ftook from a drawer ig the bureatt al the cornetiats skipped a bar and{ blood glowing through the artertes ‘oad—she had not waited to see the Wade lave teeed on does witien to assent @uah lender, will ee ee tee eta | ae cereatiats_ skipped. bar, and] blood glowing through the arteries, | atime atta, and Judge Wises. ial Are marehing together today. Ngee lias Boal ere | the bed and brushed ft carefully,|to things in general. Hie neighbor {and was leaning forward, Capt a ae ae | ention of all these|— Sole Agents for Charter Oak B\ smoothing out the wrinkles. In the|kicked him: Shroeder, the leader, |clutching the rail of his t , oe Se 2 ae x, but no| whistle from under the hedge, and iid tial iia this aie teens " rvile depends greatly on the vist-l Ranges shoulder was a mended. place; a|gave him an agontsed look. Helone noted him. Every being in that|tuened to Willie's. half-fright- Oh, the tide of our mothars tearst aol Reh ary vag ote rer Mg rat cavalry saber bad made the rent.| knew something was wrong, but he|crowd was alone in his own fesling.| ened face looking up at her. A; d-the flow of red, it is,found. that pe seo eahienet 41 8 Pik S As he noted it the old scar seemed | dared not stop, and plunged ahead| R-r-r-r-r-r-ruh-ruh! A great black | Did they—did they ca He stuck Aud the tears they cho4, Sie Ga Gales ets Sn tke Street Fito mrov on his arm. He looked to| into deeper and deeper abyssen of| cloud covered the land. The moun- | on the question p rca pyle floaty bling nd publtc instruction te the Gad, Weare bee Renmrente dhe. | Giverd tains were lost in ‘it; cities andj] “They gave the prize to me for peg. wince ois Phonee—John 981; Inds, A 1186 charge hung in its walnut freme | Then Schrocder, being essentially | towns were seen through it dimly, | him." But the roses we plucked for the blue, 10—These probibitions are intend: There was a trace of weakness in/* man of quick decision, marched) Lower it sank until it shadowed! ‘The prise? One hundred dol~ And the Iflies wv twined for the gray ed to guard the against any| his bearing. Conquering the emo-|bis band away, still playing, and|everyth aii egal, Bar ‘Ye have Lound in . wreath, trouble i and kive| tion, he put on the uniform and, %Usht 4 seclusion where the poor; through It and thunder growled.) “Yos o—but where is he?’ | OP state, slory beneath R | chase tnelined' to foolish practices went to the parlor, where he took | Offender a be sufficiently aworn| The rush &¢ ‘walling voices was| “I don't know. ‘He went away mber our today! warning, that they may repent and down the drum and: adjusted the |t,, The crowd cheered patriott heard, and the cloud retrented a|and wouldn't answer me, : ee ma! ; Sax, scape punishment. But {t does not Special Sale of shrape over bis shoulder eps wan| ThA next band came frow iittle, showing men in swarms, hur-| ‘They trudged to the house toe [exonerate those who are well i Universal Stee! Ranges watching him furtively through the | 21°! the metr s Of ar jrying here and there. They massed | gether and ate thetr supper alone. CATARRH—WE GU NTEE IT fy nd nde int Open kitchen door and throwing |JmmmMe gcunty: the next’ from] together and struggled for victory,| Late that night old Corcoran was GONSULTATION, EXAMINATION AND EYES TESTED Free, | 0es¢,fn° for, whom the authorities iy oe NTs COM nificatt looks to Wilite Ling ontereh Wr tha eaitoce and Cattaneo eee [helped by. theese mom, Was . / x naoe D a r amen runners RED FRONT FURNITURE CO. Old Tom drew the sticks soft! t bass to their hoarse shouts. Armies|took him to his room with mofe SEATTLE BYE, BAR, NOSE AND THROAT INFIRMARY, | urned not to make this prohi 208-310 Becond Avenue 8 | Y¥| people, after applauding the last, formed and scattered again. ‘They | gent! 4-6 Haller Block, Corner Second and Columbia Street. bition an excuse fo ¢ aa selbahechadh asin hE Iittle with dome memory, tut he \rertie’, down tom noley Glecuantan! we : ant ~ hi bed geting te run om tw or troubling , th a little with some memory, but he ! e ereeeasraeteaer Ger so Me ek see he Se , of rival merits, The local majority R-r-r-r-r-r-rat-tat! Out of tne| 1 or beside him, : . 4 : . 7 ’

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