The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 20, 1904, Page 5

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asics ye From Zero to 85 Degr Minutes I Rec ein Five ord With Cole’s Original Air-Tight Wood Stoves They burn wood, cobs or trash. Even heat day and night. Fire not out during the entire winter. No danger of your plants frees ing. They cost no w than other stoves, and burn * fuel Look out for imitations claimed to be fust as good. ERNST BROS. E Agent 506 PIKE ST. Main 1158 re Phone cre catensctsaiang ; NEN NORK Y DENTAL PARLORS | NO NEED TO SUFFER Either the Pain of Tooth or the Pain of Extraction. the usual agony, In every department thor- oughness is our keynote, Specialist for Everything. The Finest Materials. Latest Appliances. en you get more than theae SCALE OF Full Set of Teeth trem $5.1 Gold Crowns $5.00 MO EE a a nian aaah alanine Gold cuaner from $1.00 pmendation. q N.Y. DENTAL PARLORS 614 First Avenue. & tee $:29 a m. to é pm. ’ Sund ys §:20 a. m. to 12m. Sem weee en 2. LL Se Lamp, with best silver re- et 35e Tin Top Jelly Glasses . S-pound Butter Pot snd Cover, 2-quart Yellow Bowl, worth 30c | | Gin. Flower Pot and Saucer... 9) 7c i 60 Stove Board, lined with pa- per pa a stove Pipe Damp package Gold Dust Spelger & Hurlburt Second and Union TheThompsonCo 224 Pike Street. REALESTATE LOANS | INSURANCE Te Me OWNERS OF THE | MONTANA ADDITION |) MAA A AAD EaAA ABA aM Gente cad | Ideal | tensity, ily distanced “ " T NOVELTIES IN VEILG } | ‘ ” an excellent “air-tight | E ; i [ | heater Gh A MOV Mi N COUNCILMAN DAULTON PRO. | ea POSES INCREASE IN LICENSE for wood THE INSIDE “DOPE” ON HOW SAMUEL HILL, THE GAS MAN, | FORMED THE GOOD ROADS ASSOCIATION IN THIS STATE Cour Deulton will tnt Hore is an excellent heater that wef" oo AND HOW IT MEETS JUST BEFORE ELECTION Time t ‘ val Count - like to recommend, and which alway: { t foo r active wale The construction | Tae Se are All | ' i 4 many worthy points of excel } Farmers, business men and others; will be at Bellingham; and this «% idle ence, Bod made of plain steel, heav- } interested in good roads of one| brings the story teller to his story . . . ily lined Inside up to the top. } }kind or another will meet in Bell} Of how It happened that there is a +, ng : ‘ Q a ingham nber egret “y Ro to | $004 roads wssoctation and of how oe . ; Bnd wai The “Yuma” alrtight heater is “| oe mber 28 and 29 tO} Samuel Hil happened to be preat A : ~ 1 ‘ direct draft stove © draft is of cast attend the annual meeting of the! dent vgn aes . esthage ane Oe } Washington Good Roads associa-| Once upon a time (all good stories +i 00 ia BM ep ec {ron—a very neat pattern, with an oval ¢ Uon whether they be truth or fetion be He has £ 4 that 10. |§ door in front, large enough to admit af There {is a state and national elec cin that way) there was a non-par nt te ’ ying } tion on November §, and thereby|tivan Chamber of Commerce in a om $200 t for the hovel to remove ashes, In the middle hangs a tale involving elections, | city known as Seattle, and that non nay Fagg : an of Joor there is a screw register by § jrailroads and a private dope pill,| partisan commercial organization] A vell well draped ta a th They are worn with outing | ,, pad He in of th 1 ; § which for the roller at least will| had a secretary who was wondrous | beauty, When a yell is not prettil oo dey Son de® which the draft can be regulated. When } t | wine. Thus it happened that one | arranged it makes a woman appear shows a fascinating dren . 5 t ts lowed it makes the heater perfectly air- / oidering pill, with its/day when the gas man, who was| absolutely grotesque, When the | { black chantill with an |) ana th in propor f * dreams of senatorial hon-| but now isn't, came with a letter he| sibilities of the Vell and the dan of black tesign agate" rg 7 |] tight. Haw cast iron collar and east cold } ors descending as gracefully « the | wanted the chamber to send out to gers of the veil are not retall for ' to b 1 tu " i ty t wing ll-inch opening. i little ringlets of smoke upon the| farmers and others throughout the| about the wisest thing $3, The neveral Vv On , 1 woh am § pate, is in itself @ story, | state who live in hopes that the sun/ tet it alone and wear a is of black Ince th No. 63 Yuma, 22-inch long, 18-Inch high, 14-Inch wide which perhaps is but @ sidelight|will shine, the rain fall and Jim|ehis adornment jet and le The all theaters, “tt . upon the tale being told about the| Hill's stomach will never become) No fashion changes iin. Lael moet webs . S athe 0 ale No, 62% Y 2-Ineh long, 20-Inch high, 15%-inch wide beginning of @ good roads associa-| like the dyspeptic organ that rules pathy Geen dene 6 - eavier effect than tt t joenee, The nner wh No. 62 Yuma, 24-inch Jong, 22-inch high, 16%-inch wide tion in the state of Washagton. the Standard Oi! octopus. voile and wear th Bt nt importat The | number is ir a tn th Two years ago the association was| This secretary looked twice at thie Be ee gy «tlt auty of the veil and the novelt ple proof \ t that th sprung upon the public in two full-| letter and then told the gas man » are Ghowan three of the tea in th ¢, ‘The ve sli making money, It he column first page stories, wherein|that was but now isn't, that the N tn thn Galeke taepte show «Th befor Samuel Hill, then of gas fame, now | Chamber of Commerce was a non-|\'u” 1 lotaits at $140. The color | around ts f , a t hoy ; ore are scores of so-called “airtight” heaters—they are not @ barrister pure and simple, was! partisan body and it would never| 10. one edge te : ” f er cheap at any price; you are absolutely safeon any “airtight” you modestly interview he official |do for it to wend out @ letter such ell h Acrons the buy here. | call for a convention followed, and| as was proposed ee eS: Bae put on in V | De |simeltancousty Washington | dis Samuel Hill went his way in sor- | ™ color on P " af nt nance regulating [patches contained the information| row, but the next day he met the| Th darker shade ~4 veil « * jthat James J. Hill, of merger fame,| secretary and, ‘tis said, the latter | !O¥ over the brim. The a ate, Ite no diatinett and Samuel Hill, of Seattle, had se |took compassion on him and sug- |!" pcan elegy bea sais une tee rt n e of cured permission from the agricul-| gested that they have an associa-|@8d mabogany. There a ol deh aa bee be Nang Standar a For TULL e Co. jtural department to transport the|tion of their own which they could | the same style a Si oo ae United States good roads demon-|do as they pleased with sho cor olors pin are most commor 000 peog [stration train to the great state of} Lmm nw the wires between | Vell Is not so as the toued | worn 0 te 08 fer L. Schoenfeld & Sons | Washington over the Hill roads. | Seattle and Hilldom dn St. Paul and | a 1006 to 1016 First Avenue me, the farmers and| between Hilldom and the agricul bi wes we | =~ 5 roads. The simple ap to which he had been so ruthlessly | eur own special p elevated. Of course he made a tien Bais Ge canes speech of acceptance. Being Inte the ested in roads of one kind or an tooth without the other he proved by argument not tc be of the state of Washington depend ed upon good roads th Jim Hil must have to pat ing back cast prosperity of Washington That was the first meeting, two years ago. }tion that fall meeting last year. make the meeting especially attract ive. OF WOMANHOOD PEROXIDE! shown how to build ter coyly accepted the high position controverted that the prosperity for the reason | something | into the empties he was tak- jas necessarily coincident with the ate election and there was no good roads train out from Washington to! This year there ts an clection and thie year the good roads train! DISA PPEARING — THEN rn ME AES Ap Ma tural department waxed warm with An association was) messages golng One Way or another |formed and ite presidency was|and the next night Samuel Hill ex thrust upon Samuel Hill. The lat-| plained to three reporters how for years he had been good roads movement studying how he had | which the state of Washington most needed: how he and Mr. President >| Hit}, of the Great Northern railroad. nt good roads tion train to the coast be a good r deme is association secretary of the waociation. tate Good Roads ARTISTS OF THE WEST DEFEND THE BLONDE RIDICULE PROF. MASON’S LEAR NED THEORY THAT FAIR TYPE THERE i6 “Not so long as we have perox- @ local physician, on asked if h thought there could be any truth in the statement of Prof. Mason, of the Smithsonian Institute to the effect | that blondes are fast disappearing and that presently w Hl have no more fair women in our midst. Prof. Mason's treatise on the gradual disappearance of the blonde and bis serious declaration that within a few centuries there will be no more blondes, because fewer blondes than brunettes are born. has aroused wide discussion. Art ircles have taken up the question and from eastern studios comes the jery that in art also the blonde is disappearing. “Onee the blonde was the artist: say the eastern wielders of the brush and the knights of the pallet. “Time was when golden hair and blue eyes stood inthe art world for faith and purity and hope and all the other high sentiments of the homan heart; then the brunette type was paltned only in represen tation of the darker passions and midnight hair and dark eyes were painted only when the artist wished to pleture evil or sinister senti ments. Now all that has changed blonde has become « Her intenser sister studios, Blonde mode only for their ft models pose for the portraits the darker type there is more in more fire, more depth to portray and the blonde ts hopeless being used to po: the shallower and the negative pa fons, ‘This ts th Pr Mason's theory that th ont lisappearing be The amon place igns in tent w ment—the surviv fittest.” But the blonde ts not undefend ed, nor her beauty without cham pions. Furthermore, the published ataternents of babbling eastern ar tists are being resented in othe sections of the country. San Fran claco's art world has raised It in defense of golden hair and blue eyes and the announcement ts made that blonde models are still come in the Montgomery vo stre n dios. Local artists have become Inter. eated in the question and lively dix cussions are being held in local ‘ Such was the declaration of studios, The little coterie of brush-wield- ers gathered in the studio of Miss Ella Bush, in the Buston block, was |carrying on an animated discussion pro and con this morning when a Star reporter wandered in. | There had been much talx of the |Intemasity of expression to be caught from the faces of brunette models and of the sweet purity of delicate pink faces lit by starry bi and framed in « halo of ge but reporters, for some reason, are regarded as a species of soullens be. ings, unfeeling in matters of sent ment and the tumble of The Star man over the easel and into a freshly-mixed pallet of paints al ruptly terminated the discussion. Only Mise Bush herself had the courage of her convictions. She gave the latter up graciously and without protest “Why, it’s utterly ridiculous. aaid Miss Bush, smiling. Don't you know art Is too big and too broad to quibble over fads? Whatever this is about blondes and brunettes let me say that it isn't worthy of any artist to diseuss, Each type of beauty is painted for itself and one may as well compare the lily and} the rose from an artistic atandpoint Since art began artists have striven to catch the beauties of both types, and both have been used to typify all the beautiful sentiments of the human heart—so, too, have both types been used to picture the darker phases of human nature. 1 am sure no true artist would think of comparing the two typea of beauty, the one to the detriment of the other, and such a discussion is ne that no first-class artist would enter into Anda »ping of hands fr students behind the drawing and easels echoed the ple tint’s sentiments as The § bowed himself out. »m the boards y or ar man The steamer Dolphin sailed for the north this morning with 20 pas sengers and a large cargo, Potato shipments north are increasing. Among the Dolphin's consignments was a shipment of 150 ton tatoes for the Nort |company at Dawson | | At. the evening. of po n Commercial Ron Marche W tay the figured out that it was good roads had secured permission to bring the | atra: | how there) Se APA NRE or ane . aC TUE SEATTI® STAR—TU PSDAY, SEPT. 20, 1904. PHILIPPINES ANOTHER DEMOCRATIC oo “DOPE” BOOK ISSUE DEMOCRATS CHARGE REPUBLICANS WITH SIDESTEPPING THE QUESTION OF WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO WITH THE |!" halle y. Ringlt paid $1 “ree and opera house the high p ate take f out of the pera hour as much which ne of some sort and of how there would be # preai cue andr Sonapeneiamer 4a and Jim's prosperity | dent. The reporters, on their own nitiative of course, the next day _ added a paragraph telling how Mr.| WASHINGTON, Sept. 20—Anotb-, step will be’ and continues: “It held | Hill was being talked of for prest-|er chapter of the democratic hand-/ would not be at al! eurprising If the | ail for There was an elee-|dent, providing of course he could | book dealing with certain phases of party which bas freely admitted a be There was another be induced to take the time from/the Philippine question was given | states pared fi hood, | as argo gasoline, coal There w ©} his already arduous duties to attend |out today, It deals with “the repub-|and has Americanized common rn. ‘ jto the work Hean attitude toward the lberty- | wealths In order to increase Pinay gay James B. Metkle, secretary of the | seeking inhabitants of the islands,” | power, should in some ne Bn | Seattle Chamber of Commerce, is|an ddrawe liberally from th regency admit the Phi! : of Cleveland, Bryan, Olney, F statehood merely t |dent Schurman and Gen. Miles liself im congress a Butt | The text book demands from th exe. However, that may be, it} er | republicans a clear eupression on is plain the #0 nment we now their Philippine poticy, setting forth | maintaining preeartous peace in the that “Roosevelt simply te the Philipptens by holding out to the |Amertean people that it would be natives the hope of future state- | unwise to tell them what bis nest | hood BENEFIT PL ¥ On Friday evening of this week jof the Orphans me, is aanteting | in the arrangements for the bene fit. WARSHIPS SIGHTED My Bertone News Ant CITY IS “SOAKED” | Comptrotied Riplinger this morn- Ing received notices of five mote 4 againat the city king of water mains. 7 $6 76. Two judgm on the same unted to $1,500. agen will be paid oF The council a apr put th ised it not to agerer viously rende nt The the to have pre a water fund. the ut Of anon rt, b damages cured in th acti sulting in the award A aggregating $5,732.75 are th In | C 7 b G.\h Noyes 3 Brendenst ite $266; J. W Corescent Manufacturing company, $264 | tin | (By Geripps News Ans'n) " 1 PARIS, Sept. 20.—The Rugegirl | w fireworks factory at St. Denis, which |) upplies the whole of France with) w explosion today No: it's at the Bon Marche Wed fore af SHE WANTS BAIL for a new niders have promined to go on the parcuting Attor- Seott is r trial woman's bonds The matter Superior ernoot he « writ Judge Crotty of habeas behalf in the supreme « Several ting the i. claiming that it should not be allowed until after the me 4 new trial hall have been dixposed of. will be BFA Tar ourt refuses to allow Mra. | Rumbeaux to furnish bail torney, J. I. or ‘Dr. CHARLES| ‘ FLESH| FOOD THE GREAT aren and Eggs Have Riz! the Alcazar management will Give 8) sire gusan Rumbeaux, the col benefit performance of “A Live! 04 women recently found guilty of » won Wire,” thep roceeds of which will | (00. vn arin «| NOT HERE THO’ go to the Orphans’ Home, corner|fir nugond, James Rumbeaut, be | r boos p wag ibeaux, HA* | We Still Stick to the Old Prices for | | Harrison street and Fourth avenue | wouied for bail, pending a motion | Mra. M. BE. Cameron, superintend property | THREE DAYS ONLY. | and sell best Creamery Butter at the old prices, and (Faney Ranch) 35 CENTS DOZEN. | New Apple Cider Made from best Oregon apples, ppiteation for argued be pan this her at-|] delicious, invigorating and intends to sue healthful, regular 4c gallon pus in her | now 350 rt | COPENHAGEN, Sept. 20—The| yrs. ER Hutterworth wilt en-|1 Table Queen Bread sailing ship Magnet. which today |tertain the Indies af No. 7 Degree |f catistying, light and nutritious, passed the Nyborg. coming in. re-lo¢ Honor, A. 0. U. W., Thusday || ““Umin®, | | ports that she sighted in the gulf|atternoon at 2 o'clock, at her rev jof Finland 40 Russian warships |Gence, 521 Olymple Place [sanding wea : My Wife’s Salad HERALD, Tullor, 1329 Second. *** _— 15e 30 size now Primrose Cream lar 10 1560 For the Laundry KIRK'S WHITE RUSSIAN SOAP ular 6 ae fous Creamery, regu etkect MONKEY BRAND SOAP—Ii ives vce | Breakfast Grapenuts Alling thot posTuM CEREAL R ae tous. n so-called 250 _ GOINGT | Such Extremely Valuabie Available Property NEVER HAS BEEN CLOSED OUT SO CHEAP. THE MOST DESIRABLE LAND SELLING AT LESS THAN ONE-THIRD ITS REAL VALUE, Union Trust Company Disposing of Its Holdings in Rive | erside Interurban Tracts at Great Sacrifice, INVESTORS INVESTIGATE. It would be difficult in all the experiences of even Seattle's re markable real estate market to parallel the offers now being made by the Union Trust Company of that magnificent property called he 4 Riverside Interurban Tracts, directly on the Interurban Electric Railway, only 20-25 minutes from Pioneer Square. The entire proposition is beyond criticism from eftner the stand- | point of a homeseeker or an investor, Whichever you are, you came | GOINGIT Bot afford to pass it by without careful investigation. 'e court it! UNION TRUST COMPANY Incorporated 1892. W. ©. SQUIRE, President. 31 AND 32 HALLER BUILDING Phone Main 653, + avann HlODE ND AL PARLORS Over People’s Bank. | The best materials combined with modern operators of 12 to 20 } Years’ experience will insure |] you the b *t dental work that 9 jf} can be obtained. We are not eG cm |] dentists who advertise work cheaper than the actual cost of first-class material We use Full Set of Teeth || nothing but the best. All work Gold Crowns . |] guaranteed for 19 years Bridge Work . | Hours—8:30 to 6; Sunday, 8:30 Gold Fillings . | to 2 Silver Fillings Not in the Laundry Combine Our prices and high-grade work are bringing us new business every day. Our Cut-Rate Offices, Third Ave. near PTke, and First Ave. and Bell Shirts, 10¢; Collars, 2c ing that is not satisfactory. QUEEN CITY LAUNDRY Established 1890. Seattle Dental] TEETH SPECIALS Parlors Brown's Painless Dentists ‘i an ‘These are the only dentists in See Rooms 11, 12, 13, 14, Hinckley Bik. | jie “having the late botanical ais. 117 Second Avenue. tenuate te Ge Cuffs, 4. Remember you pay for noth- The largest and best equipped Extracting. Filling a sental office on the Pacific Coast. | Crowning Teeth, and guaranteed for We have all the latest and most|{en years. scientific methods of modern and painless dentistry, We crown, fil and extract teeth without the least pain. No students employed, but are dentists of long years’ ex- rience. We examine your teeth and tell you in advance just what your work will cost. We make no charge for extracting teeth when | Silver we lates are ordered. Lady always in| Full Set Teeth endance, | Gold Filling Gold Crow j Crowns rices a Y Ul hold 3 pA NO STUDENTS, Come in at once and take advan- tag» of low rates. All work done by specialists without pain and guare anteed for 10 years. BROWN'S PAINLESS DENTISTS, 713 First Avenue. Parlors 1, 2, 3, 4 . 6, Union Block, Southwick’s, le Suct Fall Set of Teeth Bridge Work ., | Gold Crowns ings Fillings os Extracting ation oon Bros. ‘PHOTO SUPPLY Co,| __Undertakers | School of Photography Phones, Main 1029, Ind. 102% free ta Amateurs

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