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THE SeATTLe STAR--MONDAY, SEPT. THE SEATTLE STAR proaued the butb and the proud oust wae shattered, | BY STAR PURLIAHING CO. OFFICKB-l? and 180) Beventh Avenue i Wokb Paeur soe wink | THE REWARD | * | ; BEVERY AFTERNOON BXCBPT BUNDAY = TRLEPHONDS | 4 evil t Business Depa tw t wet, Main a SS Independent UI CM | The Stare Baste it a, Chicago; 0 Tribals 1 k a feller j pn | | Wray Ard ave, Munger, Wed 14 : are Of ; nt per twenty-five conte per month, huattin’ U get th’ un ° wom @etivered by tall len - chit 4 TO MAIL aURSCRIORY ption expires. te = UY os thing have the Postoftice at Seattl e, Washington, as second-class matts ‘es eeREENNEE EN — . ~ with gray, 1 ey | }eould 1 with “And he gave it for hie opinion that whoever could make two Bl mm tae a moult meaiane | family be suffering trom a toath | th Iw “ben where only one grew before would deserve better of mankind and vy e ¢ mmigran or a CW cars go pn ther pet apa a a Poy at on in amy? ‘ * te scant (and the boys im the-of <a do more essential service to his country than the whole race of Tt somewhat daxes one had bear ee nape ag pen en lg. ob (Bie Bool yas often the (me as ‘the old mas,’ 1} a | politicians put together."—Jonathan Swift. ee oy enatyns Sea Come to America Spurred By lis Passage to America now reduced to | agent will tak hance, and if the |cumulated riches, f am only « ne i oe _ —— 7.60. eee are poople with epo of M Braun can elied rom genteel poverty. Sa ne / What haa b f the old-fash | 0 {th H By fist, expe art of aan thls cart woth wht aan Ooee Foner pay? I can see 2 hog i aa booc he | tail ahead bu ight for a living, wii Sista" wet telovewe! Own Ambition hoes with © wodden | fu ft, tor H¢ the emigrant falls at howd ul 8 ent fr & vine. Wile ONE MILLION IMMIGRANTS THIS YEAR (0s nn Si eto Pum cutie” Phe suum | Now ‘ork hole amped oft at al [mt lar? —— th n and the half-dozen off- | fax to be Kéled over the Cana) He growled like @ bear when @ of t « ast | dian t or taken t Vera Crus, ne ¢ boy molested hia bit One million {mm are coming to the United, Gtaten thle TODAY HE COMES AS THE DUPE OF AN ORGANIZED JUNTA | They live in the bleak ; der at Laredo, Hl I + Bag eee ee year. ng the jor id winter @ the A at many ¢ This human flood fs not a natural tide, but one that is being OF COMMISSION—SHARING SHIP AGENTS AND THE PO By oF rg, hats oA pant ot thet . 4 not pa - nt t. forced upon this country by an or ganized syndicate of steamship com LICE OF EUROPEAN COUNTRIES | hard tat the fields through th nation directly are embarked! of the day. 1 love panies and their vast and well-organised corps of agenta. | short, hot summers for America via Canada and Mex DAUGHT y has been built and its greatness has cabegeeemeeens I ble that any fleeting | !« The United States of t Aft e ‘ 7" 4 een made possible by the work of the ons of hard-woi ore thought | ver come to them in or the transportation is sold |g nday, and God deen made possible by the work of the millions of hard-working for | As a direct result of the trans-Atlantic steamship rate war, |thelr bondage of free Institutions, {it is not much of w task to land |girl, 1118 girl had remen eign born citizens who have come to our shores In years past | which has waged since the early part of last May and which bas re | of just the family at the nearest sailing |day and taken the tin But these good citizens came of thelr own motion; came because | duced steern, now to $7.50, the tremendous national prob- | The 1 has & port, and they are off, t nd DAS shaft of sunlight rig they longed for freedom both political and industrial; came because | lem i how immigration bas been revived, and never be Preced ‘ tions © been | sage, filth and ignorance, poverty | heart I love you Rea fore has it neidered of such burning im ' and inborn hatred for institutions, | You cannot buy tt, for it Is always « elr stur earts flickered « of citizenship that burst into | « ’ stun and made a’ through . fm their sturdy hearts flickered a flame of citizenship tha a The immensity of the exodus from the eastern sphere to our | powerful wrong Taxed and dra-|for the United States, the land of | gift, a flawless diamond, fit for an ®@ blaze upon reaching this land of boundless opportunity bhores. 4 with the lation of this condition to our national sw ty the house of Bt ape-| the tree. ompe crown within To such as these no native born nor naturalixed citizen has | welfare 1 our mora wial, educational and industrial | has | burg, bastinadoed by the ruffians of | re humblest ome. Baght but the heartiest w But the immigrant of today, as a class, is not the immigrant of are i the pe nal eet of the thinking men and women of the | 4 Turkish pa robbed of women | country + | destined to glut the hareme a It is not a question of closing our gates to the alien of the class | gtantinople and then scourg f 30, 20 or even 10 Years ago, American-born citiz have wit- | the Museov Dumb hatre yesterday. It cam be demonstrated that {n league with the steamship com neased the rise to equally good citizenship, and often to affluence, of | mains for the Coasack who tore the os panies are the governments of Europeam nations and a systematic and hundreds of thousands of those hardy peasants, whose indi- | thatch from the wretched hovel tie| > press Bi and gigantic conspiracy is being worked against the welfare of the oe vid 1 =: t nan ity aadesire better thelr « m | carried off the life sustaining cow] hem to flee here fro the bon of unjust overnme trib ~ United States and its people HR WAS NOTED FOR HIS m th nag njust government ys 4 tribute to the cear. Not only this, but of the millions of immigrants this year a very DRAWINGS The problem of today ts to deal, not with individuals, but with Totey this son of sorrow and large per cent are the dupes and vietims of the conspiracy : An organized kystem, world-wide {n Seope,sand encompassing the pow- | PAAR Bayern A fal roe ply ew gh pe: oe A ‘The political, social and industrial institutions of the United BB cee 3 a oe won @ gold) ol of the very mona ot Kuropean nath to make America the | 2° hing 4 crepes vig ad, ~ x - : edal fot snome | dumping ground of the pestilent, degraded, helpless and hopeless hue oe then “ _— te menaced and the problem is one most worthy of attention | yy York Boy—“Hub, I've been) man scum of half the world . , | borer he me hes : ents er oar RESULTS IN CLOSE GUARD BE then © WAS & \ , ¥ all classes in this country kidnaped.” Pact . i cubbietntied wibbiadies ‘ets 1 ee sun n winter he makes prac AC sACK develope 1 y Beginning t Star will present a series of articles by | al dane Site celal ake on A hs ee ae en eee iy nothing and it ia always a| 'N@ PLACED OVER c and qualities of her mother grow- . ee . um 2 : 4 “Fine wide st thin” onld the] sicss op combat the ov nee oe ruggle to fill the mouths of the| CHESTERFIELD ing in her ee eeeee 004 liatten Ri Fon, veegeetively the Leen On8 ‘ncn wan wae pding Sunday tn) me of ott family. His brother in Russial | Remember that little trick of In a series of articles 4 of which the one appended is the first tn stallment, there is to be pore of the startiing conditions p vailing here and abroad. These articles have been prepared diligent research, and with photographic reproductions of scenes in Europe and Ameri are intended to answer the questions Whence comes the flood of unwholesome foreign immigrants? makes from 15 to 35 cents on a| hers? “Father's tir night = farm, in Hungary on farm or tn fac would say, in a voice that thrill tory from 80 to # cents per day is} “Watch out for Jack Chesterfield. |» val, and then a soft hand paid, while in Prussia farm iabor-| He is a dangerous man and has a| Would rub the wrinkles out receive 10 cents in cash and | scheme on hand to either break jail, |“404's" brow, and smooth his sea New York representatives of the Newspaper Enterprise Association. | tp ‘These articles will deal plainly with the present problem. They are Bot « mass of dry statistics, but are full of human interest and of ab sorbing pen picturing has ite disadvan tages,” remarxed the native It | makes a long ru for us on Sundays n the elty fe me through 4 she even wou y locks until, Immigration as now artificially and fraudulently stimulated is sbeeapenantan | What influences ative them $0 thi : from 40 to 50 cents worth of farm|or escape from the officers who . r ST eas = 7 " ' : enmentntie cos drive them to this ntry? sendin ‘ take him back and forth to the |20mehow, he would fal! asleep ai @ vital issue and you cannot escape the responsibilty that reste | sire vir ack RUADERNECK. | What ls the experience of the wretched ‘throngs thet arrive |Pfo@ucts per day. | | take him be and forth forget that there was a worry in the upon you, thoroughly to understa nd and be prepared to do your share One day last week one of Yarbro's| packed in the steerage of each incoming ship? / 7 Soe * ros — te tn] Wile Geiintine hee bodin soteeiiann | OOO to meet it mutch-to-be-admired widows board What hope have they for a better life and what is thelr hape no literature, and what, 2, arning has been te sa ou She read to him when his eves ed a northbound ‘fr train. This) for th 4 ration? onderment when the agent or sub- | to the county jall several times late caf tol In all that shall be said no h int of discredit is to be thrown upon | *! ® northbound ‘tviaco (ral “File the eecend guaeretion? : : Aeent of the steamship company |ly by an unknown man, with the | ™*re tin , he mang to hie our foreign-born citiz hey, better than the native American, will | hoard the same train. Wonder Mt] ents glutting of our public and pos oaths Bech voter p contamination and | comes to tell him of the fairyland | result that the artist is very closely [tre Say ang’ ene” cova tomy h att ol ur a private itu’ ie orim: m wate r e Qppreciate the magnitude of the peril. that wasn't @ pre-arranged plan Gueaned of degrades ott-cgctnar Oe rene? re: = across the sea. Perhaps the story | watched and is allowed no liber-|)/Sintes and load some of hig | —Dtythevitie (Ark) Courter has reached him before, and for | ties. ‘ie cares on her young shoulders. | —_——__ -— years he has been slaving and| The unknown man claims to bi Tek se 0 admnesriel vet : WELCOME TO DIAZ j 1 wonder what Mra, Gabbington's| on pew . hoarding bis pittance, upon pain of | heard that Chesterfield is meditat-| p.tuseq @ young fellow bec | last words were.” a tt® MARLEN E PEW JED AND ARBETTED HY THE) hunger, to reach the promised land. | ing an escape. When he was taken asn't as good a man as “I don't know. But I'm willing to| NEW YORK.—An Englishman| AGENTS OF MANY EUROPEAN! He may have @ friend in America| into the criminal court today to en im dad j bet she ha ; stood on a steamship dock at Paler-|GOVERNMENTS, WHO ARE who has been sending him finan-| ter» plea to the charge of criminal | ong 4 lDEi® | She tm still dad's xirl Tt ts sald that President Diaz of Mexico may visit the Loutsiana mo, the fortified capital of Sleity, | WORKING TO EMPTY OUT UPON |chet ait foe | and the joy of her home. She re- | IBLE EXPLANATION. | 4 vessel flying an Italian flag was! A MERICA THEIR PESTILENT thority for the statement that whole | and guarded by two deputies. Be- of everything. She loves the man taking on © cargo bound for New| HUMAN RUBBISH Villages have been supported by re | hind him walked a pretty young | who had just dreamed that he was York. Into the steerage quarters of | Russian Jews may be fleeing from | mittances from America, while Con-| woman, whom he claims is his wife.|@ failure. when, in fact, he ts as that ahip Chere streamed a motiey| Russian massacres, Lithuanians sul Hossfeld, at Nieste, declared in| The deputies who bad him in| rich in the things that count as {t file of human beings, men. women |from military service—but the a report that half a million of the! charge refused to allow him to/ is possible for a human being to be. pd children, all pushing, shoving. ship agent ls omnipresent to Slavic race had emigrated to Amer- | speak to the woman in the hall and It fs @ new man who rises from hauling. tugging. screaming. shout t thelr footsteps and he cares ica ia years, and that they send | when he entered the court room he} his desk and reverently lays away ing or wailing ot who comes, providing the tleket | back to friends the sum of $10,000,- | addressed the court |a telegram that gave him so much | What myriads of emotions were | 1 paid for. His field of operations 000 per annum “Will your honor allow me to} foy. He's tired still, but there jrepresented there—joys and S0r-|is western and southern Europe What must this Galician peasant | speak a few words to my wife? I| only happiness and resolve in WO rows, vague hopes, despair, triumph, Every passage he selle means a fat family think of meat every day, of | have no had a chance to talk to her | face. He has fought. and he « setual responsibility—-everythiag In | commission to him. Aiding and sup- a boss without a lash, of schools for | for weeks,” he sald. Judge Taliman | continue to ight. Perhaps a y! the human heart and mind. What | porting bim, for a division of the, the children, of a walled house, to| consented, and Chesterfield went| Providence meant that men sb evidences of degredation' commiasion, are, in several count-| say nothing of the marvel itor- | outside the rail and kissed the wo-| be tired in order to make ther, The Koglishman gazed long and tries, notably Austro-Hungary and jes of the steamship agent? WIth| man affectionately. She talked to| prectate the blessings they enjé bard at the congeries of mental.) Russia, priests, school teachers, most of them it is but a question | him for several minutes with |" His question is answered. Purchase Exposition at St Louls and make a brief journey through A Pl, this country. For the first time in a quarter of a century Diaz feels that it is tafe to leave the Mexico which he has made and enjoy a little re- Taxation. What a large place in the history of Mexico—and of the world— this forceful man has made for bh imseif! ‘Twenty-five years ago Diaz undertook a task the magaitude of Which we as a people are beginning to understand through our ef- forts in the Philippine islands—the upliftment of a divided country, an ignorant mass, prostrated under Spanish mis-rule. When Dias assumed this task he had to be more of a military despot than president. Mexico was in the throes of revolution. War- tor Braun is au-| assault, Chesterfield was handcuffed membered that birthday. She thinks { fing factions struggled against cach other and sought to overthrow moral and physical weaklings #t postmasters, county notaries 4 of money, and with that accom-| arms around neck nono ail > Ghe republic. Brigandage was a settied occupation—followed as @ | gling on and then exclaime other public dignitaries, The busi- plished they are easy victims for! Chesterfield is charged with lock-| Qo to Spinning’s for bieye r veguiar business. Human life was cheap. It was dangerous to t ‘Off for the land of the freq; lopg | ness of the allies is to hold out the the steamship agent ling a young girl up in bis studio | p=ira, “ee | live the king!” common alluring stories Amer Should this man be a criminal by | and brutally assaulting her. ee verse the highways except under military escort. Forays were of it might have been said at most {can freedom and a land where Instinct, or some member of his . <4 i If, any evening. your copy of The! Star has not arrives at €:90 o'clock | telephone—Aunset, Main 1058, of In- dependent 12%, any time between | 4:00 and 7:00—and a copy will be sent Tew at once. by apecial messenger. @aily occurrence. Rapine and bloodshed marked every trail. To put down this reign of lawlessness required a man of tron. Why has the camel got « hump? Diaz was that man. ‘The scientists can’t say; Under his dominant will the brigand was made an officer for the | But I suppose it ts because enforcement of law, drives out of the country, or killed. There was The camel's butlt that way. fap end of revolt. The factions were rallied under the one banner. STAR DUST S FIRST AID TO Sash and Door att Life and property were made as safe as in the United States, PRESERVERS. Bar ains Then began the great work of development. Great In war, Diaz Have you put up things? If you g we, As also great in peace, as he is now great in the hearts of his have, bere is where the & D. M. : comes to your reseue, You know countrymen. Asa stategman he has been strong, wise, far vary 4 lhow ittteals it ts to make tabeta has realized the possibilities of his country, of its people, and of its | wois got your aciausors and cut out fesources. He has made liberal concessions to outside capital and [these and use them for labels PRICE LISTS FREE. My five cross panel Doors are’ known everywhere; price $1.30 per door. encouraged industry in every way so that the growth and outcome | Apples. Huckelberries, ‘@f Mexico has been little less than marvelous. —— Kraut, Send for price lists to my s ‘ Oye ; 08 Ti oa 4 Strong to cope with the jangled contentions of civil strife, Diag | )*PArAKU eg room, 1508 Third avenue, Seat has become in peace one of the world's greatest civilizers Beans, d ——, the, Wash. a He has always been a strong friend of the great republic and | Beets. Plums, * should he visit this country, as contemplated, he will be welcome no a a) Peas, ond rs “orm, Prunes 0. B. WILLIAMS | , i Jess as a neighbor than as one of the greatest living statesmen. Cucumbers, Raspberries, . . =| Dewberries Rhubarb, = WHERE SKEETERS ARE IN CONTROL | Kegplant, Squash, _ sential | Grapes. Strawberries, Gumbo, Tomatoe T Ou KE 0. a _ -—— he QUAKER DRUG (0. It will make things so handy for 1013-1015 FIRST AVE. 4 you when you look for a jar in a Both Phones 1240. 3 dark closet 4 Statiaticn " hild tn every ‘three in Chicar hools has dis- | = 3 faned nerves, = T) erves of the | Re ‘hiek&go men are still good con- aed ait DR oNN Oost ; ie } WHITE RIGBON [REMEDY Philanthropist Me tape, No efter. “any weteey cam {sa im glass of water, tea coffee oF ie Is Dead 0 a Saisiaanians shipments of Pi c Se ne 9 BEAUMONT, Tex.—Because of ing that the situation had become! , SO arpa a7 rhea ae ig m tor Df the malignant operations of the intolerable, and that they could not! pi yechinanw the mitionnive hans Piano House. g meequitoes in the vicinity of Sa-| exist in that mosquite-ridden co ~<a ~B ae eee se hab ¥ bine pro diong the fie of tha tay 8S mamdslto-ridden cous-| 54 phitanthropist, died yesterday Last week a car of the celebrated 4 3 , Gabine branch of the Texas & New| The section house men say that | Of Paralysis at his home on Seventy | Kimball Pian came in w th nu Fi ‘ Orleans raliroad, it is possible that | unless wire screens are provided for | Seventh street. Mr Fiotachmann’s | bers running over. 125,000. Also a . c, 4 the line extending to Sabine may! their section houses they will de-| Many philanthropies had @ city | car of the * Plas heave to be abolished during the | mand higher wages. him to the poor of New York City. | and a car of the and 4 summer months, and a regular wine | One of the local railroad men said ~ a | musical Hobart M. Cable Pianos. : ter resort made of Sabine. conditions were so bad at Sabine Another car of the popular new D.| a The mosquitoes are so pentiferous| that several box cara had been -CASTORIA TYPES OF IMMIGRANTS WHO ARE COMING TO AMERICA 8. Johnston Co. Pianos will arrive ad let that track and rection men refuse | standing there for » al days, a Us 3 WOMEN IGOR , " ITE ® os . . . vg | in & day two, and a little later a longer to work in that territory for | the men could not be induced to at Fer Inta 4 Child | RUSSIAN WOMEN EMIGRANTS IN BERLIN, EN ROUTE TO A ST EAMSHIP—SICILIAN PEASANTS | car of the famous ( hickering @ Any wages, Most of the employes | tempt to move them for fear of the ue Tagiate ane Calleren, AT PALERMO—AN INTALIAN GIRL Sons Pianos. Anticipating some Of the toad at Sabine have thrown | monqultocy, wien “were, roana THO Kind You Have Always Bought | —————— - $$$ $$$ | fie ago the present active demand the sponge and have come to| about like one of Pharaoh's pests in ny ports touched by thé vast [loaves of bread grow on trees and! Brutally Tortured for the better grades of Pianos and |" as 4 Beaumont with their families, say- | Keypt | netted float 0 Atiantte steam@s and | the city streets are paved with gold.| A case came to light that for per-| Organs, we took the precaution to | P ¥. Sd ay * j Ngnature ,|the exclamation would ha plied. | The steamship agent does th sistent and unmerciful torture has| place our orders early, and as al” » wnt 4 q J G * |) There would hav i@erent And th busin th y pert s ney ' nm ¢ sled. Joe! result of ov » ht 4 }human typ erbap eB Peary After le nfortunate Jobick of Col Cal, writes: | pared, a al, to leat f " =x TEETH®* = would never have beer rep- | vietim of th 48 turn i 1 ured ifferable | inapectt when re. resentation of the obsture Butuies |ed over } uM are bale Rt ae paetinte fey Purchasers Brown’ $ Painless Dentist ; It's All the and dark byways of lands whgre for |is told o requ 1 me, though T trte ¥-lin Seattle. An investigation does | SPW the world the only E Ya ya If you send one of the children [| generations men have led thi lives| ments of th t|thing known. I came across Elee-| not obligate you to buy. You are| (entists in Seatt the late a or come yourself when you want 9} of dumb beasts under the Meh of | America. He to tric Bitters and . t greatest | always welc 5, ib ‘Meek dae ces a “ a pe x “ appl to 7 drugs at our tore We ve prutal maste cus Braun, a specia thon in h "* big stock of Pianos, Organs, Sim- | ING , T ra them just the sam Even th maid pector detatled ' 1 Stat , ‘ plex Piano Players, Talking Ma-| WITHOUT PAIN, and ¢ teed RN, ‘ e pri ~ os ' teamship compar ca oe pe the con a. ; chines and emall Musical Instru- | fr TEN YEAT 4 hese prices are th admit that in no fa ditions in a ay a Oats . ments. Now that the Knights of Pythias); “Ob, our men's ambitions are |g them ail: the outpouring ew inte for Pmor- | Of training the p emigrant a be Satie * Fecugnize the Rathbone Sisters, | higher than that,” replied the presi Plerce’s Pre ption 00 ain joa today compare with th idlens subtert caleulated t pied hy 0. Guy, e store another one for Brotherly| dent. “They ho entually to get lar, big-boned people who fill§d the | defeat the United States government _ v nd) Love. on the interstate commerce commis. |f P!&kham's Compound, $1.00 alee hearages & few yoate 960 inquiry, And this, he said, wa D.S. JOHNSTON co! a ipaoiene sion.” Porcia’ $100" ha B00 Bi is. awe thoes. were pliarit cattigk ‘on. ke. tee, aoaainae an ee ~ | 903 Second Avenue. Burke Building. They are trying to make a mys . ' oe t new land, filled with a apt officials wh: duty it ts to sup iON fery of the case of an Indiana man| BOARDING HOUSE AMMUNITION |B goo oot ghi66 pina oe” Dp freedom and life through the sweat | prose tt | street Fg Ra be’ wee FORCED TO MOVE | ‘ Who was shot in the back while! ‘here's another ratsin combine. |f BSe f] %f the tace, These are in a remark-| Braun complained to higher au NON TRUST P RS’ ; |Siiver itive ; Singing in s vacant lot by moon-| “pis well, Just so they don't get tolf §. 8. G., $1.00 size able minority today, and any fair. | thorities to get convictions for ws | PHOTO SUPPLY C wesc rac athdes bt |Gold Fillings. » Hight, Doosn’t the singing wecount| paigin’ the price of the prune of Oe eee tren erate 0 rome Bae rreay One Sruseiuenny snow 0.) | The entire stock of houschold |Full Set Teeth, that fi i for it? commerce. Yet, on second thought, | Ayei’s Mercaparilia, $1.00 bi file of those wno come would doubt | people to emigrate, and after great School of Photography consisting of furniture, car- | Gold Crowns : — why don’t they? Bao if one of 60 would withstand the | difficulty obtained a fow arrest Free to Amateurs toves and rar rockery | 8ridge Work ¢ Clyde Fitch has been Injured in |f| Headache Bromo, 50c size most simple physical, moral or men neo the 5 rate war bogan | and graniteware must be sold at| baie R St ; fan auto smashup. He ought to) “I will not be taken, dead or| be J ta! test ; |the mails in many countries have | LADIES’ AND GENTS? | once. dramatize it. alive,” said the bandit who was be-|f| Vaseline, 1c alze So Why aro they forsaking the} been flooded with Htorature sent} ao Pa as | Don't forget the number — ing interviewed by the special com Our Prescription business 1 : wo he gc f "we ne eetions pr {the by at “ee hip aaouta ot wan 2 he Thousands 1420 FIRST AVENUE NO STUDENTS in the oC poe « yu the Da Ochre | y g, bee ep we give ow ‘orefathera have been ¢ en ) ere are thousand ne Slavonian < k PAIN LOSSES * ley g etre om Peer) ener 2 She Dolly Coke Ie Srowsns. She ohvaltione vati Ajlive under bondage worse than bes-|poem was found in circulation Houghton & Hunter )« by aC" af long yeary OR perte Give ws Pallroad aspires to be its president} But even while he was talking || patrons what the physicians call ographer || for and our prices are reason able $s -$.0R YOUR EYESIGHT WHICH? Stone’s Pike St. Pharmacy tilt, ‘There wre & million anawerp | whieh depleted Jewelers Jt, cand 0 ow York as a ter fy the minds of the Individuals, but | restial paradise, where bread w 704 Firet Avenue | Collins Bros. an ae oe eh we oe @ome day?” the Ochre's staff | a Antal IR ne there is one reply which covers the | only grew om trens, but was but-| | cases of probably two-thirds of the | tered, and whe poet avr Ruined bey | | , reaiG ~ eauney- WATSON CO | Undertakers ATION AND GLASSES FITTIOD Fit ‘ mjectionable classes INDICT. | wertrerren ba tee cadens ditheth, £8 be VENUE. + SEATTLE BYE, DAR, NOSK AND SURG. REMADE“. | BOTH PHONESAMANH Rb <P TiewT hy TH PALD AGKNWS OW" b ini tad wm o strove ef cur | pr cena aso tt gine qe, } Union Bilbo “oi rei : i Macboumall DR. FRANK P. ae 4 amk % FR Vitae -. — a ” THE STEAMSHIP SYSTEM, ALD- tae Of Cais phowma ery ken duandt é ea ~o * @ ~ % *