The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 18, 1904, Page 4

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7 ‘ , RY #TAR PO OFPICKE-1NT and THE SEQTTLE STAR BLISHING CO. ih Beventh Avenue e BEVERY APTERNOON EXCBY BUNDAY \ TELEPHONE | Business Depa, iment--Bu Main 1080) Independent 1a8 ditorlal Departn Sunset, Main 128 | The Bare ba ied WY ariford building, Chicago, 6 Tribune | Qutlding, New te hortortial d foreign advertiaing Babi ary s FORL BD shiand ave, Runact, Hod 141 | One cent yer Copy, HIM cent per Week. or twenty-five conte per monty | @elivered hy mall or carriers. No tree copies / TO MAIL. KUBSCRIDERS—The date when OM the add rene hat f each paper, W he ‘ no paid in advances. y one label b hy “And he gave It for his pinte ears of corn, of two blad of gra where only one grew before would do more politic intial service to his © Jonath * put together.” —— nm that whoever could make two sto grow upon @ apot of ground de ve better of and ountry the an Swift, mankind than whole race of SOPHISTRY AS A DEFENSE oP 1 Ol methods « The Charity Organisatic Griffiths, b defend tts Standa Th had the time broken feebly tn’ who and ¢ ation winded disser the Bunday papers, could not help read very far that sophistry ts a argument carries tardy conviction The president's statement grac most obvious crime against } the only criteria by which local rogating to itself the right t) con other beney may giving people. tion of the autocratic general seer the people of Seattle, “Thou shal so far as their alme-giving {a Why, Mr. Griffiths. loving general secretary of y true spirit of charity that he has Reedy mothers in this have established The stat do you kn ity Into bh will carry out his threat of BREAKING FARMING OUT THEIR LITTLE This is gospel truth, Mr. Griff you may calla You try to apologize for Mr by saying that $45 a week in sal ple. Yes, maybe eo; but why, int essary to employ three people Tt you and your directors a fairs as you claim in your state n its purpose leat Institutions it wills thenselves nt utterly ure has xt eeting of your board of dl bring you mothers who will tell you ite Mr. its sins and | through print to apologtee ety president for sf philanthropy nationce to wade through the long * and methods, which appeared in et before they had | » he } ng convin weak defense and that efully ignores the organteation’s that itaelf wp as shall anity of setting and ar harit be guided adem and destroy ever they ful r how firmly heer anu rlent San tary, who ally to t have no other gods before me | acerned. } now that this learned and homes | ayed so far away from the absolutely frightened scores of | ling their want for fear that he UP THEIR HOMES AND TO STRANGERS? Jon't belleve it ONE fiths and it you tors and The Star will | 20 to your face Steele's extravagant waste of money artes ts not too much for three peo- he name of common sense ts It nec re to well posted on charitable af. ment to be, you must know that there isless of poverty, distress and want in Seattle than fn any efty | of its size In the United States, and that one person who knows his business and WHO KNOWS CH properly investigate every care o Of course, this one person wouldn't have the time to «it down and insult and humiliate every applicant for charity by the hour by asking him idiotic questions, as y our office employes do. But that is neither necessary. ception of that term. Nor is it n ecessary “charitable” Tt ts worse than folly for Operated with the county benefit,” ete. institution to emplo ¥ gum-shoe sleuths to spend their time and YOUR MONEY in tryin « to tack some unsavory pest onto every person who asks or a nic kel, Bol that's what your Mr. Stecle and bis assistants have been do ing in this city. Mr. Griffiths to expect any sane per- son to believe him when he say «. business places and our homes are being visited almost dally by per- sons pretending to be blind, deaf, damb, lame, injured or sick, asking for money, who are genuine frau ds.” ts remarkably free from mendic ants and imposters. Mr. Griffiths says in bis statement that “the society has co- el ty anthorities, effecting a material It ts a ponitive fa et, ARITY WHEN HE SEES IT can f distress which arises in thie city, nor fa it charitable In any con- or charitable for any “Tt is a notorious fact that our Everybody knows that Seattle om the other band, that the county poor commissioners and H. Wirt Steele are not working to- gether IN THE SLIGHTEST DE GREE. A person sent from Steele's Office to the county for help and recommended by the charity trust promoter does not receive ald am ite sooner or « bit more liberally ‘than a needy person sent there b y any reputatile citizen. ‘The Star desires to call atte ntion to only one thing more, and that is that Mr. Griffiths claims that those who criticise his organt- zation do so FROM A MISCONCE PTION OF FACTS, but tf any per- on in Seattle who is familiar wi th the workings of the C. O. 8. and * who has had any knowledge of the methods employed by Secretary Steele has any greater misconce ption of THE FACTS IN THE CASE than Mr. Griffiths has disp layed In his apology for Steele, that person is yet to be found. Mr. Griffiths’ document Is, at best, an empty feast of reason, Darren sophistry, written for the manifest purpose of justifying in the eyes of the society's sapporte re its rank mismanagement. The directors of the Charity Or- ete sont society say that H. Wirt looks run down and neods a ‘vacation AYE! , AWORD FROM JOSH Wi NOW, all in favor say Th’ feller th't never does anything but whut’s he paid fer is never paid fer any more’n whut he does, “The work of the Black Hand!” Be gasped. He was counting what he had lost ‘when the man on the other side of the table dropped five spades ‘The republican ticket in Montana fe in danger of defeat because one of the candidates kissed a girl Against her will, Having seen a — of the candidate, we can’t lame him, He never would have » STAR DUST —_—_————. been able to kiss her with sent. her con “Your teachers will you in all your athletic work, chil- dren,” said the physical culture in structor Our teacher don’t encourage me,” encourage | broke in one little boy. “I had to| stay after school last night for throwing the spit ball.” eats } A brown study—a woman select- | ing a stylish hat | Jeneral Stocesel says that Port | Arthur can hold out till next month. jing to mar the general nat | | wan f ht bOOO4444 EP OOOPPEIS OEE OEPEPOSEOEEEHREEOP |e waiting troops below and rip a‘ Sali ie slate Too easy, You are a teamater,” | @ % @ | plod up to Chom. Hom the block |dntgetion ex i ee ont et | World's . Wonderful, wonderful row | 2 : | out singly and in little groups, | had fa ehh " rices Ry the Maes in you 4 $ | topec in panic Might ne wat " A ne Se eee ee anna : How are you going tho| 2 2 ° | Ante were conversing, on ee war | dan te teens Chis m wht Dinner Sets village this morning—walk ar take | FooeeOeeo eee 04046464-400000004000004 aaa, and the 68 bina they wore stl firing upon the Chire: gh poset ig | ie whee tt e ore eho aetail which Hoke through tt Crockery “Both,” replied WY WM, M. RAINE J listed and had since won his way to | the wto¢ made the fentenny ane “aoe ag urrice an Glassware was A man who could not tell] (Copyright, 1001, by the Frank Le] a commission by desperate valor, | rendy tn ang sale . a lt | lie Publishing House.) | What it to him i wong round and turned on p , Ornaments From BI Moline del Rey the bat- ] whether 1 or died? He Took | those who had Intely been weryink oe , Prices Neveit » Mra, Gadderly took the ft | rerion wore pouriig & Beattering fire | od death face ant laughed, | them, Presently the ar ath ° { }upon “Lon Yanquete’ hidden in the |and because the grim 1 . tripes fluttered out from the flag " So Che ap Need Jihorny chapparal below, and Hu-|@ bold front, he sunk h- | etatt, Cheer after cheer rolled a8 the Room for Ne 1 1t gure her i-pounders flung back a grim | ed lown the hill from the seore or #0 Hol w it didn't do her a bit of ance at then Artitiery aud.in Handsome Harry’ was collay if ragged volunteers whe ' _ oliday Goods “i, She's just aa anxious to rest | fantry kept flaming out in an na pitiat His face already was | hate frantically from the hone oaplit of pn i, os Come Early heieking of the shrapnel, thespit-| fear. In three minutes the mand from the castle above, and the b down 9 Just to Look ting of th jee ant the raw would be ready to acknowledge | cheers echoed back to them [ras alpitarte th ' oe Dh Sanaa Pade tiate | himaelt o mrovelian somata. Tee Line coe of vue Bil heat of battle, A sickening, torrl Great American Importing guns made an Indescribable pande- | Houtenant could see that the men| Someone struck up "Yankee en es Tea Co. n of nolee Ovcastonally ¢ beginning to notice h cond o at as th elumn below bh n ¥4 a harp p order of an offleer tion, Though Long 1 was no} deployed with fixed bayonets Je teh oat to on 7 > Money Saving Store the groan Of a wounded man friend of his, ye mething In him | the charge on Molino del Rey, Maj, | thir at torture ‘ 4 n on the hideous tmediey, M revolted at the thought of an of-| Wright's party of 600 men, who | the I nant drained n 908 Second Ave, than 6 & dust-bogrimed soldier | ficer of his own regiment, and one] had been selected for thé “assault, | t h he hw 309 Pike St ambored to his feet In a sudden | who hailed from the same town as|were still humming it when they | the body of a deed Mexican an « Ss ' a sined bewilderment, onty to pitch | himeelf, making a show of himself | began the arcent, and the M na | tendant of the hospital corps to eattle heavily forward on the ground i pefare the sian wondered what manner of|ed him on the arm. Liout. Mace was sick of the long] s you'd better tet me go 1 wore these who came singing This Lieut. Mace?” he acked a MN, Re. are tillery d wondered whet} against the blockhow he ald cir death, The fire from the Yeu, wit What can | do for e the or ome to charge. | gruff You'll have to stay with | fort waa terrific, but nothing could | you | at smehow the wait at the beginning (the rest of the company, I'll try] atop these veterans of Contreras There's a man dying over here | opened bi a fa battle always shook his nerve. |and get there in time to join you| and Charubusco, Batteries ripped | wants to see yo returned the! to an elbo . He supposed it was the responsibil | fellows as you go up the bill, That} out at them in @ long sheet of other, indicating @ eypre grove m rows ty. Every few minutes he got up| is, if they ever do let you go. Looks | flame, Shella and caseshot tore) where the wounded had been ba Py and walked along the line to joke] to me as if it's about time to rush | holes in the advancing line. Sharp | en Better let me tle yOu tain with the men, making @ target of| the hill now. Wonder w the hooters picked them off with gall- | first, alr himeelf for the Mexican sharp} man ia waiting for, anyhow ing precision. Not for a moment Mace followed the man mechan ‘ ’ hooters above. Once a aix-pound-| Longwood's © lightene did they falter. Order was forgot ly to the grove Gen ou hoa rw t on the gallop, a boy] you think I ought to send ye ten, for every officer wanted to get | coming out from among the h me officer beating the | sup I ought to stay with the | his men first to the stockade, and| rows of the wounded, stoppe ms 9 , with the flat of bie] rest of the company. Well, I | to that Intent exposed himself reck-| night of Lieut. Mace to thank bim | to bis apt BLOWING THE GAME word wearing vehemently.| guess the blockbouse looks a good! lessly, In that charge, and In the| for the brilliant manner in which | been mustered th uring & momentary lull there be had captured th khouse WILLY'S QUERIE : the sound of @ bunch | eee aniline hall cate Gil Driven to © Where do pinchin’ bugs atay in from the west to tell fficers of company G,” he wa I t of the winter tn that the attack on Casa de Ma- | good enough to say, The lieuten- | rer r Which star does Santa Claw 1 already begun | Jant flushed with pleasure as the | ! be ently a ruddy-taced alde-de-| | | general turned away. He resolved | f € nceta : ‘ Would you get me « notty-mobile, | camp galloped up with an order for | | | to tell Longwood part of what the | 4'supply of Bucklen's’ Armies it tt would keep me from dyin’? Capt. Longwood! Heavy shower to) | said, after he had beg It's th hee Which is the stoutest—you of |} without an umbrella” be | | rdon for having doub’ Guy, Ir grandpa’ alled merrily to Mace and next He admitted to him Who made the Do old birds p on the little want their f Did mamma eve you was little? Where does night? LIKE AB birds daylight ato lant feather seeds back when they it? s when * to com r spank y¢ go ofa 10T BIRD. One of our young men looked like a hen on « hot griddle Sunday for another with his best girl Sequachee (Tenn night young man walked oft Fairmount Cor ) News. SUMMER'S OVER We notice the be ‘The one that we Is back at her place, With tan on her face, And selling dry goods in the ihe « shore court yore, store. CRU. Newpop: whiskers shaved Mra. Newpop: @idn't think you leas! You know pull them, I think [ will have my} in « fair wi off. Why, Mort. I could be so heart the baby loves to TREATMENT OF PILES Permanence of Cure the True Test. | Many so-called pile remedies will afford the user alight temporary re ef, and the majority of those af- | expect fiteted do not this. The average sufferer ing tried every pi to the conclusion cure exeept by an rather than unde: sort situation, #0 far a tention of those Vited to the following exp “After ten years of suf blind, bleeding an: and after using he suffers on. more than after hay reparation recom | mended for the cure of piles, comes | that there operation, and rgo this “last re resigned to the smaybe. The at interested ie in ng fr 4 protruding gen “ every remedy | is oy could hear of without any benefit 1 finally boogbt | of Pyramid Pile with such good neat a dollar @ bo: the job. ago, and as far as I am cured, and a fifty cent box Cure, and used it results I bought x, whieh finished That was nearly six yoars piles ts have ne symptom of them since. “Many others ha edy by my advic rewults, to sufferers wit Potts, Burlington Testimony like vince the most skeptical the ave wi ¢, with the same nd I always recommend it | bh piles. c u Kan this should con Pyra | mid Pile Core not only cures, but If it should fall then it will be ac \eures to stay cured. It ie in the companied by several large #ised| form of @ suppository, can be ap thuds over in this country | stted ‘te the parte Mintel. abe fine Maybe the Jape are only “luring| !t#,Work quickly and painlessly. | them on.” | Harry Payne Whitney, democrat, | ™ and Cornelius Cornelius Vanderbilt republican, want to run for con gress ch expects to get a run for his money, Now, sir,” said the palmist, | ‘what do you wish me to tell you about yourself—your past, pr med ct future?” “I'd like to have you tell me what | my business {s,” sald the willing VES, WE STRAIGHTEN CROSS EYES, WITHOUT PAIN. SEATTLE “YN, BAR, Consultation Free. NOSE AND THROAT INFIRMARY . ER AN /OOL RIBBEI ous remedy for fit and sufferers & package now © tonight and cure of piles i Pyramid Drug Co. and same will be Accept no wut A litle book dene ents @ pack are urged to buy nd give it a trial titutes ribing the Aunem # published by the Marshall, Mich sent free to any address for the asking ITS: DR. A.H ALINE, Lf.69 Ar D PANTS ) SHIRTS. si0PPED nce a KLINE'S NEAVE RESTO Heh a h St, Phitadetph % this rem- DRAWERS AND moment slithered from bis horse to the ground, spitting blood, with « bullet tn bis lunge. The horse threw 1p itd head uneaally, toed trembling on instant i” fan nelghing along the Mnes It's an order to take 60 npn apd silence that blockhouse ovgrito the right.” sald Longwood, loc ap from the paper with bloodh tar Why doesn’t he send a regknept? Curse ft, there's @ thow wen th He's sacrificing ua the rest of the army. It's sure wt tell you, It's murder—th what it tw The lieutenant looked at ca sly. This good-lookin hin ne captain of bis had not . very f record for himerlf @> tar, At Vera Cruz he bad been ok at Cerro Gordo In heanltal with « wrenched knee, cauned by a fall at Contreras and down with « fever, Rx opt for a fow slight «kirmishes he had managed to keep out of the fighting without Causing suspicion. Mace wondered whether he was go Ing to show the white feather pow. it certainly looked like ft The man was losing control over him: self and going to pieces Pear had him by the throat and was clutch ing at bis hate, Unteas he could | pall himself together he would be a disgraced man. | Jim Mace called to mind « viflage tine where dwelt a certain fair haired girl with laughing eye and dimpling cheeks, It seemed to him that he had loved her since they jtind first tearst: to toddie hand In ‘hand A mysteriaun |ways held him when he looked | Into those emile- kissed. daring eyes jof hers. Ho knew that he had been to win when “Hand- |some Harry” Longwood sauntered into the race with smijing ease. The ri y between them bad cul- minated when the began. Jim bad thought the war all wrong, and had not hesitated to say so. Long- wood, on the other hand, had been londly patriotic, and bitterly scorn ful of all who were not ready to volunteer at the call of their coun- try. In securing enlistments he had been eapecially active, and he had | been elected captain by his com pany, When he appeared before | Kitty Morrison in his new uniform and gold shoulder straps, with a handsome sword clanking by his side, all eager to go forth to avenge wrongs, poor Jim dropped quite out of the from his horse Char running. At. the last moment Mace had en “COME ON, M ED IN, COME ONT” deal worse than it is LAkely enough you wen't bh any trouble driving those fellows out.” “No. It's quite a plente, Pity you can’t go yourself,” answered the Hevtenant with « sardonic laugh, Longwood flushed. “It's about six of one and a half dozen of the other. Well, so long, old man. Meet you on top of Molino del Rey Take care of yourself,” he said, with @ feeble attempt at nonchal- ance “Bure!” anawered Mace, without soticing the proffered hand, and strode away to pick his men for the assault. It had been on bis tongue- tip to tell Longwood In turn to be sure to take care of himself, but he | / had refic ted that the advice was! unnecessary, and in any case he did not like to hit a man when he was town j Mace skirted the foot.of the hill, | keeping hie men in the shelter of a ypress grove till they were oppo- | | 15 minutes of desperate fighting which followed it, 11 officers out of 14 went down Through his fleld glass Lieut Mace noted one officer in partica- lar who was far ahead of the oth- ers and of his own company. He was the incarnation of dashing gal- | lantry and the cynosure of a hun dred riflemen, Yet he seemed to bear a charmed life. though the bullets threw up splashes of dirt all around him. Mace suddenly lowered his glasses with an excla- mation of surprise, The man who led that resistless charge was Capt. Harry Longwood, of com pany G. Lieut. Mace and his men flung themselves across the cactus-cover- fed hill to join their comrades, In spite of the fort guns, which play ed continually on them, and the grape-shot whistling viciously about their cars, the irregular line went up very steadily, reached the crest of the incline, swept over the site the polnt of attack. Half way | trenches, and crumpled up the de DR. CHARLE up the hill the stockade of the|fense The first man to reach the blockhouse bristled with rifles. He| ramparts was Harry Longwood kbew that some thousand men|He sprang on the wall and waved would wateh his rash for that st an invitation to the storming party | Jade, and he was grimly dete | with bis sword; then leaped down | FOOD: tear down the green, + among the Mexican gunners, one 4 yellow rag that floated above the | man against 3,000. | tt and replace it with the From barricades and housetops, | Stare and Stripes from the large column in the field For 50 yarde men found } from the castle above, the dete / in two chapparal-grown oyos|ers hurled a hail of shot on the which ran side by alde to the base| Americans. F a fow minutes t of the rise. Then they straggled | position was almost untenable, but | | pe Into the open in loose formation, , supports hurried forward to thetr | iii Instantly the fire of the block-| assistance, and together they drove - ee was dire against them |the foe from thelr guns, Present H NN hot whistled past, | me meere came riding in with | k “i into t earth 20 feet be- | tidir of cr The brig le of | nem, and covered a dozen| McIntosh had penetrated to the » with sand and dirt. A shell] very ¢ which surrounded the } ploded above them killed | onstle Chapultep Tomorrow | MEEKS BLAME three. The Mexican musketry was! the ca must fall and open the oy he cone barking viciously at them, and it| Way to the capital itself, Th re | : bwas all Mace could do to keep the|7~ —— mt | of < ne rowular nfce! pace steady. There was an almost ‘annot ‘ anda | irresiatible desire to break forward stiches © tS f to send into @ run and get it over. Now nase All 1 Bor io fil orders ae per otter af two 8 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK PANT wer thine | the went down A withering infantry was Still they Mace one and now another killed or wounded | fire of artillery and dropping down on them pushed doggedly on, though began to wonder whether he would have any men left when he reached top. The flag wavered up the hill with ite little band of support deapite the hail of death which poured down on them. There was | ar the blockhouse one moment n when the volunteers faltered, but young officer in front lifted them forward by the contagious enthusiasm of his daring 0. Take Halls Family Pills for con A cheer swept along the ranks of gtipation / | self with a deep humility that Har ry Longwood was the bravest man he knew, since be had forced him self in agony to trample under foot so finely the fears that bound him. He stepped across wounded men at the heels of the hospital attend- t to where an officer was dictat linge ter to a man seated beside him, Mace caught the last words & pathetic cry of farewell, “Ob, Kit | tle girl, God blew yc | bye, dear heart, good bye,” and a jump swelled in his throat. The officer turned, and Mace saw that he was the captain of co: badly wounded in a dozen different places, There came to the leuten ant the picture of a brown, sun | tinted, merry face in far away 0! jagieam with gay defiance | bloodiess and empty of happiness | by evil news of her lover in the uth, Longwood noticed the bandage round the Heutenant’s head “Hard hit, old man?” he asked. a scratch. How fs it with struck At the first sight M. for a dying man, but he began the usual cheerful protects of comfort “Drop it, Jim. 1 haven't more than a few minutes left, and none | to waste,” the captain interrupted. “I've been writing to Kittie, I've been telling her what a coward I turned out. man she should have chosen. You know I flunked the fighting at Cer- ro Gordo.” “Good heavens, man, you are the here of the battle today. The army is talking about you. I met a braver man,” cried | Mace Impetuously, the hot tears tn his eyes. The eyes of the dying man light ed with @ flicker of happiness “No, Jim. | was a coward all the tim I sweated blood, even when mt up the hill. The general was in to shake hands and tell me that 1 was a credit to the army; but h doesn't undertsand. You'll tell Kit- the I wasn't afraid at the very last, Jim The pathetic humility of this man who had fought and won so grim a fight stirred the young officer profoundly “1'll tell her you were the bravest | ways, Good | e knew him | and how you were the| CUTLERY EVERY BLADE WARRANTE WHEN $20 PE WILL PAY FOR A HOME Clese In and on car line a small cash payment, then your, rent takes care of the balance, Look at those 4 and 5-roog © tages on Kast Union and 26th and 27th avenues. Then call to Bee us Secu rity Savings& Safe Deposit Co. The QUAKER DRUG (0. 1013-1015 FIRST AVE man in the whole army,” cried | Mace brokenly. “I wish to God I had known you earlier, Forgive | me, Harry.” j “That's all right, Jim. 1 reckon | we've both been a bit high strang with each other. So long, Jim.” The captain's head fell back on the knapsack which served for a pillow. He murmured the name of his sweetheart, then fell into al R. 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