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Se re nn ne cn a I ' f = band —— SEATTLE STAR AR PUBLISHING CO. tee Beventh Avenue ” <> EVEN AFTERNOON BXCRFT TELEPNONE SUNDAY. Bust) oan Deve. ment—Sunret, Main 196; Independent Bee ditortal Department-Sunset, Main LIB @ \ ee ee + Red 14 j or copy, atx conte pe kor twenty-five cents per mom | ima arrlers. Ne ¢r view i | fF eubsortp om the lat When that date arrive vane name is taken f pel is & receipt Washinaton, a» the addcope in f each pape » paid in he addrene | © at Aeattic . d-olass matter rr Lio® 8 avis t the} nient place \ i a f \eave, news o: 8 feed. Tdepende tative, 1006 Hartford Building. WARD, New York Representative, 63 Tribune Building IN DARKEST RUSSIA CHILDREN'S FASHIONS COPIED In the current number of the Review of Reviews, BR. J. Dillon, In dor to heighten the effect of the recer oting of the Zemat jeter to belghten the of re ee ealuen | Bix nodding bonnéts, tlay short @raws a dark background of ditions tm Russia The people are fr. petticoats, and woolly coats Blackbed in expression, sawed and enslaved. Laws are twited to | make the wee women of today cup | Hever tho privileged clasms and stretched te seourge the masses. [ning miniatures of thelr 1830 als tera dge and police.offiver are law makers as well gs law enforcers and 3 Judge and } ane Ta? AGHONE OO WON GF fa oF . Hate ehildren of from 4 to law breakers. Edu om of the masses ts neglected and sadioed are no longer seen, but curly heads fo teach a child privately! Liberty of the press and of assemblage |and health are protected by velvet fs unknown. What wonder ministers of the ' are hk 1 al bonnets, snugly ed under chubby hins ptdl . © appointed? bag Most as rapidly as they are appointed Big scoop boneta velvet are ‘eu what the small maids are wearing The 19th of November, 1904, says Mr. Dillon, ts hen jas the wintry days come on, and foric date in Russian annals. One hundr and ten brave 1 the wee faces are wonderfully at @otally without actual authorization by the government, gathered in te tive ne ing, frov : fer a fel ounce of velvet, lined with a del! 4 ® reside oe, delit od In seere ' produced the a & private residence, deliberated in secret, and pr 1 fam leota shade Gf Mn "‘Thaes bonnets Fesolutions and petition to the czar. These resolutions boldly stated - » the cteak ta and that the government was out of harmony with the needs and aims of or are tn decided contrast the Russian people and ¢ nded reforms and representation. The favorite color for the small e e . “ blon fa de wine red, or a rich e " 7 n if her eyes and hair har Since the printing of Mr. Dil) 8 article the ar has issued his | onise with that fashionable tone. Gecree outlining the reforms he is willing to grant in answer to the | Wh velvet, pale biue and rose petition of the Zemstvo. Briefly reeapitulated, the government will | pink are the col for the little concede a freer, but not a free press, It will m no distinction of | tris who have different bonnets for atege Be 'aceeh canned tare vration in re | “ifferent occasions These are persons in € ng the laws It will grant larger toleration in r mad with @ bunch of tine of the Ngion. TI asions by no means fill the measure of the peo ame delicate hue, or a single big ple’s prayer, but if sincer carried out they will bring « re |nodding rose, pl in the middle Mee. of the bonnet ree ie Te The economical mother wisely hooses black velveteen for h Tm the czar’s proclamation there is no hint of granting repre Sentative government. Ind the decree is followed later by an of ficial communication warning the mombers of the Zemstvo against any further attempt in that direction. The disappotntme t and keen It had been hoped the cesar would rise to ry ‘and call in the people's representatives to his aid aga: Facy. Reformers had hoped the tt of Russia's regeneration was at . better thing will ot If carried out It will in flerce white The newspa t has been hushed by One concession however. ts significant larger freedom to be given to to be ihe entering wedge to freer gove powerful factor of public opinion When that beats upon the throne” Russia will become articulate. per will voice in larger volume the demand ¢ tyrannous censors. * . Light is really breaking in darkest Russia. The war with Japan, which ts costing the plain people so mech of blood and tréasure, has fostered in them a great and growing discontent. And the manifesta tion of this unrest bas driven the autocracy to make some decent ef Sort for the general welfare of the people. The ming to demand that which the y formerly begged. mass of humanity is moving, and having put itself there wil! be no stopping this side of representative THE SCARLET LETTER he press. © the rodt ment peopte are begin The once inert fato) «motion, institutions. A young man entered a “disorderly house” in Des Moines, la, a few days ago. Among the inmates he recognized a young girl whom he had known In his own town and who was a schoolmate. He had the girl arrested ond sent back to ber home. The “very much newspaper account saysthe young man was shocked.” No doubt. Bat— Strangely enough, the young man was not shocked because he himself was in such a place! He did not have himeelf arrested and sent home. He posed as = rescuer of the girl and would, no doubt, have re- sented an attempt to rescue him. ‘And yet, what right or privilege could he claim as a frequenter of a house of il fame that he would deny to the girl as an in- mate? When shall we have done with our efecrable double standard of morals? When shall we begin to demand of a young man as much as we demand of a maiden? When shall we come to regard a fallen man as we regard a fallen woman? Note this tllustration: Ia Brooklyn an effort is being made to compel disorderly women fn the streets to be conspicuous by wearing a badge of thelr calling! “In the interest of morality and health,” it ts urged, “It is destrable to distinguish depraved women and keep them under police and san. itary observation the same as saloons.” But there is no bint of requiring depraved men badge of shame. Of course not. No one would ever think of such a requirement In “The Scarlet Letter,” Hawthorne tells us how Hester Prynne ‘wore the scarlet “A.” And of how Arthur Dunmesdale was torn with Femorse until, after seven years of suffering, he stood on the scaffold of the market placed beside the woman he had wronged. Have we changed In nothing in a hundred years? Still does the woman wear alone the scarlet letter. author of her ruin and the minister to her abasement with open arms. AS SHOWN BY THE CENSUS to wear their And still the | ia received | Score one for the census ¢ is a mark of low Lovely woman, how do you like that? it has been found that this disposition is stronger in the colored than the white, and im the foreign-born than the native whites. | ‘The census report also comes out flatfooted with the statement that the female is more prone to this class of dec male. ‘The illiterate, goes over to the other side when he gets O14 enough, and a grows exaggeration in the number of centennatian’s of this class in reported. ‘The medium age, that which divides the population into halves, fs 22.95 years. One hundred years ago it was 15.97, partment. It has intelligence to understate one's discovered that it age eption than is the however, The medium age fn cities is 3% years greater than that im the rural districts. This does not mean that longevity is greater In cities. It is explained by the greater number of births in the country and by the fact that More adults than children migrate to the city. The Biblical “three score and ten” still has a pretty large peg upon which to hang Its ¢laims, a9 only 23 in every thousand have passed that mark The president's “race suicide” proposition is not be laughed out of court, as some have been inclined to think, for the proportion ehildren under one year and under five years is considerably ams ot r than tn 1880; also much smaller than the ratios for most European countries. FROM MOTHER'S WARK fomall daughter's coat, and buys « bonnet of the same serviceat a and material. Both the coat and bonnet may » lightened by a t h lof silk becoming to the little one | Ste nes of the bonnet’s tor or matching the silk are tied piler he chin. If the Hning tm pale t a huge American Beauty rose place on the left alde of the net at tractive and gay, or if t a nz is pink, then the same ts true of a blushing pink r large white bonnet Is becoming to the wee girl Hesides the velvet cloaks for this winter for small people th is a revival of imitation fur The eurly astrakhan lamb % well reproduced in a good woolen materiak and maken a splendid wearin® coat for all occastons. When trimmed with handsome big buttons tt suffi clently dressy to satisf nild Ermine ts another fur th as been copied into wool, and harming in little cloaks , woft warm t on la excellent f in ache girls For th tule girls 8 are tw to come t They loom 4 full to ' and b e if wh | wpa, with t g nleeves and ad round collara NOT OF THE SAME FAMILY Again wo not! king her feathe Orpha and last Sunday. Some nelentist claims women live} A on Mr day New Philadelphia Demo- | longer than but thelr ages @ old mother * Clifford Ko0K« Schumacher and Mra. Al Ger Evans Va re men, Maybe the : wouldn't indicate it A WORD FROM JOSH WISE. The St ~ f o— Put away a You c’n make ev'ry man bdilieve = he's goin’ t be a has some day, but can't make any Dilteve he's one Louis Pike shows that were moved to New York are los ing money. when the Pike managers will sym pathize with tbe people who went to the fair The time may come penny, Put away a dime— That fs, if you've any In the winter time. Canada may bar Uncle Sam's | MONDAY, Jan. 9h Great Sale of myrna Rugs From 1@ to 12 o'Chock. ar price $1.49, at 98c » goods in windows. That prices have been torn to threads by the Ist Ave LION CLOTHING Co. South and Main St, c= ——! = = a —_— rei . _ HOODWINKED Rescued on Way to Grave Professor Stops Funeral Restores Woman to Life Woman Threat Without the Use of Drastic Drugs, d With Burial ts Most Phenomenal Miracle of He Dateate Death ‘DOES HE POSSESS DIVINE POWER? by Disease Revived This Mar Mastery O the Age Knife Medic and Restor fering Mankind. nes or the Surgeon's Life and Health to Guf COMPLETELY UPSETS MODERN MEDICAL PRACTICE Cure Gives Services to Rich and Poor Alike Without Charge Men and ' Women Thousands of Miles Away Surely as Those b Whe Call in Person. ‘ —— (From Cincinnati Post.) 1 HMPSTER, N. ¥ Restored to (she nine 1 1-famous ® t Refer t U ur mar mith r was called | M k b had failed, he revived th he 4) and ' ™ of Ume trul help Adkin ne health and ned her we wh * , f t Bo ret © hat ab . t ‘ ¥ a this hap- | fir HEALTH AND GANITATION GOLONS GWALLOWED THE HOOK | | LINE AND SINKER THROWN OUT BY THE COAL ®ARONS OF KING COUNTY ———y Hypnotized local al mag vith any kind an i" th health vnd nitation ran argument ai met mitte Laat t voted me ti that the cou \« nd to t nell the t n-| barons had to offer, They were] t ¢ it | told that moke consumers were | repealing the pi f put into they would kill the] ' ng the = #mok al industry of this county, and be- | t ty fathers Haetened to lieved it. They ware t 0 b King uty " amoke ordinance were baron y complaint | burners we 1 have to a hat had made! the schools or they would have to t il be loned down, and they believed n forgot th that They were aleo handed th " t Murray had in-| ingentor © that if the ord nee | 4 by health were i emall nsumers | « tigation n eastern | would obliged to patronize th that mok ould be t tandard Ol) trust, and claimed t >| " 1 that there were pleuty | believe They appeared to be of devices for that r deeply od that the small man forgot that there \ tact h robbed by th local establishment oll tr t inst the val trust consfully using smoke consume Anat of fact, It tated ry ording rf not a rious factor {made by Mr. Murray, would make the mat ott be ‘ & waving instead of an expense t f a few canes, and mann * " ; t it would ‘ | By the time the represen o| whether smoke ve pat ot the Pacific ¢ t comp 1 | Into use not Northern I ‘ th that since the Everett included th i & Pas y mit were 1| made the ne to rep by of fuel, it he code $ and $4,000 ¢ There w not a a} i nned expe present at the me « on every t “ ted the use of mmok It is elatme th The t os men, wh: now serte nt thing First aven ng to t ing ruined by the »t Th commit also we t there. They were not| select « slaughter house ¢ wanted the city Hmits, somewh in The solons allowed themac to" Duwamish valley — —— - — ATE 73 CAKES AND WON Jmoney. Fut that won't call mt any retaliatory legislation. “Mary Jane,” the Rosemont lamb. has just been converted | stew. However, this does not rat-| | Ue us it might, were we sttil going on thy little journeys t Kaopua SHARON, Pa.—The record Why does an eae scram buckwheat cake eating is held Where does the wind stay [A tant Postmast it ton’t blowing? erta, who won by jcontest recen € ing the cakes. Dr In being initiated into @ lodge | the auspices of I t of the contest part of | defeated Paul Gilbert, sec en 48 and his son THE SIMPLE LIFE? }the York (Pa.) Wall Pag when he tackled No — pany. His record was 73, while Gil-| the two contestants. | George Ade ia now said to be} making $2,000 a week in royalties. | | 4 Sorry for you, George, but this puts In contests for township trustees you eut of the hemartet class,” | |COMMUPTION | where votes have brought $25 and $30 each 1EARD f BOAT LAUNC! HEARD AT THE BOAT 1 IS RAMPANT rn gr | | R. C. Beach, a banker of Pembile | Gy Gerivpe News Asin) jton, Ore, and Lewiston, Idaho, ar INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 7.—Retir- | Tived in this city yesterday and is | ing Governor Wilfred T. Turbin, in | *topping at the Rainier-Grand | his annual meanage to the legisla Mra. A. DeFonfide, of Paria, | ture makes sensational statements | France, who ts well known in (his relative to « uption in the state | ‘ity, arrived In Seattle yesterday on lof Indians. He says & general tour of the country. She | The time has come for the ap-| i making ber headquarters at the THE BIG FREIGHTER TOOK THe! WATER. o- ~ - ° THE LADY FROM LESCHI ° - — ° Kind Lady: If 1 receive a Christ mas gift from « feller wheete-ge ling with another young lads he didn't send her anythig« | long do I have to wait befo ing it to her? IM@pEN This is mething I ha’ be | itching to answer for some time hi abe I heartily welcome ye wa thoughtful inquiry. Don't all, Imogen. Make a bee-li - her home, rush in, romy-cheeked abe sparkling-« and tell her ¢ you have just the cutest thing Rp show her. Ask her to guess ” }sent it to you, but don't tell umf she praises it. Then hand he jd truth, and ask her If it x perfectly | ly in George-—@ wh ever alias he travels under. Th & legitimate part of the + of receiving such a pre course, it will get George in bad, but that is his lookout Dear Lady from L,. that after marriage a woo and win hia wife repeatedly, lor she wil beqgme bulld up new ideas? LEGISLATORS VISIT “ue wm Is it true Representatives and senators from | | 14 different counties, while passing | through Seattle on the way to mpla yesterday, visited the Uni ity of Washington. They were met at the depot by students and | taken to the institution on a special ear. The visitors were well enter tained. Former residents of Ohio living in this city have arranged to give a banquet early tn March, comn >» rating the admission of Ohio tnto the union | | man muat restiess and | | plieation of drastic remedial meas }ures to the plague of corruption | which is fastening itself upon our polities, We have in Indiana ad vanced legislation for the protection purity of the ballot, but the | statistics of political debauchery ip | this state for 1904, tf It were ponsl | ble to present them, would be noth Jing short of astounding. | Il am informed by unquestic | authority that in a aingle county in Indiana casting in 1902 @ little more | than 5,000 votes. there were in the | last campaign nearly 1,200 voters regularly listed as purchasable, and jthat $ raised by assesament | from the candidates and otherwise was spent by the contending polit jeal parties im the effort to contro! the county Instances have come to my at | tention during the past few years Gickening Shivering Pits of Ague and Malaria, can be re 4 jand cured with lectric Bitters This in a pure, tonle medicine; of eapectal benefit in malaria, for tt exerts a true curative influence o: the disease, driving it entirely out of the system. It ts much to by preferred to Quinine, having non of this drug's bad after-effects. I S Munday, of Henrietta, Tex, writes My brother wan very low with malarial fever and jaundice till he took etric Bitters, which ved his life Store; price At G. 0. GUY's Drug + guaranteed. The QUAKER DRUG (0. 1013-1055 FIRST AVE Both Phones 1240. Rainier-Grand William Bishop, of Chinican, and Piat® MeCoy, of Edison, both well | | known logging men, are stopping at the Diller. E. J. Matthews, a well-to-do min ng man of Alaska, is stopping at the Butler. Frank McCandlers, a special in © man, arrived in Seattle you- | y from Tacoma. He ts stop- | ping at the Seattle hotel M. J. Maloney. of Spokane; R. B Dawson, a real catate man of Alaska, and H. S. Zimmerman, of | Dawson, are guests at the Northern h i WANTS A NAVAL RESERVE WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 7. Admiral Dewey, on behalf of the general board, has addressed a communication to the secretary of the navy, recommending the crea tion of @ reserve list of the navy to which commanders and captains who have passed a given age shall be transferred lL. G. Livingstone, an alleged | heck swindler, will be brought }baeck to this city to face a charge |preferred against him by the pro- | prietor of the Brooklyn saloon. The police say that he has a record and that five years was passed in the ) Deer Lodge penitentiary, Montana, jfor the same offense. He worked jas adry goods clerk in this city and passed numerous bogus checks LNE, DD. S., L. D. ow Managing Director Crown Dental Oftices of Philadelphia. Located at 11-12 HINCKLEY BLOCK. 717 SECOND AVENUE. Ind, 2648. 3% at Yeu, Ir the we t ve of th I make This 4 t of 1 happiners to th 1 ‘ ‘ ne lung at their yt Mee W ured on th 1 have people say 1 w It is scientific » the grave 8 Swayne them so quickly rk miractes erence Adkin sa ara ot divine or superhuman. to the highest di e | based on a secret law of nature that this | Ment 5. | wit to an to Ife that flesh is heir *s Mast for five ye ‘ up he than t 1 He on but ir bed sores th wre of trouble and I uch in other . ney trout arrh of t ome ay| times until wuffered fr { and ¥ wrote for me what ave done ° ome ever aid friends all say senaation created among the jyove been salen pa A e orig al fraternity by his discovery |... but skin am iraculous cures has been 80 | now » feeling splendid w t t over twenty physicians | i cif th wow taken up the study of the | oy, » your hands - b * of this wor c we for re While they one and all OS ipa see a's ° tr ae the facts and * . letter was from F Ss. & cow one cures rat, ae 1 \*| Sanders, an eminent evangelist of 5 : for the mysterious. In-|been ‘a victim of chronic indigestion t force he exerts. Some Of |/and nervous prostration. I them admitted that their rer ter says: “I began your tr . Rcd rosa pt is an with but I le faith, but in with dle ts jaye realized that I had something , pright Ch different from anything I had evar Adkin gives thanks to ¢ tried. It seemed t i with new | knowledge He has sent, he dis-|jite and energy. ‘In tem dave ff Re jaime the staterments that bis pow- like a new man and slept soundly er is supernatural, saying MY la child. Before taking your tre power ts ment I was miserably (il, blue, eree. | couraged, and nearly heart-brokets ommands life and death absolutely ine nS y Po ‘Sa babe Gee rt Though this secret has baffled the | than ever. All these blesines T owe ctors and wise men of all times,| to you, a man worthy of the fullest I finally discovered it after long! confidence, and I hope every sie tudy and research. Druga, medi lang afflicted man and woman will ines and the surgeon's knife suite th you, You are cherying call mmutable law ® peculiar magnetized food product in concentrated form, which imme- | Jiately revitalizes the whole human Adkin use of Faith Cure, Christian Sctenc What this extract or elixir is, how he mak charges it with magnetic force, ny m, Prof. or similar cults does not say. secret, but Returning Swayne Adkin said no doubt r this letter nnot. > the ‘That A copy wan tal and they are prin: hope to #0 despair, Mr. Swayne, who t* pro-|case and prescribe the proper home prietor of the Clear Spring Lithia|treatment for them absolutely free Water, New Haven, Conn. writes: |of charge. It is wonderful, but it ia I cannot express y gratitude for | true. Those who desire restored) what you have done for my wife./ health may communicate with this’ She was on her death-bed; she was; benefactor of mankind by addresee ™ paralyzed and had a clot of blood/ing Prof. Thomas F. Adkin, office | on ber brain, Physicians said there | 1148C, Rocheste Y A. He wras no hope that she could recover, | takes an intense personal interest im but you have aaved her life. She | curing cases where both doct pa improved from the very first day | medicines have faile Serer ra Se P. of case in reply to a question Prof. you may have about this and the other arkable cures I have made, read from the woman’ band, and these others, which you are at Hberty to publish if you think they will help some poor sufferers. word for word, of the letters shown by Prof. Adkin. with fn the belief that they will be a message by a8 = more harm than good. 1 Doctors and actentists are vainly puzzling their brains try- ing to analyize it and discover the ne who have given up in attle Lighting Co. Building, Fourth and Unton! Phones—Sunset, The bY | great work for humanity, i your can | discovery is a revelatic or es mbat any disease, however malig-|w shaw, of Gratton W Va. writen ‘ nant: whatever its nature, chronic |“Loading physicians and specialistél intermittent; no matter what the} pronounced my case of Bright's die. Joctors may have said about It. lease incurable. and I was given up While in some cases he senda out/to die. I had lost all hope and aid het think anything c me, jbut you cured me. There is neue doubt about the tr marvele power of your wonderfal discovery.” Prof. Adkin receives an enormous! amount of mail from all over the world. This flood of letters is due jte what is probably one of the most | mysterious elements of Prof. Ad- kin’s power. Remarkable as the fact” may seem, he does net have to see persons who are ill in order to cure them. The vital magnetic influence [he exerts travels miles as easily as inches, attacking the disease like 77 magic and driving It from the body, He cures those at any distance, however great, as easily as though = jhe visited them personally every” jday. It has been proven times with- out number that a letter sent to him | does just as much good as a persone al interview. All that anyone whe [ts sick has to do Is to write him a4 f letter, telling thetr symptoms, age”) and sex, and he will diagnose their] uid say ins the it or he of Mra. hus- Be < HOT BATH F Two have of an r an expense NTS is what you if you use a A Vulcan Water Heater It fs not an instantaneous heater, but is economical and will last as long as your kitchen boiler. We sell them complete and aif connected for $10.00 on pay- mnents. Call at our office and let us explain, Ex. 27; Ind. Ex. 7%.