The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 17, 1905, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR RY STAR PU BLISHING CO OFFICES—190 and 19) Beventh Avenue EVERY APTERNOON BXCHPT BUNDAY HON DS, RATAN © a. Ned 1a month twenty-five cents per ‘One cent per copy, atx vered by mall or carriers nte per w No free ¢ PO MAIL ¢ CRUMIRS ‘the de ke when your subscrintion | ops A Bea has icy auain bern pata in-advan ce your pame is taken from the lish ehange of date on the address i is & reeeipt ~~ Entered at the Poxtoffioe at oS Washington, aa ecand-ciane matter, WANT AD RAGLUY'S DRUG CO, COR BRCOND AVENUB @ND >} ike mber has recently been ° Ww leave The ph 4 Bulldings ‘Ow tf HONEST CIRCULATION cA FIDe + ‘This is to certify that DAILY AVIERA BONA 1 sree a RX CIRCULATION of the SHATT STAR for the YEAR 1904 BX CEEDED 16,000 COP DAILY, and for the FIRST QUARTER OF 1905 (January, February and Mareh) XCEEDED 18,000 COPIES DAILY. er General Manager. this Srd day NANT orn to before m A. J. TE on, residing at Se Sudseribed in my pres aod ew of April, A. D, 19065. Notary Public in and for State of Washingt re RRR RR RRA RRR RRR ER ERE RR THE STAR'S PLATFORM, The best news fire All the news that’s fit to print. All the news without fear oF Menesty in official and priv Municipal ownership of publi The business distriet for reputable business enterprises. A gross earnings tax upon all public service franchises, special privileg, for none. and repeal of unjust tawa. Equal rights for all; Rigid enforcement of just ee eee steerer ee eee eee SEHR RHR EH THE CHICAGO LESSON RARER ERR ERR EEE Somebody wants to know what we consider “the lesson of the Chicago election That is easy For years the people have seen men grow immensely wealthy by exploiting public utilities They have seen the rights of the people coined into uncounted mil- Hons, and these same people who afforded the oportunities for wealth-making denied common civility traffic charged with all that it would bear. They have endured poor Service at the highest possible price. In addition, they have wit Reased bribery and corrupton enough to populate hades iteelf with those who bought and those who sold both votes and influence. They discovered, after years of demonstration, that it was just ®S practical for a city to own and operate its own street raliroads aa it is for that same city to operate Its water works, They ascer- tained, by investigation in Europe, that munic! ownership meant even They have seen the an instant and great leavening of municipal graft, and better and cheaper service, as in Glasgow They realized that there was no good reason why a city should pour its wealth into the pockets of ten whose principal stock in trade is the streets owned by all of the People. Chicago may be raw and bree ay and turbulent, bet the citizens of that overgrown municipality are thinkers. They do not care whether they are called socialists or anarchists; they want progress, and as the years have passed there has been a growing feeling in favor of getting a show for their money and turning out those who had been selfish enough and smart enough to capitalize the rights It all came to a head last week. What had been simply a move ment became a cyclone. Chicago registered herself in favor of mun- feipal ownership so forcibly that the sound went around the world “It was a ONE HUNDRED MILIJON DOLLAR ELECTION There is to longer any doubt about the popular will, and wo be to those ‘who stand in the way of a full and complete trying-out of this great experiment in the second city of the United States. people's THE WILD WEST SAFER THAN BRO ADWA} The storied glory of the wild west is gone. No more is the land Of the redskins, scouts and reckless deaperadoes rainbowed with the Blood-an-thunder romance that for generations has thrilled the hearts of youth. “Bat” Masterson, the new deputy United States marshal of New York—the wild rip-roarer from the bloody plains who was @ast by President Roosevelt to tntroduce strenuosity of the r fm the metropolis—has said these fateful words “There never was as much downright cussedness in the west as You'll find right here in New York, and as for gun play you're apt to find more along Broadway than in the main street of the newest | Mining camp. That's what I've got down in my little book since I first stacked up against the local game. The wild west Place than Broadway, New York, for a man of peace.” Thus dear old traditions perish. The adventurous youth, with his mind fired by tales of daring, fay now be expected to turn from the west the east, to ot is a safer to and but @ream no longer of wild adventures on mountain and plain, those on the greatest street in A merica, Adventure has drawn millions of strong hearts to the west and turned a wilderness into @ mighty industrial impire. But times have changed. P THE GIRL WHO BEGS 7 | BY DOLLY BLYTHE Girl's, don't beg. ners and « bad practice. And don't beg for loans or gifts of bits of jew- o oo jeame to me by COPY nian? Milhon 06, HY Eine TH BY HEADON HILL NEWSPA LION eN TION THE ISH ABBOCIATION E SEATTLE STAROKMONDAY, APRIL 17, 1905, 5! Mischief| CHAPTER XXVBE “SBALED ORDERS.” ' How long I lay unconscious I know not, but, whon I began to re cover, my first sensation was that sf motion, J was lying down, aad the thing Tay on wae swaying ghtly to and fro, In my ears there buzaed a muffled metallic vi ation Then, as my heavy eyes roamed wildly round the cramped space, all that had happened came back to me in a flash, and t knew that I was in one ¢ sleoping berths of the Nightshade, and that the Night shade was no longer in the k. The vibration was caused by the pulsing of her engin : was teaming slowly in open water, The voyage had begun, and I was a prisoner on board her—-bound whither? The shock of my awakening was so horrtb! at the full significance of my detention on the veasel only degrees. But when I tried the plan ying my mind back to the day before, they | we degrees that followed each other quickly, and appalling enough I found them. That steady throb of the steamer’s screw sounded like death knell, for 1 quessed all too that I was the victim of a rate plot to get me of th way of launching ruin on Koy Marske . | That the brutal captain of the| Nightshade had any knowledge of Arth unfortunate # or had ever sailed with Roger Marske on a yacht, was extremely improbable. Belcher did not look like a man who would ever be tntrusted with the command of a yacht. However by the light of what had befallen me at bis hands, that wae |mmater jal, Doubtless Roger Marske, of maybe Sir Gideon himeelf, had had previous dealings with him, and knew that he would be an unserup ulous tnstrume ur’s ster where With an effort I staggered to my feet and looked at me. The place Twas in wasn small cabin, with | lower of drugged | ot two sleeping bunks, on the which I had slept out my steep. I saw with a» thrill prehension that the bedclot fairly clean wan thin ap ent On such a v liness suggested preparation and | design, and there were | nite pow | aibilitios In the designs of such peo ple aa had hold of me One step brought me to the door whieh, of course, was locked, and I turned to th was clow mut had I bee pen it, it would have u for purposes of escape it was too small to admit the passage of |my head, to say noi.ing of my body. It offered this advantage | | quickly, and, minute by minute, the | wav that we] }a loud knock at the | superfluous attention that I | ignorance of his {nten though, that It gave utaide world. qn was rising from a bank of haze, between w bh and the ship, at a able distanes, « long line of low-lying mud Mats was visible. was able to conclude, therefore, that it was early morn ing, and that the steamer was some where in the reaches of the Thames, beading for the on mom. And as I gazed with wistful long ngs at the far-off shore through the plate-glasa circle, the steamer bore to the right, the land fell away onsider low ran higher. | knew were out of the river, standing down channe! on 4 southerly course for the Straits of Dover Vessels passed us in plenty, from heavily-laden barges to huge in- ward-bound ocean liners, but none so near that even had I been on deck could I have made my distress known on board them I think that the tears would have distracted by cabin door—a appre ciated vaguely, seeing that the door | was locked on the outside, and that it was open to anyone to enter come had I not been “Ahoy there, missy. You'll be wanting some breakfast, ¢h?” came the husky tones of Capt. Belcher's | volce. 1 decided rapidly that, as I was at the man's mercy and in at yward for conveying me | eneel as this clean | tractiveness from | tlon as a ladies j mouth again so And you'll find me a first class ladies’ man, | warn you.” CHAPTER XXVIL CAPT, BELCHER OPENS THE ENVELOPE The Prospect of sitting dowm to breakfast with the captain of the Nightshade gained nothing in at his self-deserip man, but to under Ko the ordeal seemed the wistat| policy, And there would be more scope for selzing any opportunity that might occur If | availed myself the run of the whip, than if [ in the stifling cabin, When I emerged from the cabin into the euddy, | found the captain already d at the end of the table, and It waa a relief to see that! the meal was not to be eaten tete-| atet The ple on his left was fea | Mak oecupled by a sheepish looking man with an enormous shock of red/| hair, whom | afterward diacov to be the mate. There was also a Portuguese steward in attendance At my entrance Belcher looked me over with a bold stare, and pointed to the seat on his right | Now then, Antonio, you black swab, bacon and eggs for the paw senger,” he roared at the steward O'Brien turning to th mate. just trot out your company man-| ners before a lady. If I catch you shoving your knife | your ugly ong this bloom ing cuddy ina first class saloon I'll send you to grub forrard of the crew. 1 hope miss ? At any rate, I slept very sound: ly, but perhaps the about that the better,” dren myself to reply, trying to mate pretense of eating in spite ofthe nausea with which the rank h~ news of the place nearly ove me For some reason my answer, | the foot of the compant | distinguished its sug@@etion of a modified playful news aned the captain, lang bolaterously “Funny thing, when yooer think of it,” he sald ‘a chancellor of the exchequer goin@ta for tempt ing & poor the smuggling trade, Spends all his time hindering contraband, and then goes into the business himw & difference, | reekon its outward-bound smuggling. the ge is @ pretty trl.” “Did Sir Gideon Marske leave any message for n I asked ignoring his coaréé reference to my forcible detention on board. ‘Wot « word, unless it's in a cer tain little envelope b ave me -the| sealed orders I spoke of, and nat to be opened till we're past Brighton,” replied the captain Belcher appeared to be with my submissiveneat, and pres ently rowe and signed to the mate to follow him up to the deck. At n he halted atinfled and looked round at Go where you like on the ship,” | he said, “Or out of it, if you prefer to Jump overboard,” he added with | a hideous grin. “From what your patron let drop, I} reckon he wouldn't blame me for such an accident.” When, a little later taking ad- vantage of hin permission, I went on deck, abt that the lerew had heen selected with an oye to unquestioning subservience to his orders, no matter what they| might be. A more hangdog net ot | cut-throats surely could not been collected in the purllews any seaport in the world. For the credit of my country I was glad to find that the round dozen of them, with the exception of a drunken ei gineer and the semi-imbecile mate, were all foreigners Greeks and Lasears. (To be Continued.) —_——__— Three months ago, when every-{neas in the bank and appreciates jbody wanted to know what Mra lites worth to himself and the bust Chadwick would say, she refused | news of the town.—West Lafayette te talk. And now when nobody is enough interested to listen, she sense | can't shut up, It tw said that John D. is not at me a view of) | | E know girls who beg away from | etry. | me, there was nothing to be gained | | ® man every scarf pin, college or If a man wants to give a piece of | ¥ n defiance or a display of} Fodge button or watehfob he may| jeweiry to a girl, he will find | ’™per. 4 . way. It im’t shyness that Induces| “How roe ill break! st del s one girl meets another and/a man to wear his own acarf ping | Te®ay a striving mal Rither presents a shirt waist front| and his own rings, He docen't Vone | th question sound as indifferent as With newly acquired ornament, the} them himself because he is aid if I was addressing the steward of | first question each asks is, “Whose| to offer them to a girl. He doew't| 22 Atlantic mail boat | is nr” need any help when he really wants! My apparent compl: ce m at And so it goes, « string of stick! to dispose of gifts, have astonished him 2 blew pins, lodge buttons and coliege pins ee | Pheme but not unfriendly oath Degged from Tom, Dick and Harry. prefaced the reply Now you're “It's getting so that when a fellow talking sense. T ‘offee'll be hot wants to keep anything in the Jew- AST R 1A as you want it, and—your elry line he leaves it at home when | door’s unlocked.” yee calling on ~~ er anid For Infants and Children. | bs hbo of hg jatt os f 7 a | pular young man not long ago. ced by the scroop of the “He's lucky it he gots away with} he Kind You Have Always Bought, : boldened me to put the hie cuff buttons.” Seats the j quest Bure! girls have no idea that Signature | I you would tell where Shay are making nuisances of them- r diehins you nd for, Capt her, I selves. They have no idea that it} ” end to feel y com fan’t the ambition of the young men} till 1 know that of their set to keep them in scart - ge ay eg pe rasping langh that met m pins, ornamental buttons and pins. iNew VorkLlquorCo| sia at for enligt as not But the majority of young men have assuring. “There you } me NO such ambition. For Best Wines and Liquors | » replied the captain. “You @rue, the men seldom say any- ee FRET AVE, WORT, | OF Dotiove ne Ov nat, Dut I Kaew thing, but what is there to say? awtiads * }no more than you do, and shan't till When « girl snatches a man's scarf! FREE DELIVERY. we've passed the Stra We're [pin from his tie and proceeds to| Phones—Main 2872; Ind. 1328. | sailin g man-o-war fashion this trip ornament herself with it, what can ——- | under sealed order @ man do? “RELIABLE “TRANSFER co. | “Very well,” I I shall be gl if eee See Sean te nak Baggage, Furnitur y Storage ° a Fos ee ast in 10 min e wnat can he do but to pase) citice and storage room, 1315 Firet | “nn, von” thund ne overt avenue, Postoffice building. | ae Tome Sees gh the Giris, don’t snatch what doesn't| Phones—Sunset 902; Independent! Cabin door. “You're to have it belong to you. It is both bad man-! 626. along of me—here in the cuddy. all worried by the criti gift. Interest gos on same Just A WORD FROM J0SH WISE Th’ thinner th’ soll, th’ harder th gardner’s work. Russia would do weil not to build a new navy tf Japan makes the de mand. Whi the use of building boats so long as Japan has a navy to sink them. Andrew Carnagie denies he ever said it was a disgrace to die rich. Maybe it was John D. Rockefeller who said it. ST LAFAYETTE. Bank Co, aid ness two years ago this jmonth, with nothing but capital stock and prospects, and little for the cashier to do but carry in BANKING IN WE The West Lafayette ite first bu: I it is different now. Inatead, of one Jone man with some hair on jhis head and a few loans we now look through the bara at two bank- ors with spectacles and a sufficient lack of hair to give confidence, When the bank started two ypara ago some of us natives didn't ‘ho nk draft from a gas bill and en we went in to make a depesl we took off our hats and asked for hall rack and to see the ladp.of house But we've all got the habit now | There isn’t @ man in the town who| and t ean afford a postage stamp and hound but who has done some Nii locomotive. Sad TAKING HIS GRUB. Mr. John L. Sullivan: Seein’ your recent challenge in th’ paper I hasten t' accept it. will meet you a prize-fightt alin’, runnin’ er any other kind uv a bout exept an opium smokin’ er drinkin’ contest. JOSH WISE. Antonius, the metropolitan of St. Petersburg, who is appealing to Russians to cleanse themselves, ought to read the papers. Japan ts cleaning them regularly. hoe “HE JUMPED HIS BOND.” TRAINED FOR THE JOB. Cable Crews, after punching the back end out of his daddy's stove fireplaces, has gone to Roanoke and is learning to fire a Winston, N. C. Guide. to wv RAN They halt ovide and yourself w th time and cut third Meals prepared the rule used with a GAS TER HEATER. housework one © cent of your your fuel bille one- on time, quickly and perfectly cooked, is where a Gas Range GAS 18 BEST AND CHEAPEST. ighting Co. P.-1. Building. Phones—Sunset Fo urth and Union. Ind., 75. honest sailor-man into} | Acts Like Oxygen and he| and honpitals have} of} | absolutely free | On every boy somone we offer $1,000 fo disease germ that it cannot kill, We do this to assure you tht Liqnozo: you kill germs Ande tn the ony, way known to k rms in the without kill tiswues, too. \ lrug that s germs is & poison, and cannot ie {oe taken internally, Medicine afmost helpless in any germ dise It fa this fact which gives Liquezone its worth to humanity; a worth #o after testing the product through physicians we paid $100,000 fc | erent that | for years, two the American rightae And we h spent over om mitifon dotlars, in one year, to buy the first bottle and give it free to each sick one who would try it Liquozone is not made by com pounding drugs, nor is there any aleohol in it. bia virtues are de rived solely from gas-dargely oxy got gue by a p requiring im mense apparatus and 14 days’ time has, for more than 20 n the constant subject of and chemical research ie m liquid that does does. It is a nerve the most help o you Its vitaliaing. The what food and blood food rewult oxygen ful thing in the world effects are exhilarating purifying. Yet it is an absolutely certain micide, The reason is that germs are vegetables; and Liq uosone—like an excess of oxygen is deadly to vegetal matter. Liquozone goes into the stomach into the bowels and into the blood ALL THIS WEEK WHITE’S $3 | Set of Teeth . te a quickly restores f reuinted medicine once eanen which 1 y were overcome the germs ever they a whieh cauw the disease must end, and for That is inevitable Asthma Hay ¥ A tine Anaemia Kidne ance Bromehitia La Gripe Bload potaon Leucorrt Bright's Disease Liver Tr . Ko w rm om lect he to If the ar m ar We Offer $1,000 Fora Disease Germ That Liquozone C “ horever hn escap and 1 results are inenae must re killed. Liq ting as & wor t a cond of sith, Disea ” p ory Liquozone, and ' 1 ude by _ Germ Disewses ulte iquezone are are the known gern Ail that n ne can do fo ‘oubles is to help Netw indirect and wnee attacks the germ And when the % yapepels Bezeiia— ery sipelar . Fevers Gall BtonesTurmore—\ icers Goltre-Gout Var . Gonorrhe et y oer fimeneen that begin with tagioun dine B capareaees ation, esti ‘ Bridge Work (ie ae L M wers Gold Fillings _. $1.00 awn 0 «0s We sell them on trial ” when artifictal teeth are required. catarrh raoned | ‘This is the greatest bargain ever offered im dentistry. White's Teeth are acknowledged by all dentints to be the beat in th world, They have taken nearly 260 first premiums—and cont 5 $5.00 to $15.06 clnewhere, We guarantee these teeth to gtve complete sat n-| imfaction in every cane. Call and gee specimens. Painless extractte | mates and advice free, All work guaranteed 15 year Spaniards, | pope hae © fr work guaran 5 yea Hours, 8 a. wm. to © p. m. Sundays, 0:28 a to$ pm OHIO PAINLESS DENTISTS 207', Pike, Cor. Third and Pike Louis Ww. (Es Pianost:Rent Rent Allowed on Purchase Price KOHLER & CHASE, 1505 2d Ave. biiahed Largest Music House on the Coast 1860) YOON, D. D. SM Have You Bought Your New Suit for Easter Sunday? Sutts, ete.—Prices Ladies’ and Gents’ Terms Right. Right—Styles Right One Dollar a Week will pay for your Spring Outfit. Eastern Outfitting Co. (Inc. 422-424 PIKE STREET, COR. FIFTH THERELIABLE CREDIT HOU 3 es ae i comes Fez FROM LFF | B oO & sown. Eb % OFZ | STONCO, 4G Ba Syvo & ITISA 5o* Sel a FINEONE 7 2 FOR THE r q PRICE ei = P| We sei the Reliable self playing Piano, the Auto Grand, Chickering, Kimball, Hobart M. Cable, Johnaton, Lakeside Pianos and many others, Fimplex Piano Player, Reed and | Pipe Organs. ‘D. S. JOHNSTON CO. 603 SECOND AVENUE. ‘Union Bakery and Cafe We have everything that THE BAKERY ne. | CUTTEE, paee BOX Pioneer Butchers of Seatwue. The Very Chotcest of Mesa, Poul- uy Family Pstaten 1100 First Avenue, is GOOD IN A genteel piace diamonds and all kinds of ay SHAW'S DRUG STORE 3.03 Becond Moor Howard Bullding, opposite Penn Mutual Life Building. CLINE’S VISIT OUR 1307 JUST ABOVE READ PRICES. to borrow money Strictly confidential ny 1309 OUR SPRCIAL ¢ SHEET MUSIC AND BOOKS | ALL BLU ox RM Fr. GONDOLIER, T NOLB, GIRL, DIBR 50-CENT 8H 15c £ BELL, TIPPECANOBR, ANDER, DOWN ON THE THE TROL BADOUR} GOOD-BY GOODBYE BOY. of jewelry. | His label on ROWN’S PAINLESS DENTISTS your Presorip- 713 First Avenue tion corre-| Partors 1-2-3-4-5-6 Union Low | sponds with the me door south of MacDougall mark “Ste outhwick's. . a Hours—8:30 a. m. to 6 p. m. Sune ling™ on silver. | daye—8:30 a. m. to 12:3 are. ADVERTISED N can't Kill Meraozon, ishing 0c Bottle Free IO never th ‘Pe. and hay at i ce yond us thy nail you g mat nae obligation jnonen and $1, Cur at T OUT THIS COUPON Avenue, BERGELES mEELEED SEER ESSERE * 2s SEaeER if you are satisfied that they 4 bargain, keep them; if not, Leg ton back. That proposition, The Westfield 14-inch blade, gam PLAZA LAWN MOWER; We have sold this celebrated for eight years, and have not had { Single dissatisfied customer, HERE'S THE ieee: | 12-inch biade | 14-inch blade | 16-inch blade Penn Jr. Ball Sas. wep TLR TT est be 7% Bearing. . GEO. H. W90DKOUSE ¢0, 1495 SECOND AVE. 1 osc. LADIES, OUR SPRING MILLINERY IS NOW READY, And we can save you money, One dollar per week will bay any hat tn our stores. Visit THE FASHION. The 20th Century Store 537 Queen Anne Ave. and 316 Union Street, Seattle BROWN’S PAINLESS DENTISTS Are cutting prices again, and now is the chance of « lifetime to have your dental work done world-renowned specialists, at prices, ALL THIS WEEK EXTRACTING EXAMINA’ Silver Fillings -; B5e Gold Fillings $8.00 and $10.00 % $16.00 and $20.00 “Ssoe of Teeth 100 to $1006 Come in at once weak take advans tage of low rates. All work 4 for ten years, and done by painiess system, known and my by pm Be sure you are in the right plan SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK ONLY On Majestic and Monarch Steel Ranges from $35.00 Up RED FRONT FURNITURE CO, 308-310 Second Ave. South a DB Now Managl Crown Dental Ottices of Philadelphia. Located St Ck 11-12 HINCKLEY B 717 SECOND AVENUB, Ind, 2648. .

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