The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 1, 1905, Page 4

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THE ny OFFICHS—1NT and SEATTLE STAR STAR PU ALTSHTNG Co. 1) Beventh Avenue BVERY AFPTRRNOON EXCERPT TRLEPHONWS Business Department—Sunset, Main 190: Independent 11a PATLANDY STAN AGENCY—Sa Wallard ave Sunset, Med 1a or twenty-five cents Baia di er month, gent per cop i by mati of expires is if your subsortp- from the list Te ¢ clase matter, On Geliver arriers. No free Na ) MAIL SURSCRIBERS on ES ain been of date on (he address iabe: 4 WANT AD. OFEC® RAGLAY's DRUG CO, COR ABCOND AVENUB ies wee Went © a dove number has recently been opened t plas ix conte per Ww drone label of “,_ Sentored at the Poatoffice at Seat! « t Ad Office at th Nz Tenve want or ublic a conve cripdons tor The Star and leave hew "The phone tfice are: Sunset, Main 408) Indenendeme 1189. B. W. BLACKWOOD, Chicago Representative, 1000 Hartford Bullding W. > WARD, New York Representative, §2 Tribune Building HONEST CIRCULATION, This te to certify that the DAILY AVERAGE BONA roe CIRCULATION of the SEATTLE STAR for the YRAR 1904 Lt, ° CEEDED 16.000 COPIES DAILY, and for the FIRST QUARTER OF 10906 (January, February and March), ED 28,000 COPIES DAILY. BP. CHASE, General Manager. ——<$—_$_—— Subdseribed in my presence and sworn to before me this fra day of April, A. D. 1906. A. J. TENNANT, Notary Public in and for State of Washington, residing at Seattle. RRR REE RARER RRR RRR RRR THE STAR'S PLATFORM. The best news first. All the news that’s fit to print. All the news without fear or favor. Honesty in official and private fife. Municipal ownership of public utilities. The business district fer reputable business enterprises. A gross earnings tax upon all public service franchises, An up-to-date public schoo! system. qual rights for all; special privileges for none. Rigid enforcement of just, and repeal of unjust laws. SK EEE EESE ASRS EE (eee eee eee eee eee ee eee eee. 2. 2s FADS IN SCHOOLS The New York board of education has voted to shorten the course of study in the elementary schools, cutting out the “fads and fancies” and confining the instruction strictly to essentials. ‘The teaching of sewing, physical training. organized games, phy- Stology. hygiene and drawing will atcordingly be dropped in the first Year of the elementary course and attention will be concentrated up- om the three R's. The shortening of hours is an important desideratum in the case j of small children. Thin-chested and spectacled little ones are a 4 pathetic protest against overwork and overconfinement in the Schools. All the fine educational frills and feathers ever conceived Wo mot weight In the balance against health. Faddists have had too much recognition fn the pablic schools of this country generally. Every crank thinks his own particular hob- by the all-important one, and the lists of studies have become lum- bered up with the “bright thoughts” of several generations of ama- tear éducationalists, Meanwhile, common sense has had a poor _ «Hance. “Only a short time ago,” says Commissioner Adama, of the New York board, “1 was directed by a concern with which I am connected | to secure the services of two young men as clerks. There were about 199 applicants for these positions. The greater portion of them were from the public schools of this city. You ought to see the letters they ‘Wrote! They were absolutely disgraceful. The spelling was bad and fhe Writing itself was worse. ‘The same complaint comes from every quarter. The colleges complain of the bad spelling of would-be matriculates, and even the engineering schools assert that the engineers they turn out cannot Write a report in decent Engtish. ‘There is little doubt that the results of the present corricula of ologies are bad. The new-fanglod methods do not pan out the desir- ed results. The theories sound very fine; school libraries are full of books on ingenious methods; but the practical result {s inferior to that of the old-field school, with its antiquated method of “a-b, ab.” It will be @ blessing alike to the children and the taxpayers if the expensive gewgaws introduced into the public schools, particularly into the elementary schools, by alleged educators be abolished and higher standards of Practical efficiency exacted. ‘There is too much disposition to lug Into the schools subjects which all children may be expected naturally to learn outside. To teach such things in the public schools means salaries and expensive apparatus, yet it is wholly unnecessary. % ‘The old methods were good, judged by results. The same cannot be said of the new methods. | phe e eee eee eee RSM UH SEEN ESE SEGRE SERA ERARRR RAAT 'HAT YOU AND | CAN DO FOR PALE CHILDREN * BY CYNTHIA GREY. * iret ete eee Teeter a a ie a in ea ite ‘With the first blush of spring sunshine, the pinched, pale faces Of the little women of the tenements peep timidly out at us. A win- ter indoors has sapped their strength, has thined their blood, has left them frail, half i, pale to the pinehed lips. We, with warm blood in our veins, go bounding on. Perhaps a tear of sympathy arises as our ey os meet the wistful eyes of the chil- dren. Maybe we pause a moment for a kindly word, and, before we turn away, drop a bit of silver into the wasted, colorless hand If these little girls grow to womanhood, they will be weak, frail. sickly women, and they will be the mothers of sons who will, in time, by their votes, govern our country. Born of frail mothers, backed by generations of disease, what will these sons be? and the strong arms? As we look at the pale, frafl little girls we know what it is they need. They need God's fresh, untainted air. They need the warmth Of disease-dispelling sunshine. They want to strip off old shoes and Fagged stockings and run barefooted over warm, dusty country roads 1 We know what they need, yet we drop a smile, a sigh or a bit of silver, and pass on. Some of us are officers of women's clubs, where we improve our minds. Some of belong to state and interstate federations for the upliftment of womanhood. Some of us have Sunday school classes and are trying to teach little girls the way of salvation. Now, a little with a clean, healthy body can’t be very bad. But what of these ) pale, il-kept girls of the tenement? Ia there not some way that we can put red blood into their veins, and strengthen their bod- fes that their souls may be stronger? Yes, there Isa way, Listen: Out in the country there are acres of land lying waste. Out in the country there are hundreds of kind- hearted men and women who would allow you and me to put up a shanty, or pitch a tent in the edge of their woods, a shelter large enough for six, eight, or maybe a dozen pale little girls. A place where they could stay the summer through, where they could watch the flowering of the briers, and pick the berries that follow the drop- ping of the flower petals. Let us go out Into the country, you and I, and find a man with a Dig heart and a big farm, in the ecrner of both are which there is Foom for a dozen little girls Yes, the Salvation Army ts Attending to this, and the army and other organizations are doing a great and noble work, But does this exense you and me from doing something on a small scale? Verha the club of which you are a member will take up the work. Ah, these little girls need light, alr, tenderness and caro more than we women of the clubs noed Roberts’ rules and Shakespeare and Browning. Large charitable organizations cannot give a whole summer to Sny one child. They have eo many to care for that a week or two at the most is all they can give. What a delight one whole summer would be to theae pale little girla! What a delight and what a bless- ing to them. to their parents and to the sons and daugbters who will come after them! sickness and Where will be their clear brains Sere = 3 ee 7 « “ ° ° e Ql 9 ? For Liquozone, Yet We Give You a 50c Bottle Free | We paid $100,000 for the Amertean | and Liquezone—like an excess of) Al! 9 * that be rights to Liquozone; the highest oxygon—in deadly to vegetal mat ii | price ever paid for similar rights on tar ° | ny sotentific discovery. We did There ies the great value of Liq Liquonone ge sa ih | this etter tenting the product for uorone, It in the only way known an ce DIMDING ‘what ne “i thre bysiciane and to kill germs tn the body without rc ; BY HEADON HILL td aay ge omg lh 2 aod oth- killing the tissues, too, Any drug 90c Bottle Free f | ‘ of germ | that kills germs is a polson, and it jf i te I COPYRIGHT 1906, BY THD NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIGW ASBOCIATION ptt Rly Bacal of tea\counet be taken internally, Medt-| nev. one Sead aa ~ = | most difficult cases obtainable, We cine is almost helpless in any germ en mafl ue tate proved that fn gorm troubles it al- disease, It is this fact that gives te eziet for ry q re ways accomplishes what medicine | LAquozoge ite worth to humanity bot will pay i eannot do, Now we ask you to try And that worth te so great that we drug for it, Tien CHAPTER XXXVI—Continued.. | thior fashion last night, and it was) words, on Roger Marske’s attempt) (t—try it 8 our expense, Tost it as have spent over one million dollare our fr > convince pone ; “But nothing haa been proved | improbable that he would relax his| to capture or kill me in the Brank-| we did; see what it does, Then you, to supply the first bottle free to to show WuOLOne a aol La Aguinst either of the Marsken,” I| preeautions today, Mr. Peter Croal’s| some pines, and on his departure | will use it always, as we do, and as|each sick one we learned of what it atice to vou ae | pointed out, “Till Janet ts found I| tp had been more humble and im-| for London at a moment's notice | millions of others do, You will use ss . t today, for tf “v am the only witness, and T am|ainuating, A thrill shot through me! when he found that Janet was going] ft, not only to got well, but to leep Germ Diseases yh no obitgatiag C | worse than useless, The momeat [/as [ though that {t might be Her-| up. | well. And it will save nearly all of| ,. the & dis cs | stepped out into th® open to prefer|sog, returned with Janet and the Be sure, my lord, that that was! your sickness gag he re a and $1 | Pa [a charge I should be hanged out of| profs of my Innocence, and there-| the act of & guilty conscience,” { Ot. ae ees Geis ature « hand. And I could not even hope| fore careless of being over! firged.” “He must have suspected wsdl henna + ee bs fur the post mortem rehabilitation, |On the other hand the bold sum-| thet Mise Chilmark had bee ny Kills Inside Germs oyercome the gorms, and wu h r© 1 CUTOUT OUT THIS COUPON ‘ for I cannot expect the wan, whom| mons might mean the end of all| mother’s old home and had there| Liquozone ts not made by com-; sults are infarct a re geawon for this offer may not ie | I must continue to call “Doctor Bar-| things—the arrival of the police or] discovered the name of Danvers! pounding drugs, nor is there ajco- Liquovone aitacks the germs, wher again. 3 t the blanie ane Be Fables,’ to come forward and im-| prison warders, I wrenched aside} Crane, which would eventually| Bol tm it. Ite virtues are derived ever they are. And when the germa J ii) to the Ligueam A plicate himself the blind—to meet the gaze of| bring het on his trail.” solely from gas—largely oxygen gas | which caine & dived ed farever, | oo; sbt-404 Wabesh Avenue, Pe T was struck by that fellow the] neither Hertog or the officers of] I labored the point advisely, for | —by ® process requiring immense (ho disease must end, and fore Chicag te other night.” said Carden. “He! the law. I was aware that Marske’s abrupt | @pparatua and 14 days’ time, ‘This | That is inevita ) My Gineune is pare 34 seemed a strong man, but can you! He who demanded adminsion was| and inadequately explained depart-| process has, for more than 2) years, | Asthma | Hay Iever Influensa I have never tried Liguos be sare that he ts running straight] Lord Alphington, the man whom J| ure had been noticed, If not rasent- | been the constant subject of eclontt . 27 ” zone, but if will supply me in your interests? Is he really like-| had been released to slay, Mel ed, by Lord .Alphington. fic and chemical research. 204 polo & 60e bott I will take ft, ly to produce Miss Chitmark, and| stately figure was drawn up to ita! “Humph!” he muttered, taking| The result le a liquid that does | Brights Di any proofs she may have discover-| full height, and his fine face wore al snuff again. “All this sounds|,What oxygen does, It tee be ed, If he is lucky enough to discover | sternly expectant exprossion that| mighty like mere tittle-tattle, still | food and blood food—the most help- | ¢ her?” | filled me with dismay. I knew what|—" He broke off suddenly and | ful thing im the world to you Its heume. I would not trust him an inch/ had happened, Lady Murtet had| strode to the window where, after | @ffecta are exhilarating, vitaltsing, | ancer , Barofulg. By phitis Give full address unless our interests were identical,” | thrown me on her father's mercy,| a minute's reflection, his attention | Daritying. Yet ft is a germicide so Drepey Btomach Trowvies #72 I replied. “But as they happen to| which, as Herzog had said, would} was diverted to what he saw j certain that we publish on every | %. -ekitont Troubles be 80, I could have no more power-| be equivalent to throwing me to a| “L know it. There'll be a wreck,” | bottle an offer of $1,000 for a dis- Gall Sonset mers. Ulcers Any physician or hospital ful suport. Tam convinced that the | Wolf chained with red tape, By|ho cried. “That steamer is almost | eM erm that {t cannot kill. The Goltre Gout Varicos | using Clauosoue ‘wit! bagiadigt gaat aim of his Hfe ts to got the Marskes| virtue of his office he would have] in the breaekrs. The clumay beg- | Te0eom ts that germs are vegetables; onorrhea-Gleet Women's Diseases. | piled for a test, % on the hip, and I have even thought| to fall on me and rend me. gare are trying to put back to Yar sie - a nen nemeeree | ee lately that he went into this bust I drew up the blind, and, unfas-| mouth without proper searoom.” like denying th e can't t nest not only because he was comf-|tening the window, gave him ad-| [ could not work up my enthuse that ny man connected an petied to, but with that end in/ mission, Now taat the dic was cast,| jaam about a veasel in distress just Universit of hiesgo ought b= view.” and there was to be no more hole-| then, and I respectfully but firmly speak with au for at lait gael There was silence between us tn| and-corner work, I felt a man once ~~ the darkness, and I did not break ft for I knew that Carden was striving for a way to cut the Gordian knot “I give it up,” he announced at length. “The first easential seema to be to baffle the inquisitive Croal. but as to the wider issue of how to save you In the event of recaptare Tam all at sea. If! go with a yarn ike this to Lord Alphington, he will think I've been getting it up for Marske.” There was no gainsaying the force of that argument. With the wild improbatility of the uncorroborated story, my advocate would start heavily handicapped, but the fact that he was Roger Marske’s rival would get him laughed out of court at one more n I to address.you as Mr. Mar tin or Capt. Rivington nah the premier, as he stepped over ° threshold, gazing carlously ak>upd him “You have been told that 4 am Rivington, the escaped conviet?'t “By my daughter, who told mé a lot of other incredible things.* “If T can convince your lordilip of the trath of the other increible things by admitting Lady Merie's first statement T shall be fortun- ate,” sald l “Yes, { am Apter Rivington, and I was practically i+ | leased—encape is not the wordfon fit —to kil you.” i He produced a gold snuffibds. took « pinch and glanced out “I can only suggest.” said 1,| Window. “Gad, how it blows” “that you should submit the whole|sald. “That steamer will be on the thing to Lady Muriel, and be guided| Shingles if she doesn't take care. | by her, One woman's wit has gone} Well,” he added, turning his mock-| far to help me already, and 1 am/}!tg gaze on me, “why don’t you kill) quite willing to trust that of an-|me now? You will never get a bet- other for this part of the tangle.” | ter chance?” By George, Rivington, but that’s} “I never intended to kill you, my the line to take,” Carden exclaimed | lord,” | began hotly. “If you think enthusiastically. “I'll be off and) that——" try and catch her in the garden at} But he stopped me wita a quick! ‘Ardmore’ tonight. You must back | imperious gesture. “Do not trouble | up. old man. Muriel will pull you] to plead on that count of the indict. | through.” ment,” he langhed harshly.” W After he left I flung mywelf on the| ever your character you have bat a couch in the drawing room of the| poor wit, Capt. Rivington, or you empty house and snatched a fitfal| Would have known that f should not | sleep have come here alone and unarmed if I had eredtted that story, What { Lam concerned with fs your guilt in} ' [ea Lady Martel Cra CHA) XXXVII THE PREMIBR TAKES SNUFE| that baser crime of which you were I spent the ing of the next) opnvicted.” day tn iting and listening. If}} “Lam the vietim of a miscarriage anything were wanting to depress! wf justice,” I replied sullenly, “and me the weather was enough to do ft.| | can assure your lordship that the) By 10 o'clock, it was evident that | plot against your life was no myth, Mr. Peter Croal’s meteorogical pre-| #0 far as the principals in the back- diction was to be fulfilied. A sud-| around were concerned. Whether den darkening of the room caused the man who called himself Dr. Bar- me to go up to peep from the attic! rables was in earnest | am not com window, and I saw that the western, petent to judg sky was heavily banked with ad- “Tt strikes me as more like a plot vancing clouds. Then a stiff breese! on the part of that man against Sir sprang wp, and before noon the| Gideon Marske’s reputation than storm king was abroad in full ma-| against my life,” the premier re- jesty. A furtous gale was tearing in| marked thoughtfully “However, past the Needles, driving straight| that Is not the point at Issue. I have up in Solent, and raising such a sea) to deal with you promptly, or I as is seldom seen in that protected! shall become logally aecessory to coast. A mile or more off shore on| your alleged crime—a pretty kettle the Shingle Bank the breakers were| of fish. Just run through the main surging and ieaping lke savage! beads of Mise Chilmark’s action, so beasta hungry for prey. The thun-| far as it is knows to you, leading up dering crash of them reached me/ to her disappearance and Mr. Roger plainly between the gusts of wind. | Marake's supposed connection with I went downstairs again, feafful| the case. Be concise, please.” even of the sound of my own foot- So once again, snatching a grain steps, and I was wondering how) of comfort from his use of the soon Carden would bring me news,| phrase “alleged crime,” | sketched when a sharp double tap at the| the occurences that had followed window caused me to hold my/| my ececape, dwelling on Janet's ex- breath. Carden had come in steal-' planation of my ters dying Fou meus wale cof bes! ‘un early. teal ‘om cnrty, Tomorrow ‘ll! be the serapplent day of all the te be Queun of the May, mover, Pm to be Q May © muck ol! vight, mover. that I shell never it not hav! me out before the glass begina to ther ell the bite and chuck ‘em on the be Guava of the May, mover. Tm w be Quew And For [" Up the alley, who think ye I should see - leenin on the barrel, an’ he was on a spre cht of that lett mover, | give him lay. mover, I'm to be Queee @ 7 he’s dying all for drink, bat that can never be, his heurt is breaking, mover —I he’s gotd ¢ fp hany & bouncer tad ‘il! break his head some summer to be Queen Of the May, mover, I'm t Le Queen of May in shalt go with me to hetp me when 1 clean, ' be there, too. mover, to made the Quern the tumily gives me tip, 1" oy nies "mw to be Queen of | im 0 be of the May, mover, May om must wake an’ heal ‘em enrty, haul ‘em early, mover ‘dear, | Tanorrow ‘il be the acrappiest day of all the glad New Years Tomorrow ‘iil be of all the year the maddest, movi day, | Ao’ Um t be Quoen of the Maj. mover. I'm to be a} he May ‘ EDMUND VANCE COOK PPE EERE EERE EERE EEE EEE EERE ERR brought him back to the subject wnuff furiously, “there is one thing! had their volces with th in your favor which inclines me to- wards you Judgment to it.” “I have been convicted of murder, | my Jord, but that is mo reason why, | jow you ever saw a being innocent, 1! should not en Geavor to remain a gentleman,” replied. it was & pompous speech, which I should have laughed at myself in happier days, but it struck home. It made his lordship swear. “D— you,” be cried, his gray mustache bristling. “You have put me in a fine hole, air. Now lie ten to me, I cannot be mixed up in shielding an cscaped convict, and I shall see to it that informa tion of your whereabouts ta duly furnished to the authorities, But! tm consideration of your having say- hay’s life, I HM stay my hand for 24 houre—on the chance that Miss Chilmark may return with news that may be of service to you.” It was a concession, and 1 was about to thank him for it, when my eyes, facing the window, saw-what | was for the moment hidden from him. The steamer had grounded on the Shingles, and the great white seas were engulfing her. An unconscious gesture on my part used Lord Alphington to turn sea- rd. He caught my meaning at onee, and hurried to the window, I folowing. The prime minister on his hoili- day was as amaller men; e had provided himself with a pair of! field-glanses, and, having unslung them, he was proceeding to focus the wreck, when round the corner of the house, into his feld of vision, walked Roger Marske. My enemy's eyes glanced eagerly over Lord Alphington’s shoulder at me. (Tp be Continued.) RRR Re i /T I$ 70 BE GLAD And then from your harmon- singing their song? Except as your own heart cry ing Hath heard fts own echo of wrong? Nay, the rowe as it shoddeth its petals Sendeth a fragrance as deli cate, too, For it knows not a thing of re rrettals, To God only it giveth its due. The n up from your feeble pining! Count the gamble as worthy re- [tis only the i troubled ge joyful and. remember its Sou doubtera. are JOUN F. POGUE. eee eee ee eee ee eee ee ees “My lord, | should be greatly f obliged if you would ease my sus That man's a plumber? Ant he jpense by informing me how you hasn't @ foot of plumbing in hg” propose to deal with me,” I said. house?” He cast another glance on the Not = foot. He says that apg struggling steamer, and then a householder he couldn't afford turned upon me with sitch impett~| On one of the Green Lake cars af stingy put im bis own plumbing at his ews amity that I took it for anger. And! row evenings ago, the car being in “Why, that's bis house number.) prices and as viumber Rep #0, In & sense, It was, though n0t/its normal condition—crowded—a| and he wanted It so he could take | ashamed to lose y on a Jobe for me. It was the irritation of the | young fellow hung to a strap and di-| the numbers off the house and then ceiaiecnediipen asia official mind brought into conflict! vided hin talk between two girl| use them on the machine when he| ‘The best values in Gardem with private influences. friends seated im front of him. One| took it out.” Te to ie per foot. The . “Look here,” he blustered, taking | giri was tall-—the other short. Both Store, 714 lst ave, ” in spite of my better) pig Newfoundland dos. You saved my daugh-| way telling him about her brother ter’s life, and have not once referred | having | baldness, The two main topics of street talk + % | today are the show of Inst evening - : and the waffle supper. Both are re- Inc. : ness, # | pelter Herald F Let us ad to fits qu — Eas The arth hath oo deactir bf &| “Hot attack Knox has made onif 492.424 PIKE STREET, COR. FIFTH gear neers | ge Pade r “THE HOUSE WHERE YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD.” Tt i» merely with you, my #| “You bet it ia. boy. “That second suit must have i It is only @ question of seeing, # | drawn blood.” a a {sais semanas $)"SRGUS we goon ates ov-| THE OFFICIAL BALL OF THE PACIFIC COAS # | ing to draw water.” ious being | comamnseninnt The note rings harmoniously * | >unkley's a trifle close, tm't he clear. | A trifle close! Say, he's so stingy Caught you ever a sound of és Spalding’s Official sighing T can't see why that shows he's ‘Baide for 1905. © When the pine trees were —_ ee Edited by H. Chadwick. Tah | rary there are panned ee . } bi 7 > following books on Base Ball. F Your strength is not found in 08 Third avenue, Seat “4 wing honk oa 5 aus ta say ot Gl noos- reclining | No. 219% Base Ball Percentage trated Cats its Trust ye surely that nothing #/ Book. ta lont 222%. How to Rat. No. 229. How to Catch With effort your forces are 224. How to Play the Outfield, | No. 230. How to Pitch, How to doubled, | How to Play First Base. | No, 231. How to Umpire; Teas With faith im yourself you How to Play Second Hase.| Coach; How to Captala ® are true, } How to Play Third Base. How to Organize a FREER RR HOngor of the three * STAR DUST » m. One mut her ‘The other Cabinet per dozen, Ashley Studio, iret ave. (Open Sundays, 1 to 3 p. m.) “ “ ———$~—apinege, the tall girl—was talking discovered a new cure for Tall girl: He's the finest big fel- z) Short girl, He's just delighted er his new preparation and T.G.: This morning— & G.: We girls shampooed his head for him and T. G: This afternoon we gave him a bath all over— ‘The roar of laughter from the oth- or passengers who couldn't help heartng, simply drowned the whir of the trolley, and the two girf's faces furnished so much heat in the enwu- ing silence that the conductor mer- cifully opened both deers, And then there was the young fellow who hung to the strap. “I hope you participated in Enater services With alt the solemn- ity they cali for.” “More than that. My new bonnet won't be finished until next week.” the “You, know, Percy,” she said, they planned out things, ‘we mustn't expect to have very much. It costs much more to provide for two than it does for one.” Jan Kubelik, the long-haired vio- tin. has bought « string of horses. Jan will get trimmed without going to a barter shop. A_WORD FROM JOSH WISE. consent, he said, all right. won't cost much more to take care j of two,” The finest that is produced, ecm nomical tn fuel, fine water quickly aud fill ali quiremen: a range. a : BSS&Tts. . | BAL SF EERE EA4SSSE44 ERSEAESLRE SSS) SS ee er: The Chicago packers are com- plaining that secret service men are digging up their secrets. If that's true, the packers can't be half as clever as folk suppomed they were. Some men learn taken as part payment. Prices from $32.00 to $60.00. do by doin’, a tow “Teachers, preachers and news- papermen are more prone to Ie than anybody else,” says a University of Chicago professor. While we feel Your New Suit, Jacket or Hat — MAY BE PURCHASED HERE ON ONE DOLLAR A WEEK PAT- MENTS. WE MAKE TERMS TO SUIT THE PURSE. learn by betn’ done GEO. H. WOODHOUSE 60, en’ o lot uv others never learn at ell, ea oP ee |BEFELZ-7F TF R288 Bae Tes LIVELY TIMES. it Wi GPALDING Exe is the perce OFFICIAL LEAGUE BALL ati. No, 416 for his aut plied for The largest and most com- plete Guide ever published. Pietures of all the professional Sash and Door Bargains PRICE LISTS FREE. My five cross panel Doors are known everywhere; price $1.30 per door. Send for price lists to my sales- baseball teams, records of all the leagues, the official play- ing rules and articles of inter- est. Price, 10 cents. dim Minor League Base Ball Guide, Edited by T. H.Murnane. The offictal handbook of the National Association of Pro- fessional Rase Ball Leagues. Contains an interesting article on Seattle Base Ball, written by Robert Boyce. A Base Ball Encyclopedi In Spalding’s Athletic Idb- 228 How to Play Shortstop. ing, your copy of The rrived at 6:00 o'clock, Sunset, Main 1050, or In- pendent 1188, any time between 00 and 7:00—and a copy will be rent you at once, by special mea- League, No, 232. How to Run the Bam® Grand Prixe at the Loulslana Purchase Bxposition, St. Low . G. SPALDING & BROS. Fe it competition with the | manufacturers of tho world. Winners of the Special Award (superior to the Grand Prise) No. 1394 GEARY STREST, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.

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