Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SEATTLE STAR THeH= BY STAN PU RLISHING Co. OFFICES 10 and lob Beventh Avenue EVERY AFTERNOON BXCBPT SUNDAY TELEPHONES: Matn ow Sunset Indeper um rN Walard ave. unset, Ned 1a One ate per week, of twenty-five cente per month Cetiver hy No free coptee _ £O MALI Tern ia te when Op tho address Inve! of each p W hen that tion jn been pad In advan ca your ma nthe address label fs & recelpt Poxtottioe at Aeattl > Washington. aa eeond-< CR-RAGLeYS DARLG CO, COR BROUND AVENUD A anb Pky Our new Wan for the purpose ade, t leave mumbrrs tor ntly been opened to leave want The phone Office at the 4) bove Sumber has wee affording the p econventeat pla eita Degriptions for Th Sia) Rune entatty 1 ihatiding BW. BLACK WO* r go Re 1006 Mart ; W, D. WARD, New York I entative, 63 Tritt Ru « Se HONEST CIRCULATION, . This ts to certify that the DAILY AVERAGE BONA FIDE CIRCULATION of the SEATTLE STAR for the YEAR 1904 BX CREDED 16.000 COPIRS DAILY, and for the FIRST QUARTER OF 1905 (January, February and March), EXCEEDED 18,000 COPMES DAILY. B. F. CHAS. General Manager. ————7~, Subsertbed in my presence and sworn to 7 me thie trd day of April, A. D. 1905. A. J, TENNANT. Notary Public tn and for State of Washington, residing at Seattle. SS ———————————————— * * * * o * * - a * + * *. 7 oe RRR RRR REE EERE RRR THE STAR’ The best news first. All the news that's fit to print. All the news without fear or favor. Honesty in official and private life. Municipal ownership of public utilities, The business district for reputable business enterprises, A gress earn — upon public service franchises, 7 up-te schoo! system, I rights for all; apesial privileges for none. Ry en of just, and repeal of unjust lawa, PLATFORM. FH RAEREEAEEEE EE 2. eee ee ee ee es eee eee THE NEED OF ECONOMY The French people are noted savers. Whether their income be large or small or whether they belong to the upper or lower classes, they live, as a rule, economically so as to have a surplus for saving. Thus. although without the immense material resources, which such countries as the United States and Russia possess, France has be- come a nation of investors. Some people are accustomed to sneer at French economy, but ‘when the results of this economy are contemplated in the vast finan- clal power of France, the sneer must give way to admiration. Al- though the French people prefer to invest in securities In thelr own country as far as possible, they have billions of dollars invested abroad and they are the greatest investors in bills of foreign ex- change of any people in the world. That Paris fs one of the three leading financial centers is due to the fact that the people of France, as a class, know how to save money This example ts well worth consider: om by the people of th Waited States. We have become rich, not by economy, not by know ing how to live so that out of a balance for investment at the end of the year, but by reason of our tremendous material resources, the wealth of our mines and the fertility of our soil, as well as by the inventive ingenuity of our peop! Americans are not savers they are spenders. We are lavish im our expenditure, There is a Srowing love of luxury in this country, and this is a fact that may Well provide food for thought toe our political econom Parsi mony is odious, but frugality and saving in order to provide for old age or to built up the fortunes of one’s family are in the high est degree ennobling, and it is the foundation upon which an invest ment market rests.—Wall Street Journal. oun WHAT ABOUT FOOTBALL? In attacking football in cotleges, President Elliot, of Harvard, is Feceiving some rough criticlam. Perhaps he {s not entirely fair to the game, which has many valuable features for a rounded out te ¥elopment of young America. The public will not consent to its abolition. nor should they; but President Eliot is not entirely wrong. It cannot be gainsaid that the tendency is to brush ast for the gridiron champion Several hundred times as much advertising is the to long haired hero of the big football game as to the modest toller who carries away the first prize for mathematics. Easterns colleges are becoming more famed for the football games given they win than for their scientific achievements. Beyond the ath- Tetics which give him a sound bedy for his cultivated mind, it may Be questioned how much good the football fame is to the studeat Bimseif, when he encounters the realities of life. Will the great manufacturer or mine owner or corporation at fend him more kindly because he was the celebrated halfback, or wlil they suspect that he has allowed these things to interfere with the Proper digestion of that for which he attended the nniversity? Be Jap THE VIEW OF THE Steed pat - "++ BY COMUND VANCE coon Say, wat's dis dippy talk about de Jap A-bein’ a long-end good t’ing in a scrap? Tell me wat fights de bloke ever won, Er wat good scrappers has he ever done? has ‘ Stussel eon Kurypatkin? Say, who's Stussel? Who's he been up against en mad ‘ ‘em hustle? Dey say he stayed a long time in dis fight (Only de Jap right.) But who'd he ever bang agin outwinded him, all de rope— His ownself? Ain't he got no dope? En Kurypattkin; mebbe he’s all right, But if dem forrin guys kin really fight, ' Dey gotter show me. I hears fel- Jers say Dat Kury ver in de getaway, But dat ain't fightin’; you kin take my hunch You'd tink he wuz 4 ‘A fighter ain't no good widout a in clubs it sein mea punch. To hear de talkin’. Say, if he’s so great, Wat's dat? De Jap kin do dis Line- | Why don’t he come dis way en get vitch? a date? ‘Anudder two-spot Ain’t it rich fo wee de way some fellers gits deir in de discard! Dere's loads o' money waitin’ at de gate Fer any shifty weight; champeen heavy name Into do potpers in dis fightin’ game? kin skim it, Ef he goes on wid Jeff en stays de | limit! Bn just because de dese dubs, Jap kin do Right here's de golden cream en he | COPYRIGHT 190 | | | | before execution,” night—in London. It has nothing to do with my statement about that | man, which you will find to be cor rect,” he replied. “He guided by me, my lord, and go and fetch the village policeman while [ stand gard over Rivington. I have a re | volver. | As he spoke he produced the pis-| | tol, and I well knew what my fate | | would be if I were alone with him He would oot me like a dog and plead self-defense, But the pre “s word was as good as bia | } “Tut-tut, put that thing up and ve | sensible, or, if you can’t do that, go |and eve a doctor,” he said impa | tiently. “Come, Mr. Martin, I am all agog to witness this excitement. Let us go down to the beach and sce the lifeboat launched 1 } It was stepping out into the open with a vengeance, and po ol as | was the protector at my side I felt that I was lost if Marake went him self for the police. But any hestta tion on my part would have stultt | fled the generous poattion taken up | by the premier, and for some reason probably because he would not let me out of his sight—Marske did not take that course. He followed Lord | Alphington and myself from the va | cant and wo down the chine to the shore, wh we took places among the fast-growing | crowd of spectators round the life-| boat honse | house our | Lord Alphington, that astute | mover of pawns in the game of life, kept up a semblance of intense in | terest in the breathless arrivals of |members of the crew. Standing, | stop-watch in hand, he asked ques tions of bystanders and counted the | brown -visaged, bi guernseyed fishermen as they passed into the shed, where the willing “helpers” | were already preparing the boat for | her journey. But as | found it bard to sustain an interest in the endangered ves- sel and her crew, I felt uke a spec tator at a theater, brought to see a | play at which one is expected to ap- plaud when one’s center of attrace | tion Is among the audience. | For I could not take my eyes off Roger Marake, who, during all the | nolsy preliminaries of the launch, watched me like a wildeat crouch- ing for bis pounce on a helpless rabbit CHAPTER XXVIII TWO VOLUNTEERS. Tt soon became apparent that } Something was wrong with the | work of rescue. Men in cork jack« | et# came to the great sewing doors of the lifeboat house, and gazed anx- fously along the beach. A gentle man, whom I took to be the local secretary, fussed and famed in and | out. Above the howling of the tem- | pest and the crash of waves on | shore the murmur of voices rose. ‘They're generally the two first,” I heard a woman say. “They've Ayers Cherry Pectoral, | Coughing, coughing, day after iday, tears the throat and lungs. Healthy tissues give way. You are ill, Ask your | doctor why Cherry Pecto cures coughs, Leanne, BY H 5, HY THY LT “Nevertheless, sir, [ adhere to my gent errand of vi Millions 1M EADON HILL But in the same line n, though some 200 yards be- hind him, was another figure which set my heart th, ting fast at of | the local policeman, advancing with | the leisurely tread of his species to } the center of excitement. I } » STAR DUST invot ———— THE STRERT FOR THE NEW N. Z Dueck er ft dwelling SOMERS. bas The building w begun tion of @ seven-room story and a the it for renting purposes and it is doubt jens already dwelling houses mnkno wn. of empty d spoken for, as « ling houses) ts mm pty in Bunker HID are This (absolute ab i ° ut ony of many things pointing to the fact that Bunker Hill is the beet town oa / earth to live more rays of each apparent ina fact beoot an day's sun mark ming the descending the oantles moments of time in tunon. ward march of Bunker eterfity ushering the my (Ind.) rads HiIl's population nearer Bunker Hill Pres A WORD FROM JOSH WISE heartily But he should sult, And how fs There's lots uv fel lers th't ain't ev ead ( work th't's got callous places on their hands. HIM UP. ear oid chap, adaeit It ha @ new gpring he to got it? He's worn those patches enough * wine If he ards thet An ¥ ered How will outfit up-to-date! | THREE YEARS OF PLEASURE | ould please him greth | : ; | a woe s the thi aniversary tne moauiat {of the Indleator "Sut thas rear |] Makes Lighter Bread rraaken lately ago we laid down the pig and cattle | WEEPING WILL" i a co take-up ed jakes Whiter Bread fentiat tas dikcow was | el GT ot tres sch wan u hinck mun, | Dretty town alte and butter and eges (f Makes Sweeter Bread stirring up Go Ben Tilimar “And little knows bis let “He learne: two and a ha gotten therm. hia Hitt? brain Why don’t y civil servi For wha “Letter car The great v distress, The theater notte wrong. and w the bow over two And quite fe fop th rnor Vardam Ja in only 4 1 them when he If, and has never tit examination 2” jolintyt seemed to ‘, people in the € meth ing hen he ceased to the strings their h turned wonderful tong ously regnrds thert use of and | Kisuner’s gas, woman's clubs, swell | banquets, a preacher or two on | for-|ple can go im and deposit their | hi money, or, if they haven't any, pay | their respects. | the! The people of West Lafayette | ischiet NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISH AGBOCIATION CHAPTER XXXVIL— 1, | been talking ugly Iately, and 1, untarily glanced at R Marake My lord, I bave n shouldn't be surprised if they don't| His eye mot mine, and by th al every wh Re panted, ° (earn up at all ignant triumph in bis face | guessed to } found youto put y My mind jumped ®uck to Mr,/ that he, too, had seen the constable your.guard. You do not know who r Croal and his vance, and) and meant to (ake advantage of the that fellow is, whom you have ad-/ ognized the cause of the trou- | opportunity mitted to your table and y au-| Hia opportunity for avenging! But no; my temporary protector macy }the fancied slight on him had come, | saw the danget signal, and took in | Refore any reply could be made,| and with the malice of & mean na-| stant fection. There was very little a sharp report, heard above the) ture he was sulking in his ott that esenped the alert insight of strife enta, assailed our] when his lean, lithe arms were so| Lord Alphington ears—the sound of the signa! sorely needed in the lifeboat. And| “rook here, Marske ue’ sald tar at the coast-guard station 1} the comrade po had mentioned was | 9 but ia o towered °. “it to call the lifeboat crew togethe probably following suit you ¢0 anything to mar my Tints magnificent to set the equipment a new} type on now pm batone ined dictionary and ° ° pedia, in which finding « word t { itvelf a Mberal education and a groat training tn self ponsosalo Then best! Hbrary several government ret and KOMe KE ation We © lawyers on wt at that ars have beet d three aps month lon has about beet sugar, al surveys, Our et even and increased eral times paid in advance rhe | year of pleas Bhar to aching Wont (delighted with bis first bit, and members of biw terrible tortures the recalettrant crew to the most and the word “volunteers” came frequently above the tumult of ‘crashing wave and angry talk (To be Continued.) pathy went ont to him, as it always Both Phones 1260. does to a man breaking down in } public said one of the *, who had rusher | I am so soiny j steat music orith back to the stag | Sorry repeated the violinist’s| manager, with a chuckle, “Sorry Why, man, that's the greatest adver tisement | ever heard of. Don't you khow what stopped bis musk No,” replied the criti His hair got tangled up in the strings of his violin. -_—_- | “From the way they're treating | that fellow in the chair, and from | his general appearance, I'm inclined | | to think he’s either lost a breach of promise suit or been held up for | heavy alimony "Oh, no, He's only one of three or four fellows in the club who | \ were boasting a year ago about} Russia's ¢ pat resources at current pric w we enjoy ; ail Xinds of city airs, fire biazing out of hundred-foot | smokestacks, paved sidewalks, } seem to appreciate an effort to grind out a newspaper every week and they patronize it remarkably we! considering the p per be in| The Indicator has grown some great | Three years ago w farted wit Av was! rheumaticky old job press with the draw | loekjaw and the rickets to print the | syio- paper on, Today we have added to | With exasperating interest in the In the interval of waiting for the! ment of this pleturesque scene event toward,, the premier pulled| missing members those of the by-/ and | will be strangers in | out his watch, “Now t wonder how| standers who had glasses turned) and you kr } long the rascals will take to min | them on the wreck, and many w Biting hi at j}the boat?’ he reflected aloud.| the speculations as to the namé of me, ry enon p | "What was that you were saying,| tho vessel and the number of her! casion, “Consideration for your Marske? The wind and sea were| crew, About a score of men could! jordship and my devotion to a Veccllaes inch m naine &.aherh euiee|'we coun clesteting im. tim Yintian, (area, ain peovent. tee fees A PAIR OF DUMB BELLS. eateh It.” and there was but Httle hope for! forming an obvious duty,” he ‘ s vege Heavens, how I exulted in that/ any who had remained on deck un- | pii¢ yh ye this| 0% riapiaett, es yee - diplomatic fiction-—stgn that the| less they were sheltering im the) person so long as he ts in your Ward 7, Peterabers. padi: great statestnan meant to abide by| deck house, so tremendous were | company ps oo Lent coninana prone. era 1 his promise. For there was no|the volumes of-water that broke!” Ayjinq you don't~by word or | hal'pate seceteing reports from the doubt that he had heard every word | over tho {Il-fated steamer an stn: poateian, tunten | anak anaaee ae et the incipient accusation, and| “I was on the cliff just after she | TSO ees being said|” "Gol. Kilkewikeky,” he roared was merely sparring for, time | struck, and I thought I could make! }Y"l,.4 coast guardaman, who had| “At your service, general, replied | Marske repeated his words with re-|out a female figure and another | iow arrived, and before entering|the colonel, who commanded the | doubled venom. j rush from amidships into the wheel the lifeboat hanse was. belag bet-larask Cassnck regiment. Who is this gentioman? Why,! house at the stern. My glasses ari ltonholed by the magnate with the ‘Take 600 men and sweep Main Mr, Martin, of ‘course, who saved | exceptionally good ones,” remar parent ty: peta « Pic coiees Muriel’s life so gallantly last week,” | an old gentionan of solf-important | ““PYONTS inh RMN sack wanl Hiri” weld Col. Kitkwikeky, “My Lord Alphingtow replied calmly, domenner. | vepiyts You are perfectly right, | sword—my life—both are m It doesn’t matter what he has! Roger Marske turned sharply op eee ie ne ene eee ee ard. Welty's—-my cxar’s My men laugh at done or what he calls himse!f."/on him. “You must be migaken,” | se hee out quite clearly before |death for the Little Father. But | Roger Marske vociferated loudly.| he snapped, with o warm fhat the vessel took the ground.” air, | am 80 superintendest of |That man i» Arthur Rivington, | seemed quite uncalled for, “That|'"" crests, end my men ore Ro white] - | who was condemned at last assizes|inn't a passenger steamer. Sho's| “She Is & passenger steamer, | Sites, and escaped from prison two days} too small for that.” : | then?” pursued the old gentleman. correspondents offices to And the foreign rushed to the telegraph Lord Alphington’s ripple of sil-| original statement,” the gentleman | hop © score @ second / very leagheer ne « retdainos in pot ree T gave 15 guineas for| But he had to be content with a/ Wire & story sehr ca the-art of polite sneering My | those glasses, and | have absolute | partial victory No, sir, the wom Westbound Colonist Rates | dear Marake, what a hallucination,” | confidence in them. But heré‘cotmes | 40 |* probably the captain's wife or 1 be effective daily to May 16th. he said, “Ah, perhaps that blow ac-| a coagt cuardaman who will posai-/| sister; the wreck is the steamer) p14) passage of your relatives or counts for it. What's the matter] bly corroborate me, for dov Nightshade—port of London, bound | 1.549, by mall or wire, with Great with your head?” | they were watching the steamer | for Barcelona in ballast for fruit.”| corthern Retlway, First and Yesler With difficulty my enemy choked | from the station.” the coast guard replied, and he el-) yoney back if tickets notvused. | down an oath, and I noticed for the I looked along the footpath that | bowed his way through the throng) —. a és | first time a discolored swelling on | winds along the baxe of Rahat into the building, where the absence | his left temple, partly hidden by his | and sure enough a coast cua’ of Croal and his adherent was now cloth golfing cap. was burrging along it towar causing dismay. The coxawain's “T met with « slight accident Iast| lifeboat house, as though onda Mr. | ole was heard within, condemning Graves’ Tooth Powder 10c The QUAKER DRUG (0. 1013-1015 FIRST AVE GhAe¥ AIR 1513-15-17-19 Second Avenue. dust Above Pike St. Prices of Trunks are LOWER THAN EVER. We carry only FIRST CLASS GOODS. Gold Crowns, 22K, Bridge Work . Gold Fillings . Other Fillings years’ guarantee. Open till 8 p. m, Sundays, 9to2 Lady Attendan R. ZIMMERMAN, Mgr. the clty. That means a TRUST and higher prices if suc: are now the only large laundry not in the combine. sible for the cut rates and want Main Office, Firet and Belt. Shirts, 10 Cents; Collars, wt find ous fol S Prdpasatioafor As- ‘are food and Kes the Bears the ling the Stomachs and Bowe. Signature Promotes Digestion Cheerfu~ ness and Rest. Contains neither Morphine nor Mineral. © NARCOTIC. Reece af Old Tir SAMUEL LTT HOM Aperfect Remed forConaties- dek'Sour Stomach.Di Worms Convulsions Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Sigile Signature of For Over Thirty Years CASTOR Yn « O4NTAUR OomPaRY. Your New Suit, Jacket or Hat MAY BE PURCHASED HERE ON MENTS. WE ONE DOLLAR A WEEK Pay. MAKE TERMS TO SUIT THE PURSE. Eastern Outfitting Co. ()} 422-424 PIKE STREET, COR. FIFE “THE HOUSE WHERE YOUR CREDIT 18 GOOD.” GET YOUR. PIANO NOW We have by far the largest stock in the city, as everyone wall | knows who haa looked. Our instruments always représeat best, our prices always low and terms easy. See our great stock of Talking Machines and all kinds of Small: Musical Instruments. D. S. JOHNSTON CO.., 903 Second Ave. UNION °*t0" . 1314 SECOND AVENUE Opposite Arcade Entrance Mest Reliable Dentists in the West BBe, Bc to Te the price right. 12 SEE US. We will make We Stand Between You and There is a movement on foot to consolidate the ph Prices interests essful. We We are respan~ You to help us sustain them, = OUR CUT RATE OFFICES: Downtown Office, Third near Pike 2 Cents; Cuffs, 4 Cents THE QUEEN CITY LAUNDRY We please you or it costs you nothin Centennial’s Best Flour Makes More Bread Makes Better Bread ALL GROCERS SPRL IT We Carry the Most Complete Line On the of Economy We recommend the use of & GAS RANGE and GAS WATER HEATER in your home. They eliminate the drudgery of kitchen work and are always ready for use. Every household should take advantage of the low price and easy terms we offer on Gas Ranges now. Seattle Lighting Co. P.-1, Bullding, Fourth and Union. Phones—Sunset, Kx. 27; Ind., 75. Gas Stoves in the City and examine out from 66¢ to $5.00. We ir » sure We can please vite you in style and price. ERNST BROS. Both Phones 1158. 506 PIKE STRERT