The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 3, 1905, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR PY. STAR PU ALerINa Co OFFICHS—1Ni and 190) Beventh Avenue HVERY AFTERNOON BXCE PT SUNDAY. YELUPHONES Business Department—Sunset, Main 19%, Independent 113% TAND STAN AGHNC Ya Dallar hal ont per copy, six cents per w eek, twenty-five cents per month, by mall or carrtera, No Cree oo . , tr TO MAIL BCHECHIDERS— The da te when ur subscription exp! en, if your the address Inde! of each paper. W hen that viv & ae again been paid br jvan your name is taken from A chanae of date on the address label ts & receipt Hoatth ». Washington, ae ecand-class matter, Enitvred at the Postoffice at WANT AB. OPPLNS -RAGLATS BIROGG co, Con skCUND AVENUB > Paw shrmie?. ON tee Want Ad. Gifice wt the a bore number has recently be pened S Rirpose of affording the public a convenient place to Bee Werte utadriptions top ‘the ® tar, and leave new WR ohdns Mumbers for this office ane: Sunset Main éaen ty 53. W. RLACK WOOD, Chicago Representative, 1006 Hartford Building W. D. WARD, New York Repregen tative, 63 Tribune Betiding HONEST CIRCULATION. This te to certify that the DAILY vee CIRCULATION of the SEATTLE STA lor the ¥ » * CREDED 16.000 COPIRS DAILY, and for the FIRST QUARTER OF 1905 (January, February and Mareh), XCEEDED 18,000 COPIES DAILY. = Y CHASE, General Manager ——E BONA FIDB Subscribed tn my presence and sworn to before me this ard day of April, A. D. 1905. A. J. TENNAN Notary Public in and for State of Washington, residing at jeattle. PARR RRR RRR ER RE Re 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 life Municipal ownership of public utilities, The business district for reputable business enterprises. A gross earnings tax upon al! public service franchises, An up-to-date public schoo! system. Equal rights for all; special privileges for none, Rigid enforcement of just, and repeal of unjust laws. SR ESSE EEE EEE EE +e eeee ey eee eee eee eee eee eee ee PRESIDENT AND PASSES The most important feature ef the president's western trip & an- nounced by the officials of one of the Tt Is not so exciting as the bear-killing episodes, Bat (€ will linger longer in the publttc mm influence upon the national life. western roads over which he has been traveling. ind and have a far profounder ‘The railway officials announce that— “The president's train on this road will be paid for rates and all bills for transportation will at regular be settled through the audit tng department of the Pennsylvania road and will be President. The only special courtesy which President will be permission to ride on the engine through Red Rock eanyon.* If this statement means that the president has put an end to the obnoxious practice n from the aid for by the will be accepted by the of accepting fi tr portat! allroada, establishing a precedent in this respect. Joletng. The American people had become so accustomed to seetng their Presidents meekly accepting favors from railway compantes and mak- ing their journeys at their expense that the undignified and deg ing spectacle had almost ceased to occasion comment. So long as presidents did not deem it beneath thetr dignity te ac- cept such favors, ft was not to be expected that minor incumbents of executive or legisiative offices would hesttate to do #0. Practically every congressman and state assemblym Ris pockets lined with ralirond passes. ‘The favors may not have been given or accepted in a spirit of Bribery. They may not in many cases have had that effect in any very great degree. But the fact remains that the spectacie is am indecent one and disgraceful. The interstate commerce law makes ft unlawful for rallread com- Panies to issue passes. The laws there is cause for great re- An @ result n in the land has against to rate discriminations, which passengers as well as to ‘To say the very least, It looks bad for 1 trusted with the making and enforcement of the laws, to be by com- Mon custom parties te the law's violation. The complacency with which the presidents themselves have ac- cepted these “courtestes™ hax been one of the distinctly discreditable and disturbing things in the nation’s political life. government It's to be hoped that Roosevelt has found the backbone and the hamesty to refuse for good and that his example will stand in the future asa precedent never to be violated. Parents should instruct their children in the vital facts of life. All of life's operations sech as marriage, parentage, birth, are @mcred things. Why should custom close the lips of parents con- cerning the duties and the dangers of the chiid’s relationship to these tacts? The boy and girl will find oct some how. Who will tell them— you, or some one who ought not to be permited to tell them? Your boy should not learn about these pure and chaste relation- ships from ribald or obscene sources. He should not be fnstructed from the gutter. He should have the facts from those who know them rightly and who are tremendously concerned fn the boy. Thousands of boys are ruined by the befouled suggestions of those who make unclean mysteries of the simple facts of life. Their minds are drag- ged through sewers of filth. Your girl should know the truth, the whole truth, about herself, about wifehood and motherhood, about the sacredness of her person and the dangtrs that lie along her pathway. She ought not to learn about the truths of her being from the whisperings of the debased. Ignorance is the nearest relative of vice. Parents should take their children into their full confidence con- cerming such matters, The beauty and promise of an uneullied life sheeld be held out and the temptations and dangers of wrong doing folly and frankly told. * How ean you blame the boy or girl who goes wrong if you have failed to expiain the laws of nature respecting their bodies. There ts a reticence in these matters that is almost criminal, False delicacy should not be permitted to stand in the way of parental instruction in these important matters. ONE DOLLAR A WEEK WILL DRESS YOURSELF, YOUR WIFE AND FAMILY IN THE HEIGHT OF FASHION. It'S BASY. Eastern Outfitting Co, (inc.) 422-424 PIKE STREET, COR. FIFTH EATTLE’S RELIABLE CREDIT HOUSE.” ER CO. Baggage, Furniture, Storage Office and storage room, 1216 First Bvenue, Postoffice building. ‘Sunnet 902; specail ,OF LADIES’ | PINS—WRIST BAGS, ETC., ETC, HOUGHTON & HUNTER, Jewelers, Avenue, Geattle. ELEGANT NEW ASSORTMENT WAIST SETS—HAT | af THE SEATTLE STAR-—-WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1905, | CHAP. | XXIX.—Continued But what was wrong with Roger Marske? ‘That spasmodic working pot his Jaw, that sudden pallor, could not be due to hie having been par tallly seered off by the own of the valuable glasses, My experience of the rending of human heartstrings |had been extensive during the re cent months, and [ knew that he j was face to face with a crisis that called for immediate action This wae the way he moet | crisis. | “tL eam't stand thia”” he eried, for benefit of the bystanders at If the boat is short-handed ru «8 & Volunteer, I can pull a good oar.” And amid cheers from the wind-riven, rain-soaked crowd he pushed his way into the lifeboat the the large house Heaven knows what instinet mpted me, but the inapiration | me that if Roger Marske, the soft living, ease-loving aybarite, wanted to be put out there on the storm swept Shingles, | ought to be there too, My sluggish brain was con wious of some new awakening though not til afterwards did I piece it all together and understand that it was the woman on board the wreck who called me My lord, Lam entirely in your| hands,” { whispered to the premior “Have I your permission to volun teer al . “Cut along.” was the reply. “To me you are ‘Mr. Martin’ for the next four-and-twenty houre—the man} who saved my daughter. He does not need my permission for any thing.” | I was quitting his side, when he laid hiS hand on my arm. “A word | to the wise,” he added. “I have} been studying Marske for the last! | half hoor. fam beginning to think | that there may be something in all BY HEADON HILL enemy. He was in the stern, and [ was In the bow, so that after we had settled to the oars | could see without being seen by him, But the giance he gave me T passed to my seat would have slain me if it could Too much lost already, and when the boat had sped down the allp into the turbu lent sea, the comswain gave orders for a quick stroke that absorbed all my energy. 1 became infected with the mad craving to get to the steamer in time. In the wild desire to save life, and tm the sopreme phystea! effort, I forgot for a while the strange jumble of events that had sent me, @ sentenced convict d r the mo b, with om uae for anyone or anything but my ow hews and sinews. At first we pulled straight for the wreck, but at some distance from the shore the oxewain gave the boat a slant windward, with the ob ject of getting the current to help us. About this time @ roar from him told ds that the forepart of the steamer, with the masts to which the crew were clinging, had gone. All that remained was the stern, with the wheel house, The announcement drew a groan from the brave fellows near me, but Roger Marske turned in his seat and flung at me a glance so full of malicious triumph that I could not THE ~ STAR DUST »- | | HORSE TH AT MADE GOOD. “Ladeex an’ thenmen,” said the professor, “ze horse can reason as well as you an’ l-—" “I will prove it to you,” contin- aed the professor. | The Chicago Bar association haa brought an action to disbar Attorney Propper. If anybody calls your at-| tention to this and carries the thing| any further, yell for the police. Nat-| uraity he iw acc no more used of Imp—but no, "Fest time of my life,” said John D. Rockefeller, after playing all aft- ternoon with hie grandchildren on @ | beach down in Jersey. John always! has water 00d time when he's near the A WORD FROM JOSH W It's always danger- ous fer @ foot t' break | | a strict rule an’ purty } near uz dangerous | not t break it at} times. A juvenile court waif in Cleveland who received a new suit lothes | #20 happy he tried to wear them| | to be But still, many a man has | tried to do the same thing “Will that re butter bill reach a vote today 4 . and, by golly, we won't let it get t’ a vote, neither,” replied the rural legisiator, “Whut we wunt t’ do an’ do right away ts t’ pass an en the horse the wicked stage out a fine red apple. saw one of hands holding brought her a fork ome the “*" % “tT indorsed a note for $1500 for COPRMIGHT 1906, BY THE NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISH ASSOTIATION clous time had been | } | } } this. He looks desperate, ‘Take {understand It, so frrelevant did it eare he doesn't hit you over the | seem head with an oar-—accidentally, of| But enlightenment was soon to eourse.”” jeoma The coxswain had again I thanked him with a look, and {turned the boat stralght for the rushed away to offer my services to | Shing and the wreck, and | the harassed coxawain, who re-| guessed that he was searching for ived them with a mighty grow! of | open water to take the boat through approval, A minute later [ had/to the sheltered side, whon he donned @ cork jacket and taken my| loosed a bellow that no storm-rage place tn the boat. I was thankful | could drown, to find it was nowhere near my There's a woman at the wheel window and a man at the Put your backs.to It, lads.” Hid put our backs to it, with such good purpose that our cunning ateeraman found the opening he wanted = found, too, that it was clone to the battered remnant of the wreck, showing that had she kept but a hair's breadth to one side she would have made a clear passage Leaning all his weight on the tiller, our chief swang the lifeboat into the narrow channel In the seothing maelstrom, so that she pont scraped the stones of the bank. The boat shot through the opening nn r the steamer’s stern, and as she did so, Roger Marske dropped bis A rope had trailed overboard from the steamer, and seizing it he swung bimeelf into the atr. For a moment he hung suspended In the blinding spray, and then hand over hand he swarmed up the rope into the fantastic fragment of the Night- shade, I being im the bows, had al ready passed the dangling rope, or I should have followed, so keenly alive waa I now to the intention of Marske in fotning the lifeboat But | had not long to wait With | a half-admiring oath for the breach of disctpline, which he attributed to over-eagerness to save life, the cox awain brought the boat round under the lee of the bank and of the wreek, and ft fe a matter of pride to | mme that excepting Roger Marske, I was the firet to catch the raf! and scramble bn board. I had no soon er gained the deck than I was near- ly swept away by a towering wave that crashed against the weather side of the stern of the steamer, and, leaping on board, Mooded it with surge had subside@ I was surprised that I had contrived to hang on surprised also that the wheel house was stil! standing But it was, and fn the doorway was Janet--my Janet—pointing to the brink of the broken deck, where the forepart of the steamer had been wrenched by the sea. wnize but not rec me. distraught Scalding, to Inflammation Scanty passages, or a stoppage Red, thick and ill-smelling urine. Cloudy or brick-dust sediment Greasy. frothy or staining urine. a) | Loafer, the clqur dealer, (his morn-) Other common symptoms sre ing.” | Puffy eyes, swollen Mmba You're a great chump for going! Pallid, waxy complexion. on his paper.’ | Drowsiness, lack of energy, lan- Yo, I'm not. Me said if I didn’t | Cor *’'d name a S-cent cigar atter| Dizziness, “npots” before the eyes. } t, debility, Indigestion, | There te only one thing to do j when any of these symptoms appear, Professor Felix Adler declares! and that is to. cure the kidneya No men and women should not marry{ Reed to experiment. Donn’s Kidney bog Nagetndehs iat tee aseiat éhdnc i Pilte have cured hundreds af people few more Ike that, professor, and the proves te ty: Thelr teathmony University of Chicago will try to hire you ~— Westbound Colonist Rates Will be effective daily to May 15th Prepay passage of your relatives or friends, by mail or wire, with ¢ First kets and Yesler back if t not used, *** For Sale by all Dealers. such violenes that when the| She did| you. This great kidney specitio|§ Both Phones 1156 has restored thousands of kidney sufferers to complete and mae 5 3 Rent health, Tt is intended f j Sntl-oleormargarine an’ a pure dlg- the kidneys, and the kidneys aret bill.”* | only. i —— Watch for Symptorne of Kidney Diseases. Regard Backach * pin eee aes yoy oa | ger Genal. ene the Urine. Help the Riders Do Ther 9 a e ‘ at there ought to be $2,400, ure Them When The; . in gold in the Atlantic ocean. ‘ow y Are Sick 1513-15-17-19 Second Avenue. FOR THE MONTH oe a over, as ho doesn't aay there ia afiat | | HOW! TO THLL-—Therg are many Just Above Pike St. waa Neekin fen ., ; awe etry cit. | S7™mptoms to tell you of sick kid ye ery much, nobody should become exctt | eye First the many” aches or SEATTLE PROOF DENTAL work during the most @ pains— : Pen } May. . af |__Dull aching in the emait of the} 7° Prenatt retired farmer, of 818 Good work at low prices, gums ack. Third avenue north, says: ‘or teed for ten years, has made an Flightington haw ereat@& a) Sharp pains|when stooping or tft-| spout two years I muttered viable reputation for the BROWS | eve ation tor itun: City wo years I suffered from at- PAINLE: DENTISTS, papers h rinted her pleturesim ni Rheumatic aching in the muscles, | tacks of backache, caused, I reason 13 First Avenme. are filled with interviews wit Neuraigte pains In the nerves. rdemeonecit ant ce Hondachen, sideaches, gout, aciat- | either by my kidneys being weal a netunlety, Siew ld ane Sanne? fon. of overexcited. My back tired easity, | - po y ow an y And the urinary symptoms, som 4 after any overexertion or the | Bho refused to eat ple in offe of terme” me found by #imple| contraction of a cold it ached acute- | the big hotela un requent passages day and night,|1¥- Not onty did my back ache, but . e plain figures —_— wnt work guaranteed for ten years ww and done by painless system K nd used only by, D EY MARION TTLe,| knows and used onl DENTISTS Md I N STREET a WASH! BROWN p eet Price 50e. land The Kind You Have Always Bought | External Show Is No Indication of Internal Quality | This is true of Pianas. Good workmanship and first-class gnat rial must enter into a plano if you }expect to get music and satisfac tion of it, We have all kinds \ot Pianos for all kinds of uses | Prices ranging from | | $165 Up to $950 which anos as NOON-HOUR SPECIALS —— includes such famous Pi CHICKERING HOBART M. CA BLE, KIMBALL PRASE, | D. 8. JOUNSTON CO. AT THE QUAKER and many other makes, in elegant | | mahogany, walnut and oak cases on reasonable terms THURSDA THESE PRICES EXCERF NOON HOUR ‘Talking Machines, Records and Supplies D. S. JOHNSTON CO. @03 SECOND AVENUE Burke Buliding NO GOODS BOLD AT NG DURING Sanipure Milk, for one hour, 7 cans 10¢ $1.00 boat, 4 size Bromo for one hour Tollet Soap, odds and ends of 10« and ihe alzes, for one a a one hour, Mothine--Moth Balts kills moths, regular price package, for one hour .. ores ca Williams’ Shaving Soap, regular price 10c, for one hour, per . Shaving Brushes, regular price 25 ¢, for one hour, only Razor Stropa, regular 60¢, for one hour : Pure Spices, regular price 20¢ packuge, for one hour , Bird Seed, regular 10¢ package, for one b Prophyletic Tooth Brushes, for Téc and $1.00 Ladies’ Hand Bags Celery Coco Compound, regular price $1.00, f Pataters’ Coco Wine and Celery Tonic, regular price $1.00, hour vi . Aromatic Colo Cordial, Egg Shampoo, regular price 50c, for one hour J Bandoline, regular price 25¢ bottle, for one hour ...... one hour for one hour toe funda ss > ee Aaa Hi “ Wis PIROT AVE, SEATTLE. Second floor Howard ‘fouding La hour , - 39¢ for one regular price 86c, for one hour and terror-struck, kept potnting to yal pf yen gy ony Remember that the prices named above are for one hour oaly and the wave came and washed | ~that the QUAKER “SELLS FOR LHSS” and carries only sand them away! } ard reliable goods. Janet!” | erled, “Janet, don't you | know me?" | But as I staggered towards her | across the sloping, slippery deck | she swooned away, and I was only | Just in time to cateh her as she fell. (To be Continued.) THE QUAKER DRUG CO., 1013-1015 FIRST AVE, On the Basis} of Economy We recommend the use of a GAS RANGE and GAS WATER HEATER in your home. They eliminate the drudgery of kitches work and are always ready tr} use. Every household shoud) take advantage of the low price} and easy terms we offer on Gash Ranges now. Seattle Lighting Co. P.-1. Building, Fourth end Union. Phonss—Sunset, Bx 27; Ind, 75. The strain and struggie of busy Ife causes nine-tenthe of the dai- ty aches and paime and = kidney sufferings of humanity, | The busy ft ho work hard and rent little. wi think hard p Uitte—are those whe the kidneys most. ‘To overwork the kidneys ia to congeet and clog them—to dis- turband hinder them in their great work of filtering the blood. Duey men and women are toe opt to neglect sick Kidneys. In spite of aches ané pains and urt- bary Gleorders they go on ove working until the kidneys give! out ' There ts no middle road for the kidney sufferer. He must either! help and cure the kidneys, or go the downward course towards fa- tal diabetes and Bright's disease There is no standing still | Doan's Kidney Pills will We Carry the Most Complete Line Gas Stoves In the City Prices range from 65 to $6.00. We invite you to call and examine out) stock. Are quite sure we can please you in style and price. ERNST BROS. — 606 PIKE STREET cure there was trouble with the kidney | retions, which at times had a * Our al Offer for thi Months sealding nd burning sensation. Prices of Trunks are LOWER Hi] ectracting and examination. PRES. THAN EVER carry onlyfl| sinVeR FILLIN ce Doan's Kidney Pilis, procured at Stewart & Holmes Drug Co.'s store, promptly stopped ft, and, what is of considerably more consequence to | me, up to date there has not been | any Whenever I hear any one complaining about kidney troubles I never fail to tell them about Doan’s Kidney Pilla. T would be ant tay 6 woe ‘as - atch of diamoni not have done this had they not i | gefore you see cur diepiay in our my case brought about the results | window and our prices, marked FIRST ¢ 3 GOODS. recurrence Loan on Watches, Dia- monds and Jewelry. »p-to-date, skeitul dent> Reliable, 713 First 5. 3-4-6-6 Union blogs 4? MacDougall & Sow PHOTO SUPPLY CO.) °°" Be sure y PILLS Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, . Y Prop. to 12:30 pm 1, are in the right

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