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“pea't Worry, Wat gale of Chiffo ) t Attract B Fe PEPER Fars F7F EE. FF FF BUILDERS’ ‘Tat ws show you our line of hardware before you select for your house. We guarantee our goods as first quality and satisfac and our prices are as low as the lowest. GEO. WOODHOUSE Co. x WEEK—“TEN-VOTE CO CONTESTANTS SS me e more the merrier. i the sicgsn of the content Hh manager of The Star in two ways, _ fle Wants more votes for the pop- feachers of the state and he every Bfar reader to vote for teacher. fe Bot too late to enter candi- Select a teacher whom ts deserving of « free trip and a week's visit to the and Clark exposition jvete for her. Cut out the one- and get people who Teading The Star to sub- and every 25 cents you turn The Xow Store boards and Buffets oh Us Grow" Credit Each Week Will Do, nieres, Side- Crowds . new store has Been com- The two « a of aide an unusual figure priced the uyers, wht made here now, This $22.50 Quarter Sawed Solid Golden Oak Sideboard Fre e one sam- top 2ax4 h mirror 1x28; price $30.00; reduced $22.50 Hill ROWARE. UPON” ON SATURDAY—STAND- Watch for this special coupon. It will be printed for the first time next Saturday. Dent forget the day IMPORTANT NOTICE. Beginning Thursday each coupon | will bear the dete it wae published | lan. Each coupon must be turned in | within a week after it appeared. | “rhe standing of to date is Name. Mise A. Frances Nichols. . the contestants B subscription means 50 votes | Mise Lillian Metcalf. your favorite. Fifty cents | Miss McMillan . x Ballard 125 votes and 75 cents means | Mise Lou Chase Walla Walla $eles, and each additional 26 | Miss Bertha Johnson Interlake In@ans 15 votes more. | Miss Nellie Buckiey.. Central Mmeday was the red-ietter day | Mise Hawkins oo Green Lake Be Votes and Wednesday morning | Mise Fuller - . Walla Walla femany hundred more. Miss Nellie Gall. Dunlap [fhe Digest cain was by Miss | Mis a : “ Minor Pdekneon, Interiake school, | Mi* Alice Turner Longteliow rhe Pitan nit pectiion to | Ae Metts Armour... ...< ‘olumbia in one | Mise Peart Bacon..... Beacon Hii Buck! ot oie ee ‘ Bellard Nabbed of Mise H whkins, | Mies Grace Hal Cascade Lake. = Miss Maynard ike Everett SE 00 nigel mest ty tate ee , oe Bunker .., uth Park on every Saturday until the | wise De Hart nee oe slowes 2 mpecial coupon, | Miss Mabel Nettleton. ... Longtellow 10 votes, will be_printe: \ gies Condon. 00: «<a a anor ELLINGER ILL — “(Bpeciat to The Star.) ID, Ore., May 10.—Fed- C. B. Bellinger is seri- My Mi at his home in this efty been prostrated for several With grip. but complications Meet in, followed by septic pol Mines of Judge Bellinger will complicate the land fraud several days ago on a raid on the Chinese gambling games on Wash ington street, plead not guilty to a lcharge of being disorderly before | Police Judge Gordon Tuesday after noon, The cases were continued to Wednesday afternoon. All were released on cash bail of $25 shortly after the raid. C. R. Langan, of Minneapolis, ac companied by his wife and daugh- ters, are visiting relatives’ at the Hotel Stander. Mr. Langan is one of the best known conductors run- hing out of the Twin Cities The tax e of lands subject to auction by r which are y of hav- ‘GeBenator Mitchell and other | ine become delinquent in 1896 and are scheduled to be tried | 1897, will not take place until July ‘court. jor August, Treasurer’ Gormley Judge Beliinger’s {iiness| #tates that the extra work imposed fatal the trials would in all) >y the law requiring the amounts ity be delayed, and the} @Pd dates of the delinquencies to be Would have no little diffi- | siven, will necessitate the delay Pik maming his successor who| A Sunday's drive at Alki Point MO be free to prosecute as im-| terminated in an accMent that tn iy as Judge Reliinger. All| fured Mrs. Orin Rank, of thie city €€R jurists in the state have | and br 1 other members of the Affiliations with the indict-| party. The « became fright an ened and ran away, overturn “ the ine was appointed by|rig. Mra Ra ® suffering from a eveland in but ‘for| broken rib Years he has been of the The suit of I Negus against} lawyers west. He! M. Wilbur et ot $15,000, in be-| with f from |ing heard in J littam's court je at gus mues on o claim of personal nd since th os : leged te gp t allew wuf- Tn 1862 b a e4 by him thre * and was ° f th he ie Mate eireuit « 878 w ployed in skidding logs for| E a | PARIS, May 10—Mrs. John Hay Prisoner Jamon is |wite of secretary of state. Mme a victim arrived here morning. Mra Jaw, if th 4-| Hay in t h improved and t# ex Biven it by P mad pected in Paris within o few days. ‘a the jury whom | MANASSAS, Va, May 10.~-Vete crimes w jai. White rans of the Army of the Potomac, py ottend T horities | survivors of the memorable battles put away ft keeps. fought in this inity forty odd} Iatormation setting forth the years ago, gathered here today for | HB the case. will be the annual reunion of the Society of TE Chinese areste the Arm of the Potomac. in making ; well out, straight in front (see Fig. 1.) backs together, Lean well for ward and at the same time push the hands back to the sides and wel! be hind the body, as if pushing ax @ Weight. Do not let the hands p below the level of the ecibows making this sweep. If they can be kept nearly on a level with the shoulders the work is more benef celal . The chin will Moat up, the cheat will expand, and the whole body li feel the strain forward (Pig. 2) Take a deep breath every time the hands are brought back ward. Take the movement ten times, five standing on right foot and five on left When the muscles of the walst are weakened by incorrect carriage Or tight corsets, these muscles will have to be strengthened Try Fig. % Do the work care fully. The reason why so many fail to be benefited by physicial exercise is because they overdo it at tart. Work into the most difficult work gradually and the results will be surprising We get #0 interested the most of our faces that we forget our backs, There is more in a back than most of us dream of. If you don't believe it) study the backs of people and you will be convinced. There is the stiff back, the wob bly back, the fat back and the fat back. Then there are all kinds of Variations of these backs, and not one of them ts lovely No one can be graceful whose | back doean't move in harmony with the rest of the body. When a back is the right kind of a back, it is one of the most impressive parts of the body. There should be freedom of Movement across the shoulders and about the waist and cown into the hips Women often destroy the beauty of their backs by tight dressing Men frequently assume a stiff riage of the back, thinking that It shows dignity The swimming movements are helpful in lossening up the musele of the upper back. Throw the ight well forward onto the ball of the left foot, bal ancing the body by touching the toe | of the right foot. om the floor (Fig. 3) and let the (Pe Pee eee Pe eee eee ee THE LABOR DECISION eee ee ee eee eee + 2eeetee by the News paper Enterprise Association WE KNOW now that laws limiting hours of labor are unconstitutional. We know it because the supreme court of the United States has said it Tt i true that the decision rests upon a bare ma jority; five judges agree, four dissent Fifty-five per cent of the weight of opinion is on one side, 45 per cent on the other It is unfortunate that ment should be decided in this way mind does not rest securely on such a basis. many great national issues have been sett bare majoritic s of the supreme court IT INDICATES AN UNSTABLE RIUM IN NATIONAL POLITICS. The highest court in the land decides that no state has a constitutional right to pass a law or make a regulation restricting the hours of labor. It polds that the 14th amendment to the constitution which forbids the states “to de- prive any individual of life, liberty or property without due process of law,” ts violated by such an act. Every man, argues the court, ts entitied to make his own contracts to the number of hours he will work; to say that be shall not work more than 10 hours a day Is to abridge his liberty. it ts hardly ponsible to estimate the force of this argument on the basis of the brief reports thas far received. Laws restricting the number of hours of labor for women and children in factories and mines have long been in force. 1 am not aware that their constitu- tionality has been impugned by our bighest court. These laws rest, I supose, upon the police function of the state and are Intended for the preservation of health Evidently, the minority of the court thought It possible that this power might be extended to the regulation of the hours of adult male labor. But the main and of their dissent seems to be the belief that such matters are within the jurisdiction of the states and that the general government ought not to meddle with them. “Let the state alone,” says Judge Harlan, ‘in the management of its purely domestic affairs, so long as it does not appear beyond question that it has violated the federal constitution, This view necessarily results from toe principle that the wealth and safety of the people of a state are primarily for the state to rd and protect and are not a matter ordinarily of concern to the natlonal government.” Judge Harlan thinks that this Is a momentous decision; none more important, in his opinion, has been rendered in the last cen- tury. Inasmuch as he dissents, it is clear that to him {ts importance in derived from the injury which it will inflict. It sets up a firm | gal barrier against all attempts to regulate by law the hours of la- bor. The question that ts raised is that of the rights of the individual as against the welfare of society, Such a law does, to some extent, limit the right of the individual, but It does so with the purpose of promoting the general welfare. The belief is that the interests and perhaps the liberties of most individuals are protected by restrictions laid upon the conduct of some Individuals. To some extent, this is done, by law; to what extent it may be permitted is a serious prac- tleal question We have an ordinance in Columbus, 0., limiting the hours dur- ing which barber shops may be open. Ninety-five per cent of the barbers desire this restriction; it enlarges their liberty. It gives them their Sundays for rest. A few greedy fellows are opposed to it. If it were not for the law, they would keep their shops open all the while, and the others would be compelled to do so or lose business. The liberty of the 5 per cent is restricted that the liberty of the 95 per cent may be enjoyed. How far we may wisely go in this direc- tion, is the problem on which we need light I am inclined to agree with the minority of the court In the belief that this is a question which had much better be left to the legisla ture of the states. It canot be settled by academic or doctrinaire methods, It must be worked out by experience. It is desirable that different experiments be tried. It is not at all desirable that a unt- form rule upon such matter should be enforced throughout the Unit- ed States, If New York wishes to try the experiment of restricting the hours of labor, let it be done. Let us see howdt works. If it does prove to be a limitation upon freedom and not an extenston of freedom, the people of New York will find it out and repeal the law. The other states may learn wisdom through the experience of New York. Copyright, 1905, questions of such mo- The public Too by BEQUILIB ULADDEN DK the Place the palm of the right hand | Push the arms | right side of the body, from the hip paper $330. were the lo the down, rest on the ff Cross the eft foot forward the right th@h slowly lft the left arm. until 1H® tips of the fingers point straight upward, at the same time lift the boily, from the hips down, support ing its weight on the tips of the toes and the palm of the right hand r over MeGary notes were slightly damaged by the motrture. be IMPORTANT = MEETINGS TWO NOTABLE GATHERINGS | ARE 800N TO BE HELD AT/ | THE NATIONAL CAPITAL (Special to The Star.) HINGTON, May clation ee of T & meotin etttcern, called Wyman, of the rine hospital sions of th wide matter pertalr of the publi important ma a and to pre fe of range tection of the to be di food One eu drink eenary impure drinks. GOT NOTES BACK and| te against (Special to The Star.) MosC« v the Idaho “lt had Imper mount yt May 10. lo dealer, who the ant wir et from restaurant of $1,500 and the t of They of in where he k and bas rec dtnce vered the notes by ary an employ al Inu a waodpil of the building, Th rear as sawing wood but found. The h were missing. The wever, could not find somewhat substantiates $5 Down, $5 a Month % towing all it PARDON G-L Holmes Furniture Co: 101-1103-1105 SECOND AVE. “WE OFFER $20.00!” We old by tar wit « us, ne yet The Contest Our prise nce. g rer cmerd poem haw wer contain poem Monar are May ‘ testants mus ‘eside in Wash. ington weut of cade ne on the h Range Hterally t of 7.50 new 6 hole Monarch; second © prize, $10.00 and third, $5.00. this amount any Monarch.Range cver how long ed, This an @fer of long PERSON has ever taken advantage of it Why? Why the Moaarch the tewt? Ask any who 4 i” for y matter is NOT ONE is worn uses ome. There many she ar reasons probably won't know which to give you first Its polished top, which re quires no black ing; its blued tee body, malleable fron frame, patent duplex dam per and a score of other ive fea all com bine to make it the iM THE WORLD.”” “BEST anow Range. We @ your old @ne,al- worth as part payment on new. four of the immature victims ap- peared before Prosecuting Attorney Mackintosh Wednesday morning. Their names are H. Schaeffer, O. B. Baker, D. Bullet and I. Ivey. All are under the age of 18 years. Pros- ecuting Attorney Mackintosh is preparing a lengthy information to be filed in the superior court charg- Breathe deeply as the body is ris-| (he story that the thief was Jar ejected te Nhe Shit ing Schultz with erime. Through i epeat with the other side of a cook, who, when he lost the arrest of Albert Evans, on @ 4 dy. Try the movement once, |'# Job in the Imperial restaurant,| OLYMPIA, May 10.—Governor| charge of petty larceny from If the muscles of the waist, lege or | *UHt revenge by breaking into the | Mead yesterday denied « pardon for armaare tired with one trial let it ntil another day. Gradually p to 10 or 15 times for each aide Fig. 4 will strengthen the muscles of the waist and beck. For some GBOGIE |t is canter than the other ex lercise, If so, practice this until the muscles are sufficiently exercised to make the other possible without | fag ace down on the floor. Draw nde in until the palms are on or almost directly under the ‘This will raise the body slightly, Then, taking a full breath, lift the body slowly until the whole | weight is held by the hands and toe ipa, Repeat 10 or 15 times. Tal | thig movement slowly and increase j toe gradually the shoulders RED MEN OWN BREMERTON | (Specie! te The Star) | | BREMERTON, May 10.—This city i» thronged with delegates to |the eighth great sun council of the Improved Order of Redmen. As early as Monday evening the dele gates and their wives began pouring im, and all day yesterday they con- | tinued to come. The town Is taxed | to its utmost to furnish accommo- dations for the visitors, the private homes of residents being thrown open to accommodate the overflow from the hotels and boarding; bourses. Seventy-six tribes from the state of Washington and the Panhandle of Idaho, and the 14 councils of | | Pocahontas kindled their fires Mon day and Tuesday evenings, and the! reception committees been | kept busy arranging excursions and |* | sight-seeing expeditions for ‘the! |crowds, All day today the women | lof Bremerton have been showing | the visiting members about the | |navy yards and the points of in- terest about the bay. After the adjournment of the |counetl this afternoon the members | of the order will get together for the big potlach and clambake, which | is scheduled to take place from 6 to 9 p. m. at Evergreen park, and a | public ball at the Eagles’ hall will follow, Tomorrow the great coun ofl grill continue and the organiza~ of the council of Pocahontas, | excursions, will complete the ram nf re PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May 10.— |The Right Rev. Oxi William Whit- | aker, bishop of the Protestant Epis | cop! diocese of Pennsylvania, was 77 years old today, and the anniver sary was remembered by scores of his driends, both In and out of the |church, who sent him notes and) cards of congratulation. | | | j | | | Factory Sale Coats From $5 to $15 100 Skirts, original selling price $8.00 to $10.00; Factory sale Price +.... «es 95 Shirt Walsts and Shirt Waist Sults at Ve-pri 1207 2nd Ave. {oc Next to Stone Le Gaiks Hire, Fisher & Lane © urant and breaking up the fur niture and dishes. The robbery oc- urred the same night, and it is now wht that the destroying of the for the robbery. It where Gifford ts now At Ballard ! utenant Cushing Post and La in not dies of the G. A. R. will give open meeting and entertainment at Fra- ternal hall, corner Third and Wil- plees of the Epworth league of the Fremont Swedish Methodist church. Schultz has | custody Henry Craemer, of Seattle, who was| convicted of murder and sentenced | to penitentiary restaurant furniture was simply a/| been appealed to in Craemer's be blind known life imprisonm Fou halt. The governor also denied a par- don for Moses Druxinman, who serving two years in the King coun ty jail for receiving stolen goods. DR. SHULTZ ARRE cdrner of Kilbourne and Arora. will be given Thuréday evening, | tile at that place. May 13, at & o'clock Chief of Police Bennett. again been taken by the Ballard police and| is now an inmate of the local bas Schultz, evidence enough to warrant the arrest of the doctor was glean- ed. Evans confessed his own guilt, but implicated the complaining wit- ness against him in a crime whose enormity far exceeds the petty of- fense of the boy. WILL BE UP AGAIN ept in the state! ur governors have is The Moore-Gilman franchise will be taken up by the corporations committee again Wednesday after- ngon. Details in regard to the var- jous routes will be threshed out, and it is possible that some of the gen- eral provisions over which there are disagreements will be touched upon. Thursday the committee, together with the street committee, will take STED bert, Bellard. A splendid program| Im spite of the fact that a King/up the matter of granting the has been arranged. county jury failed to find Dr. F. Nesta Pacific .. aoe on own A. Schultz, of Ballard, guilty of an| Spokane avenue. A grand concert, under the aus-/ unnatural crime many months ago, ve —-+«—- SPECIAL RATE st via Northern Pacific. Only $75.10 to Winona Lake, Ind., and re- Accompanied byl turn. Tickets on sale May 12 only. of Ballard, Cail at N. P. Ticket Office. ose into RELIABLE GOODS ONLY. Extra Suit Sale One-Fourth Reduction Continued All This Week SilK Suits Wool Suits Mohair Suits Shirt Waist Suits ONE FOURTH OFF THIS INCLUDES EVERY LADIES’ SUIT INTHE STORE AND THE PRICES READ THIS WAY Regular $12.50 Regular $15.00 Regular $1 Regular $20.00 Regular $22.50 Regular $25.00 Regular $27.50 Regular $30.00 Regular $35.00 Regular $40.00 Reduced Reduced Reduced Reduced Reduced Reduced Reduced Reduced Reduced Reduced Suits, Suits, Suits, Suits, Suits, Suits, Suits, Suits, Suits, Suits, to ., to .. to .. »6 to .. to .. to .. to .. to .. to. me hn eee i a SPP ZRZRIEZ ONG Sue Tomorrow's Silk Specials ' Shantung, a handsome washable silk, in pongee color, sultable for ladies’ jackets and children’s coats; regular value $1.25 a yard, special at. 98¢ And be sure to see the new rough Bungalow Shantung Silk, 28 Inches wide, same finish and just Rajah; priced at, a yard. ~ 85a McCarthy Dry Goods Co. Second Ave. SCnm . and Madison St.