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' thin THe — ATTLE STAR BY. STAR PU BLIEHING Co. orritie tol and. Ini Beventh Avenve BVERY AFTERNOON BXCEPT SUNDAY. TELEPHONES Business Department Sunset, Main 9 @: BATTARD STAR AGENCY Doe cent per copy, six conte por w eek. or twenty five conte per mouth Gecttvered by mall or Garriere. NO free eoples > MAIL STRACRIBERS Independent 118 Ti Tatard ave Sunset, W The os iree te en the address label of each paper 2 one ton not again been paid tn ad A ehanae of date on the add \ Botered at the Postoffice at Heattl ¢ Washington, as eoond-clase matter, AD, UPS/CB-NAGLEYS DRUG CO, COR BRCOND AVENUR IKE STRE Want Ad Office at t one of affording. the, he WAN? r Building. BLACKWOOD, Ciicago Re presentattve, 1006 Hartfo New York Represen tative, 6% Tribune Rutlding See ST CIR CULATION. in This ts to certity that the DAILY AVERAGE BONA FIDB CIRCULATION of the SEATTLE STAR for the YEAR 1904 SEEDED 16.000 COPIES DAILY, and for the FIRST QUARTER OF 1905 (January, February and March), EXCEEDED 18,000 COPIES DAILY. ! ® F. CHASE, ———_——— mw W. PD WARD. General Manager. Subserthed In my presence and sworn to before me this Sré day @ April, A. D. 1905. A. J. TENNANT. Notary Public In and for State of Washingtom, residing at Seattle ————— KERR RRR ERR ih REAR RRA RRA ER RH THE STAR'S PLATFORM. The best news first, All the news that's fit to pel nt, All the news without fear or faver. Honesty In official and private lite. Municipal ewnership of public utilities. _ business district for reputable busin enterprisee. A gross earnings tax upon al! public service franchises, An up-to-date public schoo! system. lly rights for all; epecial privileges for none. Rigid Sanne of just, and repeal of unjust laws * SK SESE EEE ES *RSRAAES ERS eee An Iowa Boys Climb From messenger boy to manager That is the story of the upward climb of Mr, J. J. Welch ager at Des Motnes, of the Western Union Telegraph company. It is a story of ideals and effort Mr. Welch did not at first aspire to be a manager of a big tele graph business. He hoped only to be an operator, man- And so in pursuance of his ambition he smuggled an olf key Sounder into the attic of his village home and began to praction, While other boys of the Iowa village slept, Welch pounded away at the key. He mastered the code and became an adept at sending messages Then he applied for & place. The man laughed at him. Ho waa only a messenger boy and he was very young. The man did not now he had a man’s ability. But the eager boy watched for hin chanca It came one night when he was left in charge at the station while the night operator went to a dance A wreck occurred on the road, and the operators at headquarters rather wondered at the sharp, quick touch and snap- py style of the sender at the Pella end of the live. The story leaked out and Weich got a station. ‘Then his ideal was hoisted 4 bit. He wanted to be more than ap operator at a dinky railroad station. He was soon ready for prome- tion and got it He was sent to Chicago and Boston and elsewhere and made good wherever he went. Ho did more and better work and quicker work than was expectod of him. There was only one thing to do with Welch—promote him. And there is no donbt this lowa boy now has his eye on some thing better. Hoe will wet it. ‘ His story is not unvewal. It ts the common story of well direc¢- @@ ambition and effort. The only way to win suvcem ix to deserve it. Art and Heart Art ia @ great thing. Heart is a greater thing. Art without heart is art robbed of its highest power. For the best of art—pardon the apparent parodox—is a peas, A prayer that is a work of art sounds finely. It tick.es the crit- feal. It ravishes the ears of the groundlings. But it reaches neither the throne of Heaven nor the heart of the hearer. Its accents fall utheeded on the soul of the sorrow stricken. A poem that is a work of arrt only gives pleasure of rhyme and fythm. But it lacks the touch of nature that makes the whole world Rin. It does not linger in the hearts of men and women. The music that beats and swells in unison and in harmony gives @elight for the moment. But if there is in it no heart throb of feel- ing the memory bf it dies away with the measure. It abides not. ‘The painting may please by its beauty. It may be true in concep- tion and faultless ig exeeution. But if it Goes not appeal, if it doses not inspire, if there fg In It no heart message, it soon fades from the memory. ‘The orator maye amuse or entertain or Instruct. But if he would Move men to action, if he would sway them and thrill them, bis own heart must be afire. Behind his speech must be the moving impulse. Art for art's sake may be of use, but the noblest art—the art that does things—is the art with heart In L oo The Big School The Thorough School You know of our past work Well, we are not resting on our oars. Wilson’s Modern Business College Collins Bidg. James and Second Phones, Main 416; A 416. SECOND AVENUE, en © feors SECOND AVENUR, JUST ABOVE The Fair ne oto SATURDAY SPECIAL-——Slightly damaged Comforts, ‘worth from $1.25 to $2.00; tomorrow, Thursday, 75e each. Remember you can do better at The Fair. Department Store ONE DOLLAR A WEEK WILL PAY FOR A SUIT, A JACKET, A HAT, OR WHATEVER YOU NEED TO MAKE YOUR SUMMER ATTIRE COMPLETE, GOOD GOODS, HONEST PRICES, TERMS THAT SUIT. Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. 422-424 PIKE STREET, COR. FIFTH EATTLE’S RELIABLE CREDIT HOUSE.” eee eee ta ee eee ee eevee ee wee YE EM p-ReRRARASE SKLAR SALRALE ERLE RERRISES 1. I would be a madman to it. Therefore my accident! 1 would have defied the devil him- | self to hav ognized me from a| wounded bully ef the Latin quarter; for bandages surrounded my bead concealing even my hair, a bandage covered my chin, and my nose was & horrible sight to behold, being crossed four times with strips of court plaster | Napoleon aad Tallyrand came to | viait me in the evening. When the | emperor caught aight of my face he first anxiously inguired Uf my io jaries were serious; then, being re- assured, roared with laughter at the figure I cut. While |, pretending violent indignation, stamped and wwore at him, apparently quite for getting myself. But the emperor | was too amused to reprove mo for some th indeed. until he remem- bered that he had business and then be was stera on the instant His change of front was so ab- rapt and so complete that, although | my Tage was mere amumption, | was completely diseoncerted He had revoliected that he was emper- or, and that bis mirth bad given op- At bis frown I stammered and was silent. His eyes punished and febastised me with more directness than a devised and brutal speech. The silence was become intolera- | ble, when Talleyrand in his slow oily accents, spoke: “It is fortunate, | sire, that monsiea) fajuries are | not more serious, sald, and his | thought was that of @ true courtier | who wishes to break up an unpleas ant situation. I felt for bim a sentiment of al most gratitude. ‘The emperor re moved his glance from me aad took | ja chair, It is easy to be sean that you | have resided for some time in Bng- | land,” he observed with a sneer. It was fashionable at taat time for Frenchmen to pretend that Bngtieh gentlemen possessed the manners of doors, the habits of pigs T felt a flush of rage rise In my cheeks, and meditated an angry r= tort, but a glance from the minister restrained me, “It has not been al- together my fault, sire,” I returned, purposely giving the words am- bgnous emphasis. Napoleon shrugged his shoulders. | “Taliyrand baa suffered a similar | misfortune,” he remarked, “and af-| fects to know these Engiteh thoroughly, For that reason I have | brought him here to compare notes | with you before me. I should like | to hear your opinion of the English | ministers. We have airendy ex- pended large same in feeding their | rapaciousness, we should be now as- sured of the adherence of some, at } least, to our cause, but it is other- wise, with no exception, for Lord | Melville, our mainstay, is no longer fa offic “Else, murmured Tallyrand, | “their enemies would have long ago | exposed their ignorance and corrup tion; besides, they are too well paid | to be rogues.” “And yet they take our money greedily,” cried Napoleon. | | Ho watched me keenly 'e have | been informed,” he amy lowly “that a large portion of the popula | tion, including some of the leading | members of the opposition itself, 1s | only awaiting an opportunity to/ compass & revolution and erect a re- | public upon the ruins of destroyed | monarchy.” | “In all countries, sire.” I repli | cautiously, “disappointed ambition. | empty purses, hungry stomachs, are i |terrible incitements to declaim | | against courts, to plan reforms, to} plot revolutions. The levelers of| | England, I believe, sire, are your! allies, and eager to welcome the aid | your coming offers to their | schemes.” } | "My very words, sire!” cried Tal- | lyrand, excitedly | | But the opposition itself, what j real assistance would they be to us | when the time comes?” demanded | the emperor. They have no present hope of office,” I replied; “they will harass and hamper the government at | every step. What greater service could they render?” { Napoleon was, I think, well pleased, but he voldly turned to Tallyrand. “That is not your | opinion, monseigneur?” Sword iiielaid’ Copyright by the R. F. Fenne Compa ny. rand opera winger, has boen grantaa a | THE MAKINOS OF A COLLEGE { divoree. her husband cash and notes worth searty $2,900 [a skyscraper church THE SEATTLE hehe a eA 2% 1905. and Liquotone—like an excess of We pald $100,000 for the American fs deadly to vogetal mat rights to Liquozone; the highest} oxygen price ever paid for similar rights on | ter Any scientific discovery. We did} There lies the great value of Liq this after testing the product for|vozona It is the only way known two years, through physicians and|to kill germs in the body without | hospitals, in this country and oth-|killing the tissues, too, Any K ors, We cured all kinds of germ | that kills germs in a potson, « it diseases with it—thousands of the|cannot be taken Internally. Me BY AMBROSE PRATT. WePaid$100.000} For Liquozone, Yet We Give You ao 50c Bottle Free Al) Pecaace ¢ n with fover inflae & ~ ‘cone Simm é 4 “300. Bottle Free | It yo me, and b | | retary Morton’s position as @ cab- inet officer is a delicate one. And there are others that say it’s an/ | indelicate one. O’*KEEFE VS. FITSGERALD INDIANAPOLAS, Ind, May 29.— Jack O'Keefe, of Chicago, ana W! Fitzgerald, of Brooklyn, in a round bout is the magnet that wil | @raw the Indianapolis Athiettc club | | patrons to the euditorium tonight The two are regarded as among the | best lightweights in the country and las both appear in excelient condi- tion, the contest is expected to be a lively one from the time the gong * STAR DUST from Burton, Kansas’ convicted United States senator, This cught to give you some idea of how clever the Chicago thieves are. A WORD FROM JOSH wisp. we We gea'rally speak of our own failures an’ some other | fel ler’s successes ue ac- | THE JURY “Who pays the freight tn this country? demanded the excited orator. “That's the question I want some of you men to answer.” “Never mind about who pays the freight.” eried out the deep student of events aod conditionn, “Who pays the rebates?” cldents. Por Infants and Children. fhe Kind You Have Always Margvertie Lemon, the Marguerite had soared op bor. ‘The pastor of Jotm D. Rockufet- Chiexgo Ubleves stole a grip, some | ler's Cleveland church has plauned That nitn- A clerk inthe Equitable Life is accused of stealing $27,000 from THE OUTLET CLOTHING CO “Suit? for the Lawyer “Case” for the Doctor A“Call” torthe Minister AND GENTLEMEN ALL THE OUTLET CLOTHING COMPANY will offer five hundred Prince Albert Coats and Vests at the most remarkable prices ever known. These are made of Black Clay Worsted, guaranteed 22-ounce goods, perfectly tailored. The Coats and verte And Also—Gentlemen’s Frock Suits, come well tor have also marked down the balance Thene re originally in e250 We tended t $20.00 a by the | of the Suits bought from the Outlet. in vests and pante of the same material, ancient and honorable Outlet. Clothing are of fancy worsteds, tweeds and cassi- | made to sell for and really worth $25.00. On Buying their stock we gob theo to sell to- | meres, ingle or double breasted styles. fog. morrow only at Prices are cut as follows ° sale Raturiey a or Suite For Suits For worth worth Suite worth ¢ $12 and | $18 to | “ $14 — |S $20 | $22.60 ~ It must be remembered that such prices would never be possible under ordinary circumstances. We bought The Outlet’s entire stock un- der price in order to secur location. That's why we can soll it for less than it's really worth and still make a little money. Children’s Suits are going for leasthan half. Men's white and fancy vests for less than wholesale cost. ta third to a half off. Sale not going ta last much longer. All manner of Hats, Shoes and Furnishings Square deal for every man. The Outlet Clothing Co Cor. Occidental Ave. and Washington St. CASTORIA TY Bougit | Celt most difficult cases obtainable, We | cine t# almost helpless in any germ coupon = mall Soa 3 ————— proved that in germ troubles It al-| disease It fs thie fact that gives order on 4 | sist for aa “But it fs, aire,” reterned (HBR pwooor. “I think, wiré, that your] Ways accomplishes what medteine | Liquozone ite worth to bumanity. | gize bottle, “ar will pay n . inter, sharply, “It is true that 1,ve-| ministers will soon be set a tagk | cannot do, Now we ask you to try| And that worth is so great that we | druggist our for it. This ig ; eve the opposition only want] still more difficult.” it-—try It at our expense have spent over one million dollars | our free gift te to convinee yous ; | places and pensions to b “8 “And that?” with undisguised im- | We 4id; seo what it doos. to supply the first ~~ sole © | to show you what - MIGHT poison | loyal subjects as the ministers, but | patience. will use it always, as we do, Bad as each aick one we learned of. | what it can him, that is, ad-| the government iw tenacious and 1 bowed again. “To devise a fit millions of others do. on felf, please, ace winister to him | powerful, and in default of reallzing| ting tile, wire, wherewith to name | It, not only to get well, but to keep Germ Diseases |placea you v no obiigatiog ; ome drug which | thelr hopes the opposition can be| the master éf the universe. ‘Bm-| Well. And tt will wave nearly all of) oy oe the Known germ dis- | Whatever ' would delay him | reckoned as our friends,” —_ will one day grow too small | Your sickness eases, All that medicine can do for) 149% ate 50c and $1 on the read, On “Qood!" said the emperor, rub-| and Inexpenaiy Shemp dvoubles 6 to help Satere the road he must.| bing his palms together with @ges-| Napoleon was vain, vain. reaw| Mills Inside Germs lovercome the germa, pe ie gen CUT ; be stopped some-| ture of much satisfaction, “Good! |th his mien then—written on his! riguorone i» not made by com-| sults are Indirect and uncertais UT OUT out THIS COUPON how, by —fair| then uF money in not all wagted.”"| trembling lips, which he bit to com-| pounding drugs, nor ie there alco- | Liquozone attacks the germs, wher for t means or foul “We shall get {t back again with} trol, painted in his eyes which hel hot im it. Its virtues are derived |ever they are. And when the germs oe, Fol op r That was neces-| interest,” murmured Tallyramd, | averted to avoid my glance—vantty | solely from gas—largely oxygen gas | Which cause a disease are destroyed 4 Fok aoe Liquonome ary Well, it | “Sngland ts a rich land, site; obly| of Vanities, and in my heart I by & process requiring immense |the disease must end, and forever. Chic Ses abash Avenue, 4 must be a drug, fools and men of genius do not| mocked him forthe weakness [ had| gpparatua and 14 days’ time. This | That is inevitable. What drug? Tknew the effects thrive ther at length discovered in a man other | process has, for more than 20 years, | Aw Hay Fever Influensa |} ™] erere te ooo ces +s of jalap. Jalap, besides, is basily “A nation of shopkeepers,” said| wise of tron He turned from me] been the constant subject of sclentl- | A> Anaemia Kidney Diseases eine, tak O poecent ak procurable, Jalap ts must be, well | Napoleon, “but before long we) abruptly,, discourteously, and strode! tic and chemical research. = oe ane, 2 will Caan and good, I dismilased the subject | shall change all that, What think/from the room, as {f in great dis The result is a Liquid that dow bles tt i with a shrug. you, monsiegneur! pleasure at the flattery; but I did| what oxygen does. It is a nerve! / od aria Fepur ‘4 a) eee That afternoon I had a nasty ac I think, sire,” I answered grave-| not need Tallyrand’s half-eavious| food and blood tood-—the most help- | Con ge Oo ooh Err cident I tripped on the carpet; ly, “that you have set yourself a| smile to be assured that none the| ful thing in the world to you. Ite! © Plevrisy—Quinay, while talking to y lackey, fell face | task worthy of your genius.” leas 1 had struck home and stood in | effects are exhilarating, vitalizing, fibeumatian ive tet eddie ceragstaseane downwards on the floor and gashed But your opinion, count, of the|the emperor's highest favor. 1|\purtfying. Yot it is a germicide #0 | Dysantery-—Diarrhon Bhin Pigeasen war ee my head badly from chin to tem-| Issue! cried the emperor, tartly,| gained sweet hope that moment that | eertaia that we publish on every | Pandrulf-Dropsy fromach Troubles pee ple, Then, again, in shaving I gave | rising a spoke | I was safe and sure to be in Bug-||bottle an offer of $1,000 for a dis-| Reetma tooreut ile jmy an ugly cut. Truly my/ I bowed low and ently, | land soon, jeune germ that it cannot kill. The| } } Atones Dumore— Ulcers Any physic + hompital j ne ust have been in a k- | veritable courtier, mmiling in order i peasen la that germs aro vegetables; | Gore oo tase | White stecasen, | nk wul be gladigt | ing of disorder. But the fact|to repress a dangerous desire to (To be Continued) lapis is I had t reflecting and my rea fs = son informed me that, having so} : ister displays a fine sense of the, the company. The fact that he is) COVE-JOHNGON TONIGHT | far escaped detection. | should have | @ternal fitness of things not a director lends interest to the} The 20-row: it which t© to be the same good fortune right a ane | case | held in Taroma Monday evening hy. the line. No, 1 decided that ~ | tween Bobby Johneon and Paney cle like that could not be often re A western newspaper says Sec-| Cove ia expe neteg to be one of the bent ne The n pounds, in ty for some time, n will weigh “in os im a cn Modern Woodmen of Amerisa The Northern Pactfic has 1 for round trip rate of $60.10 tp Milwaukee and return. Tickets oq sale June 16th and 16th, cores Bpecial Rate East via Northern Pacific to Mih Ws, and return. Tickets on mal ae 16th and 26th only, Pip 69.7 —_. THE NORTHERN PACIFIC will change tts schedule of tradnseg June @th Leok out changes and additional trang ¢@ The QUAKER DRUG ©, 1013-1055 FIRST AVE FACTORY SALE 100 Skirts, original selling price $8.00 to $10.00; Factory sale Shirt Watsts and Shirt Waist Suits at %-price. Nee The Real Good Ones At the Reliable Family Store the prices are cut, selling— Dr, Buck's Liver Salt, for Indl gestion, gives quick relief, Se size at 500 Dr. Buck's 400, at Ab ares C snatipatios Dr. Zemwatt's Kola Nerve ‘Pabs lets, 50¢, at . .25e 1207 tnd Ave Next to Stone Fisher & Lane C enstipat on Cure, 25e lutely Cures Nervous Troubles. Dr. Buck's Kidne 1 Backache Pills, for Kidney and Bladder Troubles, 60, at a5e he Powders. .25¢ t we Irug wants; deliver the goods promptly. Stone 5) PIKE ST, PHARMACY f Family and Presert> tion Druggists, 419 PIKE STREET. Both Phones, Main 933