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

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i | gee THE SEATTLE STAR Y_STAR PD RLIGHING Co. ‘ n OFPFICES—i90) and 18) Beventh Avenue RBVERY AFTERNOON BXCHPT SUNDAY, THLEPHONNS Bustnees Department—Sunset, Main 196; Independent tas eg BALLARD STAR AGI Gatland uve. Sunes, Ned la ‘One cent per copy, six y week, of twenty-five cents per month ivered by mall or “FO MAL wm thy ddr expires f your subsortp o From the liek sUBACK label is & recelpt Washington COR BROOND AVENUM Beattl « n ae econd-claan matter, b. OF rice-sMaAGLeY@ DRUG Co. AL anp Pika STRERT. nm Ad recently been opened) ef afford to leave want — x" BW. BLACKWOOD, Chicago F esentative, 1006 Hartford Building. W. PD. WARD, Now Yobk Ropresen tative, 62: Tribune Nullding —— HONEST CIR CULATION, ‘This ts to certify that the DAILY AVERAGE BONA rips CIRCULATION of the SEATTLE STAR for the YFAR 1904 EX- CREDED 16.000 COPIBS DAILY, and for the FIRST QUARTER OF 1905 (January, February and March), EXCEEDED 18,000 COPIES DAILY. B F. CHASE, os Subseribed In my presence sworn to before me this 3rd day iN, ef April, A. D. 1905. 4.2. 7 Notary Public in and for State of Washington, resid! General Manager, RRR RRR RRR RRR RR RR Re THE STAR'S PLATFORM, The best news first All th that's fit to pri nt. Municipal ownership of public utilit 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 privileg Rigid enforcement of just, and rep for none, of unjust laws. SH ASR EE DER eee ee ee ee | fi Real Feminine Aristocracy ors of One of the lead the east In di ntrast Between the “thousands of women studying se « een” and “swearing and cigaret smoking women tn f says that the former are “the real nine aristocracy of Ame a No one will qu the superiority of the = © student sover the swearing ! cigaret smoking woman. But is re not an implication in th nat as the “real ine of the aristocracy Th which a“ is no quar > pick with t ‘ an ali right and the more of them there are the better off the « will be. But what of those that do not have the opportunity that comes fo the college woman? Can they, do they, have no place in the “real feminine aristocracy of America?” What of the girl who struggles against adversity ng her col “Jege years and in spite of obstacles makes her life a livid ing, positive force for good in the community of-which she is a par What of the woman, without colle; fon, who has dev tod her whole time to the matchless task of making a home and to the labors of love which are inseparably connected with the home life? What of the woman who rejoices in the sacrifice which can take in the service of her Mhildren and Is cont with seeing th honorable and faithful men and women who a ying thelr part in the world’s work? This is the season when the college student and the graduate hold a conspicuous place in the thoughts of the country. that there should be rejoicing because of academic a Tet this rejoicing be tempered with reason. There ar that are full of regret because they could not do what these others have done—hearts that are just as brave and true and worthy of ad miration as are these others. They are willing to bear their share of the burdens of our common life. They will bear them unflinchingly and successfully. They will make their lives count and the world will be better because of what they do. Their circle of influence may not be so large as that of their college-trained sisters, but the Ateelf is just as wholesome and inspiring. A Chance For the Children Tt ts right ° But influence . Mr, John Monaghan, of the Bronx—it is a homely enough name ef « plain man, But it stands asa milestone on the way of true phil- anthropy. If President Roosevelt were In the knighting business it is a pret- ty safe guess that about the first person to get into favor with the fiest man of the land when he returns from the west would be Mr, @obn Monaghan, of the Bronx. 4 The gentleman of the Bronx owns three apartment houses, ts building two more and intends not to stop until he has 18 in all, and no flat will be rented to a family without children. It ia not bis endeavor to populate the Br It Is his hope to remedy a crying wrong He says: “It may be a queer thing for a landlord to invite families with ‘thildren into his houses, but that’s what I am doing. Why, I have geen so much suffering from this inhoman prohi agrinst chil ren in apartments that I think it is time for someone to take a hand in the matter.” Perhaps Mr. Monaghan is too modest to real is a great philanthropist. All the more honor to him! ‘The world today gives cold welcome to babies. Landlords prefer to let houses and flate to families with no children to annoy the neighbors and do damage to the property. The applicant for a place as rd, janitor, coachman, or any of a dozen other places of a domestic service may be allowed to have | & wife and perhaps bring her with him for service, | doors will not swing open for servants’ children. “he poor widow who ts forced to go out and make the living for * herself and little ones finds them a deadly , she turns. Every day, parents who love their children aa dearly as the rich Jove their own are forced by harsh necessity to place them in Institu- tlons or desert them, and when the cause is sifted to the bottom the fault ts found to be less with the parents than with the senseless and heartless customs and conditions put upon them by those who easily could, if the would, change It all. And while the children of the city’s poor are being fatally etiminated against, the children of the city’s rich are being eliminat- €4. The decrees of high society render it convenient and unfashion- able to have children, and most of the great mansions them not. Yet all the world knows that babies are to the home what sun- shine Is to the fields—its light and life. Mr. Monaghan, of the Bronx, wants to do the square thing—give the children a chance, And the fact that none of his three apartment houses been an hour without a good tenant indicates that the square thing may be @ good busines principle. eel “The minister of the interior has prohibited the publication of the Russ for one month.”—St. Petersburg dispatch. We had noticed the absence of the Russ from table. but the mahogany imeumberance wherever know has ever our exchange ——_—___——_ If President Roosevelt doesn’t ease off on Chinese exclusion act enforcement, he is in danger of losing the entire chop suey vote. Another thing—China may boycott our canton flannel ——— Gentleman named M. Huret, from Paris, ing house cattle killing to a field of carnage. Huret, and see a football game. OO Germany and France put up a dandy scrap last time, and may moet again before the club offer ing the largest —_——_— ms -siaueti Japan has $80,000,000 TO HE R credit in New York banks, This aught to make Hetty Green with envy. OR IE IC 00 9 IE Ve If you want to sce it exemplifiea—if you want to see upwards of 200 students— above the average etr ‘ae for the battle of life— likens America Huh! Stay over, M. ¢ eee ee | berg, were guests of Wooster rela |state of Holmes county, but physie- | lally looks sort | weighing only 199 | evidently | before the war?” pack- | longa" -|form a pool to take my new com |hold that 2 THE SEATTLE ot ¥ sign he is @ Arman an Cornelius Daly, veteran of ib r an examination, la ne Birth rate In Now York elty 3,000 per t 6 1 off inte bay yot ule, Ww DIVORCE A REFUGE BY SUSAN B, ANTHONY, , u y Pr t a W ‘ J can think of no strong a8 my opinion on I have previously of brutal husbands may fle brutal masters once fled to t beyond that “land of the them im bondage of body prie ts and p y that may be mach or who wo and ld | af wi ed wll, n going wee tm Which than 6 re that the b w) wiv » slaves of| ome of Uyerty whilelt “held soul, The take, this refuge from the victims of slave riage had their prototypes in the overs and officers of the law who followed (¥W sinv of ante-bellum days to the very borders of Canada and drag them back to servitude and misery y infamous laws af the orthern ta which permitted thia outrage | against humanity find thel nterpart In the| one of hurch which. bar forever the | © of escape from those who would from * STAR--MONDAY JULY 3 r 9! TODAY AND “TOMORROW leg relved in wedlock od pr ? Of course It may The r tt aw nm the statute ften are perverted from th x and made to serve unworthy purposes hail we therefore h all those laws? NoNo; rather that we safeguard | them as far as possible from misuse and strengthen other lawa which bea n them In order to do thia with the divorce statutes, we must revise thone om mea age. So long rmit in various states the jegal age of neent for a girl to be from 12 to 15 years (In Tor 14 for a boy ar ther states f to 18), are we not morally bound to pro FREY BOATS Lt ATLAN vid » means by which they mayes the consequences of their BERRIF BE FOUR yout folly? So long as it remains th neo that there one no ary rt mn marr except neither he con tractir tes me be legally we to another, are we not 1 f society, to hay remedy at har by wh ous results may in & measu unteracted? yrewent sitnation where the insane, the idiotic, the optl | ards, the “1 and the viclous may freely intermarry and | ‘ cir kind, is too enormous for discussion in this brief | on 2 ge ; tion 1 é‘ t ke f Even for those who are normal, there should be some safe guard ech Heathaaa ne one ing most m a8 action, but on the contrary, thi places n tl mplest business contract. In s | be a written agreement; many require no license or | none jemands @ previous anouncement, and church while | not authority, legal or ecclesiastical, asks for any proof of the moral, mental, physical or financial fitness of the parents who are to | marry 1 out of this maelstrom of accidents, society expects suc coastul and fect marriages! It is a ma: ent tribute to human- | ity, and to the marriage relation itself, that so fow divorces are asked | for No one class ta #0 responsible for these evils as the clergy them . selves. The vast majority of marriages are performed by them and Terma, & the cases are rare whe ey make any inquiries as to applicanta m 90.bew or refuse to perform the ceremony. Of late years there has been a - es flurry of reform on the part of @ few to the extent of refusing to fap 608 cnet marry divorced persons, but this fs the most superficial and ineffictent Washingt ¢ a en yring your family, « What an absurdity, yea, what a crime, to refuse to marry a mat pce ete hee who has been 4 oreed and then, pure woman who has lived a life of immorality and intemperance! Or to decline to the ceremony for a divorced woman and then, without a qualm bind In wedlock one who is a child in noticed that, almo: t exception, the of the unfit ° s 5 5 . which come before parts for ansulmen’ peon performed by reputable ministers. COME TODAY COME TODAY 1 have-no sympathy what with the cry which has been ralsed in recent years by tho clergy and their narrow-minded following among men and women, that there shall be no divorce except for-adul — try. While I regard that as the unpardonable sin, there are others ~ Cut Rate Dentist UE agi we oasis =- THE WORLD cour cogniae the same causes of sree for a man as fof pi wo dentists. We have the lar "| dern and best equipped man, yet, as wives are divorces, Mis ac riage with an habitual drunkard. wife shal malreats ber I naturally cons! mtinue to live Nor can I see he ly deserted her. cases, They are legitimate, ratic be removed from the statute books without a der them mo me against herself and her children for a wife I hold it « sin to with a husband who beats the w i benefited by refusing her a divorce when her husband has permanent hese are the causes alleged for divorce ‘Those members of the clergy, and « demand for no divorce, or for recogn eval in spirit and wholly out of touch with the broad, humane tenden cles of modern thought. ally fe, her ch and just and not one hers who unite sing only question one ¢ to be petitioners in at least three-fourthe pf the 1 ma! tren of th of them ever will be. with ¢ ause tenths t to a t FRER | HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE EXCURSION ATLANTIC CITY ADDITION TO MERCER ISLAND PARK AND FREE ICE CREAM AND LEMONADE ok LOM LD, We Run Another Free rr OM THIS SIDE OF LAKF A RETURN FREE THE rwoO ACRES OF ADIO RIPE RASPS] MAT FRE, ATLANTIC CITY ADDITIC level land, all EXCURSIONS. » nthe car line; mi is now open for inapesgel parked with new six-foot sidewal FOR CHOICE OF THEM y FREP wht laice. ¢ ft t right Into $50» $75 h the TWO HUNDRED HOUSES WILL BE BUILT THIS YEAR r who live at Green Lake and Hillman City don’t have to be told twice how I bufid up my adeg yme of these lake front lota, as they are the last a 4 ¢ right on the lake front and S-cent capil hon Ind w will sell for $500 each before two years. Lots I sold at Green Lake two no con ut today and get your pick, as this is my last addition before retiring from bunir City, Only B-cent car fare, This is the best lake front addition ever put on the market. ( m wner and have thous ars in the National Bank of Commerce to build up my s4ditiong rt money quickly. Fifty salesmen today to show you around. Come and stroll along the party 1CE CREAM at my expense. If you » buy, come anyway and see the lake front, intain that of nem sti ed in the are medi eettne MORE GLADDENS NEEDED. Editor Star:—I admire the arti- cles of Dr. Gladden in “The Star.” What we need is more Roosevelts and Folks, politically, and Gladdens in our pulpita, If the working peo- ple saw, and rd, more men of the Gladden stamp in the pulpits, » STAR DUST SREP REE EERE ERR RRR ee | EDITORIALS BY STAR READERS SERRE EERE EERE ER Re | the churehes would not be long ad | filling. God send the tt Intert merey are hurled ——— JO® 18 SHRIN Joa, Jones and wife NKING. of Millers- tives on Wednesday, and were cor dially greeted by many friends. Joe, | the clever gentleman, is prospering | well in that good old town in the} of shriveled § up,/ pounds. — Woos- ter (O.) Democrat. nperor William sent that in case of war peace would be signed in Parts. Bill determin: that if y must go to the expense of shall have a little fun out It in said F word to Franc A WORD FROM JOSH WISE. All th’ world loves a winner, much!" “And now,” he was piace me wh said the minister at finishing “The Washingtons!” en the min al thunderbolts of justice and | defiantly pulptts over this broad land against the national bloodsuckers. HONOR BRIGHT. from (Copyright, 19 BY CHAPTER VII m the Newspaper Fn: THE NUMBERS OF THE MISSING | NOTES. | On the wharf at Queen | Loide secured a position whe jeenled himself, he « Uner, Hours seemed to drag by. At last the tender put off with the mails nd re od the steamer's The bags were handed on board, the last/and presently he made out a wake of foam from the blades of the piped out a/steamer's crew. The tender had small boy who watched the per |turned and was coming back. There centage table. HAPPY FAC “Are Russia and France on tho| hoard of directors rat they were the corre same friendly terms t asked replied the great | man, “We are attach-| “1 to Russia by the strongest The French stat same,” Then he went out to see how they were quoted on the stock exchange. “What have you got on hand now?" asked the broker. “Just at present I'm trying to pany’s stock,” “Hugh! replied the promoter Well, it'll take a pool to stock—It's watered REMOVAL NOTICE! #0 enue and Marion teria! and workmanship, Alki Natatorium. mer in attendane MODERN DENTAL PARLORS PHONE, MAIN 6190 Have removed from Second avenue and Pike street to Second av- street, Mariva Bullding. Our prices are the very lowest consistent with first class ma- Modern Dental Parlors Second Ave. and Marion St. MARION BUILDING An @: SULTY | was no excitement | |dark—as he had loft it | He made shirt, clothi |weuttle Into a pare | while |der London bridge. What did it mean? That he could not solid fact was existent been foul play Jome one had the r rte. a fathom Ultimately Loide reached London, and let himself into bis office after nd wig. Jand all the coal he had in his office 1, and after the parcel was making a hole for itself in the soft mud un- a short of The disguise was disposed and Richard was himself again | An aggravated, very much upset] |Richard, He had committed actual | murder, and was not a penny the [richer for it But Loide no long imagined BURFORD DELANNOY, {feet in alarm. those crisp Bank of England notes | cumstances he would have probed | school a gain of 50 per cent in | He did not belleve they were even] He thought of his own disguise; = Twelve-year guarantes on the ship. That towel removed jhow he had so changed his own ap- Lady attendants Jand a tragic story stared him in the} pearance that he had not known Hours—8:30 to Sundays, 9 face himself In the mirror. | to 12, Both phones, 5. 30 She. BGe and 1.00 work guarantecd Hours $s pm. oOHIo PAINCESS DENTISTS, 307-1-2 Pike Sreett, Cor, Third Ave. MOVES The trend of modern improve ment is along the lines of ec my of time, labor and money. A Gas Range and Gas Water Heaters Give the maximum of efficiency, wey th ten- dental offices uarantecd W a and get # t cone cost, labor and attention. Ranges Sold on Easy Pa Seattle , Ligation Co. P.-L. Bullding. Fo erth and Union. Phones--Sunset, Ex. 27; Ind., Bx. 76. PIANOS - We sell better Pianos at lower prices and on easier payments than any other house in the city, ——— prise Assoctation.) KOHLER & CHASE, C. A. Meyer, Mgr. 1305 Second Avenue. deceived? Suppore be had been Suppose had not handed the| money over to the real George De~| pew? He broke into a cold sweat at the mere °d He 12membered how exceedingly lax he had b because Depew had frightened him. | The American had seen through the frauds on his aunt, and practi cally taxed the lawyer with them Had he chosen, he could have made him disgorge all those gains of years | Why had he not? If the real, | genuine nephew, why had he not, | On Easy Terms $1.00 a Week Eastern Outfitting Co. 422-424 PIKE STREET, COR. FIFTH with his suspicions aroused, insist- | ed on an inepection of the back ac- counts? What if a real Geo. Depew appeared on the scene and demand- ed that which was his? The lawyer called to mind how| meager had been the identification. | He remembered that, frightened as he had been he had accepted a tificate of birth, and some envelopes directed Depew in America, as | onfirmation that he was the real ma For that the lawyer would never | forgive himself. In ordinary cir- ere to ‘The school census has | showing 14,425 of TACOMA been complete Why should not Depew have done 143) SECOND AV: One} there hadi x | He re had prevented his looking head That was another pitezte the finding of Mr bleeding of him worth. Dep for a which sent all the Go to on Sa m ow, all man tted now that his horror at the and he could not in any way solve it Hut he was bent on one thing— and the he was Suddenly a thought came to him blood to his m the heart and caused bis to start to his 4 Fourth on steamer Capitol City; 6% hoars in Olympia, Fare, $1.00 round trip Steamer leaves Galbraith’s dock be Several dead men have been found | not all the dead ones are on the iearun tetasaeead-ts slap tt and take a part in the drama “Winston says his two authmo-|, The hand of death had lowered biles broke him the curtain on the first act, and the If his automobiles could talk no _ fe eet hankered after getting | doubt the: wale 6 much for | Debind the scene onan they would say as much f | ee uraat oa ain “Oh hth. ow! ‘ |that for some reason Depew was Go to Olympia on the Fourth | lurking In England; had bargained Capitol City; 56% houre| With the man Loide had killed to Fare, $1.00 round trip, | personate him on the boat and so aves Galbraith's dock at| destroy a clew to his existence In eee | London * What then did the other, the cut LADIES AND CHILDREN up body mean? Who could that Can enjoy @ pleasant afternoon at | have been? |unexpectant one is generally a similar thing? Did disguise account for the dif-| ferent appearance of the man who was now crossing the Atlantic with a gaping wound in his throat? he that was not so. De was a head shorter than the man he had killed He was glad he remembered that because It removed the slightest doubt. It convinced him that De | and it must be pew was in London his—Lotde’s—business to find him. i lew York Dent: Find him, and put pertinent ques al Parlors | Ten years’ guarantee, ~ make him do a sum in auers & =» A: ‘ 2 Sx tions to him; He did not fear an Interview. The Becond yan Howard 1 in 1053-1015 FIRST AVE unexpected always happens, and the ata opposite Pen: Rullding. Both Phones 1240. disadvantage, Lolde felt that, in the language of | Depew's country, he would be “up-| per dog” in the Interview | how to discover Geo, Depew's| whereabouts, * And meanwhile, in the same com- pass, within the radius of the city) of London, taother man was think ing—thinking h the same strain- ed look on his fai too LONDON LOA Next to Guy's ‘prog Money to wo lee oe Watches, D De not buy « t 1207 2nd Ave, Next to Stone. oes LP Gianscirrs Fisher & Lano (To be Continued tnitnationallciantaadats GO TO ALKI NATATORIV Kvery afternoon and evening the great pool of warm anlt water is full of the best of people enjoying the warm salt baths,

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