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lt reonepencrsarebureeeninenttiner rer Se prema penta THE SEATTLE STAR TAR PUBLISHING CO. BY OFFIC LWT and 1909 Beventh Avenue — VERY APTE RNOON } XChPy BUNDAY » Seay LEPHONES Business Departme ntsSunset, Main 1080; Independent 1128 ABENCY 21 Ave, Sunset, Red 1. allard BALLARD BIAK One cent per copy, ax centy per week, oF twenty-five cents per month, @elivered by mati or carrier, No free copter. ‘ PhO MAL HEC Mibsoription “expires, i op the addre 1 arrive y le taken from the Hat AVE. TORE COR. SECOND or hae & | RRR RR RRR RRR REAR RR RR RRR THE STAR'S PLATFORM. The Least news first All the news that's fit to print. ithout fear er faver. ficial and private tif al ownership ef pu district for earnings tax upen all public service franoh a up-to-date public schoo! system, for none and repeal of unjust lawa. enforcement of ju SR EERE E TEASER ES SeARRREERER ORE SERRE RE EEE RR RE Lincoln’s Car. Lincoln's private car—the car that was bullt for the spectal use of the martyred president and that carried his dead Washington to its resting place in Spring? is without a home. Tt is said to be “one of rel relics in America,” and yet it stands upon an un di sidetrack at Joliet. Its owner has tried to dispose of It to the Lincoln park commissioners in Chicago, beady from id the most sa Dut without success. It still stands upon the unused track, in an out-of-the-way place, exposdd to the weather. It is sacred, but no one will take the trouble to preserve it. It ts & treasure of great value, but no one wants it, There would be profound regret if it should be destroyed, and yet no one will pro- Vide for it s0 that its destruction would be impossible. The treatment of this car is an illustration of some of the strange paradoxes in the character of the average American. We have a profound reverence for the memory of Lincoln, and yet we are <@rossly neglectful of some of the things hallowed by his use. many respects we are idealists of the extreme type and, at the same time, in other respects we are so sordidly materialistic that idealism becomes absurd and serves only as a vent for entho our sms which aro worthy in themselves but which are productive of no | results. Im our senseless scramble for money we are losing some of the finer qualities of our nature, both as individuals and as a nation. When will we as a peaple come to ourselves and learn to value things 4t their true worth? A Note of Warning One must shudder at the fate of the Muncle, Ind., girl Caught behind the bat without a mask. You've guessed it. A foul tip drove the cutest little nose imag- inable right into her lovey, dearie face. That's what happened to this bloomer girl. Now, there never was a face so beautiful that it could dazzle Without a nose. The less nose there is, the less the face appeals. The absence of a proboscis leaves nothing from which to gauge the eym- metry of the face, Cherry lips are a mockery unless there's a nose above them. Bewltching eyes sparkle in vain If there's nothing be tween them. Ruddy cheeks and sheli-like ears don't count for much unless there's @ nosé in the combination. For this reason girl's cannot be too careful when going behind the bat, putting on the five-ounce gloves, or throwing the hammer. Carelessness is apt to prove ruinous to some of their most necessary features. Besides, it's a sin for them to place their good looks in Jeopardy, when so many, many others are running to beauty special- iets and massage artists in a desperate endeavor to train misfit foat- ures into comeliness. Girls with pretty noses should be expecially jealous of putting them in jeepardy. If you can't find a mask, use a bird cage. who The Interurban Lines ; ‘The interurban trolley lines centering in Indianapolis have car- ried in and out of that city in the last year 5,000,000 passengers, ‘ One hundred thoucand people a week have gone into and out of that one city by this means of transportation, and this Jy in its infancy. In@iana is the interurban trolley center of the © fy being done in Indiana will in time be done through United States. And the time is not far distant strides slong the line. Electrical north, south, is little short of marvelous ‘There is more meaning in it than can be put in words Distant cities are uniting into one comm The ting line between city and country is fadin The quick, convenient and che om parativ But what the ut lway S wigantic east, we ra at, ay ap tr orta fon is working a $4 and mighty change in the modes of 1 nd thought, in the cus toms and achievernents of the whole peop A vast industry in itself, the interurban railway wonderfully quickens and promotes all other industry The enormous demands it makes upon the car the steel Fail mills, the wire factories and the motor works are but a small part of the industry it creates. The uncounted thousands who are afforded employment as m tormen, conductors, linemen and office clerks represent but a frag- ment of the labor to which it has opened the way It has made all markets more casi! ssible, In bring: nit Classes closer together, It has developed in them tastes and wants they never knew before. It educates better than all the schools. It not only carries people to the stores, but makes them heavier buyers. All that the interurban trolley lines are doing for Ir a, and y stat more, they will in time be doing for ev n the t No section is too remote for it to reach and brir cation. No wilderness is too deep for it to penetrate and peo —_—— i into ce Comes a Montana man who says he has a process to raise 60,000 bushels of potatoes to the acre every two months. Burbank. Its now up to If you want to see a > it exemplified—if you “OS OXY want to see upwards AAT) of 200 students— ‘ee above the avera atudente—at theh work - You should go right down to the Collins Bidg, James and Becond, top floor, and visit the day or even- ing classes of «ing for the battle of iifte— ee tA ins cB HOW TO LEARN TO WALK tn | MOVE, WITHOUT UERKD, > SEATTLE STAR-—SATURD. AY, JULY ao, | fooling of mprightlinews, which la the} “Well, please be wensthle for a! “Here, right here; on my beuting, | t wep toward race, minw I want to tell you about | palpitating bosom. And now where | Exerc! %—Take tha correct| por old Susan Jaro your felsdora’? Undo standin position, place the right Susan?” stitches. ‘There. ‘That's it Bi n foot forward, bringing only the toe She died the second week you! paper parcel tied with twine, Don't RA to the floor Blowly, evenly allow © away ° lo worth 19,000 pound — it {he weight to glide from the bull of| “Poor old soul! She wparly killed | Open the packet, and you will see a he left foot to the ball of the rigith | me, but T bear her no gradge ) wight for sore eyes, Ninateen crixp Bway gently and evenly back to the Did you find out, Gerald, wheth- crackling, rustling Bank of Bngiand left foot with ing any | welght on the heel nin sway forward, leaving of the } left foot t Then down, until ight 1 | neta firmly t th right right } 20 tin Hirt her foot for | c tt | | ne and: fenes nts This Fine Cottage lwft foot Practice nly after exercise 3 d 5A has been’ practiced for a ween an cres ' | Kxeret Hold high above the ee ee eee ae CLOSE IN—NEAR CAR AND t too heavy. Rise on tip toes and tog jw htly from : the | thé ‘Roos | & 4—-Hald the weight light the balls of both feet, Spr lightly forward cnto the toe of th right foot, With a bound bring the| Wolght back to the ball of the left | in t her foot | er 4 hands | Terms to good party " y silt | DOWN, $10.00 PER MONTH che Gop sepuet eanveloeay Also LAKE FRONT LOTS at At- Lean lantic City Addition, and only $5.00 " faithful practice up. Terms $1.00 per week. New 6 Gracy Apion foot walks, fine boating and bath- y. But the exer Irif ATLANTIC Bee at TORE, on Washington street ing. eful. Or 4 store up| CITY 8 Many women think that it ts aillyy rests upon the balls s of the ¢ t more than one can take! car Mine, or C. D. Hillman, in Times ry to be graceful, touch the floor, but there must ugh this apring to keep “toate be no wetght upon them, Lift t through all next year Grace ts not only beauty, It '8] chest, which should throw the who! nd quickest re health; grace is physical economy.| body upward, throw the hips tack| sults observe t owing The graceful body moves as naturel and draw the abdomen in and back| Exercise in fresh air Intended, and the body that mover! into its proper place. Lift the] ‘rake wacep breath at the begin naturally apends the least force in| weight to tip toes, raise the chin,| ning of each movement, and hold tnovement j sway upward slowly, without Jerk | the lungs full of air until the move- It is far from sitly to learn how] ing the bedy. Let the body down t is completed | ipseuuisengenty. It io neuey talcewty; wotkent © pormicttnen Tiel ee crmeee. and If peo Painless Dentistry | pocket, for it strength be | wetan to away back onte the béels.| «ible in shoes without heels | pe ore OF¥ THY BROWN WRAPPRR AND REVEALED A PIECE | Is a_ scien our new eee and that means fewer bis | Rvery exercise should be takes |” wxerciae h sides of the body OF FOLDED NEWSPAPER. ieee t) poms SU Ci tie meenentien Comm ‘o learn to walk property jsiowly and without allowing the! exactiy the same I which e and growing business must first know how to at cor-| body to move unevenly. Keep the} slow at first. Remember the} er her husband was really murdered ; notes for 1,000 pounds each | banage Pledge Rage Eaten jenn ale r mind upon the even movement, and | muscles are weak from disuse and| af The trembling fingers of the|has been built, The new system of Let the wetght of the] try to feel a ligt wand uplifting | cannot stand the same amount of| only that, Tessie, but I) farmer gripped the sclasors and he | (VO eet known or used by dy away forward until the weight! of the whole body. This will give alexercise which they will stand later, | found who were his two murderer®.” |cut the twine, Then he tore off the | S°°"Uti wr dentists. Other dentints Are they arrested ? brown paper and revealed—a piece | come and go. Brown's Dentists re- “They were arrested by the hand | of folded newspaper! mat reliable world-ree RRR RRR death. No earthly judge and jury| For a moment there was a silence, |nowned dentists, the same doctors 4 » will try them. They have to toe the | but in that moment a great change | who have done such “food work in rs mark before the Judge of All.” came over those present fake tales dakos. Wifteos yoom :§S7TAR DU > Dead?” All the hilarity left Gerald. He|™* ; * * ee ee ed “Prunes? Prunes?” repeated Cashington, “I have nothing contempt for prunes.” “Pr Cashington,” the landlady most wholesome food.” “Lam perfeetly f Prunes.” retorted Mr “In fact, my contempt for them.” A friendly tree, A limpld pool, A gentle breese That keeps you cool A hook and line, A lot of bait. A briar pipe And about seventy-five mi gnats to spoil the whole thing Mar ashing’ A pretty girl d have hold an audi their foreheads and shake Was won eight m mths ago THINGS IN A } 1AGHT “What excuse can you make such behavior?” asked the plate glass window, carried a ¢ store Indian into a restaurant, d the guests out, car and stole the c liege man, eh? cuse, That doesn't give yc right to act like a college boy. . * Mr but a ‘are a with} ton. the familiarity has bred Iifon A WORD FROM JOSH WIS on't talk sense t And yet there are people who wipe their } The Mystery of £19,000 BY BURFORD DELANNOY. (Copyright, 1905, by the N: paper Enterprise Assectation.) Gerald sat on in the magulignt “He has never said a word t smoking, and when in the morning| mother or to me till be found bimeelf in his berth with | came. his clothes on, be thought of the }talk then story of the moonstruck man,|not been for you, thought he had been affected in the | Same way, and was thankful that he jhad a ened at his regular hour) with nothing worse than a hea you must remember that I've ge ache | his promise that he'll give you t ‘Come right In, lad, come right | me. You, Jim, look after the maré.”"}a man of hin word “Mother-in-law, give mo a kiss.” | “I'm sure——" “It's right, len't it? She can kiss) be called in.” her futare son-in-law in safety,| “1 don't can't she? I bring you home 19,000 | hurry! in Teasie, just as soon as a parson ca see any reason But he was full enongh of | He says that if it had I am counting on finding bim Our two beat ing hearts are going to be made one. for We don't want to ath now, Teasie, life which is before us, the |in double harness, The life— | “Take your arm away, There's the farm, and father are standing at the door.” “. . | “Well, here we are at last!” called the King of All I ed. Once the system f Bere mt 0 the Tongue rows, and finally Honea If you have any of thene BLOOD CURE Immediately life work, to the very be 2 | atient the : t ° BROWN: ‘s BLOOD ¢ CURE. bod a BoTTL prep and that is all we will say alk of but of life, the life | which you and I are going to travel | Gerald. mother and whit bore. fe | out at ver Colored Bpots on the Pac Ti Bwolte Laiprecime e Similar symptom This treatment js practical ‘ntains no dangerous drugs or injurt mm of the Dis mn ane, eat face that on the bringing his table with (To be Continued.) Bioed Poison either hereditary the diseane may ff nd symptom the fexh, di pounds and Tessie and ! enter into| “put your sight’s bad. We'll have Made by Dr Br Arch Street. Philadelphia, partnership till death doth us part.|to see to it. I'll plank those notes |f washington, p. Cee hie ai Fir y Lt, Ian't that the bond?" | into his hand, and say, “There's your | Dr. Brown, Philade Dr. Brown, FP “Every word of it, son. every) part of the bargain,’ then I'll stap|§, Dear Sir) —1 4 Lat word, But that money, where {#)across to you and say, ‘and J think |f fre “ain have a > le HB benetit. from it ave 64 ——— oe ts mt He'll agree, and you | been witho t n for the rt ik and I | Rad) would ‘like, to know ‘the, local 7 it, Gerald, dar’ n che where it can be purchased CHAPTER XXX “But, Gerald. darting—" If nee satistied if i 'continge with it THE LOVERS MEERT. darling. Tecan netting me |i 1 will get permanently cur tn Now York. Gerald bade fas ROurtae sounds sweet—coming ery truly, 998 from your lips. well to his companion, who pressed | "er Winn von thim, if ever he returned to En " land again, to pay steele Mts |* ieee . fist act was to send a wire to De Cosida’t, Tessie, if 1 trled.. Tv od jearned you, and you're mine, mim Have succeeded in every way. idteen' eal ais Coming by train, arriving Oakville at 6. Let Teasie meet me with trap. | | beads when they read about Peary in a slight difference, at ate, between Investing your | money in horses and on horses Mrs. Flashly says her new hat is a dream Poor Mrs. I'm af she sleeps on he Now doth the saddened baseball fan Discover there's no show Of hauling off the pennant tha “Ww for judge ou ran an automobile through a igar rove turned over a street anal bridge. What exeuse can you make? You're a fine, That's no ex the | |} away specimen, you low down | euse me, judge,” interrupted the prisoner, “but lam a college | I'm RALD DANVERS.” | pidity at every po And Tessie an there to meot|” dity at ev p os him—Tesaie, bright, bonnie and ex-| cree. encom Pernelt }On Northern Pacific new tr T abe rf eyes apoke, but they k hands quietly and then just} tween Seattle and § drove jclase service oa ves Seattle dat When they reached t road, away from people. hold of the reins and horses to a walk “Little woman, I've come back ‘éd | full of joy—and | must say of money | that I wonder my feelings aren't too much for me.” “Ie it true, Gerald—all of it? Dad told us when he got your message.” What did he say?” Well, when he opened it and read it, he said, ‘Hallelujab! That's your dad right enough.” Then he told us that you hag been over for nineteen thousal pounds, and that you said you w bringing them with you.” That was so. And before I w I bargained how I was to be palp| for my work, I made him promi to give me—you.” The QUAKER DRUG (0. 1013-1015 FIRST AVE So he said.” feems to me he has told you| Both Phones 1340, *most all there is to tell.” | We Extend You Credit Ww Men, Women, Boys, tres: and Girls for $1.00 a week Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. 422-424 PIKE STREET, COR, FIFTH Seattle's Reliable Credit House. " would be sensible for } o| your wire he never would | have seeen a dollar of the money | “That's so. Sounds egotistical, but I don’t believe he would. And 80 | Just oozing stu QUAKER DRUG CO, JONES. BOLD IN BEATTIE 1013-1015 ONLY BY REMOVAL NOTICE! terial and workmanship. ‘TES wry y 1305 Second Avenue. P.- Phones--Sunset, MODERN DENTAL PARLORS |) 190 Have removed from Second avenue and Pike street to Second av- @mue and Marion street, Mari.a Building Our prices are the very lowest consistent with first class ma- PRONE, MAIN CURED TO STAY CURED FOREVER On account of ite frightful hideousnons: EMCASTS a ‘wonTH. Bealp Treatment the balr grow stood looking at the packet with the | j, er living The farmer's clouded to the piteh of blackness, and hand down ce which made the crockery on jthe dresser ring again, he blurted man “What damned fool's game is this, anyhow is commonly or contract manifest in the t Swollen Joints, Brup- * eer. FIRST AV. GLOBE BLOCK. Modern Dental Parlors Second Ave. and Marion St. MARION BUILDING wo! neat PIANOS Wo sell better Pianos at lower prices and on easier than any other house in the city. KOHLER & CHASE, Qa k with ¢ and Me Winter or Summer it 7 Cheaper GAS H you can wi © up-to-date, y Ind., Px. 7%, than ments any Why not kitchen and comfort lean and Economize be Seattle Lighting Co. Bullding, Fourth and Union. Bx. 27; continu eattle is a guarante work will be of the best, lowest cost consistent with is work. " success and at the first- ‘ome in and have free examina- tion All the our operators are licensed by state of Washington. We é0 do cheap dental work, but you best here for half the price by obscure dentists whe ig to the State Society Dental BROWN’S. Paintess DENTISTS 713 First Avenue Parlors 1. 2 3, 4, 6 and 6, Union Block, one door south of MacDou- gall & Southwick’s. Hours—$:30 a.gyo. to 6:30 p. m Sunday—8:30 a. m. to 12:30 p, m. Diamonds, Brooches, Rings, Scarf Pins, Linky Studs, Bar Screws, Ete, Houghton & Hunter Jewelers 704 First Avenue BOSTON DENTAL | PARLORS | ‘Twelve-year guarantea Lady attendenta Hours—8;50 to 6; Sundays, ® to 12. Both phones. 1420 SECOND AVENUE ChicagoLoanOffice agro A genteel piace to borrow money on éiamonds and all kinds of jewelry, — confidenUal ALBERT HANSEN JEWELRY, WATQHES eur GLA: 706 Ist Avenue New York Dental Pariers Ten years’ guarantee Hou! a mttom Sundays, §:30 a m. to 12 m. 614 FIRST AVE, SEATTLE. Second floor Howard Bullding, epposite Penn Mutual Life Bullding. BARGAINS IN FURNITURE For bargains in Furniture see RED FRONT FURNITURE Co. 220 Pike St. | LONDON LOAN OFFICE 108 Second Av. 8. Next to Guy's Drug Store Money to Loan on Watches, Dine monds and Jewelry. Do not buy a watch or diamoné | before you see our display tn our | Window and our prices, marked Ia | plain figures Isaac Lurie, Prop | RELIABLE TRANSFER CO. | Baggage, Furniture, Storage | Office and storage room, 1215 Firat | evenue, Postoffice buliding. g:Fbonea—Sunaee 803; Independent i