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

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< Firat aac, ania sins psi sss Sa i A AaRIS THE SEATTLE STAR BY STAR PUBLISHING Co. OF FICKS—L8T and 19 Seventh Avenue Bays FERNOON eXCEPE SUNDAY TRLEPHON ES Business Denwriment-Buneet Mati 100, Independent 188 BALLARD STAR AGENCY m Ba d Ave. Bu t Red jab One cent cony, atx © © week © twenty-five cents per month, DRUG STORK, COR. SKCOND AVE tly been opened eave want ada. yum: «tema. Th dent 1183, W. D WARD. New York Represen tative, & Tribune Butlding HARARE RRA RARER ERR RE RR THE STAR'S PLATFORM. The Lest mows first, All the mews that's fit to print. All the news without fear or faver. Honesty Im official and private life. Muvicipal ownership of public utilities The business district for reputable business enterprises A gre enings 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. SK ESOP EE OEER ED KRRNAERAER ARES iii tht Pee ee ee eS ee ee ee es Education and Matrimony Whether ft ts better, being an uneduc mountain girt 15. and having a chance of a ex Hege ed » get married and give up the education, or no? ‘This is the question |\ttle Nannie Gibson Maswered by choosing matrimony This is the story About a year ago, while standing in the door of her father's i Mannie heard @ big noise and saw a big slice of a mountain sitde @own across the railroad track m any At the « time She heard the whistle of the train at the station two miles away. Nannie Gibson uttered no word. She snatched off her little red Petticoat and, rushing to the railroad track, waved {t lustily. ‘The train stopped and the liv es of a hundred people were saved. Then the passengers crowded about the bright little woman of the mountains and showered her with silver. Ina few days an agent ‘@f the railroad company came to see what Nannie wanted most. She @aid she wanted to go to college. All right. The railroad company Would pay al! expenses and she was told to make ready. Enter young Lochinvar. Alonzo Ellis is 20, broad sho uldered, long haired, swift footed, Randsome. uneducated and the best shot in the He loved Nannie and told her that married lite was better than college ‘The father objected. Nannie was too young. And so, like Loch- Mmvar of old, Ellis carried Nannie away on a swifter horse than the father could summon, and they were married, * Query Should this girl—considering her fine prospects all for the sake of Alongo Elli And which career promised the most for the young girl's future happiness? Women readers of The Star are especially invited to answer in @Ris newspaper the questions ral sed by the story of Nannfe Gibson. | of North Carolina, bas feet deep county have given up A War on the Onion } aia ¥ A campaign against that odorous edible, esteemed everywhere for Ms strong savor of virtues—the onion—is being waged at Ports- @mouth, 0. ¢ To trace the origin of the crusade: * A lecturer before the Alliance of Woman's Clubs sald that the @Bion bad no value as a food, that it had no taste, appealing only | to the sense of smell. The friends of the down-trod den vegetable had the spunk to de- fend it. ‘That made trouble in the to wn. friends and stopped one marriage. Finally in the effort to sett le the dispute the alliance passed Tesolutions classing the onion with “the noxious herbs of the lly family.” The concluding paragrphs read as follows “Whereas, the Apostle Paul, in his letter to the Romans, doubt- ‘Deas referred to the eating of onicns when he said, ‘If any man defile the temple of God him shall God destroy, for the temple of God is holy, which temple ye are,” therefore, “Let all sensible and clean people cease the onion habit.” There, now! There is no compromise with the unclean sniffing, no meliorative The ensuing debate estranged Suggestion that the acrid volatile oi! of the onion may be released by boiling. No, not even in hash! However— The cnion needs no defense. It is strong enough to speak for Mtseit. DON'T WAIT A SECOND. ! Do you ever feel like shouting and hollering, a regular H nortin’, side-mplittin up one te and down tother, hear'ual'over | Whoop for for our whea ing soil? And then for your | town? We do, We do right now We feel like shouting “Cunningham and Big Wheat Crops” so loud it may be heard in the east. Help us shout. The way to it is to tell us about your wheat yield, We'll | publiah it and you send & paper to | your tee on finance has a Fiag Day ac- counting of. inemamen, fees $19.00 and expenses all told varified by Schwalbe and Sullivan. He plunged bis band into bis breast Consider its history. Think of the criticisms of the finical and the pungent answer of its boquet through the long ages since it found its early home in Asia. Bulb and top, it bas always been in evidence and has followed man in all his wonderings. Its scent has pat tang to every breeze. Remember how the children of Israel got tired of manna and Jonged for the leeks and onions of Egypt? There is no doubt that as soon as they got seitied in the Prom feed Land they sent back and got some onion sets. The mouths of those Portsmouth women shall yet water! + And as for us who love the fragrant fruit—Long may its perfume Face our nostrils. Aye, even to th ears! While Lovers Meet poin You had sprinkled the lawn and were putting up the hose when Jou heard voices on the porch, and in the gathering dar you Fecognized Daughter and that Young Fellow who calls sc often and geems to have so little horse sense. You had a desire to cail him a dude and throw him over the barn. 4 Of such is the jealousy of a good many fathers. * You didn't do it. You were even nice to him. haps Memory pricked you and stayed your hand. The girl on the porch isn't different from the girl you used to gourt in your porch days. She is good and sweet and natural and Pretty. Of course she wants the company of young men. You are all ight in your place. You are Dad and you have a mortgage on a corner of her heart. Her love for you is the real thing, Old Man But it is natural that the young fellows should seek her. She is honey and they are bees—and so they rost on the porch and sa RVrosportiy preparing for the battle of life Good man! Per 4 want to see wtyou = Y iy it exemplified nt to see upwards ef 200 students above the average students—at their work @own to the Collins MODERN BUSINESS CCL. EGE Bids. James and ~@ot>4> tt, <6 Becond, top floor, and Visit the day or even- ing clasnes of etic he ees = things that seem silly, and they laug brings over bis mando, and that And you stay out in the backyard and wish you dlood of the young man who would vse ee so h easily; and one yo makes the neighbors aw ould teal away your girl Mister, be glad that you have a girl who ts growing up Into beau tiful womanhood, Be glad that she has so much confidence In you that she has her admirers on YOUR front porch, Be glad that she thinks that you Want her to have a good time; and bury that twinge of bitterness that ts in your heart These things were always the ways of men and maids, You cannot change them Happy is the man who can be a philosopher while lovers moon on the front poreb the bo friends and relatives in east, and the big about is done, IT NOW.—Paha Hub, A WORD FROM JOSH WISB. Money don’t talk It hires a lawyer ¢' do N that, th You'd think so if she eve: eve “What the devi! do you mean?" you & blowing up iike Noga@riy! “Vait, mine frent. Do not get ex ‘wots. cited. It's big mistakes, Valt till RUTTS IS BUSY. Botts has butted out the commit Collections from bus nee, license and entry Paba Hub. The My BY BURFORD prison says he will let Bigelow he'll keep ‘em if he gets btw h. on ‘em. £19,000 (Copyright, 1905, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) ABOUT TO RETIRE # Such a hustling little woman Mt. amgerty is, She's got more re han & ton of dynamite —_ é A New York girt broke her Dakle, the result of wearing high Weei¢d shoes ¥ the honpital she'll break her neck Jo get those same shoes. And as soon aa she thavhs os The warden of the Leavenwor $175.00. The business men demand |banker and embeasier, of and are entitled to an itemized ac-|waukee, keep the books. Jud counting. The above accounting is|from Mr. Bigelow’s past recoj stery of DELANNOY. ob jarket and screamed with rage the pocket was empty! The notes were gone! lto } EN WSFA AI HY Y WIV al MH | \\ if it He had entered the room anda common hotel thief, for his stags, then—of course, some one had| watch and loose money had not bean sprung on him from behind touched. It must have been ‘some ne who knew A horrible thought smote him.| He would, at that moment, have werfully given one of the misaiig * to know who the thief waa, He was afraid to go te \ } AWAY WTI FE i| ANN a HWM AME HA Wie | Wy Ty BEFORE LOIDE COULD UTTER A CRY, STRONG FINGPRS WERE GRIPPIN His THROAT What should he do? Give in-{ and that he had been formation to the police—would it be} » if there was a wate | Depew sald step forward He had—foresweing possession|claim ihe money, and he—I again—written the Bank of England | would be worse off than eve withdrawing the stop on the notes,| Besides, what explanation of hts aying they were now in his client’s| attempts to cash one not uld he possession | give? How then was he to account for There was the 1 ) pounds forte the holding of them himself? nately saved fre he robbery. ‘Thi ie yw it was not the ot “w work as safe in the money changer “Ayers He looked at his wateh, By time he reached the banker's time would have elapag, the ybably bé back He the thousand pounds firet, and consider what he ould do about the others after to Broadway and hand. | the | office, | | | He took a car eutored the banker's office. | "The money changer looked at | him You haf come back—alone, eh yes told you T was a | New York | | ©. But you hat frents| Lhorefrents avxious to meet wit| What do you mean? What non-| onse are you talking? Ha ou able back from England? mine frent, nor did I cable} Jout there—1 saves the expe | | You see, von of the peeples vat © anxious to meet mit you mes in directly you leaf here My—fr A? | ‘Oh, yes. He know you quite well, | my very gout | He say to me, ‘Dat vo | frent, Meestair Le the lawyer, of | London, England. eh? $ald-—that—to—you?” | ‘Ogsactly. I say, "Yes, dat vos Den y frent he answers that he| jeama after you about stolen notes j He say, ‘Dat I change him.’ { smite | He go out to seaks you much urprisad to see you alone here all by yourself Alone | “Yeu, because he say that he tink today he arrest you. Arrest me! Dat is a way vid destectives; dey do dat wid peoples yot steals bank notes “Steals!” “Ho. “This in a trick! Give me back my note Your note? “Yee on you-give me back | my money ‘Jobn,” the money changer called to hin assistant sitting in the glam office behind, “will you oblige me by ring up the call for the police.” “Police,” said Loide. “ho.” the police come. bettaire “Ourse you'’ “So—if It please you, times “I shall go to my lawyer,” he was! making for the door as he spoke, you shall pay for this.” ‘Omnactly Loide disappeared, He saw a couple of policemen coming along the sidewalk, and promptly jumped on a car going in the opposite di rection } It took bim the way of the hotel, | There would be me to go in, Ket, his bag, and leave before the police, The explain tings it pass the | turned up there | There was a little monay left in the bag; be must secure that He got his key in the hotel office }and was carried In the elevator to hia Moor. Locking himeelf in his room be }t open the bag and threw the | contents on the floor. Papers—he crammed them into |the grate, and, applying a match jeet them burning. He destroyed everything which would link him with the name of Loide. Then ho started to resume the dis. | Rulse which had been so successful on the boat. He would be safe in it. he thought He would wait for the police, and jatve another name and--and then there flashed to his memory the reeolleetion of the register! He had | #igned there his full name, Richard }Loide. His signature would convict him. He sank with a groan on the bed | Cherry Pectoral. The |best medicine ever made for the coughs and colds of chil- jdren. Always keep it in the |house. Prevents croup. Stops Ask your doc- 4.0. Ayes Ge le Thence night coughs. | tor all about it. ‘This Fine Cottage | and 5 Acres CLOSE IN—NEAR CAR AND SCHOOIL,—Onty | Terms to good part $25.00 DOWN, $1 PER MONTH Also LAKE FRONT LOTS at At lantic City Addition, and only $5.00 up. Terms $1.00 per week. New 6-| foot walks, fine ating and bath ing ¢ Griffin at ATLANTIC | CITY STORE, on Washington street ear line, or C, D, Hillman, in Times | block cATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, AUG. 3, 1905. -_ th naan Indisputable Evidence. You have read our oft-repeated statement, “In use for over 30 years.” It was wm the early sixties that Dr. Pitcher ead made — of my ae sep universally known as Castoria. With a record of over fifty, under five years of age, out of every hundreddeaths, it was the AMBITION OF EVERY PHYSICIAN to discover a remedy suitable for the ailments of infants and children that would decrease this distressing mortality. In Castoria that relief has been found Let us take the statistics covering the deaths in the City of New York for the past jo years, and here we find the beneficent effect of a combination of drugs excluding opiates and narcotics so long sought for, namely : CAS TORIA. Of the total number of deaths in New York City in 1870, 50 per cent, were under five years of age; In 1880, 46 por cent; in 1890, 40 per aeht, ; in 1900, 35 per cont, only, just stop to think of it Until 1897 no counterfeits or imitations of Castoria appeared on drug store shelves, but since that date Mr. Fletcher has been called upon to suppress a number of these frauds. While the record for 1900 does not come down to our expectation it is owing to the carelessness of mothers when buying Castoria. Thesignature ofChas, H. Fletcher is the only safeguard, and he alone is authorized to use the doctor's name. ASTORI The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which hasbeen in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his Lafiillitea. personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no oné to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Juast~ as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experiy ence against Experiment. Promotes Digestion Cheerful What is CASTORIA mag * werwienggante ton Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- + NARCOTIC goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. it contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee, It destroys Worms and allays Fevertshness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colle. It relieves Tecthing Troubles, cures Congtipation and Platalency, It assimilates the Food, regal the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. ‘The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. senuine CASTORIA aways Bears the Signature of similating the Food and) yng the Stomachs and Aperfeect Remedy for Cons Worms Convulsions Feverish- s and LOSS OF SLEEP. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. A COMPANY, TT MURRAY ET., WEW YORE CITY. ‘What should—what could he do? tt The police were on his track with ery Pures 1 His labet on ‘out doubt, or why the call at the f your Prescrip- money changer’s? What a fool he cconbvelnae tad been to set foot in America how could he set fot out of it? If he was to escape, there was no time to be lost. He took his bag io his hand and passed out into the passage. Looking over the staircase, he| saw on the ground floor two police. ten taiking to the hotel clerk too late? (To be Continued.) mark “Ster- ling” on sitver, SHAW’S DRUG je. 1213 See- ‘STORE, ond Ave. Painless Dentistry Is @ science; our new sytem is based on true science. Correct prin- ciples must be the foundation upon | which « large and growing business w ‘as | has been built. The new cystem of | Brown's Painless Dentists, 713 First avenue, is not known or used by any other dentists. Other dentists | come and go, Brown's Dentists re- main the same reliable nowned dentists, the xa |who have done such fo | the past are still here. make false cleime. Fifteen ye ars’ | Diamonds, Breoches, Rings, Scarf Pins, Links Studs, Ear Screws, Ete experience and continuous success jin Seattle it a guarantee that your Lister's © Per- [| oF Will be of the bent, and at the HUTCHINSON co. lowest cont work e in s consistent with first- fumed Taleum Powder, Regu- jar 15e; Qua- ker price 100, 3 for 25e, Ciothiers, Second ani Union and have free examina- tion | All our operators are licensed by the state of Washington. We do |not do cheap dental work, but you the price ists’ who ty Dental |get the best here for hal harmed by obrcure de: © State Se BOSTON DENTAL PARLORS Twelve-year guarantes Lady attendsata Hours—8: to 6; Sundays, > to 12 Roth phones, 1420 SECOND AVENUE t I i ‘BROWN'S Paintess DENTISTS 713 First Avenue Parlors 1, 2% % 4, 6 and 6, door south of athwick's 8:30 a. m $:80 a. m. to 12:30 p.m. ey ~ (Chicago LoanOffice Healthy for Your Purse | manay s:vam, see 117 Yesier Way. No big drain on your } our LIF The QUAKER DRUG (0, 1013-1055 FIRST AVE ‘ Both Phones 1240. & Union MacDou- to 6:20 p.m | A genteel place to borrow money on @iamonds and all kinds of jewelry. | ct confiden(ial, cket-book RAL CREDIT PLAN MBA T & b medium priced n and Children, when buying clothes here “ONE DOLLAR A WEEK wearing apparel for Men, ALBERT HANS! VEWEL RY, WA s 706 ist Avenuo Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. 422-424 PIKE STREET, COR. FIFTH SRATTLE'S RELIABLE CREDIT HOUSE. jew York Dental Parlors ‘Ten years’ guarantes, Houre—8:30 a m te 6 p.m fundaya, §:30 a. m. to 12 m 614 FIRST AVE. SEATTLE. fecond Neor Howard Buliding. epposite Penn Mutual Life The 20th Centu ry Method Of cooking your meals and heat ae ing water for a bath is by using a GAS RANGE and a BARGAINS IN GAS WATER HEATER FURNITURE They are a complete, up-to For bargains In Furniture see date equipment for the kitchen vs. and a ern hy ‘¢ Indispensable to a mod RED FRONT FURNITURE CO. 220 Pik Gas is cheaper than either e or wood. | LONDON LOAN OFFICE 105 Kecond Av, & eattle Lighting Co. Ss play in our win Meand, Cur prices, marked 1p isaac Lurie Prom —w ,! \

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