The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 17, 1905, Page 4

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a THE SEATTLE STA . BY STAR PUBLISIING CO, nr 4 OFVICES—19t and ti Seventh Avenue EVERY Alrignn oO NN RXCRET BUNDAY Business Depart t-Rinset, Maty 1050; Independent 118% BALLARD STAR at 42 Pollard Ave, Sunset, ed 14. NeoY One cent per copy, alx centy per oF twenty-five cents per Bolivered by mail or carrier, No tre o- TO MAIL SURACRIDENS— The date wheg your W ‘ » matter. AVE. COR. BRCOND (ntace to leave Want Ade. The phy CJ — wand leave news tems Main @e i ave mu e bUl Bers for thts W. D. WARD, New York Represen tattve PARRA RR RARER AR RARER ARR ARR RRR RE * &g THE STAR'S PLATFORM, The Lest mews first, x All the news that's fit to print, x out fi er fav g In official and private life. utilities, business enterprises, io service franchises, f publ us A grees carnin: tax upon all An up-to-date public schoo! em. Privileges for none Qu. te for all; epecial * Rigid « ment of just, and repeal of unjust lawe. BOROe ne enaeeeekeheresverseenness School Teachers and Beaux ‘g Should a pudtic school teacher have a beau? This te a question to be discussed at a meeting of bool boards ta Wisconsin Should she? The teachers, with one volee, say yea. And the public must give ame answer unless it wants its schools to be teacher less. Here is the way one prominent Wisconsin teacher puts ts. “Why shouldn't she? She is accustomed to settle other weighty Problems for herself—why not this or If she feels the need of the spice and re a which bagging game of this kind ts sup- posed to bring, surely th viloge ts hers to enter the game of chance anc ‘aw from the matrimonial lottery the prise or the Diank. It ts hardly worth while for the outside world to trouble itself, for she wil! settle this thing for herseli.” Just because she of tone We hope she will. It is her inalienable right gives herself to the thankless, underpaid work it ts not to be understood that sb erty and the pursuit of happin There is no class of people in A digger kick coming than the school teachers. ¢ man that cares for the hogs and catile in the country receives more pay than the woman who presides in the little schoo! house on the hill Is it fair? Do you blame them for getting out of the work whea the opportunity comes their wa: «& the young, © contracts away her right to Hb merica that has a And now it is proposed to deprive them of their beaux Dou you agree with the narrow-minded school director who would put an end to the Innocent pleasure which teachers derive from their beaux, or do you join testing against the contemplat- ed actions as an invasion of private rights and personal liberty? There is an old song which fits this case well: “Is it Anybody's Business if a Lady Has a Beau?” ‘The answer is “NO!” Mr. and Mrs. McConkey court granted a divorcee to Mr. and sband. Last week, in Pittsburg, the Mrs. McConkey on the petition of Common enough. But the bill of complaint ‘Metr character. McConkey says he was very {ii last winter and that bis conval @scence and recovery was greatly held back by Mra McConkey, whe persisted in asking him what undertaker he would prefer to preside Qt bis funeral, fay McConkey says he kept account end the cheerful suggestion ss to his ot a body taker was Made nineteen seperate and distinct times. And Mr. McConkey further alleges that he recovered charges rather unique in On one particutar choice deapite his ‘Wife's sepulchral aliusions, and that he concluded he needed a di- vorce. In this latter the court agreed with Mr. McConkey. Now— Aside from the glimpse afforded into the conjugal relations of Mr. and Mrs, MeConimy and the human interest thereunto attached, $% easily covid be shown that Mra McConke lected a fine opportunity for defense. For instance: The argument might have been made ‘Well because of, rather than spite of, Mra. rnirks, Tt fs a well-settled principle that will power is a great factor In Wecovery from disease. Any fairly good lawyer ought able to Show the court that Mra. McConkey’s suggestions w ade Benevolent purpose, to wit: That she desired ta produce in Mr, Mc- Conkey's mind the friction of afitagonism and to stimulate bis deter- mination to cheat all the undertakers. And thus would wifely solicitude made to appear. And, on the part of Mr. MeConkey, a base Poor Mra, McConkey. Bhe is not the first of the wives who have been greatly ‘a lawyer gromuly neg- that for Mr. MeConkey key's grave got re- be om with aineteen times in one day atitude. ‘misun- 1 derstood.” \WAS DEATH OF DR. HERZL N91 A BLOW 70 THE ZIONISTS? | BY DR. HARRY FRIEDE NWALD, OF BALTIMORE, MD. -* Yes, the death of Dr. Herzl was a severe blow to our movement, for the movement is young and we had learned to depend upon him for everything. But if you believe that Heral’s death will shatter the movement, you greatly misunderstand and underestimate the force that underlies it. Zioniam is not a growth of yesterday; it is no fad which some sentimentalist has thrust upon us; it is a force which has its origin in the Jewish nation as it developed and be- came great in Palestine: it is a force which has been nurtured since the dispersion nm; it is the desire and the hope and the prayer and the life of the Jewish people these 2,000 years Herzl did not bring Zionism forth. He planned an orgnnization, a machine, « method of realizing his hope and this ideal. And his death will no more disrupt the movement than Abraham Lincoln's death disrupted the union. The movement is steadily marching forward, gaining new strength fn every country among Jews of every form of belief, of station, of intellectual development. If I may express my own experience, I parties to- harmony and ‘would say that Herzl's death has knitted the various her and given to all an increased desire to unity in the movement. aeek has recently been opened THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, AUG. 17, 1905. . en — 5 an tneasy expression in them, I de wited to be called early looking woman, and told her to yee aS BS bring me a lamp. [ noticed whem }ehe conducted mo to my room that Your attention, plea for a tow | above, th® United States img her hand was trembling and her igrures: | foods to the wale of $1,117,50 volee seomed thick as she bad eo they're tiresome, he hich was also @ record br night Hut they are r in thin last 12 monthe we ly bedroom was a long, low on 1 \ ve can get them! only sold mere but bought with old furniture, quaint carved ondensed form and predigested, | than we ever did before In th chairs and a huge four-post bed } to speak, while t ‘low whol space ef time, That's going some, tead, ‘There we & to the } mote ther up has all the grind of it | door and the bolts rusty and | --the nickening routine of preparing| Some people may hastily T1e4F6) broken, so T could enly pit the latch them, Ho turn to them with a| that It would be vastly better if Wel gown, I was, naturally, not pleased | cheertul, thankful pirit hadn't impor 1 0 ninete cents) with the ph 1 was on the nt | It may Interest you to know that} Worth be ommodities, #9) of real om, but as | wae the exports of the United States for| that the whole $1,518,462,833 would| somewhat weary I did not do #0. the faced year total $1,618,462,503, It} Have been ours, at the end of the} and furthermore, as the night was ta the biggest ever The previows 12) year tt i of balance of only @) wet and windy and th sky Inky ' ending June 30, 1904,| balf billion dollars, Hut this would) hack, 1 dtd not wish to venture out a high water mark which} Ot have a shadow of political econ | side been bettered by $30,697,.| omy in It, and It would not ev I tried to go to sleep, but, try as } busines, In that way our te | 1 might, I could not do mo, and t Now let's take a breath. We muat| customers would be exhaust 1 tay, listening the tapping of have selling something. The| thelr resources Ih & year or two 84) the ivy leaves against the window . buying. It ie wet) | there would be then, to put Ht DAME | and thinking of the dark and evil that we b womathing to ect. It|i% “nothing doing.” ‘There te nO! look im the landlord's eyen \w that we know how ta/| chance emotest, of much a mly, after some time had | well it, Emgland and Germany | Complete y occurring. The) siapsed, I started up in bed, for I and France and other countries of | fet Is We have Deen sell- | heard something or som elim: |iens importunee are also tt the bust. | ink the more we have been buying. | ing up the ivy to my window. With | ( setting, and some of them| WhY, our imports were $92,000,000) Wiidiy palpitating heart and strain ; chty sharp competitor greater than in the former banner | ing eyes 1 listened | Germany in particular, We en-| Year of 1903 All at once a thought struck me tied to go to the hothow and Now, if you will think over this a/and [ rose, hastily smoothing the pluck ourself & magnificent bouquet | bit you Will #ee that while we are| bed clothes as though no one had | Jeration of ou w vot Ketting the earth, we are getting} slept in the bed. I had earcely done | Back to figures, We or hare of it d then a Little so and crept in under the bed, when another ord—thia time In buying.| Let's to the conservatpry, then,|the window was ral man Wor the same perlod dwelt upon|f whch of blossom: softly entered. | heard him mutter to himeelf wearily, as though fa tigued; then he got into the bed. drew the coveriet over him, and in } compiled unoffictal fig a few min I heard him snoring You can readily imagine how pleasasnt | felt, and the man had my money bag under his pil low, too What should I do? r ights of my home, and of my dear littl @ e now perhaps dreaming of mo, gave me cour but, as IT was crawling from un oe my hiding place, I heard another sound, and, a few minutes later, the latch was uplifted, the door was pushed open, and I saw the landlord slide into the room. Then a hand holding a candle stole im at the door only a hand, but | knew those fin nly too well KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Barton; Carefully —— ounty, in central Kansas, {8 the! ures place the yteld of Barton eoun-| 1). ly —_— . rept, om tiptoe to banner wheat county in the Danner|iy gt 4,145,000 bushels, thare being] (2° 7m) Bit) imallins Over the sleep wheat state in the country alll ig bashels to each of the 4,153,000 Th arn $0 Che Beart the wheat Barton county raises this! gores of wheat in the county, The here was only @ groan, and all was over, The murderer crept to year is converted Into loaves of! grain avorages 69 pounds to the/ ia" over The : bread of average weight and e#lze)pushol. A barrel of four, 196 } sd joor, after drawing the money the result will be 602,096,000 loa rom under the pillow, glancing or six for every hid in the Un In other words, one Kansas produced in a 6 eounty enough broad to keep alive for over | Mour and sold as bread at 5 ceniys & Week, without resort to any out~| loaf it will net $26,104,780, a side sustenance excepting water,| $5,000,000 more than the United every inhabitant of the country. atee paid for the Philippines. — —_——— A WORD FROM JOSH WISE. 1. “Why, old man, where've you been the last three or four weeks “In the hospital. Just got out to- | day.” . lest uy ef ttecs You don’t say so! What was the | trouble?” we elect U pubit flee ¢'n smell a mouse | $20,000 salary from the Equitable) Jimmy but not an elephant. Judge ness, “first he hit me in the of the stomach with his fists and kicked me in the ribs.” is to say.” observed then “Tha ends against the middie.” Twinkle, twinkle, little czar, How | wond nat you are. ‘rom the world so far away. nt for common clay. When your sun Is almost set, And your land with blood is wet You should show your little light. OC><3E> <C> 88“ 0E><9f> “0 If you want to nee {t exemplifiea—it you want to see upwards of 200 studente— the average ¢ battle of life— ¢ above Lrosyerity uring for t ¢ : street is?” An Indiana cyclone carried off a} Jersey cow. out any t It might do that wi off a Jersey skeeter. | position to know. I think I can - | truthfully say we haven't more than If John D. and Peary find the t three honest officials in th north pole, Ida Tarbell and Tom Lawson would better look out eed 7 you've bought a fast horse “What did your wife say when| have you?’ you arrived home the other night?*| “Yes, fairly fast.” She said I didn’t have any feel- I thought you had more sense Ing.” than to buy a fast horwa I yect| “Oh, he's not so fast that I'll ever ngle season * anid the prosecuting wit-! r- the judge, “that he was playing both nble, but it couldn't carry | 20-year franchise. wer | pounds, yields 400 loaves of bread Barton county wheat growers wi in] colleet about $3,222,400 for this year, If it is all turned Int “L was trying to mauve 15 minute of- | im a trip to Now York.” Now that Chauncey M._ Depew’ has been cut off, where'll | Hyde go to hear funny stories? | pit | president, had to pay $50,000 for franchise, and the etreet railwi company ith-| est owner, had to pay $75,000 for on him.” stadente—at thelr work—prep ; You should go right * e A rajher well-to-do farmer @own to the Collins trips Into the city always nette Bidg, James and * 3 la handsome sum of money, for Second, top floor, and | stock was imported and well kno’ visit the day or even- 4 }to be so, and other farmers, | m INESS COLLEGE pe purchase whenever [ put anyth -@O@t- et ~-R><320 dispose of a half-dozen 2-year-v the crop of which I am the beayi You see | am in Umidly bebind him. i re eg NO, MINE!" | EXCLAIMED. Tromblingly | came from under the bed, groped about for my clothes, and, after donning them | crept after the guilty couple, Their room wat opposite mine, and I | could eee the light under the barely | closed door I partly pushed it open Aiand glanced 1:6, the room The | table faced the door, and they were| }s0 intent upon the money, | was| lonabled to creep up close without the man whispered ‘there in more than enough ta save “ A yur bay! And all ours—all our | Do not twinkle out of sigh’ tage Sn. ser Eee epi to i Riot carnage, everywhere. volee of thunder. Yet you never seem to care. 1 grasped the money, and dash Royal hands your people sear, Ip there much graft in your oe oe “ p from ne woman's | Twinkle, ankle, little ¢ city? asked the traveling corre-| "aad, fled back to where the dea Pe ee | spondent man lay. Opening the window I Twinkle, twinkle, little czar | “Lt should say there ta,” replied! Sfoped with one hand for an ivy How I wonder where you are. the prominent business man, "Con-| bough, clinging to the sill with the Tell me, do you hide your head ditions in this town are frightful and at last r the Underneath the royal bed? as bad in Russia or China Our I had scare © 80 ‘ city government {s rotten to the| When I heard from above an awful “what I have been trying to fig-|cora Why, I bad to pay three| ‘Ty In & woman's voica — ure out since I've m reading the|counciimen $500 aplece hefore | My boy! my only son nzied finance scandals is this,” | could get an ordinance passed giv-/ I clambered over the gate which observed the deep student of|ing my company the right to lay a} !od into the street and at the corner event “How can the rest of the| switch in one of the city streets, |e & policeman, to whom I hur country be prosperous when Wall| The gas company, of which | am/fledly told my story. He accompa nied ma back to the seene of the a y|erime, The policeman bent down and peered closely at the dead man's af face. I's their own son!" he sald. “They didn't know he had returned so they mistook him for you." ef Now I knew the meaning of that FEL NAPTHA my ;worth a clean $500 apiece, as thelr me | equals wore not to be readily found my/in the entire nty | wn| As it was too late to begin The QUAKER DRUG ©, to| which I had finished my business, I 013-1015 FIRST AVE ing| put up at the R hotel, t : to} the proprietor, who was a sharp-' Both Phones 1240. ds) faced man, with black eyes that had The Kind You Have Always Bought. s the caution applied to the been manufactured under the 30 years—the yenuine Cagtoria, We respectfully call mothers when purchasing Castoria to see that the wra black. When the wrapper is removed the same signa of the bottle in red. past years need no warning against counterfeits and to public announesment of Castoria that has supervision of Chdg, H, Fletcher for over thé Aitefition of fathers and upper bears his sigiature in tire appears on both sides Parents who have used Castoria for their little ones in the imitations, but our present duty is to call the attention of the younger generation to the great danger of intro- ducing into their families spurious medicines, It is to be regretted that there are people whx nefarious business of putting up and selling all sorts of more properly be termed counterfeits, far medicinal adults, but worse yet, for children’s medlejnes. » are now engaged in the substitutes, or what should preparations not only for It therefore devolves on the mother } elve to scrutinize closely what she gives hey ¢hilld. Adults can do that for thernselves, but the child has to rely on the mothér’$ Watchfulriess. in use for over 80 yeirs, and AVevetabte Preparat - ting te Pood and Regula Yomachs and Bowels of i you tn this. All, INFANTS “CHILDREN ence against Experiment. Promotes Digestion Cheerful What is Cc tories —— goric, Drops apd substance, Its age Colic. It re’ and Plataiénoy. mee The Kind You Have Alwoys Bought, and which lias beon Le tllihea 0 supervision since its in: ¥. Allow no one to deceive ©o eevicit as-good” are bot Baperiments that trifle } ondanger the health of (uifants and Childten—Pxperi- Stomach aud Bowels, giving h: The Children’s Pinacea—The ™ cenuine CASTORIA aways had Vorne the signature of lias been made under his Imitations apd “J ust- S * with and ASTORI Castoria is o harmless gubstitute fer Castor OU, Pare- | Soothing 6; l> is P! contains neithet Opium, Morphfhe ry Narcotic its guarantee. ib atttyers Worms and allayt Fovérisimess. ‘It cutes Didrrheea and Wind eves Fpethine Troubles, cures Constipation t assimilates the Food, reruldtes the It is It jeasant. thy god natural sleep, hef’é Friend. ture of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Ye TAR COMPANY, TT MURRAY 8T., WE YORE CITY. rs. unearthly cry, “My boy! my only CARLTON DENTAL CO. boy!” The murderer sat in a chair|[} tas the tatest In methods and by the bed and held out his hands |[ appliances for p Jental to be m ied, without uttering a/f work. Prices re nd word. When I told him how it|f work guaranteed. Call and be convinced. SECOND AND YESLER. Over Guy's Drug Store. happened that his son had fallen a) victim instead of me he simply/| wtared in my face and made not the lonst sign that he had heard. Tho mother died, ravirig mad, and the man was hanged, but not an-| Jas. Means’ Hand 12-60 Shoo for sate a! The Hu other word did he speak from first to lnat. passed sentenr slowly nave once—when the judge] on him Then he! solemnly, impresaively, | i man~my only son, my = Av onw' SEE OUR WINDOWS for the sylendid Skirts which we will sell on Saturday for $4.00 CASH OR CREDIT. “The best Skirt value of the season.”’ Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. Corner Pike Street and Fifth Avenue. MODERN DENTAL PARLORS REMOVAL NOTICE! Sak tasks are Have removed from Second avenue and Pike street to Second ay- enue and Marion street, Marta Building. Our prices are the very lowest consistent with first class ma- terial and workmanst!p. no PLATES Modern Dental Parlors "Quip, Second Ave. and Marion St. MARION BUILDING PIANOS Yo well better Pianos at lower prices and on easter payments than any other house in the city, KOHLER & CHASE, 1205 Second Avenue. aA treatment t treatment Piva rs HUTOHINSON CO. Y Clothiers, Secont ani Union Pa a nr nnn ChicagoLoanOffice HARRY SILVER Prop 117 Yester War. | A genteel! piace to borrow money | diamonds and all kinds of room A | Btrictly confidential | 14% FIRST AVE. SOUTH Phones—Sunset, Pink 1751 Gependent 1781 Tn- Free Delivery. Mis label en your Prescrip- tien corre: | sponds with the mark “Ster. ling” on silver. SHAW'S DRUG jo 1213 Seo- ond Ave STORE, ALBERT HANSEN 706 Ist Avenue Becond Moor Howard Butlding, epposite Penn Mutual Life Bullding. BARGAINS IN FURNITURE For bargains tn Pury ture see un. RED FRONT FURNITURE CO. 220 Pike St | LONDON LOAN OFFICE 108 Second Av. &. Next to Guy’e Drug Store | Money to Loan on Watches Dim | monds and Jeweiry. Do not buy a watch or diamond [Before you see our display in our window and our prices, marked in pialo figures Isaue Luria Prop 4

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