The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 24, 1905, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR Qo. NY 7 OFFICES —190 PHON usiness Denartmentfuneet, M BALLARD STAR AGENCY an y. sie cont carrier N WANT A AND Pike Ow AR PUBLISHING CO. and 1808 Beventh Aw ¥ APSERN GON EXCKP t SUNDAY TRL se) t Red 1a twenty-five cents per month, Independent 1138, Halland Ave Bu second-clase matter KR. BHCOND AVR pened tad W. D War presentative, & Tribune Butlding ee The Stupid Child What are you going to do with the stupid echild—the mental deficiont child? WIil you take the t » give him the special training that he needs, or will you allow him to shift for himself? Will you by Special effort help him ¢ mo @ useful and respected citizen, Will you allow him to r iby bis playma’ and, through discouragement and chag hecome a burden to soctety, either as a worthless ne T @4 men and wo Boaton has er-do-well or is as n paying sy ight crimin & hopeful " sign that high For mind to solve it Several tion to the education « ——— DEBP GREATHINC a OR.ED kor, Batieve ime keys grew thresor rt or brush corral, We picked ur un ax with a broken helve in th wreckage on the shore and in a fow dagw had @ corral and but that looked as if they could withwtand herd « phants, Thad mr . Alr to the botly what coal ls to) the chest sink as low ae it will (Fen/ @ aR AAR RR eRe e ent a w York ts be do this and other citie | thi figure) Then draw in, | ® * sidering it the furnace, The deeper the breath-|throngh the nose, a& much aif as|® Form the habit of always * The investigation in New York shows that from 1 to 2 per cent | !ng, the moro draughts are turned] the chost will hold, lifting the chest | * breath y * of the children in the public schools are mentally deficient. There |, 8d the brighter life burns as high ae p le.(e00 fart tig-|# In the morning protect the * fre thus In New York alone from 5,000 to 10,000 children that are It is not enough to stir the alr in| ure) ® body from the 1 and, stand- ® ata upper part of the lunga. The} These four exercise can Be tal * Ine before the open window, * Handicapped by our present methods of teaching and that need tho | at alr should be 1 out and/at any time and anywhere, when|*® take 10 deep breaths * care of specially trained teachers sh alr drawn into every part of| walking or when driving * Always inhale through the # The causes of this mental deficiency are numerous. It may be lungs To obtain the best results, one|® nose and exhale from the # ereditary; % may be tmproper food, or physical defects, tobaceo, Mf, 7 othe palms of doth neater] should practi *, at night and in the ® a . Hiquor, tea and coffee. There are a great many cases, but it is not |and slowly force out the breath.| which are not po easily takeo. * *| impossible to remove them by the right kind of training ons with the hands and notice how! Lie flat on the back and draw in| * alr #) What are you going to do with the stupid child? As our schools | *™4ll the body grows. Then through j the breath slowly until the back|* » * re now conducted, he is always at the tag end of his classes, He re- | * nese «r w in a mn » air asf tw am if it werg_ pressing hard * Aware when stopping out * ¢ | possible. Make the body about the] againat the door, «till lytag|* of doors, remember to breathe Sards the progress of his classmates and annoys his teachers. He is. | waist as large as pousible (see sec-lon the back, by deep breath ing Mitt |* deeply: it quickens circulation # @ifferent from his fellows, He can't keep up, and he is dropped from | ond figare) jas high ax posstble the up sur-|}® and drives off the cold. * class to class until he loses hope and gradually drifts into the life of With elbows pointing from the! face of the whole body, from # When going out for lunch. #| Dp shoulders straight out at the at to the ab * hefor rf at night *) Phe truant or the criminal iS Yr’ A h It is not to be “ ” reg place the tips of the fingers upon he reasc have so many|* in the open win- #| is not to be supposed that all of the mentally deficient children | ine chest, Exhale slowly, letting narrow-cheated » and women is|# dow before going to bed * of the country are in New York and Boston. There is probably as * bal | Marge a proportion of them right here, eee eee eee ee eee eel! What will you do with them? | | id because we are too lazy to breathe! —_———_ |-or else we have never recognized Broken legs, heads and necks seem to be supplanting broken the importance of dee breathing | Fecords in the automobile racing world. The three most famous ye Jand the necessity of letting treah | Facers in the country have suffered frightful injuries in wrecks es Freee Daag at pet paedla nlp FG PP Within a week ; Pr "4 ice the deeg breathing when | “ it will pake & Woman more Lincon Steffens pught to turn the searchlight onto Seattle's city Sagem graceful and healthy | @ads, Me doesn't know what a chance he is overlooking IT WAS TOO HIGH oun with 6 afew trent it will develop the chest and Young Lady—What is the priceot| Gracefully the mermald stanf"to hang sung a Indianapolis monkey that smoked cigarets is dead | they're smuggling into Indian: ay aie malin Mt Sain dl ainda ; GNATS AND CAMELS RRR RRR REA DR. WASHINGTON GLADDEN,|a generation of young men that no the Congregational | crookedness and no cruelty need be jor of , Chareh. {Note—Dr. Washington Gladden be the principal Mgure in the session of the American of Commissioners for For- Missions when that body meets Beattie next month. Dr. Gladden | wrongs, this teacher & regular contributer to the col-| small of The Star.—BEditor.} FCopyright. 1905, by the Newspaper 3 Enterprise Association.) Hot words were spoken, once upon time, by a teacher whose word to go for something tn these about moraliests who put tre- emphasis upon trifies and the weightier matters of law; who tithed catnip and car- and dill, in their devotion to ceremonial law. and made up his excess of piety by robbin: poor and devouring widows “Ye blind guides!” he cries, strain at the gnat and swallow camel!” You lift up your hands holy horror at the small pecca- of your neighbors, while the wrongs of which they are you pass by without a word disapproval. Buch fearful and fatal want of perspective is too common in times. Society is facing a crisis more grave than any man has ever seen; practices tendencies which threaten the life of the natiog are before) and yet how many | teachers there are who prove! for judgment; ves utterly incapable of with these great matters Here ‘opinion as gutity of vast oppree and extortions, as the ruthless yer of hundreds of home, as man who has done more than one of his time to debauch and ize trade—and when his con comes up for judgment we hear defended from a Christian pul-| in these words T “Does he gamble? No, Does he % No. Does he go to horse/to treat with a truer perspective i? No. Does he violate the|these burning questions of social ith? No. He is no sport. He) morality. The man in the street Rot fast. He bas been true to! understands them perfectly, and he} family.” has his own opinion of the people fore, the argument run4.|whp apply to great affairs such who venture to-eriticise him utterly inexcusable; they are rers of a good m The vast injuries which he has per- fs a man arraigned by pu!- |some of them have a large reputa tion ed are of no consequence. Has trampled thousands under bis fm his path to miliioniam? Yes, he doesn't drink. Has jhe taught Piper & Fatt, 1026 fd Ay ene ne ae Vrosywrt heir work—preparin g for the battle of life— Wisove? MODERN BUSINESS COL! eect mee 8 ——$_$<$_—— Studente—at tt Tou should go right @own to the Collins Bidg. James and top floor, and wisit the day or even- ing classes of | pointing out Fierce brand s | * * * * * ebunned if tt promises gaint Yea, but he never smokes. Has he sown the industrial soll with dragons’ teeth? Yea, but he never violates the sabbath. Over against those gigantic social lifts up these personal virtues, ead pro- nounces the accused overwhelming- ly vindicated. Ye blind guides’ Ye do strain at the gnat and swallow the camel’ It is such Judgments as these that bring the church Into contempt. ° are dealing. In these days, with questions that require some breadth ot view some largencss of judgment. The most heinous in- Justices, the most damaing immor- alities, are those which grow out of those larger social relations in which we are all involved. The men ho are false and treacherous here are the greatest malefactors. And it ia, unhappily, no rare phenom- enon that men who are sober and decent and exemplary in their do- of the Equitable Assurance society could pass the same examination with credit. They are men of ex- emplary private character, and for philanthropy. Does that alter the fact that they have been faithless to a high trust? It aggravates it rather. To excuse or palliate the larger infidelity by their private virtues is to strain at the gnat and swallow the camel It is profoundly to be wished that! some religious teachers would learn petty measurements. For fishing bait there is nothing better than preserved salmon eggs. We have them at 250 per pound at| If you want to see Wt exemplifiea—it you ‘want to see upwards ot 200 studente— wbove the average this volume? Book Salesman—Four dollars, | madam. | Young Lady—Four dollars? Heavens! Is it printed by the So- ciety Editors’ association? A Greenwood correspondent to the Oregon City Courier that a number of Greenwoodites attended the dance at New Era, but all re ported a bum time A WORD FROM JOSH WISE. ; Th’ with most uv us is th't we trouble have two kinds uy hunches an’ then act on th’ wrong one. Out on one of the long dovks, just fainter, but didn't dare follow. We [below Wail street ferry, a strongty (had no Mat, ahd all we could do| uit colored man stood one 447) when tt caine, we found all that was| eeomry American’ ship. ‘That the man ot] *tt of cur ahipmate—a pile of bones color knew what he was looking at! s AF Anna Cabtll had the misfortune of | having her clothes stolen from the) clothesline on Tuesday evening Anyone seeing them please notify the owner and receive reward.—Ore- | m i gon City Courter. | | Every time some lawyer defends | John D, Rockefeller you realize that | money talks Chauncey M. Depew says he gave mestic life are utterly dishonorable| advice freely to the Equitable. No-| and even criminal in their public! tice he didn’t say he gave it free. life or in the transactions of high - | finance. "1 finttor myself that I never let Some of our big political bosses| my wife talk me out of ing. have been men who could answer} remarked the little man with the bic} promptly all the questions of th emt. | pulpiteer’s catechism: there is no I can't say as much,” remarked reason why he should not give them/ the man who had to duck to pase jcertificates of high character. through the doorway. “My wife Most of the officers and directors| talked me out of the house night | | THEY MOVED IN HIGH CIRCLES | | erhaps Taft's mission will have accomplished if he make Jap ar will to take th Phill val an a gift | THE JOCULAR DIVER | The mermaid sat in the green, translucent light of an ocean cave, | combing her yellow hair with a gold comb | lowly, through the shimmering water, a strange creature descended ~« being encased in rubber and | lead, and wearing a great round hel j the | pieces off St, Matthow's im that seven I was the or [lived to tell the w sk s this apparition Why so strange a d With a chuckle the For divers reasons. ties the deep athing to six times daily, and remeasure in #ix weeks. The » } urements will prove the benefit ot} the exercise. she asked, “do you wear man replied Bears That Drew . the Color Line THE OLD NEGRO SAILOR RELATES A THRILLING STORY OF THE NORTHERN SEAS j hundred evident aa was the fact that | 4 somebody to talk to, and | ently required a pleasant salute- | tion to get n speaking terme with him j He was an olf satior, having, ax yards f ho laughingly remarked, without the | slightest trace of negro dialect rawied into the hawsepipe and came out of the « olor abin windows de which, translated. he had worked himncif up from before the mast to t tera berth, in spite of the f spite my mas | that he was a negro. 1 suppose you have met with some strange experiences,” 1 marked, by way of leading on to « story Yea, many a one.” he replied. “t was just looking at that whip there it's a con walled to a strange any man ever had. 1 was ot 12 who left the port of San Francigcoyon whisky for 9 of one tn part whicn I An experience as ae of a crew trader the Nelile, ie intands th, and 1 THE GREAT BRUTE WAS UPON believe it was only my color ME that saved 1 You may laus sf ined, but th y| From the tracks in the soft ground | snvtethor ‘ jwe knew he had been dragged off The island was uninbatiifd,| and eaten by bears. though it hes plenty of timtle nd We 1 that and literal- | brush and drifttwo hc at our safety only lay When night ea ea! bing tall trees. and sleeping | Into the hut, tired, cold and gre there, and this, you may be we were that hung About 1 ht | hear thy *« sniffing, shuf r fling ling along the a yell whi Sia 'kantl Greed bunting tor thelr prey | ard, 1 think, by wee During the day we would gather | ¢ fea, He seemed to be! hell fish from the beach to stav away by a huge and | off hur and then we would take rd his cries grow fainter and to the trees on the first sign of dan- | BOYS’ SCHOOL SUITS ON ONE DOLLAR A WE BRING YOUR BOY IN tK PAYMENT Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. Corner Pike Street and Firth Avenue ite r, and when night came t in, while th rhe 4 through that brunt kade if it had beer made of 4 tering aught, killed and devoured by th The d f thene two Ww tled the question of ping siuck to th 1 thin forced nw 1 wan i r I» i in my t u inyn t 1 red mak for food o r Finally 1 fo 1 r t taht ' After r 1 {I mad At f 1 to 1 at the 1 queer y troubles, but I showed them the | all hands turned out for | t hey killed eight the! and 23 before the week| RUBBER GLOVE REGULAR PRIC QUAKE PRIC G +e. The QUAKER DRUG (0. 1013-1015 FIRST AVE 10 CENT Cloth Bound Popular Novels, Children’s Books, Paper Cov- ered Popular Novels, Linen A B. C. Books, Pasteboard Cov ered Baby Booka, and many more which apace will not al low us to mention l0c Store Arcade Block, 122 We sell this Range on thirty | days’ trial and guarantee it to | use 10 per cent less gas than wny other Ra pon the mar ket. Call and see them on dis play at the store. | GEO. H. WoodHousE 1405 Second Avenue, Seattle i CASTORI for Infants and Children. ne the wi © Kind You Have Always Bought has | of Chas, Fletcher, ar 1 made under sonal sapervi ars. Allow no | » deceive you in this , Imitations and “li” are but ents, aud endangers the health of Children The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In tien For Over 30 Years. 1513 to 1519 Second Ave. 1513 to 1519 |] Second Ave. Ghe FAIR A Large PLATINUM PHOTOGRAPH Of Yourself With Each Dollar Purchase. ASK ABOUT THEM As Simpleas A,B, C. The reason of this store's great growth is as simple as A, B, C In the first place, we must have done business right and with fair- ness to have grown at all in the face of the competition have had. We must have done business fairer and have sold better pi anos and given better values than all competitors to have grows as no other piano business ever did grow—continuously, largely, ly. The basis of it all ts fair dealing which means mu you come to study it over The Sherman, Clay & Co, plan saves you $50 to $150 on a Piano. SHERMAN, CLAY & CoO. 733% Second Ave., Seattle The Safest Place to Buy a Piano ] THE LAUREL The 9 h and unique ap- pearan of this range makes it an ornament for y home. WITH TWO 'LUES heat ts evenly dis- tributed, consequently oven bottom will never warp and always bake the same on every part. With a Lauyel gas attachment you an have two ranges in one. Your old range take as part payment, Ghe Hegdahl Co. Incorporated Bole Agents. 1622 First Ave. Seattle. 818-824 Second Ave. Ballard. we Heaters Stoves Ranges REMOVAL OTK = OE es Have removed from Second avenue and Pike street to Second ay- enue and Marion street, Mari.a Building. Our prices are the very lowest consistent with first class ms- tertal and workmansh'o 0 PLATES Modern Dental Parlors Second Ave. and Marion St. MARION BUILDING PIANOS We sell better Pianos at lower prices and on easier payments than avy other house in the city. KOHLER & CHASE, 1205 Second Avenue. Cc. A. Meyer, Mgr. The Greatest Discovery in the History of the World, Alveolar Dentistry Practiced by the » Dentists Only The new system that tigthens loose rea bleeding and pyorrhea of ame; treatm tural look e has ever : of the Ohio safe system of painless dentistry makes ail dental operations Examination and extraction set of teeth, with the cr ywre, 2k prod York Dental! Parlors Ten year guarantes Houre—8:20 a m. to 6 p.m Sundays, §:30 a. m. to 12 m 614 FIRST AVE, SEATTLE Second Noor Howard Butiding, eppostte Pi Mutual 1 Ruliding. BARGAINS IN FURNITURE For bargains in Furniture see us, RED FRONT FURNITURE Co. 220 e St. : oe LONDON LOAN OFFICE. RELIABLE TRANSFER CO, | , Nextt Gus Deve © Bagyage, Furniture, Storage Money to Loan on W Oflice evenue, whonea— Sunset am ry. watch or diamon@ our display in our our price marked ip Lurie, Prom —— ¢ ~ | . :

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