The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 6, 1905, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR 0 BY STAR PUBLIAHING CO OFFICHS—187 and 109 Beventh Avenue APMTERN OON EXCEPT SUNDAY TELEPHONES 3 an Department Suneet, Matin 1060) Ty ALLARD STAR AGENCY—#1 Malt ver week No free cop eh ab la aE NRE ne Sunset, Red 14 month, nie cactlee nt per cop or twenty-five cents per . suns he date when your subscription expires te ddreae label When that date arrives, [f you Decrtpe St again been paid in RAVANGS, Your Hame la taken from the lt 4 A change of date on the nddress lalel Is & receipt Boterea ar the Postoft at Seattle, Washington, an second-class matter WANT Aly OPFICE-RAGLEYS DRUG STORK, COR SECOND AVE STRERT mber has ree we of affortir entent place ' news Recene . iemendent t Ww. b on tative, b2 Trity Buliding . 4 The Loyal Twain s 3 The city counct! ts facing a vital issue just sow, and it should be a comforting thought to the that two out of thirteen of the members of that body are loyal 4 Seatle citizenship has so often been debauched by corrupt coun : a elimen that to have even two public servants faithful to their pledges, 4 ig as refreshing as the waters of Hebron There ts little room for dowbt that “Jakey" Furth owna enough : a Of the present council to force the exclusive franchises. on Wostlake ( boulevard and on Second avenue through, unless outside pressure be Drought to bear on the traitors The public has Tittle to expect from Mullen, Benjamin, Zbindon, Crichton or Rude To them, Furth has said “Come unto me.” And they came. To Conway, Johnston, Burnett, Cole, Daulton and Gill, Wondly calling, but they haven't answered yet These, In other words, are non-committal. They may keep faith with the public, if it is worth while from political considerations. We can't understand why Bowen is found on the people's side at this time, He has always been smoared with a pretty dirty political stick, but we may overlook that for the time being ff he stands by his guns now. Wiltiam H. Murphy, representative of the Nisth ward, is tho only remaining councilman. He ts always dependable. Not a shadow of suspicion has ever tainted his official record when the interests of his constituency as well as of the public at large have been at tasus And if the common people are to be ket oat of Furth’s land of Gosh:a, Murphy is thetr Moses. True, he has Bowen with him now. he may not He may have Conway, bul probably not. 4 He may have Burnett, but Burnett {s an eel He may have Cole, but Cole doesn’t now and never did know Furth is He may have Johnston, and gg ‘is own mind. 2 He may have Daulton and Gill, but they must first weigh all the ‘ oe political considerations Involved before they know where they are at. 4 % So, fm fine, the situation is almest hopeless for the people and q their. rights, unless— First, the people riap up la their wrath and whip the traitors into Mine. Or— Second, this failing, Mayor Ballinger veto the Inquitons exctusive franchise. ‘There is more hope of the latter than the former. 4 Is This The Same Roosevelt? Among the telegrams of congratulation received by President Roosevelt since he succeeded in bringing Russia and Japan to terms of peace, the following is on some accounts the most interesting: “The President—-Sir: Your policy and diplomacy denote you as the strongest character of the age. Accept my heartiest congrat- not know, but this tribute to the president from boss of New York bas produced in our mind a this: who has aroused the enthusiasm of the whole between Russia and Japan. bringing to an of modern times, the same Roosevelt who, 25 for aassembly in the state of New York, republican leader of his district by persisting, while making a canvass of the saloons, in telling the saloonkeepers that be was in favor of high Heense? : Is he the same Roosevelt who, as member of the assembly, made the practigal politicians smile at his devotion to reform? Is he the same Roosevelt who, as chairman of the civil service and thus earned the distike of the bosses, whose political ascend- ency depended upon the “spoils system? Is he the same Roosevelt who, as police commissioner of New York, actually “dug his political grave” and “ruined his career” fm political estimation, by enforcing the excise laws, closing the sa- Joons on Sunday and making the police force toe the mark of ? gs this the same Roosevelt who, as assistant secretary of the navy, caused amusement, even in cabinet meetings, by bis enthu- siastic industry in studying new methods for increasing the size and efficiency of the navy? Is this the same Roosevelt who surprised the country by resign- ing his important and comfortable berth in the navy department at the opening of the war with Spain In order that he might get on “the firing Hue” as leutenant colonel of the “Rough Riders” regiment? Is this the same Roosevelt who was nominated by Mr. Platt as governor in a year of forlorn hope and who actpally achieved a vic- tory in spite of the skepticism of a good many of the solid business men of New York, who said that he was of too uncertain and vis- fonary temperament to serve as chief executive of a great state? Is this the Roosevelt who, after his term of office as governor, ‘was put upon the pension list of the vice presidency by Mr. Platt in order to get rid of a governor who had actually put himself in opposi- tion to the corporations by signing the franchise tax law? Is this the same Roosevelt who, when he became president, brought the Northern Securities suit, adopted an unusual method of ending the coal strike and led Wall street to predict that he would destroy the business prosperity of the country? Is this the same Roosevelt who was cartooned last year as a man with “the big stick,” ready to plunge the world into war? Is this the same Roosevelt whose enemies have pictured him as @ wild man, a destroyer of precedents and the constitution, and a lover of sensations’—Wall Street Journal. -_ Chauncey has also made his peace. ee Lineviteh is now a hero by default. —_ You wouldn't call the big stick “thin timber, LUIS 996 Encolied thouga Last Year 376 firme asked us for office help. 188 positions filled. If you had been in attendance and prepared for a position we could have filled one more. James and Second. Phones 416 COLLEGE BUSINESS Wty Lotiic ites ata i ipa tink Mk BEE 2 as nit atte ink a AE ASS = Pack se a i a Rae ie NSB * . * - - t * * for the father's acta Pleane, We judge, would speak to her THE SKATTLE STAR—WEDNSDAY, SEPT. 6, 1905. * seen ae ee eee Tam a mother and IT wilt not) T should ike to #hake hands with | Mollie Rya | make that tittle ehild and that moth | ta a good women er suffer for the acts of the father.”| Her own little h Mollie Ryan. | any The man who had ¢ i Thy this Me nentence Mra. Mol-| gered her purity stood within the He Ryan, of Omaha, has done e| bounds ef the law to raise the lard of womanhood! ‘The Judge had already written “30 than any Swell Set or Woman's club| days” after Duteh's name bas done during the last half cen-| Mra, Ryan held the whip hand tury over her enemy ahe Mollie Ry to the of at Omaha’ F but she's fr blow, » } Just about all w would not jet fall (he lash Chas, Dutch was charged with) She looked at the mother and making insulting remarks to Mra! babe limmed, Bhe, her Ryan's 9-year-otd daught He | welt to the Judge and begged was brought tnte rt to anawer! hin to set her daughter's persecutor the charge, His wife, with @ three: | fre week old babe in her arma, came to] M Ryan 414 what about one plead for b |woman in a hundred would have Mra, Duteh gatd that ff her hus: | de Even to avenge own whe | band were shut up in the works she would be obliged to pl , and to others like baby In a public institution « ut and work for the family’s sup The World needs more women like port Mollie Ryan. They make the best Thon it was that Mollie Ryan! of wives and the wisest of mothers spoee out as one woman should] They raise the sex from the ak for another ditches of petty Jealousies and cheap { never saw the man before, and) revenge he has insulted my little girl, but I lie Ryan makes us all proud em a mother and I will fee that) to be women, She makes us long little chitd and ite mother suffer! for the honor of whaki *« STAR DUST Shame, Shame! ina, k from the T Whence arise those horrid sounds | fut Sow Wonder ‘O're the quiet up-town street; that made btm se ti Cries of give and anger mixt Switch correspandenc Clink of glass and shuffitng foot? Hist, this secret kindly hold, At the home of Hjones they play Penny ante through night Now that Hjones’ wife's away, A Word From Josh Wise DON'T by yo (Tenn) News. nt trowbl addre omba a Dote who he appy © Requachee saw * it know Talk About Luck! A young lady went to Mr. store Friday, and had the good for Rowe's tone of bringing back about 140 the. of Be Bequa “Even wise guys sometimes Kureka nee (Tenn) urrempondence News. Queries Answered. GLADYS-—No, a peace envoy tx poetry fet th’ tent fan” hot an envoy at the end of a plece of MARIANNA-—Yea.fow women can drive = wail, but most of them can! # hall a drive tn shirt watets, LUELLA —W, Byron lived in Vento ‘e've forgotten where Have you tried the city directory? Tom, Tom, the piper's kid, be Swiped a pork and for home then) atid; The pork was canned, and Tom was) ‘hem Wellington Dnterpriae tanned, And Tom bawied out to best the ban | | not | is” \ “HOISTING THE COLORS.” Buch Ecstacy! QUALITY RIGHT, PRICES “SEATTLE’S RELIABL Visitor | his pickle erer | Pondence Bellevue Gasette. “Pop” Anson, | Chicago, refuses to act upon charges against a deputy jing of an umpire's job “Pop” does Is Your Boy Hard On Clothes? If #0, put him Into one of our School Suits. RIGHT—TERMS THAT SUIT. “ONE DOLLAR A WEEK.” Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. COR. PIKE STRERT AND FIFTH AVENUE. CREDIT HOUSE.” A Clothes Calli. ~ Frighton Rumble bee, Little tad Zing? In the Chamber of That in an « it was tn Net at All want HYDROGEY fort Admirer of Dist nays be ts too modeat Will Robbing passed by here sing- J. J. Corbett EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR Mandolins and Guitars FROM THE FACTORY OF George Bauer, Philadelphia, Pa. SHERMAN, CLAY & CO. 73% Second Av. , Seattle city Whoever stote the clothes belong-| tifully besprinkled with eray ing to Walter Edwardes from nis | [atures were refined and intellec- home of H, Milt would | Mal his expression grave, and his | confer a faver if be would return | Correspondence Horrors. And what ts that grew- some four-wheeled thing? Guide to-mo-bile. | Tt was used as a machine of torture about 1908, Visitor writes copiounly in note- | book. ‘ariably fat Dill-atory. | Louis Strecker te busy harvestin, Parkertown corre clernk of Anything savor DIOXIDE Why Mabel first to college went Her locks were of a dingy tint; | But since she studies chemistry | Her hatr gives glint h a golden Atty. Jerome Then so ts Yarrio ~ woman To woman; THE CANON BY CYNTHIA GRAY. | BY JOMUN STRANGE WINTER (Copyright, 1906, by the Newspaper cl ine Axnociation.) When it beeame known in North towers that the succe to deur alt Canon Gregory was not only a bachelor, but a man of comparative youth, being not more than fiv and-forty, the feminine population of the old place was highly excited poculation Was rife in the old city jand many a feminine eye turned }longingly towards the old house which stood at the extreme weat corner of the cathedral close I shall never forget the interest which the coming of the new canon evoked, 1 have very ® eaight and I t think I ever efore saw so Many new bovAEts On ONE OOCH sion A good & y seate in North towers cathedral are allotted married ladies. They were all full that particular morning when canon in residence made his appearance In person Canon Herlot very ideal of a great preacher was very tall, of spare but muscular, and jatrong. Hin face his ekin olive, luminous, and smooth and dark the He proportions nily very As clean-shaven his eyes dark and his = hair wa. “THAT LADY-—WHO 18 SET” Hie remely sweet, He looked areat man, and he had a volce f silver, a volee so full of melody that It was a pleasure to hear bim read even one of the driest chap tors that the old tontament com- | (alas; @ man of great dignity, of se perb presence, and of undeniable *trength and power “He i as charming man!” said Rosey to me one day when be bad been in to consult her on some busi nome connected with a concert which was being got up in the town: “but what a pity he is not married’ So thrown away be ts now. Why does n't he marry Mary Callander? She would be just a nice age for him, not too young and not too old; she would appreciate bis position to the very full. I wish | could bring it about. 1 asked him the other day why he never had married, and he told me with a sigh that Fate had | not been very kind 1. Pate not |kind to him?” Rosey repeal “Why, I Inughed in his face, Fate would be kind enough to him if he were kind enough to Fate,” she end. ed with « wise air Yet it did seem as if Fate and Roewry had to do with Canon Herio | His first period of reside that } is to say, three months, was nearly) jover. It was b ul September weather, 80 mo! nd balmy, with ha clear bine sky overhead, that Rosey, who always preferred to be out of doors rather than In ad @ J ranged on her at-home day to have the tea served in the quaint old gar den which lay at the back of our house, | happened to meet the |ranon at the door when he arrived, i ng just taken a lady to her learriage. “We are all in the garden today, canon,” I said, “though it i }iate in the year for freaks of that | kind; but my wife insisted on ft She bas « passion for spending ber | time on of doors.” | “A very good thing, too. We lepend far too much of our time cooped up in our honses,” he replied | heartily, “Really, Dallas,” he added looking at me with a quizes j"the more I see of your wif |more lucky I think you, She 4 sensible—such a wise little Indy! “1 have always been supremely satinfied with my own luck, canon I replied 1 had led the way as we speaking into the drawing room, which opened with long French windows on to the graveled terrace of the garden. I was just about to step out when he suddenly clutched my arm as it were in a grip of iron “Datias,” he said, In a shaking voice, “who is that lady?” were | “What lady on?” T asked, try jing in vain to free myself from the | grip of his relentless fingers. “That lady in the brown dress Who ts she?’ “That? Oh, that ts a lady who is staying with ue, Her name is Pall ister——Mias Pallister.” | stil he muttered under his j breath “Margaret Pall How jeomes sho to be he you to know her?” | “Well, canon,” Is has known her for a v She was her governess.” How come “my wife Jong time. NORTHTOWERS first | C OF |, ."What?” looking at me incredu lounly Your wifes gove hs | “She i about eight years older than my wife. She was only @ litt time with her, but she was govern eos for She off my wife le extremely fond of her Margaret Pallister a governess!” he echoed, still holding t st to my arm. “Why, man alive, when I knew her, her fathe as a miiiionair . Ob, you, | know that they w very rich, | have heard her say so I vaid. Hot, canon, Lam afraid this has knocked you over, this unex pected meeting. Let me give you some brandy—come iuto the dining ream Yes, yes, | will have some brandy You will think me very Dallas ins Pallister here today n her for married ages sinew but I didn’t expect to 1 have thought | years years. I no, she has never married. She le Mise Paliiater wtill 1 xave him « brandy and soda; he drank it without a word, and sat resting against the edge of the table Dallas,” he sald at last 1 feel ron a ghost” + than a ghost poking straight at bin | “That depend he stood upright he replied. Then shook himself to gether with an indomitable gesture of pride and resolution, and said in this ordinary ourteous, melodious jtones that be was all right and | would go into the garden. As he went across the lawn to where Rosey's tea table was set, It suddenly occurred to me that If the sight of Mise Pallister had so un nerved this strong man, what would jhe the ef t of meeting Canon Heriot upon Mins ster? How Jever, there w no drawing back |then, we were already close to the indies, and the next moment Rosey | wan greeting him with ber usual cordiality, “And let me introduce you to my dear friend, Mins Pallis. | ter,” she anid, indicating our visitor by a gesture. “Mins Pallister and [ have met be fore,” said Canon Herlot; “many years ago I had the privilege of kno her 1 watched them both eagerly, 1 must admit it. 1 saw the sudden blanching of Margeret Pallister’s cheeks and the equally ewift return of the blood to them. She rose from her chair, pot out her hand half besliatiogly, and sald, “Yer, it is long since we met. I little thought to meet you here~—or today.” Mercifully at that moment the Ad- mirable Vincent arrived on the scene, bringing more Visitors, and Roary tention was taken com- pletely away from the two who had met again tn woch vomistakalde eur- prise. They did mot move from the spot where they hed stood on meet tng. He made bo pretense of low ering bis volor; | beard every word that he said, | could not help it, for i was wedged in between the tea table and them, and could not get away without making myself more conspicuous than was necessary. “I thought you were married years since,” he sald, still holding her hands and looking dewn upon ber with euch a wealth of love in hin luminous eyes that the little meek, almost dowdy woman in brown, whom we bad regarded as a born old maid, seemed positively tu quail before him. “Why ¢!id you not marry him? “Becsuse I felt if I might not marry the one that loved me and|— that—1 loved.” # d, im a low voice, but without any pretense at oncralment, “ would rather go un jmarried to my grave. And after | wards, whes the money went and ruin came, it did mot worry me 1 was 1 th anything then.” And that was—how long »cgor" “Years and years,” she said with | a righ Wasted years.” 1 heard him an swer. And then | made a dive , | the tea table and I heard no 1 Hut the canon's new howse in | jclose had found a mistress, and all| | the unmarried ladies of Northiowers | were gut of the running CASTORIA| For Infants and Children. ‘he Kind You Heve Always Boug!t Boars the Zf/llka Signature oa . No Danger Although the € Vatke is at the yard there is no danger of hostilities, Take boats | n Pier 2 at 9 and 16 a. m,, 1:16, nd 4:30 pom. one rman cruiser navy At the Retire ment Sale of H Lewis & Co, Firat and Cl for $15.00 you can the best gar- ment that bas ever been offered at that price, and for $20.00 you cannot go to any taller and have the same kind made for lows than $40.00. Remom- ber the address, MM. LEWIS & CO, Cor Mest and Cherry. Janipure MIM, por Epsom Salts, por S0e Perfumes, all week Whit bottle Va White's Listerated 1 2e, Quake price 26 large double sheet Pyrographic com plete prices ¥r phones We offering some new fall top- coats at $15.00 that are will appeal to you. In caring for our high grade pat- ronage we are afraid that we may ne- glect the great ma- jority of rie who desire bu mutt. So we have gone to the extreme of almost bending backwards in our effort to give the best pomible value in $15.00 business suite and “topcoats. W. B. HUTCHINSON CO. Cor. Secund and Union Seattle 1513 to 1519 Second Ave. ——GOING AT HALF PRICE-— OUR ENTIRE LINE OF MEN'S AND BOYS’ CLOTHING. THE “GARLAN e8-—-Sunset, pound THE.QUAKER’S — LITTLE PRICES can ne roth School Scratch Tablet for 10¢ cake Jap Kose Soap for Outfits wock of demonstrator gives free rons of this department. delivery to all parts of the city Main 1240. Ghe FAI Powder Sticky Fly Paper for ne weet Winter or Summer It Is Cheaper To cook with Gas than with any regular Suppties; a noveltion large and at special instructions to pat Use your 1240. Cor. Colby and Hewltt Everett 1513 to 1519 Second Ave. 0” WAY 5! an COOKING WITH GAS any other ket. Call play at the store. 1405 Second Avenue, Seattle. other fuel you can use. Why not be up-to-da do your kitchen work with ease and comfort, be neat and clean and Ind., - Tb.

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