The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 12, 1905, Page 4

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i 4 i “THE SEATTLE STAR BY STAR PUBLISHING COg. OF FICES—i901 and me Seventh Wvenue i BURP AEN O6N Excert BUNDAY we Gh Nie Busmens Department ain) 1800; Tndependent 1198 4 BALLARD STAR AGENCY-@2 Paliard Ave. Sunset. Ned 14. One cont per copy, six conte ver week, or twenty-five eants per month, Belivered by mat \ or vier, No free ec . TO MATE BUBSCRINERS sei rout, wubscription exghren te the ad@geas lade ach paper, When that date arrives, (t your mihacrtpe cha at the addrens label Is & receipt Binteced at the Pistetfice at Arattls, Washingign aa socond-olabe walter WANT AD OFFICE-RAGLEYS DRUG STORK, COR. SECOND AVE AND Pik STRERT. ua: w Want Ad Office at the adove Sumber has reoentiy heen couaat for the f afforsdir th onventent place to leave want ad = f t, T 4 lee © news Iteme. The phone num- Dendent iiss. yee tl W. D. WARD, New York Tribune Buflding More About Bremerton If Senator Piles was rightly quote I. this morning, be ts knocking h aga blunt fact Ho says t t that the navy depa Ms erlminating against nd navy yard, but the ovidence he has to back hild-? edulity Ia some of 1 state ments by some body or other connected with the navy department at Washington Whe t Bremerton yard is being discriminated against not & matte tis a matter of fact, cold, hard tubborn facts, just suc were presented to the readers of ar editorially oft als navy rtment may tell Sam Piles that Bremer ton is not being discriminated against in favor of the Maro Island til they are black In the face, but when wo see the ver jehead bundled off to Mare Island for repairs, when we hear that the supply ship Solace ts to follow in her wake, and when we hear that it has been decided to overhaul the Chicago, flagship of the North Pacific squadron, also at M Island, and when we } that men are being laid off every day at Bremerton, and that there is two years’ work for 1,750 men at Mare Island— When we hear and see all thi We have no hesitation {n saying that Senator P sand that there is somet ten at Washington Most of us have grown weary of hearing this and that navy de Di ent off repeating wh yar’ we have here at Brem erton, what great future lies before it and the navy yard town Such cheap twaddle, with more out of the same package from our @istinguished senator destroys what lit © faith Seattle people have had that a change for the better w I me to Bremerton with Mr Piles in the senate and a new chief at the head of the navy depart ment As The Spar remarked, Monday, the local Chamber of Commerce fen't tearing up much turf on behalf of the Puget Sound navy yard. And team work, all hands around, is what is needed most, just Bow. We Eat Too Much More people starve to ath through eating too much than teo Uitte, ‘This is true all the year round, but it ip particularly to be re- Membered in summer, A heavy meat diet taxes the energy of the digestive machinery to get rid of what hag been unloaded upon it and leaves too little ef- fort remaining for the assimilation of necessary nourishment. During the winter the fuel consumed In keeping the bedy warm helps to burn up the unnecessary food, but in the summer, when the temperature of the alr approaches that of the blood, the surplus food @ & dead load, whose burden falls on digestive organa enervated by the Beat and not aided by physical exercise. WE FAT TOO MUCH. ‘The main cause of many summer diseases is the superabundanc of food which the majority of people eat and the fallure to adjust their diet to suit the conditions of the weather and of their ocx upa- ton ‘The body dors not thrive on the amount of food that gorse down the throat, but on the quantity of nourishment that is aysimilated by the digestive organs. The average man knows mare—and cares more—about the prop- er feeding of his horse or his dog than he knows—or cares—about the proper feeding of himself. ‘To fit a hog for market the farmer carefully selects and meas- ures his food, but it is a rare man who has the good sense to tak S9 much care to increase his own health and vitality. The Centenarian club has long been propagating the the 109-year-otd man would be common did we not » by overeating. WE EAT TOO MUCH. A well-balanced diet, more than abundant food, provides the nec- essary nourishment. The amount of meat, fat and starch which ie needed In the wum- Mer time ts really very small Fruits, green vegetables and plenty idea that ten our lives of pure water meet the essential needs of the body and the brain better than steaks, potatoes and bread and butter. Beans, peas and Gheese supply assimilative proteins better than meat. Salad off with lettuce, tomatoes and like vegetables, anawer the body's require- ments much better than butter and lard. The benefit from a suitable summer diet is both in a lower cost Of food and in an tmerease in effective bodily and mental energy There is also a saving of doctor's bills, a prolongation of life and & better enjoyment of it, Hang up this motto ia your dining room. SEER Port Townsend water bonds are not “municipal securities.” Great victory for Togo Brainerd retreat! Rojestvensky Blethen now in full —--——-- The kaiser joked with the American congressmen who visited him Look for extra editions of Filegende Biaetter and the Record. Congressional It may be that the latest defeat of the Russians in Korea |s only in pursuance of—er—startling that “recognition of Japar prepon derance. —_— Two Japs killed In a riot at Tokio. Any third-class Russian town could give more work for the undertaker than that ee ee Now that the French ulstimatum to Moroceo has expired, it would be too bad if the man over whom it was issued a ae Judging from recent police records, Seattle's baseball team sho be called “Rusty's Rowdies.” or oO haw Publte Printer Paleer has gone to _brees. 996 Enrolled Last Year 976 firms asked us for office help. 18% positions filled. If you bad been in att and prepared for a posit could have filled one more, James and Second. Phones 416 MODERN y ithe USINESS 4 e Lat JOUN D. THE E SPATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT. est Photos BY L PHOTOGRAPHS COPYRIGHTED, y OY AND Hts WIG JOUN D of John D. Rockefeller, Taken EN AND STAVE 390§. anne PHOTQGRAPHER gr THE TOM JOHNSON ROCKEFELLER POINTING OUT A vine TREE AT FOREST HILL. IL KING HAD A FLOWER PRESS TO HIS Nos COMMENCED WEARING THE WIG ONLY THE SUNT FORE THESE PICTURES WERE TAKEN § John D. Rockefeller, unposed, has} But there was no troublelpaliing been photographed at last these pictures, The of! on Here is the famous Standard Ot] Wednenday, September 6. the king, Just as he ts im everyday life,| world a surprise by thvit Btho! wig and all convention of Newspaper | inte | For a ® of years the snapshot | to bis summer home at Fo HM, amera crew of the country have r Cleveland, Oblo, n tripped up and slammed down ally entertained the p agar by the man c yntold millions. jamithe, who were accom Photographers by the dozen have) Mayor Tom Johnaon, way laid John D. to catch him In] L. Van Oayen, staff phot action, but the usual result was alof The Star, is not a very at | John P, pany yee a fine view of the back of a hand or/ but he can take thunder speed dno pl ag Himbered at 20ch Century Limited) ee ronned the rim of a hat or the expanse of p’ «and he went with the party | an umbrella where a face should!to Forest Hill Then, whepugpme have appeared on the artist's plate. body suggested ph ad s* STAR DUST » GREAT LIGHT, BY Train | and 2 met bere giving om natives an opportunity to view a fast train. It is that more of our people out to behold the curtosity.—Pahal woman standing on a man's tap | Caled Grimytown. ‘The Gobet Hub. t on bis feet, either, were froway. dirty girls and gross, pararane dent » and the teachers NOT KNOCKING, JOHN. Ye, why doesn't Jakey Furth | a — por ae ca Renee Jobn B. Stevens, be the blosted/ furnish seats for everybody, then | hy nly to let light Into the dark | mine owner. with the swallow tail-| the girls won't have to sit in some| ones brains over which {li-living. (Copyright, 1903, by the Newspaper ) books. Eaterprise Ansoctation.) Once upon a time there was « WEN. yeoutorday have to insue another, forbidding young men to sit on the girl's Jape the pictures speed and snapped which here appear. THE LITTLE TEACHER OF GRIMTOWN certain grimy board school in « Sweats mt you never heard af a Seattle | primsy ‘upon @ still grim! * turn | street car manager objedting to «| Fou ‘test? was fact, t place coat and BIG thirst, self with a whoop and whiskey one day thin week and was gone, may be to work on trade.-Paha Fb ONLY FoR Did you see wun, Wedoesday at sun rise you next one is due may not see one was up i took a look at old Gol ralded bim man's tap. the section, at his} BARLY BIRDS. the eclipse of the ' if yqu weren't up missed it, and the in 30 years, #0 you again. The writer poverty and bad air, had drawn so thick a veil. For all day, above the clamor of shrill unchildish voices, the great tron pulses beat, om the right hand and on the left, and the thi is quivered and shook with the whirring of swiftly-revolving wheels The board school in Mediterra- nean street was the worst on the lst! of the board, and if there was one Clase worse than another in a place of euch entirely bad reputation it Sc Ge i ak ae en was Standard Four, And by an between the earth as the sun and Reortians elitet of atticiatian Head for a while it seemed as if the sun's aed Bier Wen predides. over bw. ai electric julee press was out of or- Sonia er The slightness of the shoulders . cRY . selected to bear the burden of re CLS MEMRY THINKS sponsibility accentuated the crueity | of the arrangement, for the teacher | & frail little Th’ | | woman-—searcely more than a girl Th tang web certainly not very far into her 20th we weave sometimes year. Cold blue eyes, a thin-lipped makes a purty fair mouth, white teeth, delicate hands tiesue 0° Hes.” and feet—the former strangely strong and firm—a head «mall even for ber infantile paysique, all spoke lof character and determination—a “ “HIS LUCKY STARS character and determination recog THE DIFFERENCE — nized by the pupils. They called ‘The honest barge who DEFINITIONS. [her “The Little Teacher,” Convey the freight to us (By a Pesnirist.) Poor Little Teacher, hers was a cidedly unlike LIFE—The prise curiosity) of the | difficult life! No wonder the votce skiff upsetting cuss universe . that was naturally low and flexthle| © it, walk with r CHEESE—Something that-ta-dn- | became sbrill and monotonous, that | And watch them at the dock—|Micted upen us with ple |the biue eyes, gay originally, The latter rocks the t COURA A bluff ¢ scope: waxed steel-like and bard, and that The other boats the to ar remity the keen, thin-lipped mouth grew —_—— HOR A vietim of ite own in seornful and harsh. Once--and AS USUAL teilie yet treated with *\once only—was her sternly impas ‘That man ix my deadly enemy.” air thse i it in not hha i a go e — d Why”? VV galaxy of_adyer- | lout, the y of the class, rebe! 1 recommended a summer resort | tieees ote intrduded upon by a lim yes at being “kept in,” defied the to him, and he went.” ited amount of reading matters j Little Teacher, and she thrashed H | CHURCH—A place where! g yro-|him effectively, the blue eyes blaz FORM REVERSAL. man can stay while her husband i#/ing like a tropical sky and the thin She didn't care to sing and dance, reading Sunday papers. |) 5 lips white and set. Then she die She ne'er was neen to flirt HEALTH—A fletion xpophd | missed the class, and, sitting down At may girls she would look askance, | Mfe insur examiners. Jat her desk, fainted At maeh r she'd look burt BOYHOOD—The state of | prifit | Only one person witnessed this But, sad to say, this girt one day tive savagery through whitdh ape conclusive triumph of womanly Ran off with a bald-headed man|™male Infant passes en route! {O"his | weakness, and that was the monitor who had « glase eye and) first shave. Hie was a rapidly-promoted new seven children — boy, with big black eyes, a big head, omeneee Don't blow out the @ and brain afiame with the love of It is 1 that most of those who| go to Saratoga use the celebrated water only for a chaser - . * tues ed OUR FALL SHOWING OF CLOAKS, N doubt Russia would be tickled . . ~ . to eatin to. compere by dn SUITS AND SKIRTS IS NOW rsaw to Japan, } on \ + NE SSS cess COMPLETE Now every one who's fond of fun Here is a merry fact CASH OR CREDIT It won't be long ere it's begun, And « The nar em manager street rafiway h street railway by forbidding girls t laps It won't be long until they'lt « starts to act ent of a Cleveland Aw ismued an order an ineued an order con sitin young men’s| Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. PIKE STREET AND FIFTH AVENUE. “SEATTLE'S RELIABLE CREDIT HOUSI." He had descended into the Little Teacher's life as though sent from the gode, His eager attention, his mobile face, his observant black yer, his quaint use of book English gained him the hatred of bis school- mates, but rendered him dear to the Little Teacher. His reading from the school primer was a revelatio I WAITED YEARS AND YEARS. to the class and a delight to her She vaguely looked to the monitor for sympathy and even aid. When the Little Teacher came to upon this memorable oceasion, she found her head pttlowed upon a boy ish breast, and a wet handkerchief traveling quietly over her brow and cheeks in the slow, accustomed fash- jon significant of an experienced nurse. She glanced up, and beheld the monitor Do not sit up yet,” demurred the monitor; “it will go off if you lie still, My mother’s always nurse her, you know.” The Little Teacher lay passively against the monitor's shoulder, en- joying the feel of the supporting arm and the cool strokes of the handkerchief. “Had you not better have your dinner?’ sugegsted the monitor, thoughtfully. “Tt is getting on, and you will be tired, you know, after fainting, if you do not eat some- smiled wanly at his chivalric air, and at the literary speech which vat so Incongruously on his boytsh lips, but allowed him to raise her, nevertheless, He watched her as she brushed back her dishevelled hair, and then turned to go. She drew out her parcel of bread and butter and Cushed unreasonably as his chance glance fell on it n have be long way to go.” said to him; “have you not?” He assented gravely But I am stopping to dinner,” he explained, as though to anticipate her regrets, she An impulse of lonelfness om upon her. “Won't you bring your dinm hore?” she asked, flushing again for the monitor ra old. most ridiculously, was but some 12 y do. I — Exclusively for the Star TAR AMILF JOUN D'S $3. et nOUP OF TIO! LADIES WHO remarked the literary man, » which was so very clear net that the chairman of The monitor himself flushed this] “Yea, time, and brought gut his lunch. It) in @ vob was simply bread and butter tied up) and dist in a neat package | the boa dat him as well as Their eyes met in a glance of pity} the chiidr X ke lw as io —hers for his scanty fare, bis for|the Fourth Standard when I left he | The head master turned to the ‘The cracked bell rang outside for | Little Teacher, school time, and the Little er No uble with your class at all, awoke to real life I hope,” he said, calling her by her “Thank you for being so good to} name. me," she said to the m r, and| The Little Teacher did not an- held out her hand. He took it, and| sewer, but tottered and would have his eyes traveled over ber with a| fallen had not the literary man look of appreciation that made ber| caught her in his arms blosh He dropped onto one kore and set- “Will you come to tea with me on| tiled the Little Teacher more com- Saturday?” she inquired, with s| fortably sudden thought “Some water,” he commanded, The monitor colored with pleas | shortly, and drew out his handker- ure chief. “I shall be very glad, indeed,” bi When the Little Teacher felt the replied. cold drops upon her forehead she he be ® e opened her eyes slightly “They make a terrible noise in the came also a brief note from the| playground, monitor,” she com- monitor saying that his mother and| plained. “Pot out the geography be had been called suddenly to Lon-| books and clean the board.” don, and he did not know when they| The literary man rocked her to would return. And when the Little! and fro salt unconaciously Teacher put the note away in her “s- “ be whispered soothing- desk there were tears on it. Poor| ly. Little Teacher. . - But when Saturday came, there The Little Teacher sighed heavily, “Have some of my bread and but- ter, monitor,” she said; “you have a long to go. “S said the literary man. The Littl Teacher opened her eyes wide and looked at him. . . spun round as fast in the factories, and the the board school grew grimier than ever. But no news of wocame to the Littl Teacher, and she grew hard and cold, and felt more and more tired year by year. But she never fainted again. Perbaps it was because— But there! it is silly guessing such things, Poor Little Teacher! | sgh pane : A literary man was entertained at dinner by the chairman of the school board. He was young, this literary man—only some 22 or so. His had been a very rapid success. There were speeches and toasts and reports in the morning papers. Next day the literary man, the chairman of the board, and several members of the board itself, visited the school ia Mediterranean street. “This is the Fourth Standard/ room,” observed the head maste he opened a door and allowed the! Mterary man dha pass in. Chloris Violette week specta Florida Water week special lar price Uardas Oriental Witch Hazel Sh. all week ep jar Imperial Borated Be Rose Cold Cream—full pound jar, celal . Liquid Egg Shampoo- etal Violet Ammonia—full pint bottle, special, per box Quaker Cream Violet all week special .... Lamberts Tooth Wash Pasteutine Tooth Paste We make free delivery to Main 1240; Indepen mt 1240. 1513 to 1519 Second Ave. all week special price rida Water— ee size, » regular price Boe; jal Uardas Liquid Face Powder—white or flesh, regu- all week special .... all week special etal Florentine Massage Cream tut’? all week special .. regular price Soe, Antiseptic Witch Hazel—regular price 4 Savon Royale Soap—3 cakes in a box, ‘tor chaps and | “all week special regular price y all parts of the elty—Use your phones Ghe QUAKER. DRUG CO. 1013-1015 FIRST AVENUE Ghe FAIR. ee eee ~——GOING AT HALF PRICE—— OUR ENTIRE LINE OF MEN’S AND BOYS’ CLOTHING. “You never came to tea,” she mur- mured, “though I waited years and years.” A big tear fell from the literary man’s eyes, “Don't ery, monitor,” besought the Little Teacher. “You remember ‘The Lite Match Girl’ She was in the third Royal reader then. You remember you read it so nicely, They found her in the snow, didn’t they? It's cold, isn't it—and snow- ing outside? Come in to tea, moni- tor, you've been a long time.” Still the big tears dropped on her fa i am better, I think,” sald the Little Teacher. “You may lift me Up now.” The monitor lifted her up and kissed her on the forehead. Then be laid her down forever. from the flowers, regular price i5e Face Powder—regular price ‘ cess DRO aving Cream- “regular ‘price 65e; ie on. jar, all week 15 best on a the market, all week spe- ‘ail week... regular price 4c; 16: in burns, revises Price 25e; a week special ies 1513 to ISI9 Second Ave. -3 $i.

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