The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 13, 1905, Page 4

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one 4 s Qa : THE SEATTLE STAR t BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. OF FICKS—197 and 188 Reventh BVERY APPERN GON #UNDAY. Tr wt, Red 1a. twenty-five conte per month, Avenue Independant 1198, inca Ave & be Bosiness Apartment Sunset, Main 1089 BALLARD STAR AGENCY an One gent per cony, ety cents per week, oF Molivered’ Gs tenis or carrion, We tres coplen SURSCRIMERS-The date when your subscription expires te f eneh paper, When that date arrives, [f your sub tp been paid In advance, your name tse ta froma, the list the address, label te & toptes tice at Beattie, WashPhuten, as sesond-class walter AAGLEYS DRUG STORE. COR, BROOND AVE WANT AD. OFF PIKE STREET D. WARD, New York Representatives 2 Tribune Bullding The Mockery of Peace ore and shouts of that two The world has heralted {ts coming with ch A thrill went around the globe when It was nations had ceased warring And yet peace is a good deal ¢ ing becative of a victory that seems almost barren. IN RUSSIA THERE CAN BE NO PRACE For where there is oppression there will be revolutions and blood- shed. The pr p that ‘The idea that moves the bain and hand of the assassin Is alive. The spirit of liberty is growing and the power of no man can stop it. The cause of the common people is the cause of humanity, and support and encouragement for the oppressed will come from the en tire world, Finland, Poland and all the countries that have fallen to the grasp of the exar have been subjugated but ‘The bh that is slumbering in the hearts of the pe Tt may not break forth today or tomorraw, but wh will be a reckoning. Tt ts the full moral right of every man to speak what language he pleases; to worship God after the dictates of his conselence; to marry and raise a family in the way that seems good to him; to le bor and secure for himself a large part of the fruits of thy labor and to have a voice in the affairs of government. Tn Russia all of these things have been denied by a ruler who is bound hand and foot by precedent. All of these things the common people WILL have If it ts neces sary to drench the country with blood. ‘The man, be he czar or sultan, who attempts to stem the tide of freetom, is defying God and must fail. The kind-hearted person who designated the local Hearst Faker as the “official” paper of the coming missionary conference is sure ly not on to his job, for, up to date, the Faker has been compelled to Tehash from « morning paper all the real preliminary news of the convention. joy known a mockery. In Japan there Is riot confronted the czar has not yet been solved. hever conquered ple is a voleano. a it does there cowardly rising The Golden Age ‘This must be the golden age for America ‘Trig soys that Rockefeller te as big « gentus a8 Shakespeare. Gunsaulus says that Roosevelt ts the only matches the Man of Galilee for perfection. Sheparson says that Klhu Root breaks even with George Wash- ington in the mattter of patriotiam.. And there are, besides, Morton the whitewashed, and Loomis the indicated, and Lawson, of Boston, who, in the opinion of his pub- Meher, has been raised up by the Lord ave the nation. To be sure we have Chauncey Depew, the fallen peach, and Tom Piatt with his wasted life. The Equitable stench ie still with us and Graft is being discovered in every nook and crany. The lid i» off tn Saratoga and various other places. . United States senaters are Indicted and convicted; and other men aspire to seats in the senate who ought to be indicted and vieted. But what of that? Do we not still have our poets and writers like Hathhouse John and Heary James? Our statesmen like Sullivan (Tim, not John L.) and Hearst.? Our geniuses of trade—the Rockefellers, the Rogerses, the Ryans? Go to, then. This ls the golden age—for the Rockefellers of the fountry. man of the time that con. Hired Girl, Hired Man Considerable fuss is being made because an eastern milli has “stooped” to marry a hired gtri Living in lows. Why? ‘The girl must have graces and personal points or the million- ‘Bire would not have chosen her. And it is safe to say that morally abe in his equal if not his supertor. ‘There is no stooping about {t ‘They were on a level, or if anything the hired girl was just a lt- le above the millionaire. All of us in America who amount to anything are hired people. No doubt this millionaire is a hired man in charge of some big corporation. Rocseveit is a hired man. And #0 are all our senators « servants In the pay of the people. And, fellow citizens— One of the things that is the matter with this country is the growing tendency to look down on the man who works with his hands, or the woman who works with her hands. ‘The tendency ts devilish and dangerous. Let us learn again that the hands that are scarred by honest toll bear wounds as honorable as those received in battle. The overalls and the gingham apron of Labor are as honorable—and v useful—than all the martial trappings and uniforms of War! Lat us learn again that the doctrine of the dignity of labor is fun- damental to the republic And #0 we say, Hurtah for the hired girl and the hired man thene two—who loved each other for what they were, and pald no at- tention to the accidents of fortunes. alre 4 congressmen and diplomats— tly more os Now that the kinks In the Japanese cable are straightened out, perhaps the banzats will no longer be delayed in transmission. een ‘The judgement of those who voted for Alt He turns out to be one of those $100,000 men. _ M. Witte, it seems, has acquired the 10-minnte-for-refreshments habit. Parker is vindicated. — Why not call Porth th 996 Enrolled Last Year 276 firms asked us for office help. 188 positions filled. If you bad been in attendance and prepared for a position we could have filled one more, James and Second. Phones 416 MODERN COLLEGE BUSINESS 4 athe SEATTLE STAR-—-WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 13, 1905. — ~ sone nome fund ew it open rtos’e Y SKETCH = | vol, was inquiring for Amy and | Ward Kila way in a low + the z _ IE WAS NO FANC See at | ptothe Woman _ ee or } 5 ba word of her ii 1A wees He flew ta 9 stood fap ; 1# PAINTING FROM TH MAR ly flushed, while ber breathing be- jing me ever tha forget iia } cle webct al 4 bo her OF FIGARO 1 0 Afcame very much oppremed he | tac Going rapidly to the bedwge Y Beg ae ¥ TORY OF LOVE AND BOR-| best thedical advice was called Se eried, Kawi "amy! My oe tr to th ¥ ¥ gees) me, gots ohaked | KOW foo fate! They pronounced my |1 have me t lone, t fy an Old Maid darling in conaumpt never 40 leave v mee white & Mas he ought) In the cabinet old friend, ‘Oh, Emma! What I saffered \o answer came the . to have knowr Mr. Winche hangs ajecan be known only to God. Amy |my ebild, but b on» an It t ' It's up to the v un pl which Mas often attracted] was calm and resigned. Her express ston and fect my attention, It represents a ace re was to seo Atherton ¢ ud it change s fp i breaks | 1 comes} * If caller varly and find things from “The Marriage of Figaro. & wrote the truth to him and jjook of pain came to it the eee ok meee ut the faces were evidently portraita.|implored him to come without de-| stretched out one hand to me at wouldn't Rave ha i if she'd Twas & bad day for William when! Although it hung among many|lay. The day after the letters were) Father,’ she gasped, ‘Atherton, manages right h 1 whet works of German, Italian and|sent I received one from him writ-|1 am so happy.’ ite up to the woman It's up to th c French masters tt did not suffer|ten on the eve of his departure for Her head sa mt from (he contact hor He was coming by sea and d her eye Amy » 4 if Gaughter gets giddy and dangles The « 1 book agents, plumb 1 wa tanding one morning be-|of course would miss our letters, {| Atherton is now in Colorade, the w | ern and cooks fore this, my favorite picture, won-| “C flernoon I was sitting be-| pursuing his profession. He js stiff Tf mother had Watched hor, tt] Bhe must keep them tn band and/dering tf there was not some his-|#ide her bed. We were alone.|a bachelor and a woman hate, wouldn't have beer find time for by {tory connected with it when a deep| ‘Father,’ she sald faintly, ‘| am go-| people say, 60 much do they know It's up to the womar It's up to the we |sigh behind me caused me to turn|ing. I shall not Atherton. You|ot him ‘ | my I saw Mr. Winchester,| Will tell him how 1 loved bim.| “Kate and Georgiana moved ¢ If young #on gots frisky sind smokes With one foot on bank book and one|who had entered the room and was Hark! There ts a carriage at the| Kentucky, where Georgiana died rebcgs on accounts, {standing with his arma folded, look. | door! |four years after her marriage His mother has spoiled him, now And both ends must meet when she jing sadly at the picture | “I! sprang to the chamber door! Kila is with Kate. I am fee what tigu amouw Is it not beautiful, Emma he I's up to I's up to the woman, wala. eT. } “It in, indeed,” T replied, “and for] MINNESOTA LID TO CLOSE lof United State, Ju na fancy sketch the on are won| AT. PAUL, Sept, 12 If the ent and Morris, that it » derfully lifelike ruling oF the interior depa t to} maintain a « on it tw no taney sketch,” said my all Naver sell ir no- lands, even after th old frk hastily. “The whole] called “Indian f white person picture is drawn from life. Sit| every wa quor store in all # decision, the I down, Emma, and { will tell you! of Minneso ing fet attorney the history of the picture you ad-| will be shut 1d in-| United Btates sur mire so much Jclude th * of Minne 4, Du-| upholding th “You know my wife died when my|iuth, St. Cloud, Moorhead, Crook-|diang negotiated #6 only child, Amy, was but 2 years! ston and hundreds of st r places.|the United States 7 old, Of courke it was neceswary to| The district attorney says that if|jends in the Red river valle provide son capable of taking|the law is weed the “iid” will oe char the little one, and my dear) shut down so tight in northern Mt Great Northern Ticket Office, three eee refused to elect John D. | tlon after being royally by the Standard Ot! magnate. |is @ Joke which won't appeal very| girls during strongly to John D. in that Taggart case soon, let's change the subject must decide which wan boss, wifey | - or whisky We are forced to announce that - diamonds have advanced 59 per cent! However, radium ts still hover: in price, and inasmuch as we have ing around t It's worse than a four-in-ty This team that « wor ** ae What Manner of Men Are —— These Japanese Who Will Peacefully Compete With Us?: SERRE EEE EEE ERR Ree Half a million Japanese soldiers and aatlors will now retwrn to peaceful pursuits, Triumphant im war, they will seek to be triamph ant tn trade They will beco: “f competitors: With « natural eurtosity, we wonder what manger of men they are To the average person of the west the Japanese are Inecratable. TAfterences are those of language. manner or thought, religion, so- eal customs and history. duit American or Buropean has even been able to really master the Japanese language. How, then, can he understand the Japanese mind’ Several have attempted it more or less successfully, Probably the most successful of all was Lafeadio Hearn, a man of great Insight end fineness of feeling, who wax born In Dublin of an trish father and « Greek mother, and who spent the last 14 years of his life tn Japao Hearn loved the Japanese and studied them passionately His first books shout them were exqeisite pieces of word painting, as beautiful as anything In iterature But on the eve of the Russian war he undertook «a m task—to fully introduce to as the Japanese as they are may understand them. This book is called “Japan: An Attempt at Appreciation.” RELIGION, Hearn believed, was the great molder of character. whether af a man or of & nation, and his book starts with the premise that WE CANNOT UNDERSTAND THE JAPANESE UNTIL WE UNDERSTAND THEIR RELIGION And the Japanese religion is ANCESTOR WORSHIP, a survival most primitive form of all religions In Japan this has the name of Shintotem, which «imply means “The Wey.” Baddhiem, which t* aleo popolar in Japan, doce not in- terfere with the primal aneestor worship. Japanese Buddhism is simply @ set of beliefs IN ADDITION to ancestor worship. When To- 0 telearapheld that he had whipped Rojestvensky because of the great virtue of the mikado's ancestors, we smiled, but to every Japa- heat the phrase was full of sacred meaning. eee “sors oft Ancestor worship was the religion of the carllest Greeks and Romans. They believed that all th dead became gods, and they wor whipped their family dead. Out of family legends about the great de- parted grew the gods and goddesses of the ancient mythologies. But the family dead were also remembered and worshiped up to the time of Christianity Religion today in Japan is practically the aame as that of the South European at the time of Romulus and Remus. As we find it hard to understand the ancient Romans, so it is bard to understand the modern Japanese. in both cases the stumbling block is to under stand their religion. Japanese religion is centered in the family worship. offerings of food are made to all the family ancestors, but more par ticularly to those immediately deceased. in the living room of each house are small shrines, and in each shrine are small tablets, on which are printed the names of the deceased. Ther ghosts are supposed to haunt the shrines, the house and the neighborhood. They are plously believed to be sustained by vapor from the offerings of food and ta be solaced by prayers. When the family gods are thus kept in a gopd hamor all goes well with the fanfly Other deities are the departed great of the village or clan, but the most popular of all are the imperial ancestors, to whose heavenly vir tues Togo ascribed his victories. It is an article of faith in Japan that the mikado is @ from the sun itself, ax well as from a long line of gods and ge Hence the Japanese fiag portrays a rising wun. And this religion of ancestor worship is to the Japanese nd mere Prayer and matter of fancy. It is to them real, vital and tremend an the greatest single influence in their lives, Family worship is neve} neg lected, imperial worship never overlooked. To maintain the fprmer families are kept together at whatever sacrifice; that the luster bf th latter be not dimmed a war is fought with courage and devotiod that has amazed the world. Almost every Japan custom and mode of thought ¢ be traced back to this religion. Christianity has as yet scarcely affected it, and it coutinues in full vigor, despite all modern innovatio The American Press Mumorists several quarts of them, buyers will ol | pienee bear the change in mi The hero of the new play, Land of Nod,” makes love to twe the course of th piece. That play, so far as the hero in concerned, is misnamed. entertained | This “~The Unless Captain Laubscher brings saloon box report pretty | The judge in the me old price, $16 000,000 «a olding ours UN spring quotations arrive. beter with Tartar mays a Chic Edward Bok says that men should marry before they are 26. All right, Eddie, the next time we'll bear this in my sauce, “What i home though « bargain chaser rm CERTAIN MAXIMS OF HA- SHEESH THE WISE Contain thy . thou short. jon return full of the winter months And spend all ridding herscif Of the meermchaum-like Unt whick she bought with roueh pelf. Rehold, and then marvel, at styles Laday! Inspection reveals that what now Is. wu fat as panne, “TAKING A SHORT CU ‘v ACROSS THE LAW SHE'S NOT HANDICAPPE | Since It Is known over the county | that Lam ranting Miss Mary Ho kins for Co. Sup't. and that I wan! o of the factors in her candidacy and that she intended to devide the salary with me, I therefore, deem tt to lone yoten, bec of my un popularity, to make this stater to the public, I say that it te an Infamous, unde Ing election 1h and any one confirming same is a} liar, [never asked her te run in my | life 1id not discuss that subject with her HW. M. BR In My sandatichn Henry Watterson might run for governor of Kentucky on his record | in not being asked to subscribe for “America’s Smart Set.” s Great Northern Ticket Office, Corner 2nd and Columbia sta, Low exe rat Sept, 16-17. Re- orve your berth now ooo I 1 bl sister, Ella, a widow, consented t bring her two girls and live with me giana, my elder niece * old and Kate was the s of my Amy, born upon eo day The three girls were up like sisters, sharing the studies and pursuits, But as the years glided on their different characters were more fully devel and each had ¢ favorite or pastime. Georgiana w nd of books and in danger of be Is the same that of yore went out| chestnut hair, fine figure and reg- | thie was but little. intimate with )ana's betrothed, and we saw much | birthday of Amy and Kate was cel coming very bine and pedantic. Kate unlike her #! possible She wai cap, fond of gay am eupecially fond of horseback riding and dancing “Amy, my motherless on as you are are, beautiful, her large brown eyes, ¢ ta that only an act of congress | Corner 2nd and Columb ~ Low an raine it | sion rates, Sept. 16-17. Ree + | The der of the inte your berth no» | Some ofthe Quaker’s | Little Prices ANTOZONE, the great disinfectant and deodoriz- er, colorless, odorless, harmiess. Full quart bot- tle at the Quaker . 50e In general use by the U. 8. Goverament FREE. Leave your name and address at the Quaker and get 2 50c bottle of Liquozane free. 2he bottle White Vasoline at the Quaker for 10¢@ Mc bottle White Vasoline at the Quaker for 29@ BEAR-OLA Shoe Polish outshines ai for ladies, men’s and children's shoes, ¢ and quickest applied, 10c bottle at the ba ek for i¢ Peroxide of Hydrogen —at the Quaker all lor 2he Ol Dressed Chamois High grade large alte; Quaker price A $1.25 Dr. Gieason's Soaps—Box of 7 assorted cakes, medicated and antiseptic soaps, regular price 0c; Quaker Special price 19¢ Dr. Hoff's Anti-Pain Felt Back sears Plasters— regular price 26e: . Quaker price 2@¢. 2 for .... Oe Large Scratch Tablets—tor schoo! use; "regular Price | ‘We; ‘Quaker Special . Spanish Hair Renewer—Quaker Price . Use your phones. Main 1240; Ind ependent 1240. Carter's Swedish Halr Renewer (the genuine), Quaker price... 50@ “AMY, AMY, MY OWN LOVE!” ular features. She was lively but not so daring as Kate, fond of books but not sufficiently so to be in danger of becoming pedantic. Her ruling passion was music ben Amy was 16 years old an old friend introduced me to Ather- ton Holmes, a young artist who was pursuing bis profession in our city I was much impressed with the modest manners and intelligent conversation of the young man aad he took @ friendly interest in our family affairs. He was poor, hav- ing nothing but his profession; and not having made his name famous; He became very Ghant, Georgi Dr. him. From his firet visit 1 4 nee he was pleased with my y “In teas than two montha he had asked and obtained my consent to his addresses to my daughter, and, sh was not indifferent to his attentions, | promised myself much pleasure in watching the s of this Httle love affair ton made up his mind to go to California to try for a fortune. | Amy was heartbroken at his de- cision, but he was too proud to mar ty her without wealth “Shortly before he left the 17th | | ebrated by a fancy ball, before which & series of tableau were to be given. The last of these was the second scene from the second act of ‘The Marriage of Figaro”-the scene in which the countess and her wait ing maid disguise the page to de ceive the count. Georgiana repre. sented the countess, Kate was Cherubino, the page, and my Amy was Susannah. The curtain fell with the actors in the position you see in the pleture “As a surprise for me and a part- ing gift, Atherton had painted the girls’ portraits "Ax winter came on Amy began to cough and her face was frequent- Your Fall Suit t bought here. We hi sity salected stock o: © elty, the iargest, Mixses and Wom ost complete and most n'a Wearing Apparel in CASH OR CREMT Eastern Outfi tting Co., Inc. cor PIKE STREET AND FIFTH AVENUE. SATTLIOS RELIABL FE CREDIT HOUSE.” Ghe QUAKER DRUG CO. 1013-1015 FIRST AVENUE Well Dressed an Always bas an advantage in business, social, or any other phase of life. There is no exeuse now for a man to be otherwise than weil dressed. For $15 we can show him @ suit thet will make him ppear AS prosperous as A millionaire. W. B. HUTCHINSON CO. Cor, Second and Union Cor, Colby and Hewitt Seattle Everett CARLSON DENTAL Co, ALL MODERN METHODS. Corner Second and Yester, over y's Drug Store. Entrance gd bargains in Furniture see ame, SE. Weleghee Sad. f. RED FRONT FURNITURE CO. 220 Pike St. 737-Sunset Main 2716. 1513 to 1519 1513 to 1519 Second Ave. Second Ave. Ghe FAIR ——GOING AT HALF pmice— OUR ENTIRE LINE OF MEN’S AND BOYS’ CLOTHING.

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