The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 19, 1905, Page 5

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THE SEATTLE STAR BY STAR BLISNING CO OFFICKS Ii? and li Roventh Avenue Wren APTERNOON BXCEPT BUNDAY THLE HON is ERED Business Nenartment Malin 1080; Independent 119 BALLARD BTAR A VENCY-2 Halland Ave. Sunset Red 1a One tg ber week, or twenty-five cents per mont @ettvered hy No"? oplen hata? een TO MAIL he date when your wibsoription expires hi tien has » advance, your name ts taken from the list m the address tabel is a recetp GAL the Portoffice at Boattls, Washington, aa second-class matter WANT ALL OFFICE-—RAGLEYS DRUG STORK, COR. BKCOND : AND PIKE SYRERT ‘i, Boentaghdter Qur new Want Ad Office at the above number has recently been oo tor Vhe pu t affording the public m convenient place to leave want ae Star and leay Itema Phe phone num: Main. oe dont. TNS W. D. WARD, New York Re m tative 6 Tribune Bullding Railwey Hilling The & series store threatens to be continu. wreek bef. to v Tt is-a dull day that does not bring ite y tories, of k r i mangling ¢ Mit @ion or derailm t Last y all omis for railway nceldenta were Broker This ye 10OF Weome record still ts being ¢ iy | Laataencl ft are the horr that the pu has to a great degree nh od t them. Offictal ty at tions are = by ming pert ry and the blame and penalty are very seldom ? report of Int ‘ Commerce Commission Just tasued for the year end Ju 30 » we that ¢ total number of casualties to persons on the ra * Wes 94,201, of which 10,046 represented the umber killed and $4155 the number injur A. These figures do not appear as appalling aa they ought © are Weed to them But t is that great military campaigns have Joes of lens men than are y Sacrificed to the railway juggernaut oft United § s Our continually dis asters, as compared with the almost plute eufety of Miwey travel in England, would be astounding. We ot hardened to thew arison with © d te unfair ause of our much Breater far large mber of emplo our leas pe t Poadbeds, and our vas trackage. It cannot be hoped that our raiiw ay system way years to come be as compact @nd perfect as that of ng But many glaring dete ugh which lives are lally Sacrificed, may b The block sig system rigifly a i, has « 1 in- RMumerable lives. ik an be ext 4 PUlimans and private cars of officials come out of the wrecks safe @n4é sound, demonstrates that safety m uy be incaiculably iner i by the proper constr tion of all cars, Some of the worst of rece t wrecks have been due to the “buck- Mag” of freight trains. The 1 safety appliance law con- tains provisions which, if obs 4, would render “buckling” impoe- Bible Blunders of raflway employes are not always due to carsteasness or incompetency. with them. Remedies for the commoner cause But they cost money, And as long o Ways’ saving of money at the sacr ly to remain content. Long hours and overwork have much to do of disaster are not far to find. the public tolerates the rail- iffce of lives, the railways are Ike. The public has power to compel the adoption of all these clearly Gemonstrated remedies. When this power ts exerted travel will be far safer than it is now. It Is up to the pubiic and tts offictaln Noth~ ing is to be gained by railing at the railways when coroners and courte fai to fix the blame. 1 must not be forgotten, either, that a large part of the list of @ead and injured is made up of trespassers upon raitway property. And the general carelessness of the American peopie makes another Reavy contribution to the annual list of casualtion. Sage, the Sign Board “Most men die too young. Just as they have learned how to live and bow to make money they die. I am going to live a hundred years.” So declares Russel! Sage, the stinglest millionaire in the world.” f Mind you, he has not lived ninety years. He has learned how to Make money, but he has never learned how to live. And should he stay on earth his hundred years he will not know how to live. Not ia a thousand years! As an illustration Mr. Sage has never taken a vacation. He does not believe in va- cations, Think of the fun he has missed. His only happiness con- sists of drawing directors’ per diem and loaning money. And he calls this living! If you were to ask him the difference between making a living and making a life, between making money and making happiness, he could not tell you. He knows no difference. And so— When he sees men dying all about him—men rich in go and service for their fellows—he pities them most of all they cannot live longer and learn how to make more money “Most men die too young?” Yes, they do. And we cannot always understand why the lives of good men and useful men are cut short Nor why the candles of such men as Russell Sage should be allowed to burn to their sockets. Except, it may be— That Providence keeps the sordid man es a sign board pointing to the realm of mean-heartedness. Doubtless it hesitates to take away the post which supports the board with its warning finger. ee When Mr. Battling Nelson defeated Mr. James Britt the other day the stage gained a star that will not dim until another light- Weight with a sleep-producing punch lays Mr. Nelson on the scrap heap of oblivion. 1 works because A few more accidents to balloonists and ballooning will be classed as dangerous as riding on a Now York elevated train or dodg- ing motor cars in Seattle. —_—_ When the St. Louis election commissioners revised the voting list they considerably marked off the names of the members of the city's two-base ball clubs. Sneed Miss Alice Roosevelt was the guest of Dowager ‘Taking a Pekin on oriental ways, as it were. Empess Ann. By the way, when does the baby-a-year free-for-all qualification race begin in Zion City? 7 fh, GON is TD hg testa Night School No makeshift with us, but a big part of our life work COME AND SEE! THE BRA’ TLE STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT. 19, 1905 | = Live Mother Goose to see th wond tt humar * Woot } | | John ‘The Solitude of arrington fq Jobe Barrington Bwootstuffs, jagainest his himbar vertebrae, and Whole and Retail.” ‘Ton years|strain him backwards until ht ago John Barrington had had that | spine wn 4 fa@lty lance. inct inseription painted over] "Madge ing, “you # the front of a tiny shop in Little] very cruel me love you, | Japan-et, and he could i afford|and now you won't love | the hitting ont ut as their} i did nothing of the « Kilded faces faded blood imod Madge, indignantly 1 ved f ott ve the | never aald a wir word to you that | neat wooden boxe mery No,” admitted the I Ro-| overflowed Into first one room and) meo, sadly, “but ut i at me then ther of jand my heart was yours from that} house,and a gla 5 the cramped yard in the re For-| rewumed Madg tur miled upon hia v | per ed the repulsed] To look at, John Barrington was! nificant tremor in bis] comely enough, being unbent and Mudge, couldn't you car straight of Himb wpite his|for me @ little? stooping, b right eyes. \ repeated Madge severely cately molded chin, and a ng| "and I think if you were a gentie-| nose. Aa a whole, indeod was} man you wouldn't torment me with strikingly Norse, for bi d—| this sort of talk when I've told you itwelf square and compact-—was set |{ don't like There 4 other] squarely anc mewhat loftily on al w 1 besides me ay, | pair of smal d.museular shoul ri me to elose der Only, instead of being fair 1 put up the shutters for and erlaply curling, hie bair *lyou?” inquired the rejer uitor dark and fine, with @ gentle ripple | still in the same pathetic tone in ite raven ¢ His eyog were aid Madge practically as blue and his skin was as Mir as! “iney don't put up, it pulls down thowe of & princess {na fairy story ; Mr. Barrington 1 1 in bi it, Hey in a minute, | , wine with a wich napliration Italian | sf he catches you here, he'll anis k on his 1 see oncluded her wooer, vin dead mother ad been ® | dictively u want to be mistress! Neapolitan bine blood | of old Barrington’s money; I wish of the G flowing down from | you of the br and #0 un | Odin himsel John Barrington was | cattantiy departed | a racial hybrid. How such a man|" y¢ , that young was 1 mid ondure to toll over cashbooks in danger of sudden fracture, it] and ledger was a mystery. When at that moment. Rut Jobal John Barrington entered upon | tenancy of the abop in Litt The oh ie t hood The boy who has never trembied he fier Jack the ‘ Killer 1 to be an j giant killer, won't make half Give us the nimbled-legeed, the hief-eyed, the emart little der There ix time enough for lott i Hosophy after the tittle Bodies stretched out in & good start BY CYNTHIA GREY M QGudran Thorn-‘Thor te Jonge t an ' ‘ Imag a houweful of youngsters ley i of the delight Mothe rh t ditth 4 th | th pa bulst | the w aned from th 2 of « n »phe That would be th sult of Mra. Thorn- Thomson's Idea. She wouldn't the Httle ¢ fit their tn th such | as “F r "Hey I Dida nat be taught to] from Homer: | seconds th ourt 1 * day } ve Those who revere the gous The gods will biess. »ward healthy growth of armp and ome We hope the seed of Mra. homson's idea won't sprout These are the days of presidential booms. It if no wonder that Bill Taft is coming home tn # hurry and only hittin, “Who was 4 the high apote. Bilt Tati?” he ie in a bad way Indeed. Unete Joe Cannon now has a boom. counting him as Roosevelt's logical successor. ularity, health, aggressiveness, and that he kno’ seems to count for most of all Already the people are beginning to Aad when 4 politician gets in that situation ‘Thorn. | ay, Politicians at the capital are They say he has pop- % the game, which They also assert that the next pres- ident must be a man of an entirely different stamp from Roosevelt; precetent «mashing. human being can hope to compete with our chief magistrate. It ts now about the amallest thing ‘There there in # way, say the politicians, Mr. Fairbean: man who ay of strenvosity and was a Fairbanks boom. vo learka, follows Mr. Roosevelt no has got to be that and more ving its Sparker refuses to apark, and any fen't a vote getter, and any And that fe why the Uncle Joe Cannon boom is being olled and cranked. » STAR DUST A Chicago man hat been keeping/a turkish bath, and ever so much two families om a day Halt) cheaper Lake papers please ny | ‘ -— ore A Green Lake subser t Witte says he dowsn’t like Yankee | know why we should nd better ooking. We don't lke sins et car service, wh you ean whiskers travel on the wings of fancy A Tacoma preacher Homebody ought to sumest that Jeliver a ser Beoretary Taft sit on that revole Tecoma” next day night Uenary tid over in Yokohama fently one man over there has “woke pron It's too bad that Governor otk — gets inte the pre al race with UNCLE HENRY THINKS. A handenp from the start. It wasn't necemaary for Fry offer bis mup~ port #0 « Batttis ting $1,56 tage, Whe terfeit mone The trouble have | to the “coppers” selves. Chicago hi boxes, Seat of her saloon Py ody we for leer | linger still sufferir | Mpna: led by the & money wasn Jomse Jam bed. If his |#o long, we A St. Paw town trying He says a le ek on the vaudevitle ther it's stage or coun- oy Inn't specified. which Seattle police- n locating “blind pigs fetion that the eye” trouble them as a shortage of packing | Rockefeller bootsed olt d hav “Freckles kiver a multitude o° skins.” ight lend her some yKen. yn’t somebody sugge: “boxitils.” Mayor Captain Laubscher s. half a cent ¢ had just been inform- attle conference that his t “tainted.” nes, Jt» has been father hadn't bi re n ¢ ur suRpicions. I newsp per man is in to buy k at the totem po it is better thar =a Cruel | Willig we ~, “SNAPPING HIS PICTURE.” NAMES FOR THE TREATY. While ther over the p treaty bet we The Picture The © The Stand-Pat The The The The The Armi Not-a Can furore? you atic Kop mako Tr reaty k Treaty? a noise i# 80 much discussion per name for the peace n Russia | why not consider one of th Machine onference Cocktail Treaty? Air-of-Pessimiam Treaty? Irredueible-Minimum Treaty? Non-Possumus T lows Japan, Treaty? paty? like a | ' | merely looked at her undemonstra | tively > urday afternoons to his ledgers and/ stamp with her foot, and said When his assistant came prosaically, “The nasty, spiteful & from her tea, it was bie custom | (hing’” | to leave im charge of the shop, What more she might have «ald land, retiring to the dusky parlor | was short by the entrance of her comm ASTORIA For Infants and C dre n The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Be la } similating the cod ant Re } ting the Stomachs and Bowe ignavure Pre motes Dige stion! Chee fui |) ne ssand Rest Contains netther | Opmum,Morphine nor Mineral, | Nor NAnCOTIC, 1 | | In Use e For Over Thirty Years — CAS TORIA Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms Convulsions Feverish- | ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Sigule Signature of Gatlin, NEW YORK. EXACT GOPY OF WRAPPER. at, he had £5 and 3 halfpe | pr rth from £2000 | to £2000. fair to him, he 1” did not ca never had cared—a | rush for 4 single sovereign. It was the joy of getting it which was Goedel 2 the tend be 0 seBiaty| be 6 Welnens Oftb-odll ts en ot sweet to him. He was a modern one his face in his hands Viking on terra firma, a fin de Soha: Sasvingion ‘watendl “tael” Tae Gamat te aan ond siecle land pir | hungrily. She was or a bright] fearfully across. He did not move, Recently—because the wholesale girl, with limpld eyes touched his shoulder. He business was showing Itself distinct-| | aed Mae ae he We T tas tee wat Gee eee ly more profitable, he hed relin-/ the fire pouring the hot/ there were great tears upon his quished attendance upon the count-| the teapot. a whiff cheeks and on her open palma. er, and had aged an assistant i fragrant herb came to his nost Madge’s eyes met his, and she Why #0 gra and preoccupied al lo, all the solitad ot tn wrest. out erying man aa Jobn Barrington should i back on him lke a f The ‘Ob, I'M stop! I'll stop!” she said, bave Shesun te delegate Cale part ot | Jearnest face of the attendant han#-| and flung herself at his feet bis ‘werk to @ poreon of the fom | maiden swam before hi . . . : inine gender will never be quite! ‘Thera, it is ready, Mr. Barring | And so that supper was cates satisfactorily aasertained, but when | ton,” said Madge, “and | must go.”| after all 4 Madge Smith appeared timorously p Bhyee beng Be gerd 0 upon the scene, John Barrington inquired her previo perience, and appointed her forth-| with. Then the currenta of both lives flowed on aide by side, silent- ly, formally, in & routine that was | delightful to the man, mechanical to the girl | Jobo Rarrington hed not engaged the services of Madge in preference | to those of a member of the sterner | sex from motives of masculine! weakness. He never noticed her ox-| cept to ianue bis instructions. Nor | was his choles of her to be set down | \to motives of economy. He paid his feminine ald £2 a week, and did) DENT WOOING OF A REJECT- not evines by look or word that he) gp SUITOR. was doing anything unusual The two golden sovereigns Rta being to “some “trifitng MIGHT HAVE REMAINED A BACHELOR BUT FOR THE AR- handed into the little palm each |degree—at least. externally —civit- Saturday night with the satisfied | restrained himself with diffi-|™ air of a well-to-do merchant set lout. tling a heavily-discounted Invoice. | Being set free from the counter, John Barrington devoted hin Sat 8 stage one, did not weep or faint, but tarned flery red, gave a distinct | for behind, to plunge Into his boc the rest of the evening Along the even tenor of this quist employer, who regarded her obvious dDiushes—-not without a ridiculous satisfaction — and proceeded to way John Rarrington and bis em-| “clone” for the night. © proceeded for six months, and) “You can eave one lght on | then the former became re that) Madge,” he directed In even a colder in the vague concerto of vices which floated to him from the shop tone than usual, and retired Into the parlor. on these same Saturday nights, one)” when Madge had made all tidy waxed familiar to his ear, and that /ghe followed him to recelve her one not the voice of Madge. It pro- ceeded unmistakably from a mascu aie Crenthiel i as line throat, and was a youthful bar-/ ig ehair by the fire, with a ledger itone, capable of modulating itaelf|/ on pis knees. He had broken tho Into tender tones and caressing #*1-/fire into a blaze, extinguished his inbles. John Barrington grew UO-/ customary lamp, and had lighted ba ~-4 every burner a large chandelle One Saturday he got up and set! isualty lost to view in the twill the door stealthily apart. He could | Viich summer and winter inhabit-| nee into the shop. Madge stood be looked up when} ed the room. He hind the counter sewing, the coarse brown holland of the material he asked lo you mind gathered up over her wrist a0d/ naxing me some supper? I feell bagam in that womanly fashlo® | thor strange, or I woutd get it my witch 14 80 unreasonably appealing | sie | usually do.” to the lonely masculine heart. 09) "sr aie heart wellod up into her sharenawenra ot8 a ee en eyes at the thought of those lonely young man sat with hix elbows on | (7s At the ‘ bis his ee e 4 4 sn vaing a conventi phrase in her we a ee co confuaton, 3 half choking " John Barrington listened, and as | Soe union. and half choking with he listened his Gothic blood sprang | ? | PO Ts lee into ite old fiftth-century heat with " " 1 d a rapidity that made him reel under| "Don't. If you lave somewhere ad Berserk desire to take the} § “But I haven't,” responded Mad fending youth by the ok] But | haven't,” responded Madge, " and se ut her task from behind, get a Knee planted | Ye dust every where—harrowing EPILEPSY CAN BE CURED, | up her housewifely soul. in a cup: tanding epilepsy is con-| board she nd ergs and a few most physicians as in| slices of ham d set the pan with a torative Nerv-| some of the latter on-—or rather half} re peda oe imost | on—the fire, while she tald the cloth} Bee hone wha hice heen | Upon a portion of the clumsy square cad Cheer itl i ant {table. To think of a man doing it. DRO MILES MEDICAL] work which ts properly that of her| CO. Fikhart, Ind sex is always pitiful to a woman Of America’s foremost designers” aro exemplified in our ehowlng of Fall Cinaie @ Suits Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. COR PIKE AND FIFTH AVENUE. ment to look with pride at table and to give an additional poke! to the fire. she remarked, with her hand on door, awkwardly took on the table, ing sense of propriety “good night.” fot to the shop door, “T Madge being a real girl, and not ya but: stepped on it it tay growing cold “© woeful sight aught up her hat, but paused @ mo- You are tired, nervous; your brain © COSY iy over-worked—and your head aches. Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills act gently on laying | yoNERVOUS HEADACHE. | | | the nerves, soothing the Irritation which the pain in your head, and in w moments You ore entirely cured 26 doses, 25c. Never sold in “Good night. Mr. Barrington,” the John Barrington got up, stumbled w to the cupboard, ut another knife, plate, cup ind saucer, and spoon, and ret them “Madge,” he sald, “you'll stay? Madge flushed with an emberrass- “Oh, no;” she replied He mistook her again. “Very weil,” aid and she she observed when she ve forgotten nd it's raining.” k hastily into the the thres- surprised. John Barrington ad not moved towards his supper. “Dear me,” ny umbredia. She went b BOSTON DENTAL PARLORS Swueovee sverentes Lady a! Houre—#:90 to ¢; Sunday > 12 Both phones. 420 SECOND AVENUE Only $300 For Cottage Like This cheap 5% and » Lake Wash’ finest Iake in the have sold over 1,800 « beautiful Garden of Eden Addi- tion the last year, Ina few days all will No wo we ALBERT HANSEN 706 tet Avenue A tra whut Some know you can raise over off of five acres. « Hillman nels suburban property more people to get any five firms in don't 2,000 worth D. Centennial’s Best Flour Makes More Bread ie vwonion “sco cor 11 Makes Lighter Bread ti Makes Whiter Bread Makes Sweeter Bread Makes Better Bread Than Any Other Flour at Atle lesmen on ¢ lake dat Or see Block. 1513 to 1519 Second Ave. Ghe FAIR. 1513 to 1519 Second Ave. 1000 Samplo Wrappers and Kimonos on $ ONE-HALF PRICE ALL GROCERS SELL IT

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