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4 THE SEATTLE STAR BY STAR PUBLISHING CO . OFFICHS—iWt_ and 180 Beventh Avenue EVERY APTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY Business Department ependent 1138 BALLARD STAR AGENCY—88 Hallara a Bunset, Red ta or ent per cor © per week twenty-five cents per month, ered by mailer carrier, No free cople TO MAIL SUBACRINERS. The date when your subscription en the address label of each paper, When that date arrives, {t you @ change ot nthe a Riel Is & recelp: Batered at the Postofft Bea Wa om a8 second-class matter a WAN AD OFFICE-RA LYS DRLG STORB*COR. BRCOND AVE AND Pik STREET Our + Want Ad Office at the above number nas recently been opened Mains tent ti cote ae: Representative @ Tribune Bullding Japan's Finances , ‘ ‘ 4 gives a rather . ! ‘ a the ‘ r that the lead. * tha war with F ‘ 5 And t t * ' ® f Tok V Mr, M « the t uct 2 in Jap $ he va f the A 1 nua ae he s rh fish#Pies y i ut $40,000 \ f alls 1 proxt t$ a pita r t ( ry haa t and | st the country Financially speaking, th s in the banks 4 v debt ie $715.00 ” bb» t annual income f all sources » real paupers in Japan, that popu 1 of thrifty tax payers like the h peas Mr. M does not into this matter but a Bs: writer has rais ta ou ama of Tokio and it is i ; shown that there are a half milion of half ved subjects on the of heaven” who no poor they rent the rags they w And this explains the mob. Japan wanted peace because that country ta on the very at any price. ‘ With Japan the continuation of the war spelled fina al ruin, 3 Ideal Citizens “ A unique election was b n among the boys who @isport themselves on Hamilton Fish playground in New York, Un- der the tutelage of the city commissioner of parks they cast a regu lar ballot for mayor of the playground. The victors rallied under the banner of the political purity party. The new mayor will be reyeasible for good order and for the care of the dumbells, trapeze and other apparatus of the playgrounds Me will appoint a squad to act as police agents, and other lads will De nominated to ald the park laborers in keeping the grounds clear of rubbish. It is significient that the boys, $00 in number and of all classes and conditions under 16 years of age, stood overwhelmingly for po- Hitical purity. In this they set pace that their fathers, always follow. These boys are supposed to be untrained to the responsibilities and duties of citizenship. But if the same spirit which they mant- fested were uniformly manifested in all the regular elections of the land the result would be revelut!onary. ‘The lads have bad put upon them responsibilities fur the care of their playgrounds, They realize that the grounds and the apparatus are for their own use and enjoyment. The playground is to the boys Perhaps as intimate and important an a*fair of their own as are the afairs of « big city cuvernment to their fathers. Bat how differently from their fvthers do they go about the con- serving and promoting of the own irterests. Since the bors wanted politics! purity, honesty fidelity in the administra*ion of their affairs, they made that the trace, selected a candidate who s'ood for that one thing. and they voted for it directly —and won it. True, ihe boys are unschooled in the ways of polities, It would Be a good thing for every city in the country {Uf thy grown-up men could at election time forget every thirg except what (ex buys know the simple direct issue between right and wrong. Grown up citizens often forget that political purity is the only safeguard to their rights. They let that issue languish, or confuse it, by dividing upon national party lines, becoming mere cog In political machines and mee slaves of party bosses. The money question, the tariff au-stion, tt ippines have been tremendous factcrs in the decision bo‘ w @nd dishons ity in the government “tf @ thousan! cit'ex. How much wise: are the boys who know what they want and gx Straight afte: it and get it! These bovs are yeiag schooled in the duties <{ citizenship. Let's Bope they wll never become so selovled in politica as to forget te fundamental piimcipl: of making phrity direct os unfortunately, do not rage. It is hard to understand how Colonel Blethen escapes the at tion of the lunacy commission. After his faking sheet had clipy an @grogions knock against the Puget Sound navy yard from a Tacoma paper sad been boycotted by nearly everybody at Bremerton as a re. sult, the Colonel with characteristic Hearst tactics knocks knock in Tuesday's issue of The Faker. SERIE The fact that there was % his own ents in the pocket of a New York editor, found murdered in his hotel the other day, is acce i by the Police as conclusive evidence that robbery was not the motive of the crime. —_—— The school teachers at Urbana, Ohio, have gone on a strike the boys and girls of the town are posed to any attempt to arb trate the differences. a M. De Witte and Baron Rosen are homeward bound and torn by doubts whether they will receive a shower of brickbats or boquets. nd After the investigation of the officers of the life insurance companies, what then _ It may yet be necessary to take the differences Bweden to Portamouth of Norway and It behooves Mr. Taft to make haste. MA/N 4 |W fd Zz 7 CH hig ta 5b Night School No makeshift with us, but a big part of our life « COME AND SEE! Py THE SEATTLE ‘THE REAPERS AND | THE HARVEST, VETER REET E EEE E ENE Ee Mahe : MAKING OF A GENTLEWOMAN : (BY CYNTHIA GREY.) ¥ i IPP Pee eee eee eee eee ee eee * STAR—WEDNESDAY, SEPT, 20, 1905 ( right, 1896, by the Short Story (little cook ' uid Publishing Co.) amma y Hoa it 1 the deserted “t he answered with her m i of t Northwest territory, | tack Then, at th her | the Inst t had! own v in the empty ve} " yne afternoo threw up her head and lo ) i Apor a man [her aghast, breathle Concord couch, f face, suddenly grown pallid with the! apa with to und | pallor of a After an tt 1 th wn, be cast b n her kne qi r oh » Queen |} half er a couch, and] Ant sburba, where i with the 4 Jonment of A few \ bust t pa Thus Adam found b 1 he came back, It wa ti { the end, He ne \e an | tlou top and say, “I at] (on t you hear it, the both | ate, iwa | to the ' ttied | building was full of uy ho | paterin i inf é " hard ' han hers, Often a] | work, bu was an incen-| t nt hum went on, | th he uch of @ b ‘ At times the bu between them, | could all t wut the words o “ nat ve carre by the! the conversation, That, he sat ay, to pre ufficient for their| fied her, was a draft of alr circling it were & past that it} about in the rotunda. The footfa I have been burdensome to re-| he never 1d hear, The voice she} ber, neither remembered it. | *ald nothing about; and 1 He planted and tended a garden,| Was & good while before | { «| {falls and the whisper-| na f «8 were more than she could en-| ! Let us gol Let le | ful place!” she murmured last | aid t late,” he! eardin © anxiously eto ® any day now i move. We will find here are not ss hows. We will go and j CN . | ofthat They want under a le - and found a re de in t sires. aie Tate te oF cis quarte but when row | at Gann nahi: an dana eo a 4 ra pea jawned, the snow was falling in a} ~ Kve nee d well on the way to All of us may t . Ke the ha " ar Ba, sp z Srarmgh vee min. "Rees : bee eee recovery from her temporary pan. mmay b&b . £ rn) talking 4 frow Ween one ay me meena Soe: Se | at th t volee again. After that it spoke ~ her with lacremaing frequency; | Bg , i sine ¥ ‘ he ’ never when she was listening for it} PR era eB chs spe bow nl a and dreading it. of (as she some-} yy haope too * “ : ‘ : times did) longing for it, but always | s woke wore ‘ when she was busy and absorbed in| , « « Pp hing else; or waking her up| mud i 4 the t * : A rae =t : « ’ out of sleep, and bringing her up-| pth aa eet : st eae, # right In her bed. trembling like a — sae ee aye af, and with w yes staring int You have , men take from] Let us keep our ¢ open ané cer darkness, It never sald aught} re) te geo nge irda jd Dane Same Spee eee ee but “Mamma!” Sometimes, after it | n ive | athe and app nat we we had spoken, she could hear the pat-} —————~ - — — of tiny feet im the hallway or on ¢ stalre So the weeks went by over the dwellers tn the abandoned city, until one night they were aroused by STAR DUST %ye hearing one of the horses below ve stamping traordinarily. Adam SVE! EVE! WHAT 18 IT? | 8rose and went down hastily to see what was amis, He could not dis- won before he was a bank president.) ver that anything was, and re- Theirs was an idyllic existence. | turned, shivering, up the stairs. The yao caer They laughed at the atic ef-| bed was empty, and in a panic he Sar te Meme . ‘ lfects which accompanied their foot-| searched about the rooma, lantern _ OUR WANT COLUMNS. 1" — man to the one who was in! ion through the empty strests|in hand. At length he found Sve COOK—A good plain cook ean ont} a hurry, “be aid you ever stop to} aye ssid it was the ghost of the| cowering in a corner. “Eve! Eve atens 1 nat be ood.) tht - FS , teady work. Must be truly ® bee - booms prowling around the haunt» it is itt” he cried, afraid to but not too plain. K. K. K. No, | never did. 1 don't have tn. [Orne Pee triumphs tonsils baw ARTIST | — ane lates ee oe > well when I'm)" rhey got into the way of calling] “Oh, is !t you?” whe said. “I did north High on Bhar eid notion. mane. ntach or themselves Adam and Eve, and sald/ not know who you were at firet.” "x "Y Zz ] }to mach other that they were happier! One day, when he had been after pP- +t a eee | outside the garden than over they/en armful of wood, she had disap oa are wai Bonny ar —, were within it peared on his return, He sought wg ag Panag erp Od yr od Cog ~°. | “Is not this divine?” said Eve, a*] her from room to room, At last, on . y Ng ie, and not o my ‘ they sat one twilight rf om the) the third floor, he came to a door BC alii steps of their little poreh, her head| that was locked vee ap On poo after i - w upon bis shoulder. Here we are] Behind that she must be: and be lon rally one corkscrew re all-auffictng to each other, but back] knocked, and 4, and besausht ig treated as confidential | tin the wo some day, some one th phrases of love, that she would ee Ba | would find ux out and point the fin-] open to him, but there was neither : DAESSMAKER went - to sew on ger at un word nor movement in response. He hooks for the eyes 0 ed, pote} Well,” he replied, “we have the] framed a desperate resolution. He tors with their jackets on. beet part of a year before us, you) entered the room adjoining the et ag a am | know, for you to change your mind] locked one, and, softly raising th: TO RENT Apa tment, for gen | lin. By the time the plies have] window, cre yut upon @ narrow man with steam hea oF 3 ixiven out, I fancy you will want tolornamental cornice which ran JOJO. elatrvoyan 3 ret rey a non people, if only at a d © around the building below this third veala overribing, | Predicted Lab | Have you looked at the money| tier of windows It was coated with! day tee fall on § 1h, 44 13th | lately?” ane asked irrelevantly loo, and a chance as desperate as al ree | Ww would steal itt” b re-|man would care to take in any! WILL kindty wii jturned laughing rait. If he found the window fast wave . " De you believe she asked] bis daring was in vain; but it prov-| front Stoenth Nat pet See drumming absently on the edge of] od not to be | plea . c omunicate with AN la box with her taper fingers, and He raised the sash with the hee THROPIST? a fot looking at him. ) you believe, | fulness necessitated by bis situation, | FOR SALE hn really bellev ny heart, t 1 let himself into the room, but! on time; also « ail you will be able to slip away ¢ woman was oblivious to his .s HE DREW THE COLOR. LINE. |when you go « of here—back | prese She was kneeling in the BL N CHANCE - | ° | + mK acant room, upon bare floor man with experien jn rahe isn't that divorce case hordbiet if 1 didn't believe 1 should] surrounded by empty white borses will Bee to invest lite 1 1 see why the papers. print! not ha undertaken it he an-| walls, with he lrooping, and aa c a hard w ing w * bee h things. The ought to He's) owe Don't you believe it,to tle rms moving gently k and forth N.G |law passed pre ng them ftom 41d once as if swaying o while she pu 6 stuff like that. thea] pia she said. “No, I never] smiled and crooned a soft lullaby. HENRY THINKS | terr aw J looked so far abead.” The day was one that deepened | ‘ » you know abou iw w » the first rain of autam the lines that the year had graven 1 always 4 a | wee # terri or not r tinge leaked like a *.,on his forehead ia know anything abet te} We shall have to go to the b ses Hit when he's |except what I've—I've read ift-ind they said simulta: At length there came, one eve, a baie ie the pay { y chose a sunny of} strange wind out of the upper sky; | pom i with windows fw the] all night it blustered, and raved, and nature did mak na P _s ker deserves a transferred their belongings,|raced through the empty streets] deal edit. He's a self-fmeel and made themselves coay for the] with a noise as of marching bat | m: winter. It was while this ing|talions, And in the dawn, great I, U always thought #0, He HF] was in progress that a queer thing| masses of snow began to come thun » be very original |happened. Adam was away with|doring down from the roofs with| HISTORICAL FRAGMENTS 4 = ile : % jthe wagon, and Eve was ne injrush and road. A January thaw had| Hemry Vill was very Giaconsolate| nat 5,Tit ATTRACTION, Sim? jtheir apartment, arranging it with| set in BF ge es euceraene te hate te- | housowifely instinct; quite absorbed Now let us go! let us go!” eried| x ne sidiiaialt side Saturday. He had had « miave|in her occupation, and humming] Eve engerly, as she woke and b ark- " te a WAVE On the Tenteneos Tonk | softly to herself, she was not in the| ened; “away from this awful place!” ek ah i ind his et Dingiet ihe of ine © Us er,| least startled just at first, when a All day tho strange wind blew, and jesty, “every { think of how | News ar it many wives I could have had if I | \had moved to poklyn and posed| © the Akund of Swat has not i jaz a dentist | wired congratulati | What position can a coal-field? | QUITH A GALAFEST | So | een, R CREDIT? | THE MAIDEN’S PRAYER { da If they are not talking |_ A certain girl said she wished this, it i# that, if it ts not Any garment in our stock of Fall and Winter ring Apparel Dave Passmore could find him a it is the other, and if it isn't may be bought on weekly payments. | girl.—Roope correspondence Seqr the other it is something elae, as Good Goods—Honest Prices—Terms that Suit chee (Tenn.) News. the old woman aid Pittaburg ns Pear Corresponden: equachee, Tenn. a ae he sen is fu of water News E (@} . ! hs ereirie’s fall of fant, | astern Outfitting Co., Inc. But Jagley'’s full of something | It’s out of date—the pipe of peace Ot gaits another brand | So. pat.away the cammet COR. PIKE STREET AND FIFTH AVENT j The real thing in this century ; “SEATTLE'S RELIABLE CREDIT HOUSE | cu me. began the chy Is the treaty cig tte under thet , 1 ght. Bw On the turned \ ‘ thelr faces A hed t he a “ an . bet y pid b A , f Opog ve the mant f t i tits | ‘ ack gaped . 1 I f mountain def a wint fl A f ud glacier ur ante of th P flew, d k ¢ y a rt oa Panwit , t ' in KorKe; od Its firwt ture 1 nook f | & The Quaker’s Little Prices are pure Milk—regular pr yer ca T manuf A must not sell th nevert price is, per can Dr. Gleason's Soap—sam box of 1 at Quaker special price Whirlin nee ar aker p Bear-Ola , nes them for ta r hildren's shoes; regular pr price Dr, Hoff's German Sali—best for 1 at a debility; regular price 75c; Quaker pr eXTRACTS—Pure Food Co.'s Superior Goods—Unequaled f and flavor Regular 26c bottle Vanilla, at the Quaker ......... ihe Regular bottle Lemon, at the Quaker .......s0.ss000+ - Ihe FREE DELIVERY. se your phones—Main 1240, Ind. 1240. Ghe QUAKER DRUG CO. 1013-1015 First Avenue DENTISTRY BY THE Al VEOLAR Bereee = protected by Ohio dentists. There in no longer ity for { faine tect and fall- ng teeth ¢ firm and strong forever of the guma, including pyorrh permanent- oy pared ome ner dental work and with guaranteed satisfaction. Spe- dental work, with * of experience at but the best at reasonable prices. All i advice free to ail . Corner Third and Pike, am or phone, Phone ny nece in ne 3 without pair ialists for each branch of your disposal. No cheap work. work guaranteed. Examination a Seattle. Appointments A 414; Like This Awful cheap & and tracts on Lake Washington, finest lake in the state. have sold over 1,800 acres in beautiful € den of 10-acre the We tion the last year, Ina YOU'LL FIND all will b 4. No wonder, as we sell acres $50 up on terms o $1 per month. Some have houses Shaw’s Pharmacy on them. You will be glad to get it at $500 per sere before long. Some people don't know you can raixe over $2,000 worth off of five ells on acres. C.D. suburt nd hel nore peaple Sroeek tha ame ten vies ie ACROSS THE STREET FROM Beattie, because be te the own- HIS OLD LOCATION AT or and sella on easter terme and given work to hundreds and has don more to build up Beattie than anyone He id over 12,000 people their here the last 5 years. Once a customer niways a « ea gE Second Ave. ing lote at Atiantle City at §75 on term 1 per month edly yee mo Ppa or te TELEPHONE 368 FOR Take Washington Stre car FREE QUICK DELIVERY. Only 5-cent fare by gett ok of tickets Get ff white store at Atlar cH Twenty salesmen on as un- ti sold out. Free boat rides on atk free to erybody Shaw’s Pharmacy D. Hillman in Ti Stop in and have a good Cup of Coffee with choicest Rolls or Cake at the Union Bakery & Cafe a Changed Hands BOSTON DENTAL PARLORS ‘Twelve-year guarantee, Lady attendante Bours—#:30 to 6; Sundays, 9 to Both phones. 1420 SECOND AVENUR The Bargain House, for two j= = — years at 1104 First Ave, has changed hands. The new own «Persian Ne } Essence ers, ia order to get a new line Il Retonuds of cases, of Nervous er of goods from the east, will sell | bility. Insomnia and Atrophy ey the Bargain House stock, con- {j| clear’ the brain, strengthen, the cir make digestion & magnetic vig sisting of Clothing, Shoes, Hats tb'the whale and Men's Furnishings, at 1c permanente than wholesale. Watch Friday ‘sta Maitea evening's Star for bargains. Lente