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i THE SEATTLE STAR “ BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. OFFICHS—10T and 109 Beventh Avenue WERT APPERN GON ) ACKPT SUNDAY. TRLEPHON bs. Busty MALLARD BTAR AGENCY itt Maligrd Ave, Sugpet, Red 14. ent per copy ik conte Per Week, of twenty-five cents per mont Dy Math or carrier No Pres’ sonbes . a BACKINERS The date’ when your ah M bel f ea ne aper, w hen that date arrives. A ehange of date + el . Bntered at the “WANT Ais oO AND PIKE en Our new Wan the purpose ¢ te Jeav hacttp for this atte nription expires te ft your subsertp name li en frou finns Zour game le taken m the te, Washington, a¢ second-class matter, DRUG STORK, COR BRCOND AVE e number ha ently en opened phone. ane: at the ad pin rand leave news Itc Main (60, Independent Preven Cative 63 Tribune Mutiding. Restitution First W. D. WARD, New York & Tt Is expected that President Roosevelt tm. his annual message Will lay before congress the disgraceful facts disclosed regarding the enormous use of one in national campaigns and ask for pro ; Yentive legislation % This is the very least } 4 There is much more he Geo, W. Perkins has adm a do. ght do ed that the New York Life gave tn Found Aumbers $50,000 to Roosevelt's own campaign fund, The New York Life is a m neern and all ite assets are the property i a of the policy holders, held in trust for qu the corruption of the electorate. There is not even any pretense j 7 that this use of policy holders’ money is comprehended in the by- laws of the company or was consented to by ‘This $50,000 was stolen from the policy hol © a different purpose than policy holders. dors. Preventive meas may provide all well enough for the future. But the thing for the present is RESTITUTION. It is all right to lock your stable after your horse ts stolen, pro Vided you first recover the horse President Roosevelt knew nothing of this double corruption. But he knows it now. The wronged policy holders and honest peoole in general have a right to expect that he will demand of the Re- Publican National con ittee that it return every dollar of life in- @urance money stolen and given to it t > secure his election The committee mi It Delongs to the F President Roose fed to him, compel When dur F contributions wer agers are’ good” for the money y holders. can, if he has the backbone commonly « Korgement @ campaign Judge Parker charged that heavy being levied upon great corporations by Geo. B. Cortelyou, President Roosevelt's indignant denial all but approached the He direct But the proof is at hand, and Cortelyou ts still ta the cabinet J. P. Morgan is the dominating spirit of the New York Life, President Roosevelt's ment se tary of state was long and inti- mately associated with Morgan and the New York Life The first assistant secretary of state is a man who had been a partner of Morgan's Paul Morton was secretary of the navy until he was put In com trol of another politically managed ine: In the well-meaning and strict integrity of President Roosevelt the people have the utmost faith. He is the most popular president the United States has had in a century But there appears to be many things doing that he does not know. An@ some of them are too strange to be accounted for on the Grounds of coincidence. But this he can do, and know exactly what he is doing, he will have the unanimous approval of all honest Americ zens: He can compel his campaign managers to restore the money stolen from insurance policy holders And he can kick out of bis cabinet every man in it to whom are tied strings running from Wall! street $ After that, a message favoring preventive legislation would ring true. nee company _ A Tacoma divine, in a sermon Sunday, entitied “Tacoma is Hell with the Lid Off," apparently got all his “dope” from the series of articles which appeared in The Star inst spring under the caption “The Shame of Tacoma.” In fact, a reference to the files of The Star for that period shows that Rev. Barnhisel Dean's stories for “future referenc ts identical. ust have clipped Dan for in many cases the language oO Whether it was 100 or 10.000 siain in the Caucasus, the average reader has forgotten the number before his eyes reach the next head- Tne on the newspaper page. So cheap is life held when it is so far away trom home. _ Japan ts fast assimilating the ways of enlightened, Christian ‘Western nations. The graft in the army supply department is a Palpfal reminder of our war with Spain. « -_ Gractous suds! but Hi Gill can't be thinking of running for mayor! Monday night be called the Fourth ward folks “tin-horn aristocracy.” So impolite of Hiram. ee Daily forecast in the Caucasus: Riots in the morning, gradually increasing to a slaughter towards noon. ending with a massa by night. — ‘The people are not as interested in a “sea level canal” as they are in an “on the level” canal. os Some finicky individual is finding fault with the new $20 gold Certificate. The only criticiam we have is to thelr scarcity, Ge Matutinal greeting in Philadelphia: “Good morning; has Mayor ‘Weaver been assassinated yet?” ‘There ts to be no tempest in a teapot after all. President Roose- Felt did not accept those 60 bottles of bee BEES E SEES EEE EEE EERE EER EEE -¥ HINTS ON ORIENTAL TRADE ELE SEE OPS i many All reports from Japan and China lay stress om the necessity for ee conformity with local customs and language by Americans who want 3 to cultivate closer commercial relations. The miscellaneous sending of catalogues printed in England to American consulates or to for- eign commercial houses is said to be a waste of time and postage. Even trade marks ought to be accompanied by Chinese or Japanese translations. And the most effective way of getting trade, it is said, fs to send agents to the country who know the language, or who will engage high class interpreters who get into touch with the class « people who have the money GON Pe tho J V7 bs MOUERN BUSIWE. SCOLLEGE Night School No makeshift with us, but a big part of our life work. ; COME AND SEE! with her eye ry you aa well on her as she does on this, her Rocket WHATS phy's hard reg about riv And what good ¢ when h of the I guess swimming, tomorrow's the ays hi cided to lead the simple life.” been foolish life long enough.” you or Bhe Ing germe that st to ® bull husbands mud love to » a air to his wife, jury robbing her of the de’ of loving him. @ ber He ts setting her up for ridioul * STAR DUST A lot of yellow fever refug fled to Onto. yellow fever no ty ts Just itching to get into| actress.” some kind of @ political office this me for one to scratch him, Bernhardt is in Buneos Ayres, an! jectores is “her last trip| Hareb do am well as she did in last trip to Amertes pected to ¢ Hid im her Inat trip t abt last trip to American bee im thir UNCLE HENRY THINKS comes war but I don't like ain't = an bad fr And grammar’s of ape And stuff that they t prone But the worst of the it's If the sun fs out bright Fl be happy, TH duck “Bender's wife created as last night fourth or fifth time she's done has have a lace scarf When that day comes remember that you are to bi who net your wife upon a pedeahed! for her may k ot own and her part the cash runs Ing and go a-blubbering to brew ting th He ts dotog b of the earth who will lowe yc lyou have made yourself her slave have; in the last month.” shows what) | much, 1 don’t suppose she can help | Young post? Mis stuff is rot, ab solute rot.” 1 know Jt. but we call him a ris-| growing whiter and more rigid with|poor little milliner, dressmaker, | ing Young poet because lte write after every y of earth ler anys much of HE CHILDREN MULTIPLIED RAPID- Hubby Dear From the seashore | That your dear face haunts at al and it's Always haunts me, and I miss Every moment more than ever. Really xtudy it tke ’ Hard down in the city Wouldn't it be really Oh, if you could ont And how grand it is in bathigel , They've the best, di Ry Mr 14 #00 nd it ‘or the last six days, please won't To a fellow who's not on the stage 1 was kept so dreadful busy Keeping up with Mra. Richguy Hateful thing she is, and giddy Oh, I nearly failed to tell you ‘an't you send me fifty dollars? I have only left eleven all right but Don’t please don't forget the Write me soon Yard tak L IN (Copyright, 1906, by the Newspaper 1 will h cloned | shaw roa that bung besid face to the wall ehed ¢ him, and turned tt once more 1 morning, Reuben,” ob back of his chair, th knee, For a brief « took no notice of thts lover-ttke gee other on bi and Kinsed h that made hb savagely win air of half-pitying ownership, drop He is making « fool of her Few men can resint the det palon you've crum body's letter shockingly. 1 at thelr love for pretty] . . ; : *} am very sorry, sir,” with a mock thes You knew it when you de S yourself a sult that she might | Courtesy, “but—why. It's for mo! “ 7 fol! to pacing up and down like By and by the worm will CUrn.} woman in pain. Thirty years of mu Will feel abused and neglected. | POON a ue his eyes and # oe. You, it waa, throned upon his big chair When you kneel before her thréne ng up the gold that has brohen | ur health eon, don't bla The man th dust bs If you agh x y to buy the hat @he t make a que of your tit you afford to be bh There ts not a w “Il don't think she's to be blamed You know she used to be an “Why do you call him @ rising KISSED HER SAVAGELY @ continues | every line ‘ours very sincerely, Rev = far-away voles; " ‘yours—-very—asin eorety, © “If ever you ceased!” she mi “then you do not love ime still no'—let mo think what it means. recitative, innocent of full stops will never love anyone clas; that jt at your mother wants you to mar fy nome one who is ¥ very fond of you; that you are go ing to do it for your peupie’s make. and that you are only ‘mine very sincerely, Re n Shaw He fat {| wise man and « law |Shaw.” Hor voice broke sudd she lifted her oulders | Gee the Fleet uret The fe will be at the navy yard | Sunday To eee it take boats from Pier 2 at 9 10, Iam, 26 1.16, 2: 80, LY IN THAT TRY OUR COFFE AND COFFER CAKES NOTHING BETTER 1 write this letter to tell ¥ ways darting, please don't Work 80 \ ij | Union Bakery & Cafe nl the breezes blow m across the freah bi roan ont migtig 1 fine orchestra nightly. | Jones is here, and other fellows 1 T used to know before you, se excuse me for not writing you? you p right ‘One viby, hubby, love and kisses Dollar-a-We k” payments. mone Your Darling HONEY Battleship Excursion the fleet at the Navy boats from Plier ® and 11a. m., 12 noon, 1:16, 2:90, 20, 7:30 p.m oe To # COR, PIKE “SEATTLE STRE RE IKE A CANDLE | A ecatrad Enterprise Association.) Mias [reson to see you, ate Reuben Shaw looked down at the envelope he had Just blotted As the outer door of hia chambers hind the attendant, Reuben ¢ hand to a picture A determined little figure in gray stepped forward and the door closed rvod his visitor, quietly Reuben Shaw did not mov Mins treson, after tapping one foot impatiently on the worn carpet 4 moment, crowed it swiftly and bent moment, crossed It ewiftly and bent md Reuben ture, then he caught her in a clasp Mins Ireson, with an incongruous per a flery salute upon his forehead ed herself we're friends again,” she ith t me of tol Read it,” he sald hoarsely, and ” » that | |kloomy, paper-littered room, with jthe trim, «mall figure in the gray ng the scrawled pages, and A) “What things on bes sat dows oe him.” Shaw,” ahe repeated in a seornfu She weet off upon « strained, high It anys that you fove me, and | Four people are poor and that you|T e are poor, and that I am poor, and rich and | = ES restos co. ¥ } 4:20, 7:20 p.m. - Rain Coats Priced From $15 to $25 You need a Rain Coat howadays—if you buy one here it will give fect satisfaction. Fit, Style, Quality and Price will be just id moreover, any coat in our stock may be bow Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. r AND ———_ out laughing The unreal merri ment ended abruptly What ts that pleture with its to the wall? Some woman Reuben, n’'est-ce-pas ran across and turned it round Ah, the rich woman, Reuben thaw, by her diamond rings and te hands, Tell me, ta it she? What is her nam is to supplant me I have @ right to know Isabel.” sald Shaw, bewlldered ito candor by her rapid chang f mood Isabel’ already! Very well ! and she set the portrait t agalnnt wall with a long 1 t the p A face 1 know,” she began gatly ar this morning on 0 Reuben Li ¢ nele, a very rich old man who was a squire or someth that sort in mt, has died, and there ts no re’ mn nearer than I T saw his death in the Tam going to put in my claim, and so I ume to ask If you would take my | Jease, and make me a rich little} woman, Reuben dear.” | | tudied him acutely while she hein canter tte te, currender as her ence regained natched her Miss Ireaon him feverishly, and with a shudder ing sigh, relapsed his mouth Isabel crea on . a moment, dea Here tn Haves about something” He put her into bis chair again Well, Hay , Bir Alfred Gentt to see you He save it is exceedingly important that he ehe k with vou for a few moments Very well Haves, T wil! down to the hall sald Re Shaw, and the door closed wile . . . . Hid ee “What are these things, Reut jasked Mins Ireson, when the door opened again ¥ darling? Oh fon’t touch them—they are some of the evidences in a murder case of mine. Mind, for God's sake, Roth! | that dagger {is poisoned. Don't} leugh, darling. Seer, this tiny bottle) holds the same poison as is on the} blade.” “What sort of polson is it?” per-} | sinted Mise Treson. You morbid creature! ‘The sort of poison that if I took a sip of It don't be afraid, little women, I'm not going to—would let me walk from here to the Tower without feeling anything wrong. Then I should go out like a candle in a draught.” Come and sit down and ta'k business, About this great for- tune of yours? Mine In leaned against the | side table, playing with the diminu- tive green bottle, It was @ second | before she answered “t led to you, Reuben, my 4 1 wanted you to make much of me nee more before—Ob, | am only a jtvpewriter—what you will—after all. Now go and marry the Isabel reature and pay your family debts. She drew the cork of the phial jand tonsed a few drops into her | mouth | Reuben Shaw leaped up, horrified. | “Nay, do not trouble to show me down,” Mixes [reson protested laugh nly, as she opened the door and latepped through. “Remember, I lean get as far as the Tower before out Hike the candle in the aught. Good morning, Lawyer ben, and-—goodby.” R Clothiers, Second ant Unior ALBERT HANSEN sway otal? 706 Ist Avonuo You'll find Shaws) Pharmacy across; the street at ($206 SECOND AVE ht on FIFTH AVENUE. CREDIT HOUSE. j ch * * . * . * 2 * * ‘ t * * BY OR. WASHINGTON GLADDEN * * Moderator of the Congregational Chureh f * v ix + * Werte PGeeeenl Selle iin a 22 2220 If 1 had it, 1 co » much through many year® leads me to the good with it bel at the son of @ man worth This in the cor refrain of | $10,000 has about 10 times as many 1 men as the son well-meaning money-lover who ances of being cok to justify their greed for gain.|of a man worth ro) Reasonable people are bound to| THE POOR ARK, FAR AND c , t of reason for the AWAY, THE MOST BFFICIENT HELPERS OF THE POOR; the ald from those t; and few of us are fish ¢ we could be iat comes to the ne h heaping up great hoar m their own level ip of vastly great wme thought of ultumatel ha ¥ than that which emt th our neighbor » from the social grades help the r the things will buy, but by kind al nese, by care, by friendship, by the 1 stretched forth in the my mind freely w treet railway tal had been ebled, and ver little of the proceeds had been 1 n improvements. To my protests} ered. The is not gh our ambitions are a agar t woy of getting rich, he} b 1 large amount of answered But how else w give away finds a tre you ge r pub) rar | mendous task n his hands, Mr. art «a “, hospita Carnegie knows, by this time, how he ¢ plays in? Ion't itlit i, He bas been conscientiously for t good of all that en| endeavoring to disopse of a great ld be permitted to get rich rap-| fort he has tried to find places idly in order that they may have alto put it, in which it would do as Jarge eurptus tribute in n/ little harm and as much good as he has not been able, never accumulate provide | ae yet, to get rid of much more than themselves wi ich things. I#n't| the income of his estate. The great it well to encourage large and rapid! bulk of it still remains in his hands. accumulations that these higher! And there has been no end of fault ways? 1 working jo will! possible, bi needs of the p may then finding. A great many of the work- applied? lingmen refuse to patronize his H+ To. this of a “benevolent |braries; not a few of the college pro- feudaliam answer is that it is| fessors resent his professional pen- doubtful policy to permit the levy-| sions, and others declare that the ing of large tribute upon the earn iit of the scheme will ba to keep ings people in the he that laries at a low figure, some small portion of it will be) The fact ia that the amount which returned as largess, It ig better to}any man can wisely give away ts people have what they earn and/ limited. It ought to be invested m to use it wisely. Justice|in ways where he can watch the is @ better social foundation than ation of it before he dies, and a dubious biend of robbery and » that it is doing good and not harity | harm IT 18 A DIFFICULT THING TO| | DO G are thos mponstt eflecting people are apt to 10D WITH MONEY. There| have much to say about the good who say that it is nearly| that the multimillionaires could do to get a large fortune) with thelr money if they would give nonestly; but I think it is about as|it all away. That is by no means y as to give it| clear. These multimillionaires have | had no training in the very difficult fi are not always grate-| business of doing good with money. ome of our worst enemies|To pour out upon the community be found mg those whom|a flood of largesses would be @ » benefit. Still more) doubtful good. It would multiply paralyzing and pau-| mendicants and undermine charac- portzing effect which unearned Such an cra of undigested its are apt to have upon the|charities would fnevitably be @ racter of the recipient | pertod of moral decadence. To en- THE DIFFICULTY OF MAKING| courage the growth of a class of MONEY REALLY USEFUL to those| enormously rich men in the inter- who have not earned it t* seen in| ecets of charity is a doubtfnl policy. the characters of the children of the} It would tend to the reproduction of rich. In the great majority of cases|the conditions in ancient a 3 they are injured rather than bene-| with a hungry mob howling fited by it. Careful observation,’ bread and the circus. Quaker Drug Co. Special Sale of the Famous PLOW’S CANDIES We have a complete stock of Bon Bons and Chocolates. A delayed shipment which we pur- chased so that we are enabled to offer these well and favorably known candies at less than whole- sale price The stock {s all new and fresh and we would suggest carly purchases as the stock is limited and we will not have more, SLEEPERS—If you have cold feet you need a pair, ali sizes .... Dr. Hoff's Peptonized Emulsion of Cod Liver Ol @ specific cure for consumption, colds and grip. Regular price $1.25; Quaker special...... SKINS TO BURN — Largest assortment in ‘t city, all colored, . The Quaker makes free delivery to all parts of the city, Use your phones—Main 1240, Ind. 1240. The QUAKER DRUG CO 31013-1015 First Avenue Home Well lighted, is one that is lighted with GAS. The Welsbach Light ‘The most satisfactory light at a minimum expense—white, bright and cheerful; the nearest ap- proach to sunlight. Seattle Lighting Co. P.-1. BUILDING, FOURTH AND UNION. Phones-—Sunset. Ex. 27; Ind. Ex. 76. ALVEOLAR DENTISTRY The new system that tightens loone teeth, cures bleeding an@ pyorrhea of the guma, Treatment of Dental Pulp. Irregularity of the Teeth, Absorption of Dentine. Treatment of Exposed Dental Pulp Treatment of Alveolar Abscess Treatment of Autrum. er, which the Doctors nave ac- ompliahed: have been the replacir missing teeth without the use af plates or bridge work. This of course prohibits anyone else from practicing Alveolar Dentistry. Examinatt # advice free to all. OHIO DENTISTS, 3071, Pike Street, Corner Third and Pike. Seat- tle. Hours—# a. m. to 8 pom. Sundays $29 a m. to 1 pm.