Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SEATTLE STAR BY STAN PUBLISHING CO. OFFICES WT and 10d Seventh Avenw APTERN « Pr SUNDAY. Wey Business Depart N EXCH TRLEPHON bs nt Bunwet, Mat 1080: Independent 1198 BALLARD STAR AGHNCY-Sh aliard Ave. Suaseu Red la, = ‘One cunt per copy, aly cents ver w or twenty-five ee: 0 Galtvered b matt ves Neo free eee = — TO MAIL AUBACRIBENB—The dat your eit fon the add | of ench paper W hen that da rrives. tion has not e heen paid in advance, your name is taken Son the ae label Is a reste the Poutoffion ot Seattle, Waphington, as seconde Want OPBICK—-RAGLEYS DROGWTORE, Cou COND AV AND PIKE sTReR relics on J Office nt the shove number has 1 tfomting th: Wats ne for, Th public Star and Main © If a man can t h of a his anger and view the oc ® y m the viewpoint of an ated apectator, he an evening spent with that body is a good deal me “ * - anvedy Be Somet n be such a bad actor that he's a deal m enterta if } 4 18-carat brand of Tt Most Ne Seattle men ate actors, und bad actors at that When they artse to address the chalr on the nd a ex elusive franchixe plan, their efforts at trying to look and talk he st are very funny Rut What's the us M cr une ila Don't you k ty ld « great deal w respect from th anity if you were frank Why not come out into the open, take hypocracy and deceit and say to your very f Now took here, My su kno ar that I'm tf Jake Furth and his the long grve “As f ae th public is conce od, I What they think y know I'm crooked, Heating about the bush. I'm for Jakey fi Tong as he pays me for my suppert Oh, no, Mr, Co man! Thi wouldn't hurt you with your ee: stituents as much as you think They know ye anyway, and, wertng their estimation of you, tt ¥ create exactly a nciiman of ours, they would aay, “has, at least, one re @eeming quality—he's frank and isn't a hypocrite.” For There are pleasing qualities tm a poltiical pander, a municipal thier unscrupulous, —treacher ” Jellyfish as you and your associates who have so the Seattle Electric company Who has prostituted your hor or for the sake of m: The Power of the Press “Further performances of ‘Mrs. Warr poned, Daly. Bully for the press! A foreign dramatist, brilliant @ Gry gourd, made a piay—a bold slap im the face In manuseript form it was harmless enough. Mara Shaw and a few hardened theatrical p had access to it But a certain coterie of dramatic talent agreed to perform ft. Arnold Daly, an excellent actor and manager, decided that the play ap- Pesled to the worldly wise who wanted the naked truth, the more Undressed the better. First the play was (ried on a little New Kngtand town—on @og-—but the dog would not allow a second performance. Dlay was hurried to Now York, with its wickedness w and everything was made ready to reap the shekela fr ns Profession owing to the universal condemnation will be pont of the pross."—Arnold but with no more heart in him than of ency. Only orge Ber. opie the Then the advertised, n moral per- ‘Yerts who revel In seeing mimicked what wholesome people know Only to despise. Of course, at the first performance, there was a crowd. While Sleefully taking tn the gate money the management said that it would leave the fitness of the play to the press. Biff! Next morning the press gave its verdict. It was so unatl- Mous, not to say pronounced, that the police hastened to forbid the further production of the rotten play and arrested the house man- Now the promoters of the play mourn the loa of $19,000, expend- ea im staging the play, and declare that the pubite cannot stand to @ee the truth portrayed. Because crime ts a fact is no cause for wanting more of it; be- eause immorality ie 2 fact is no reason for making It profitable for Arnoid Daty and other “nelf-sacrificing” actors to force it upon the Public. The press has earned new laurels by that “universal con- emanation,” and done a sterling public service. An Indian Washington “An Indian Booker T. Washington should be looked for—an In- @ian who would do for his race what Washington has done for the colored race.” This is the keynote of Dr. Lyman Abbott's address, opening the Lake Mobonk conference. It seems an easy solution of a grave and complicated problem. But it must be remembered that Booker T. Washingtons are not to be had for the asking; a Booker T. Washington is not only a force, but & result of the elevation of his race. There must be a thrifty p'ant | 4 before there can be such fruit | ‘Whatever elevation may be claimed for the negro race in this Country is due to association with the whites and direct domin by the whites through two and a half centuries of slavery It was a hateful and unholy institution, but it was the forge-fire that tempered the negro from a savage into an industrial man Association with a superior people, and industry, enforced until it becomes voluntary, can alone bridge the way from savagery to ¢ivilization. No other method is shown in all history The maintenance of the Indians in tribes and apart from the Fest of mankind has dtlayed their civilization for a century and, if Persisted in, will delay it until, under the unnatural condition on acquiring nothing of its virtues. A fountain can rise no high er than its source, and it is as im- possibit for a Dr. Wahington to rise up among the Indians as it was for one such to rise up am ong his own race 200 years ago. There can be development of manhood in the Indian only when the degrading tribal customs are abolished and every individual is Itft to stand on his own feet and work for his own living and ad- vancement. | El Hadji, the king of Abyssinia’s envoy, is creating quite a stir in New York. Never heard of him before. The man everybody would like to see is the famed but mysterious Abund of Swat. King Edward is to confer on the mikado the Order of the Gar- ter. Mutsuhito will probably return the compliment by investing Ed with the insignia of the Imperial Kimono. | ‘They're blaming the farmer for the high prices of Thanksgiving @ay fare. What can you expect him to do when everybody wants to eat turkey and nobody wants to raise turkey? Chief Engineer Stevens, of the canal, says he doesn’t Intend to~ tesign. Perhaps this will be the first time Secretary Taft will go visiting without anything happening. ee Senator Penrose says the Pennsylvania republicans have no apology to offer. They expect anything of that kind to be taken a@way from them. It is barely possible that the McCurdys will be ousted by the Matual Life trustees. Wonder what family will move in then? ‘RETREAT OF THE CZAR, WHERE LIBERAL MANIFESTO WAS SIGNED | ceive no greater surprise than to be told that the chief misery of the the humpty—humpty ter atrical life ts its deadly monotony.| hump!’ Seems like it dis obliged ter Oh, | know! I know! [ have stood) hum right ° every Mon waiting my cue sometimes feeling| day night do law, but Td almost rather die than go on and/it's mighty Urosome sonietimen” Tepeat again in those same, «ame) One of the hardest things a young words; standing In the same, rame| actress haa to do la to recognize hor place; looking at the same, THY SEATTLE cman iy be the together san tt once veveral in town after town. lah, now te dere dis yere music play ‘What do you mean, Ma CLARA MORRIS I suppose the young woman wh: burning with stage fever can re bout Why, even the very overture will 6 sometimes for weeks happened that) the Monday night first overture for! weeks was always the same At last my maid any } ‘in ria? | “welt dat yere “Humpty, humpty/ eed et and then cultivate to the » STAR DUST ANGE! 88X j newspapers t they | Bn ~ all die of the vices they have borrowed from the civilization while IT LOOKED SPICK AND EXPOSUS YRS With a rex i “You have s mild case of pneu-|the I How did _* feeb net 4 1 a may ” COLLINS BLOCK, JAMES AND SECOND. % The largest school tn the Northwest. Exclusive Rookkeeping. State agents for Gregg Shorthand. The only mercial Exchange Dept, in state, More teachers than any local school. There are many more facts about the big school to know them? WILSON'S MODERN BUSINESS COLLEGE. users of SPAN. PHONES 416, Pudget Com- similar Want in my t | movements graceful, yet certain. She could have been! the Ideal high-comedy woman of her time She could have gratified her maddening ambition to star, as a light comedienne-—but no, she did) not care for the triumph of wit and grace and beauty; she went doe wedly on trying to play tearful hero- tres. And so she threw aw: of a sure success of a comedienne for the shadow of @ success as an emotional actr It was a cruel} sacrifice, and the bitter struggle i over now, but I shiver w her) for somebody in- ‘Oh, yea, I re- her touch leht) the realit | name ls mentioned | variably remarks | | Bomber sho was both pretty and/ promising'” | | 1 can's see anything in He's » & Cook he ts, but hie m ar haw m that he imitation of a “whirlwind campalgt | An Htinols man has discovered a “WHAT! YOU NEOMI AMELOT?" |Ticketutore thie has been left tothe | placing my note in the heart of the cold storage planta cluster, sent them to Neomi. In this | | 7 pote I besonght my darling to wait three years for me and implored - -* her, if she cared for me in the least, : to wear on of the roses, that night His VIEW OF 1 when I should te'l her of my great | | "De » wlleve that competition te afeection for her he. Fy by age _| Evening came, but Neom! wore no | i ert tor the (roses, I was desperate, but had to} the women of go to Clermont. There I plunged would be dead with nurse into my new work and in the of time married the colonel’s dangh- ter, who died eight years after | marriage. Now | am quite alone, I often think of Neom!, and what ts/ more serous, | always see her in| imagination as a young girl of 17 the hh soine day if you | with ber dark brown hair and eyes | e up the right thing like black velvet, whereas, if she is ‘mem to the worst, | U¥ing she must now be an old wom-| 1 grand dukes can each | an.” an heiress and set You do not know what became _— tT” asked Madame Ne Lon-| blamed for the ine erk, who ” | = comp Your name, then, is Edmond |— —" dAlthien. | How did you know?” queried her » * * | friend ai ea I will tell you,” answered ma- dame. “Also, T will tell you what Don’t Wear Shabby Clothes JUST BECAUSE YOU'RE A WORKING MAN , Working men who make us ak easily be well dr any SUIT, OVERCO. be bought on easy payments. $1.00 A WE of our Basy Payment Plan can just n the wealthy trust magnate, for in fact anything in our store—may 0K IF SO DESIRED. Eastern Outfitting Co “Seattle's Reliable Credit House” Cor, Pike St. and Fifth Ave* | rv of the Roses necame of E STAR--THURSDAY, NOV. 9, 1905. : } BUSI On all Cloaks, ne garden the other m ‘4 | day I stopped before a tree ere Caf you?” bn a j with yellow and, 100k ut] agod man, hin ¢ } 4 Longerel y fond of flowers, | caused ma é b 1et of my cholcext roses whey ‘ ur De Lor ; ; I went with my customary offering Monsieur De Longe me | ing " |hackgammon with an elderly man You, Neom! Amelot . \ . ~ who had shortly before taken bi ly a . Kar nd r which had to him ears) would ¢ ha thought | th wr | before by No sooner| that the day would com wh j had b eon than he a w hould no ecogh ach ther } bow you believe that this boquet| But the boquet I lover , }has awakened, as if by magic, an entire epoch of m thful — | days? For five nutes 1 was, in bs can : | j imagination “0 years of age in Livuhisy ouster tases || ~~ HERE'S QUAKER PRICES | | inte t must be at least 60 year : | f ag Th f had an imen ’ rol ts coun wo wares aban They’re Money Savers extraordinary mar Urged to go on with ory, my! junt re a very new acquaintar ond bags and parses I was 20-tha r a ow days in azo. I had just : goo aa and my father had, without tre | onsulting w desire or foture | th in fe ecured for me a lew {ff | ney in regiment, then In a ree gon in Auvergne He desired ~ “eg tol me to be ready to leave home tr , Ht Kage i three day o ar ‘spec a ' was taken al te oral : pectal, : anton Maveatest of all was . $2495 that | was «. Nothing in the . chs and colds; world could have induced me to sated ; utter a word of this to my father the chin’ soft; a sic obey I was deeply in love with Neomi Quaker pri : Bult Cases—pecial for thin week, black linen 1 Peterhof ts close to St. F the bay of Kronstadt. which joina the gulf of Finland. The Amelot, but had never had the cour Canes; regular price $4.00; Quaker special caar is in @ position where he can ke » touch with affair the capital, and he bas an easy way to |8s¢ to tell her so. One bund BOUVENIR POST CARDS—Newest designs in both ° ape should the revolutionary mo tinue to a wh he tay in Russia would endanger times I tried to do eo, but each time wood. Address and mottos bu t with it | Dis life : remained sp until some |trivial remark ‘om my Mpa. I TH! QUAKER PAYS EXPRESS CHARGES ON ———— | wrote piles of 1é but these al-/I) AMOUNTING TO $5.00 OR OVER TO ALL POINTS degree the talent she docs | Ways see too weak, and I gav MILES OF SEATTLE in nipalote coleenl $e lit up. But now I was going. I m Umit on ost one we | write to Neom! and find out if ahe feat future, She wes ar red for me. The most embarrass Tel: Brash Msshen Gallage selpelen clreumstance was to send the| \ aheve ak ngs to be-| ¥&* no ume to be lost 1 purchased et of yellow roses, and afte ome an exponent of hunen, eno 4053-1055 First Avense She made a kuccesuful debut; | the s said she wa mang, | | pretty and promising.” At the end Jof a year the critics still anid he | young, pretty and pr - | She brought some influence } whe -youns fer and had a trial of the ¢ nese wh affair delight te My pa om | partn she so longed but when she acquires the familiar one ee eee os. oe ae ity that breeds contempt, when) sriet, to me she sald: “At home 1} = ss exactly where the #t@ri rehearse that part and cry until I _* v handkerchiet | on" a but at night I shed unde close her {80) .ot one tear, and the people—dear | lye oo ee era | heaven, how am I to beur it!—-the for the hundredth time the villain Fe ea the oats mecting hls _¢ atts | Now this elev woman played eat ya 7 a, eat DTOPATR-}bich-bred lady of fashion as no| iz Ty to entering and breaking 4p 8) cher actress on the stage could Jo, | happy home—she will yawn wear-|i1.° manners were eaquisite, her} To be difficult in bargaining. — Webster's Diction- In most plano stores the buying of a piano is a bargaining feat on both sides, like horse trading. The sliding price dealer will haggle with you for hours about the price and always charges you too much. That kind of a dealer aims always to betray your confidence There can be no haggling over price in the Sherman, Clay & Co. store. Fach piano is marked with its lowest possible price, and to go below that would rob us of our legitimate profit. The price is always from $50 to $150 below the lowest price of the hag- gling dealer for the same quality of plano. For $150 we sell plano quality sold elsewhere for $200. For $200 we sell you plano quality sold elsewhere for $275. For ’ io We are western distributors for Steinway, A. B. Chase, Estey, Emerson, Starr, Heller, amer, Richmond, Woodbury, Thayer and others. SHERMAN, CLAY & CO. | 711 SECOND AVE. SEATTLE The Safest Place to Buy a Piano, SFATTLE NESS CONT EGI NIGHT SCHOOL Four Nights Each Week, $4 Month MILLER & ELSTON, PACIFIC BLOCK, THE FAIR 1533 * —_ Second 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT, Sults and Skirts for one week. Sale begins Wednes- jay morning LONDON LOAN OFFICE 105 Second Ave. 8. Next to Guy's Drug Store, Money to Loan on Watches, D monds and Jewelry, Do not buy a watch or dia before you see our display in window and our prices, marked plain Agures. AAC LURIE, Prop, THE RUBBER ST0 714-FIRST-AVEN Wet Weather Wearables » is the worse dime ease on earth, yet the easiest & WHEN ou KNOW WHAT DC ha’ We have 20 Cravenette Rain- s that we want to close out in a hurry, so we have put the price down to $10.00; th real value of this garment is $15.00. H. LEWIS & CO. First Ave. and Cl St. erry BREWERY WORKMEN STILL | tary ing hair, bone pains, cai don't know ‘it is BLOOD POU Send to DR. BROWN, A Philadel phi DRINK UNION BEER | Seek din Beattie Guly we waker Drug Co., 1018-1015 First AYR,