The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 16, 1905, Page 4

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# Rata apitesns THE SEATTLE STAR STAR PUBLIStING CO. orric ESOT and 1809 Reventh Avene Wi AFTERNOON Nata go NbAY, Busmere Department Sunse t Matry 1980 _Independ ont Lied CYS Ralieed Ave. Munset, Med ta “One GONE Ler coy. aN conte Der week, or twenty-five conte per month, od by mati or darrier, No free coples > MAIL BUBACHIBERS—The date when your subsoription expires is addrees label of each paper, Whi if your subsortpe o from he list BALLAND OFAN Al the Postoffios at Be. jane matter. WANT AD. OFFiCk-RAGLEYS DRUG STORK. COR BHCOND AVE AND PIKE STRERT. ur hew Want Ad Office at the above number has recently been opened ihe py ffording the publi @ conventent leave want ada, . et ie leave subscriptions for The Btar and leave news Items. The phone au- ont for this office are et, Main 0, Inde = Save Old Ironsides Which shall it be? Or does the public Sentiment or the ecrap heap? Has the Am- @tican public forgotten “Old Lronsides? grudgo the money for “mere sentiment?" These are the questions presented ‘by the news that the historic Ship Constitution, now lying tn Boston harbor, must be repaired or Broken up for old lumber, It is almost a hundred ywars since the Constitution, the pioneer of the frigate class, with her 55 24-pounder guns, and her crew of 463 men and boys, salled without orders from the harbor where she now Nes to engage the redoubtable British Guerriorte, Perhaps no one remembers the 19th of August, 1812, when the “terror of the world” was reduced in 40 minutes to a helpless, mast- Tess hulk, rolling in the trough of the sea, and the pride of Britain was humbled. Once before it was proposed to forget “Old Ironsides” and let her go the way of the old and decrepit. It was then that Holmes gave forth those ringing verses beginning “Ay, tear her tattered ensign down! Long has it waved on high, And many an eye has danced to see That banner tn the sky.” ‘And conctuding: “Nail to the mast her holy flag, Set ‘every threadbare sail, And give her to the god of storms, ‘The lightning and the gale.” It would take about $250,000 to restore the old Constitution. For that sum she could be fitted with masts, sails and guns and Made entirely seaworthy .In this ehape she would serv @ naval @iuseum, and a permanent memorial to her own vallan services, ‘and of the brilliant chapter in American history tn which she was ge conspicuous a figure And that is what ought to be done. Our statutes provide for the sale or destruction of vessels which Ro longer are worth repairing. There ts no official “sentiment” ac- gount. Congress might well open ona A Land of Millions . Rudyard Kipling has been condemning the American people as & race of money-makers. He uses some high-sounding phrasea Lie aeems to be very indignant. But, after all, he can accuse us only of succeeding eminently in ‘what all the rest of the people of the earth are trying their best to do, In the open field of foreign trade we encounter just as keen com- ‘Petition as we give. The gravest public question In Engtand, Germany, France and ‘all the rest of the Buropean countries is how to maintain and extend their trade and enlarge their opportunities for increasing the national ‘wealth. Because we, through richer natural resources, shrewder business Wethods and bigher skill In workmanship, beat them all at the gea- oral game, need there be fll-tempered accusations? To the sneer of hypocritical contempt we can placidiy reply thet England, France, Germany and all the rest are trying thetr best to be aces of money-makers, but don’t. ‘We have the widest strip of the richest sof] the sen shines on. ‘We have the finest climate in the world. ‘We have the most productive mines, wells, farms and factories ver grouped into one land. ‘We have the richest supply of natural resources ever known to ‘any people in any period of the werid’s history. We have gathered together here the best blood and brain and brawn of all the nations of the earth, and each individual man is ‘broadened by general education and quickened and inspired by inde- pendence and opportunity. Indeed, with all our advantages, if we did not eminently succeed fm the ambition that is universal among mankind we should be nia- Bies and nincompoops, The charge that we are a money making people ts quite true. But it is no reproach. It tm unlikely that there was ever a day, or a place on the earth's Surface, when and where such enormous sums of money passed about ‘#0 freely as have recently been exchanged in the metropolis of this country. A messenger boy secures $360,000 from a bank on a forged check, and discovery of the staggering theft creates not a ripple of alarm on the serene financial sea. In an inner room at some very plain offices a very mild man- Bered gentleman takes $10,000,000 in certified checks from his pocket and passes them over to another. The almost fabulous sum is given out of @ private fortane, which will not feel the loss, for the extension @ higher education. About the same time a cab was rolling down Broadway from the city hall to the City bank, and im it was an unnoticed little man bear- fing $36,000,000, a part of the taxes paid in during the day. “Money makes money,” is an old maxim. i “To him that bath shall given,” is still another, Fight Not Finished of ‘The fight against bossism and graft is not finished. A great campaign has ended in some glorious victories, but the triumph is not yet complete, and will not be until bossism and graft have been routed everywhere. THE FIGHT WILL NOT BE FINISHED UNTIL NOT ONLY EV- BRY BOSS 1S STRIPPED OF HIS MALIGN POWER, BUT EVERY GRAFTER 15 IN THE PENITENTIARY. A complete victory over the grafters has been achieved in Phil- adelphia? NO! Only the fine BEGINNING of a victory has been achieved. The grafters have been rebuked and their old opportunities for graft closed. This is a great achievement. But the victory for jus- tiee and decency will not be complete so long as the deposed grafters, who have stolen millions, are permitted to walk the streets as free men, plotting freth methods of public plunder. Good men may be In the offices—for the present. But law will Rot be vindicated, honesty not satisfied, honor not thoroughly es- tablished until the penitentiary has claimed its own. ‘The real fight for honest government is not in sporadic throwal of known thieves, but in the ceaseless vigilance keeps the spring of public service pure at its source. Philadelphians have begun a great victory in driving the graft- @rs from power. They can complete it only by driving them on into the pemltentiary. over- which —_—. ‘Those Iittie dealings M. Witte with the inscrutable Komura were ail to the merry compared with those he now has on hand. THE SEATTLE § PAR — THURSDAY, Nov.» Obliging F Father . In the Whirl of the Dance! Here’s a List of the | A BY GUY BOOTHBY When the m coased the ad-| QUA R S minal crossed floor, and in de | Rear Admiral ir Dominic |: ance of ball room etiquette, tool Denby, K. ©, B., was m bachelor! Ming Penning from her partner's and a most @llant and pole old ‘ Then they passed through the gentleman awing room junto one of the snug | When the fleet had been in gorles together ney harbor @ fortnight or #o For some minutes she was too ex THIS WEES issued cards for an afternoon “®t /jyusted to apeak, and her futur : home” aboar@ his flagship. Mrs} husband watched her with an anx GYPSY COUGH CANDIF De Courey Fenning and Miss Ethe ogy to { Colds; sure, pleasant; Jumbo St lyn Fenning were ap & thowe to | Kthelwyn,” he sid softly 1 can a 20 Mule m Lorax—reguiar ‘x ted. |nee there ia something very wrong.| 160; Quaker pr oe +8 | Sir Dominic had met the younger! What is it, my dear—can you tell Matchew, one-half peck best Parlor | lady half a dozen times before, abd | ye j the Quaker for ; on each occasion he had become! she did not anawer, and an ex Sa¥on Royal Tollet Soap—highly perfumed mc and more enamored of her! pression of almost terror swept ular price, por box of three cakes, Sic; Quaker beauty and accomplishments: acres her face. | price, all week, per box «1... s 196 On the evening of the day upon! ie jJeaned toward her and took Hiff's Belladonna, Plaster rag which the invitation arrived #h®) her hand | each; Quaker price all w » for... attended the Beeton's Cinderella Am I hot worthy of your trust, | : FLAVORING EXTRACTS—Pure Food Co. wm A number of the naval men were) yenelwyn?” | perlor goods, we are agents and offer to intro prevent, and among them was a cer)" "On, yeu, yas,” she moaned, “too| duce regular 25¢ bottles of elther Vanilla or tain Sub-Lievtenant George Hoe | worthy, far too worthy!” Lemon for only ibe kyns, He was a nice enough Young) $4e took a seat on the sofa beside| alike alien oe al fellow, very pink and clean looking. |nor and gently drew her toward The Quaker pays the freight on or tere emomnting ($0, “0 : all y Jand irreproachably — upholstered. | ijn, ‘Them, bit by bit, with Infinite || points within one hundred miles os mat Gane” Sas vaur ae © | However impossible a thing MAY/ tect he coaxed her into telling him) livery to all points reac hed by Seattle & t weom, it was a cane of love at Mrst) everything, and in the telling she MAIN 1240; IND, 1240. q wight tabbed remorselessly at the heart] ‘ x alse , I that loved her best | c To quote the press, the Blunder-| Hi» heard her out, atriving to con y fuss “at home" was a brilliant e0-| coal the pain of the bitter blow she H he x q ope harbor looked! its love-} wax dealing him. When she had € est, and the arrangements were be-| finished, he said almpl | 3 yond reproach. Mra, and Miss Del “child Tam elad you had the| 1033-10145 First Avenue Gourcy Fenning were among the] courage 1 me this. it is all ‘ first to arrive, and the rear admiral) iy fault mould hawe hacen that ‘ Yet bg ne — el ‘ ms : n (% ored like a schoolboy as he step lit nai} Gepcaninie tar son" te ' “Our tt girl made herself sick yesterday cating too much ped forward to receive them love n old & ike me. i will ” pudding, and I'm taking home a few of the remedies suggested by the By the exercise of considera rte ent eB agony , love you by | « : , | child's two grandmothers diplomacy he managed to keep ber| considering your happiness before e ¢ — —— eatineahy by mien Be al re |my own—if you will leave It to me. f PASSING OF A WOMAN’S NAME qpen and unmistakable attention dhe ya di ft Sub-Lieutenant Hoskyns watched] On his return to the flagship be . r them from a distance, and in con-| sent for his rival. When they were TO PAY DOWN! i ’ lrg his conversation with | alone together he commenced ab- ‘ " s pretty a8 disjointed | ruptly BY CYNTHIA GREY and frag me. 5 ; In Missouri a beautiful young woman listened to the pleadings |" "When the vice-regal launch was] porting hae told me ct yon neat of a tempter, deserted husband and home and has fust come before | signaled, the guard of honor form-|rachmone. Peet ensgg the — sn -y = attempt to ye bts gS ging she seve Jed, and the rear admiral had «d-| certain to the stability of your} up everything, and who, as men will, had tred of her. vanced to the recelve| spree ‘The woman, profoundly emotional, had been wrought ub to a | tha governor Hoakene Bg a roe . terrible pitch by one of Blanche Walsh's plays, in which the position | giongside Miss Bthelwyn said} “No proc restination, sir!” the ed , of a leading character was similar to her own. something in a low volce. There he] miral thundered. “Are you cer- ‘ =~ felt Hs ceca it ~ ie ga Ua made a mistake, for she withered] tain? She went to the man, and he spurned he hen she sho! Sion With & lame and they sncke SR lg He will not prosecute! He, who has been her accomplice, who | it would bo hard for an admiral tol reer, provided you behave yourself : has bade her go down to her rain, knowing as a man of the world, that he might go unscathed where she would be utterly HE WILL NOT PROSECUTE He who has BROKEN THE LAW OF her for breaking the law of man! That, they will tell you, is the way of the world y self-reliance, and goes seot free. The people grin, and nobody snubs him. He will continue ww enjoy life and the world will smile. obt grievance. it is to become of ber? Tt waa written on the tombstone of an Engiiehman of another day: “When a woman gave him pleasure, he supported her in pain.” NOT 80 TODAY. hit upon a better place to plead his cpuse than the bridge of bis own flagship. And Miss Ethelwyn, re- prosecute |ipembering certain advice given hor beforehand, turned deadly white and faltered an assent. He was delighted consumed. GOD will not mira! called Fenning and placed mat- upon Mrs fers upon an eminently satisfactory basis. When the business interview was ended he went into the garden to find hie fiance, who, upon meet- iT ‘wet ote hu Today, the man, in his strength and morcilens assurance, forgets | {1% wo gy sh Saeed Bye and goes ahead “A : The woman, hurt unto death, staggers for s time in the glare of | {”° ‘4 not seem best pleased to soe notoriety’s searchlight, and bears, with shrinking ears and cowering form, the knell of her dead character, ‘The raven's “Nevermore!” the world’s “Pool, FOOL!” go deep im her heart. The scars heal not on her seared soul. Hor own kind shrink from her, lest they, too, be contaminated Unjust? Ah. yes, The RACH IS to the strong. old =gentioman, in the seventh beaven of happines: ind she found it impossible to be angry with him for long. His courteous manner of present- ing gifts equaled thelr value, and Mise Fensing felt that after all the situation was not quite as horrible as she bad imagined. She told her- self repetediy that she could have endured it well enough if she had Rever seen Sub-Lieuwt. Hoskyns. That little “if'* A farewell dance to the officers of the fleet was planned, Miss Fen- ning undertook the decoration of the supper room, and the sub-leu- tenant discovered that it behooved him to aastet her. People whom it But, you woman of unsullied fame. REMEMBER: It ts the way of the world. s» STAR DUST » 4i4 not concern wondered what Sir) A Fort Lawton soldier contributes pain te that tt waant larger. Dominic would have said had he the followtn, a vu thet Lhe | _ coon them. FORT LAWTON AND SEATTLE. - vine Tt was really a beautifully tet) of morning dance, admirably arranged and te tinge of Kray yh a ried out, yet four people did not en- The duties of the day Joy 1 one bit. Miss Ethelwyn Feontng arrived in} Bup- ey ee ga a feverishly excited state that so| Bebe from the mountains, frightened her maternal parent Roll along the shore and Stripes the trees, R nd hiue Flying in the breese At the dawn of morning And the break of day When the sun peep o'er am Looking down upon the bay that she almost forgot she was to! dance the opening Iancers with luis! cxcellency himself. The young lady was faultionsly dressed, and her helghtened color, radiant beauty and dashing carriage electrified every- one, She danced tho opening set with all antir, the pine trees, Singing In the fir. Hear the song of wild birds, Fae we with bis sub-lieuter clous! how she dashed through ev neck pace, waltzes were too slow, and that the polkas sounded like dirges. Hor temper was by no means amiable, and hor partners suffer ording: ly. Her eyes sparkled Hants on her wrist No. 15 was a Pas de Quatre, } 16 @ square, buni- | ner for the first, Sir Domini! m cond. She whirled and bounded through | the Pas de Quatre like a mad woma dashing, crashing. leaping, prance ing like @ professional danseuse. It was @ gorgeous performance, and by ything at break Ob the grandeur of the mountain, And the beauty of the bay ght before the traveler amen on his way! Now we're In Senttia The city on a mound, Protected by the mountains, And favored by the Bound. ING THE LEMONS. Hear the notee of business And of pieasure a ty forms fa im every where All, THERE, COLIN! Colin RB. Richmond, Kaq.. b ness at the court house this w. for the lL. CHANCE UNCLE HENRY THINKS ort (Pa) Journal “In this your last appeara naked Mra De Rox Parra” cade te aoe no means the least remarkable part Teplied the great of It was the study of her mother's you don't know how gta face © heard you sing on youk fare. 1 tour Nobody ever forget it The admiral watched from an al cove in amazement, while oumbers/ of the other dan: e. batdbere t to sess on. { wish our meat market hadla bag gain day 1 prices.” | ~ = — “Where te your society editor?’ the . . managing editor asked the city editor. mn last year ht. oat “At the horse show r “Well, where in rting editor? “Gone to tur ture anid! than at First « vA Ken elves only the finish Congrean k nays bin only 2g regret. abe Mutual's $2.59 con- Yes, and that’ what his father gets, | tribution to the And fit you right can sult your fancy can please your pay out. no matter pocketbook, n¢ COLLINS BLOCK, JAMES AND SECOND. PHONES 416. Choose your Suit, Overco: | of purchase and the balance ‘The largest schoot In the Northwest. Exclusive users of Budget Bookkeeping. State agents for Greag Shorthand, The only Com- mercial Exchange Dept. in state. More teachers than any aimilar local school. There are many more facts about the big school. Want to know them? WILSON’S MODERN BUSIN COLLEGE. But he was a kind hearted) the rear admiral and the first waltz! complaining that the! ke the bril-| Hoskyns was her part-| who saw that will! 8 stopped to look | no matter what your dimensions may be. and Cravenette, pay a little at time $1.00 a Week Eastern Outfitting Co., (inc) “Seattle’s Reliable Credit House” Cor. Pike St. and Fifth Ave. will be my particular care. But kee thin! If ever you give Miss Penning cause to regret her action, by God, sir, 11) keel-haul you through the fleet! Now go The sentry, who had overheard the foregotng, affirms that after the jeub-lieutenant had pased out, a sound very like that of a man cry- ing came from the stateroom of Rear Admiral Sir Dominic Denby. KCB _ OUR MONEY 1S SAFE gece ord only afely invested. mae Pemts, Eseate vil with « i dats ate at Derviary on you; bad loans may cripple you; speculation may ruin you. The State Bank of Beat- is eafe because It ls governed on & conservative banis, It holds your money where you can get it quickly, and without danger of loss. We pay 4 per cent Interest on Savings De- posits, interest compounded twice a year THE STATE BANK OF SEATTLE. ois Almost nothin to pay down on the Page ¢. *** Get a chicken ranch Tig gutat orn mae 10 Alt THE coo POPE pry eo tee aes te eae nm me you not come and SHERMAN CL, CLAY £CO. Victor Dealers 7il_ SECOND AVE. SEATTLE FINE OLD VARNISHES In a field of several at the Lewis & Clark Exposition were PER QUART.........$4 Sinew Rye, full quart 00 Fine old reserved stock. Awarded Gold Medal Fine old Peach and Apricot Brandy, full quart, each Paar Port Wine ee lh wore full That means that the best ma- terials are used—That the man- The: Murphy Wine __ & Liquor Co. ufacture is of the highest stand- | ard—That it is a Pacific Coast §} product and enabled to stand “Agency 008 Pike Street, Seat Pacific Coast weather. The Se- CORNICIDE CURES CORNS Pacific Ry. Co. and the leading 4 alyzes pain or inflammation — at once. There are myriads of ~ manufacturers using varnishes all endorse Heuter’s Varnishes. | | Thousands of Happy Seattle People Were on the Big Free Train | | t | Sunday; also DRED came by CARS to see C. D. beautiful Meadow Everybody said it was the best ever offered sround Seattle. Some of the first peo- ple carried home sacks of nice red apples. This week will see all of the best of the land solid, No wonder, when you can get trects over 400 feet long of nice level, cleared and grubbed land for only $260, on terma of $8 per month; why, tt would cost more to have cleared the land than we are selling it for, Come out today and see all the new houses going up. Take new: Renton cara, Occidental and Ye Duwamish bridge, and co day. City offices, rooms 2 or 3, ups airs in Times Mock, Twenty CARPENTERS WANTED AT GOOD WA Fit You 8 Hutman's Gardens. | corn cures, but Cornicide guarat | tees a vastly larger proportion of | cures than any other. At all drag- 7 | sists, Per bottle 25¢. CORNICIDE CURES CORNS CORNICIDE CURES CORNS | Woodcock’s Pharmacy om PIKE ST., SEATTLE, Wash. ‘CHICAGO LOAN OFFICE HARRY SILVER, Prop. 7 ¥ GEO. H. WOODHOUSE CO, | 1405 Second Avenue, BOTH PHONES 44. We We want to how fastidious it may » matter how little you ALBERT HAN. WATOHES ou! 706 Ist Avenue ler Way. A genteel to borrow money om | diamonds and all kinds of jewelry, i Strictly Confidential HUTCHINSON CO. Clothiers, Second and Union os” 108 CHERRYS BETWEEN I5T AND 2NO.AVE. ee

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