The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 12, 1905, Page 4

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THM = SEATTLE STAR STAR PUB LIRMING CO. ormices LT and 1908 Hoventh Avenue WVERY iti oon vu ; PAE B Sths or 8 ny 1080: Trdependent 11M. BALLARD STAR AGENCY—Sn Rallard Ave Sunset, Red conte wer week, or twenty-five cen carrier, Ha" Pres’ soples joan Department neet per month Pen.ses basis MAIL ia dare rene suboartye ab not crow" the list wae At the Postoffies at Beatle. ANT AD. CPFICE-RAGLEYS DRL vi NE Ab ore RUG STORK, COR. SECOND AVE new oo) Ag, Office at thet fs: Durpose of dee afford vo wu cry tions for, ar aa 3 unset deve number hae recently been oveged convenient piace to, leave want a iaitoma. The phone num: ndent enews ond The Industrial Spirit The power of the business elo ment in polities Ix deplored by the Rev. Dr, Charles D. Williams, newly elected a bishop in the Episco palian church. In a magazine article he pleads for a larger plac for religion in politics. And so tt goes, Every man wants a large opening for the par tleular interest which is nearest to his own heart. Religion is a Bishop's business, and naturally he wants other people's business to make more room for his own. The dow!nation of industry and commerce over politics ts no dng new and perhaps not so alarming as it seems. Politics is secondary to commercialism ta true importance to the public. It ever has been so and ever will be so, There is nothing paramount to industry, Religion ttself is linked to it, hand to hand. Political doctrines, and religious doctrines as well, that do not pro mote the industrial spirit and industrial interests are visionary and false and ought to die. The mere money-getting Instinct is the lowest tn h Dut this is not to be confounded with the industrial Projects esterprise and sets the heart of mankind hope. purpose, effort. We are accustomed to regard this ation of industrialiem, The trusts and great M1 the center of the stage, and all other interests than those of money Geem to be of subsidiary Importance. But, it has Rot been greatly different in any period. Industrialiam always Deon and always will be the chief interest of mankind It is through labor that the human race ution, moral as well as physical. Let general idleness prevail for a sing! eivilization would slip back a century Tt is industry that has given man purpose and efficiency and comfort. It has elevated and chastened his ideala It is the great eivilizing. the great moralizing, the great spiritualizing force of the World of al! ages. . FOR LABOR IS LIFE. The Point of View yman nature; spirit, which thrilling with age as peculiar tn its manifes- commercial combines as a matter of fact, has is working out itse evo- r, and the wheels of Cheer up. What right have you to carry has troubles of its own. Cheer up and change your point of view. You can't? Nonsense. Your point of view {s largely a matter of habit. Quit looking for the dark sides of things. Your life is what you make it. Your happiness or misery is in your own hands. Sehool Yourself to see the silver lining of the clouds about your life. Cheer up. Your ills are mostly tmaginary. As the old woman sald, she had ‘worried all her life “mostly about things that never happened.” You fare borrowing trouble and paying a high rate of interest. Cheer up. Why man alive! In a five minutes walk you can find scores @f people worse off than you. And here you are going through the ‘World feeling sorry for yourself—the meanest sort of pity in the world. You are nursing an ingro wn illusion. Rid yourself of the Dogie man. aad— Cheer up. Man! Woman! Cheer up! Carry about with you a glorious morning face. Smile I think if you could see the Almighty’s face you would diseover a benevolent smile. Smile even through your tears. The tears wil! dry quickly. Cheer up! Beware of Headache Powders Most of the so-called headac he powders, so largely used by ‘Women, contain a deadiy drug, acetanilid, which acts as a heart @epressant and frequently produces fatal results. Even in cases where the action upon the heart is not fatal, the Qhabitual use of headache powders engenders after awhile a “drug” Babit, like that formed by using opium, and with almost as bad ultimate effects. Now that the facts have become fully known it seems incredible that any newspapers can be found which will continue to allow the venders of poisonous “medicines,” including most of the pat- @nted comyounds, to use their col umns. If ever there was a demand for a “boycott,” it ts right now * upon. patent medicines, headache “remedies” and all the rest of the dev! |-inapired concoctions. funeral in your face? The world BY OR. ELLA K. DEARBORN Well Known Phy jan, of Portland, Ore, REET KERR Kha ‘4 ee tReet a OE EORELSEN ELEN YS HEY « * * oma * * wto +* How TO « M0 > *« * ® PREVENT «x x CURE x - * * a THEM : * THEM * bad * * * Sannin Kine nnee® * * * * * * 4 * * * The so-called “simple cold” is an infections disease, and quite liable to go “through the family, “attacking those of lowered vitality first. Colds are more prevalent in badly ventilated homes and where there is worn a deficiency or excess of underelothing, and steam baths, while a delightful luxury, render one susceptible to colds, if taken fre- quently. Nature provides an oily skin to protect one from sudden changes in temperature, and frequent and prolonged steam baths r this oi). After a vapor or Turkish bath the patient should @ cocoanut oll massaged into the skin and remain in bed at least two hours, It is worth more to know how to AVOID a cold than to CURE one. Firs:--Have plenty of fresh alr day and night. Second—Wholesome food. Third—Plenty of outdoor exercise. Fourth—-keep clean, inside and out. Fifth—Avold people who have colds. TO CURE A COLD. If the patient would consult his physician upon the first symptom of a cold (a hot sensation in the throat, so the Inhaled air feels cold) ft could usually be absorbed, but he generally experiments upon him- self till it is deep-seated, and then wonders why the physician does not cut it short. Neither whisky nor quinine can “break up a cold.” The average woman knows £0 little of nursing that the home given sweat ts ofttires responsible for pneumonia, otherwise I should THE § TTLE STAR TUESI a IAY, DEC. 12, 1905, [AMBASSADORS ARE THE TALL SPENDERS REID, TOWER, MeCORMICK AND MEYER THROW OUT $500,000 OF GOOD MONEY EVERY YEAR TO MAKE THEIR DIP. LOMATIC JOBS GOOD—THEY ARE NOW THE HOTTEST! BUNCH IN EUROPE LONDON, Dee, 11.—With an an- Roosevelt, have now taken first “ place in the soclal world in-wll the nual salary of $17,500 a year, the) four chief Buropean capitals, for the Unite ates am eadore in i~ | first time in the history of American rope are spending between $100,000 | diplomacy and $150,000 anny to maintain] Ambassador Reld in London heads socially thé dign of Amertea, | the list for munificence. Mr. Reld's or before has America bh town house ia in Lane, the ut ented in the principal E trasfashionable quarter of London itals by #0 rich a coterie of am~/and is considered the finest dwelling | bansadors Whitelaw Reid in Lou-jin the British capital after the} ton, Charlemagne Tower in Berlin, | king’s Buckingham palace, The am Robert McCormick in Paris and| bassador pays $45,000 a year rent orge Von L. Meyer tn St ere-| for it, and he haa a summer b t| wrg spend between them $500,000 a! Wr Park, about 40 mile t of year London, for which he pays $10,000 a] The United States embassien,| year, It costs Mr. Reld about $25,-| owing to the millionaire ambassado- | 000 @ year to, maintain his two jrial corps appointed by President! tablishmentas, and his entertainment hie Pe sc LSE TS | | DORCHESTER HOUSE, Ww HIT gE - AW DE *« STAR DUST » REID'S PRI Chas. M. Schwsb wishes to go to; moved to Rochester. the United States senate. now and then we hear something| sition in a hearse factory Ledger that increa our regard for Jobn | bia, O., D. Rockefeller. He never had aay such low desires. UNCLE HENRY THINKS now youta coming between them because @ man strong in his 1 the power of his love was The atmow without the protection of suspicton, | 0 and Rudy only the education | v that her fraiiness, thelr poverty, | but and shifting Hfe could yield. Her| there femininity showed her Billy Owen's manner of his former life was duo to the respect in which Billy held] her, For himself, he eouldn’t hid of a troublesome pride when he called up the men--the brakemea, and ongineers, and inflated conduct- herses, in say, “Take a sweat and go to bed.” ke an Irishman's advice—Never faco a draft with your back, id if you get a cold, consult @ physician tnetead of your grand- mother, remembering that a little cold is.a stubborn thing, and A also become ous, the air stomach again get) the ants te the summ: On came the pelling dust Every | he bought « dweling and got a po A DARING HOLDUP IN THE CALAVERAS One sumny summer year 1880, a wan lay und¢| phere of her training had left her|of chaparral at the base near foothills to one who might hi were slits to that covered his head a roadsld He r the driver, The mas. VATE RESI N.Y. where} Colum- | } | (Copyright, 1895, by the Short Story/ore—who had backed # Publishing Co.) the steel-ringed mouth of Rudy's father had been Rudy’s| his Betty } life, and she lay awake in the night oe ‘ h Of the a}lump na fe ia lool vewn om brero tt eyes sing the ang masterful physique, his supertor| behind them were not cloed, | strength, and tonite vitality. The fies lifted off on |@ry wings | Billy had always had his pleasure/as the figure heaved ontd fro°elbow | with @ gun in bis hand until theso | and measured the shadow. © With) | wondrous 12 months of his know!l-jthe sharp focus of quick Ietaht, he! }edge of Rudy. That that slight per-|turned to the road again){ Ddwn in| |son had no acquaintance with the| the far distance a cloud of dust hung went onto, his! wettled burden, and| ae the messenger, an Jinto the brush |eplit a rain of bullets er in N QUAY DEHILLY, PARIS. end other expenses bring bis totalyin Parts annual expenditure up to nearly] In St. Petersburg Mr $180,000. I t is not spending Charlemagne Tower, in Berlin ' as his three the first American ambassador to] freres because tho disturbed Gormany to rival the magnificence | uation e Hussian has f tho British, Rusvian and A placed a ban on general entertain embansies, the triumvirate « In ordinary times, bow tinental embassy leaders, He he ke evel with the fast $18,500 9 for his house rer © set by the Russian nobility ' servants, all wearing gor-|who are the most rapid spender g liveries with a tower fo: f money socially in Europe, on the butt One of Mr The ability of America’s am ervants always wears at] b ader vend a fortune yearly t ide a Turkish imitar, bis}in keeping up with the leaders tn bad f office ns su ! ial race helps them more The t with the other one thing in look-| ghts of Beriin. Mr © interests of th nde §1 ear on entertain- | The dinner tabi ng, the moat expensive single items» eptions bring them into al-| o » balls a year, given at Mr | dal ontact with the political The rtant al tune the * house alle ar an impo! The metinber» In Parte taken a new Dehilly $50,000 rating it case are by yal family MeCorm! Mr eanbasey on the ba Quay k and spending pvating and r e grand hall an among the most | auiitul 4 the passengers, They must have passed by Rudy's little house perhaps Rudy had been looking out at them. Well, the fo be hurt—it is only to march to the muate A stage re two betting nm, & pale an, and a Wells Fargo who nat on the box Malt! Throw out your exp unload your passengers. Three men and s woman lined along the roadside with their bands s need not ked into ¥ with little wom monsengor neo box and | leaders of the they are ne with « ountries to which and they intimate friendly eryone of nee, from © ruler of th y down. Then when international difficulties arise al wed calmiy and ly ae between personal friends 7 yoth sides are on are anions on made easter, me, cutting through tangles the rocks, and scaling the only halting for seconds way @ loap « ters. to separate insect noises from that| of the hunt of men. If he might reach his corral there would be at least for further campaigning hot on his trail, be know The long, slim « lows of the late afternoon had bew one of twilight when Billy on bis heels behind the walls of « stone corral on the sheer slope of a Sierra bill, The fever to the sky, and @ green, brase-han-|from his wound was racking his dled box lay in the dust head, but the keenest pain that he} Out with your horses, my hearty,| suffered was not from that. His| and line up.” ‘all to on that box,” Billy di rected. He signaled a man of gen erous wold and ample manner, and the gentieman stood in bis tracks. Two,” said Billy, “One But the man was in the middle of the road, willing and toolless, An ax was dragced from the stage, and he sent the hot fury of his anger into the strokes of the steal Billy and the revolver waver nger one Diindness, and the mease sprang to his feet “Get him. s ted and his bu we t mark. Confu sion| come vith ins Soment. Mon leaps » thelr pockets for weapons and algnaled the team coming up. Billy wasted nothing of the aid Betty held for him plunged with his brain and art in the thrall of hia shock him spit, and ersehed, and his b About He swore himself into energy, and beat on through the thick, thorny underbrush with the hope of their disor sustaining him There was & small stone corral some one h told him of—Raudy had told him « was bemmed in with rocks, and and chaparral. For a the ater of war it was safest for a man inefde it, and there was only one approach! Rudy had found herb roots there ickeye, ja man and senses were preternaturally alert; they made re 4 of the millers’ winging and the life of the lizards In the wall at his face. The} red leaves of a polson-oak vine! served an bis shelter, and above thi and about it, and beyond it chaparre!, and the pines, acd buckeye watched. mass of summer foliage the eyes of © mouth of a gun were the! “ | “Cut the mati pouches,” came the! at aim and waiting ee en eee joext order, and the messenger) tut it was Rudy's face that was you the other evening’ 7 No, but I think he was just writhed under cover as he ripped) searing with fire the brain of the bout to 4 gle gant ny j with his knife |man—Rudy’s face, which had nen bck teuearn alae cesanst At that moment fell the certain] known only love for him, and trust Se ee ae . ew erin; iistant sound of approaching|in him, and pride of him. It went to you unless he has nerve, THE SCOUT WAS SEEN SCOUR-|}orees Heaven known chore do Bids tae pee oe Re. Oe rest I never had wench confidence in| eee eee Kove of haste, and Hilly stood o might set them on his track. She aa | nag, = nacrny h curses to « ii t t cue e ou © th’ man th’t had (* be kicked int'} “Dr. Kildun swore in court that! 7) hi three he v migh oe what ™ - ald make b Jenner >I . 4\° > | for. ney had laughed ai mee a ines Mas unable to avpear and) ‘gwent fell from the men as hol robber resort. But the thought Yes, why doesn't Mr. Cortelyou! cover his health.” Poe to te Laer began—and| 2m Bot live. Rudy's womaalt ° 'e on n CG le ee ae 'y or OR | eee oy ~ = that 914.000,000 Be How Jong has Jenson been bls! rudy was looking up at him. Rudy|” Hark! There could be no mistake in the posntties department? ' two or three weeks.” jwith face like chalk, the soul] step. He had been waiting hours Then I believe his statement in 1 coat bre A and ble as |for it. It could come. He needed no Jonas Candel, 900 of Geo. Candel.court_was the truth.” Liken ua dncorthe Waite of = women) ne of movement to send It into t BS on » a Woman! silence. here would ~~ more © struck back into her heart them behind. There must be no| in wiping them out comes again, on and up. | The fool! Does he think his life is worth juggling for? An unlodged » trips jerkily down the hill- ay There it » and over ad, Betty ts so safe, and #0 sure, and so ready that the will lot the idiot come into her face. A hand shows through the bushes at the gate of the corral. Billy is forced to turn; it 1s some one who knows the run of the land. A black figure thrusts through the branches and Betty throws out her ball of death Billy,” he heard tn its last terrl- ble note of misunderstanding. He sits in the open and holds her in his arma. Her b) over her face, and he thrusts it back to clasp her against his breast, against his lips. At midnight they find Billy Owen, the bandit. There is a woman in his Wet drops of something warm tickled down his back, There must be « wound thera Billy forced bis & arma, and their lives have gone out on a common search, d. Page 6. © ~ Good jobs to be hi Santa Claus Comes to Our Store Next Friday, the 15th Moth bring along give proseats to them next 5p. Not necessary ginl must ke accompeniah by ol thy dey and thom your be away ™. to buy an Eastern Outfitting Co. v5 oad girk, Senta ts golag te Friday afternoon between 3 and ything eltker, but every bey er her father oy wether, Roommbor (Ine.) Cor. Pike St. and Fifth Ave, Seattle's Relfatle Credit House, terms! e after bim,| allowed in the| night-| | the) From behind the; n@ bate blacken the atr) k heir hangs| | Holiday Sug gestions It wo and then limited suggestions for range of ideas at hand relatives friends with is that yvome would be n cle, Kapecialy, is this pi for future remembrance well, and the economy Take a peop at our your phones The QUAKER DRUG CO 4043-4015 First Avenue cover this whole show The dispaly is well worth seeing The Quaker makes free delivery to all parts of the Malin 1240, ay gifts, can the greatest ease satisfaction of QUALITY that goes with each arti ing in the presen The prices nam is broad page to tell you of them all ted, wk offer nm the le tokens for as our ste and by suitable and too find tion of gifts d are pleasing as windows, then come inalde. ty Ind, 1240 NT—UNTIL XMAS—25 PER CENT To All Bringing This ~ ow AD? WEAK EYES MADE STRONG. BRADT OPTICAL Co, Room 4, 1112 Gecond Ave. EXAMINATIONS FREE. 25 Percent Reduction REGINA Music Box Prices We are closing out our entire stock. Many selec- tions have already been made. We probably sold more Music Boxes last week than all other houses combined Here Is the Secret Firstly: —It is the Regina Music Box that we are offering—the best Music Box that is made. Secondiy:—The prices we are giving are fully one- quarter less than the regular. Thirdly twenty-four with every Box now. We are giving tunes free bought Permit us to say that if you will ever want a Music Box, now is the time to get it. A discount of 25 per cent from regular prices. If you already own a Re gina, this is @ spelndid op- portunity to secure 4 new lot of tunes. Best of selec- tions may be had now. Sherman, Clay & Co. Steinway Piano Dealers. Til Second Ave., Seattle Dolls Glassware Christmas Holiday Goods COME EARLY See Our Tempting Prices Great American Importing Tea Co, 325 Bitsabtset: { SEATTLE BOSTON DENTAL PARLORS Pwelve-year Guarantes, ALBERT HANS ewOGT ataas ** FO6 fet Avenua plat re: | win TE AKG LURIE, Prop, GIFT FURS THE ELEGANT ANDO INEX. PENSIVE. iF YOU CONTEMPLATE A GIFT WHY NOT LET IT BEA FUR? IT’S SURE TO PLEASE, EVERY ONE LIKES FURS— THEY ARE SO USEFUL, AND A LASTING REMEMBRANCE OF THE DONOR. OUR IMMENSE sTock— GATHERED FOR YOUR CON- VENIENCE FROM ALL COR- NERS OF THE EARTH=— AWAITS YOUR CALL, FINE RICH | PELLERINES, BOAS AND MU! ALL AT VERY REASON ABLE PRICES. PETKOVITS FUR CO. 110 MARION 68T. SA One week more remains to close out this stock of Clothing, Shoes, Hats and Underwear Everything marked at half price, Come and be convinced. THE BARGAIN STORE 1104 First Avenue. Second Next to Guy's Drug Store. Money to Loan on Watches, Die monde and Jewelry. Do not bu: watoh or diamond before you see our display in our window and our prices, marked im Centennial’s Best Flour Makes More Makes Lighter Makes Whiter Bread Makes Sweeter Bre Makes Better Bread Than Any Other a

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