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“THE SEATTLE. STAR BY STAR PUBLISHING CO, 1907 and 1309 Beventh Ave. 17 ERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY, Independent 576; Sunset, Main 1060, Independent 1138) Sunset, Main 1050, hones—Editorial: Business: aTAR RALLARD meet, Ballard me One cont or Week, of twenty-five cents per month free ooplea Delivered by Rinene The dete when ye per, W > paid in adva address tab ot * « Renee! Fr gubecription expires te ft your aubscrip- mn from the list The New Union Depot ning to traffie today of the magnificent new p: gor y James J. HIN is an event of no slight importance nt " n fact, an epoch In the development of the Queen cn he Northweat. ! na exterior, Ita marth! corridors and palatial furnish wee ntly proclaim the fact that Seattle ts recognized as ae f metropolitan destin snd entitied to ratlway terminal fm ont in keeping with her vivanciag importance M HI wal jong time before he began to fulfill his oft ret 1 astruct a vultable passeng tation for the railroads here, but when he once got down to work he certainly spared no expense and made a most creditable job out of his under taking r attle depot of the HI roads will long remain a monn het to the man of dominant energy and ability who constructed tt The Game of Grab There is no longer any question but what the lumber combine fe this city ts striking a blow at the proapertty of the community Through its action tn raising the prices of mill lumber, building operations have been partially checked, many persona of moderate means having abandoned plana for erecting homes during the present Coincident with this advance in lumber, has come an advance t s of building material, including cement, tron, ete inerease that {a ouraging to th who contem st any kind of construction work Of course the mill men, ike all other people who go into com dines trusts,” are loadly proclaiming that there tw no raey among tb ives to gouge the public They offer a number » cious explanations and try to lay the blame partly apon the lox gers who, they say, are taking advantage of the opportunity created by a brisk demand to get more than they should from the bel) mail! men, who, to save themselves from absolute to ch the public a little more, ete, ete Tommy rot Look around Seattle and observe the sleek imen who own fine houses and automobiles and then ask your if any sane ld believe the tale so oft told that the lumbermen have no money in re ATs, Owing to “low prices” of products Seatth all 4 * trust burdened today, and every trust, or combine, is shouting a denial of its existence Up, ap, up go prices of everything, and today shelter, food and clothing cost fully 20 per cent more than they did five or six years ago. Seattle has not only its grasping lumber combine, but its grocery and provision combine, which hae so fixed matters that no citizes ean buy even a crate of vegetables, or fruit, he gets it through a retail store. This combine bas successfully fought off the proposition to establish a public market, and it has managed mat ters so well that bucksters, who might sell at lower prices, are kept off the streets. And the carpet mills and the cloth mills and the furniture fac tories push ap prices, through Ube retailers, the follew sult a. even our old friend, the butcher, having a full q@omplacently trumps his partner in this biel a.” As for the plain citizén, the fellow who “just works” and has fothing to sell, he gets himself tnco a labor organization. and in sheer seifjefense talks up wages in a way the of the man whe bires him. The condition is unhealthy Jong enongh for sa things material, but somehow !t seems to be in as cha as when Adam picked the f fate paying an excessive pric except tries to milkman 1 hand, ® ac of “doe cam that jars senaitive nervy This it to have found out id world haa ¢ he ainly existed aching to all tle a condit t by Eve 1 valu t fruit crop and was invelgte for apples. The Union Pacific’s Demand are some indications of friction ar etween the city and the Union Pacific over the question of terminal facilities Within the last few days officials of the railroad have taken the stand that the Union Pacific must have Fourth av its tracks and can accept nothing ise. It will be remembered that Mr. Harriman himself sald: “It la not a question of how soon the railroad will come to Seattle, but Father how soon Seattle will come its terms. The city official opposition to the Fourth av. 8. as made by road, giving as a reason the absolute necessity oughfare for the use of team traffic, as it is the only one remaining to the efty through the tide flat district andoubtedly soon be thronged by tactorie: tablishments ‘They state that the Union Pacific can secure thoroughfare, Oriental av.. which is ample for although not so wide as Pourth ay, nect with the end to the railroad,” which meant to have declared demand for in no uncertain terms their the rail of saving thor wide, straight which will and other business os the a purposes, 4 that it will be easy to com depot by condemning a short strip of iand at olther pining trackage The cost of acquiring the short strips In question would pos sibly be 54,000, at going prices, and it is understood that this is the real cause of the Union Pacific's insistence upon the cession of Fourth av. 8. If the railroad can secure the gift of this thoroughfare ft can connect directly with its depot without condemning any more land, nd will save the considerable outlay otherwise Involv So it comes down simply to a question of whether the city should give up its one broad street through the tide flats, or the rallroad pay $250,000 more for terminal propert The Star believes the city rhogld not surrender Fourth av. 8. to any rafiroad, If it did so, there would eventually rewult a badly congested condition tn the district of which Fourth av. ts the main business would be greatly hampered in consequenc the city should, and undoubtedly will Wilsons Night Sch Viusth : ’ SOLS Yes, All Summer Mike. ZI - Bes - a eg Wipe Seattle y and But grant to the Excellent Methods MES & & SECOND Union Pacific, of any other railroad needing an entrance, such pr] street, or atreets, through the tide fat distriet as are not of vital importance and which well serve the purposes of railroad “ap proach to terminal stations ‘There fy Ho galre upon the part of the city to be anreanon doow tt that either the Union Pacific le Nor ratl road will be unreasonable. There may be jwatifieation for Mr. Harriman’s reported trrita tion over the high prices charged him by property owners for tide flat dirt and his consequent desire to avold if possible any further outlay by securing Fourth ay. &, but the elty look for sin in this matte expect of any other ast peverthelons out its own beat tater The Modern Borgias The quack doctors and quack medicine vendors, who hay | a . SOME LESSONS BY A. fF. PAINE, eee ee eet eee eere TUUTLETEEUTTUTETETT TTT Te Municipatitios, business firme and individuals ean learn some thing from the earthquake and conflagration at Sao Francisco. First, in a crisis in which « great number of people and firms are involved, the contro! and organization should be taken In hand, abso lutely and definitely, at the earliest possible moment, by the federal authorities Red Cross people should wear a decidedly distinctive Outre and Impositions without end were perpetrated of the easlly-made red crows badge on the arm The government should tasue permanent ntiala for sontalives of press associations logally organized and doing a general uniform by means repre er 4 period preyed upon the people, are rapidly appre Clase A steel structures beat withstand both selamie disturb c of troub! ance and fire 4 days of trouble, Cities In earthquake regions should have their independent res The time is close at hand when they will be branded | oryoirs of water for fire-fighting purposes by the laws of the land as enemies of society and will have their No building or street constructed on “made ground” will with proper punishment meted out to them stand hard earthquake shook For they are murderera—nothing lens There come times In great conflagrations when water and dyna mite will not cheek their progreas. Mut a check can be given by de The Borgias potsoned scores and became famous in history, But | ftroving a row of buildings with explosives and covering adjacent their eriines were as nothing compared to the present day Borgias | puridings with Immense wet blankets who slay thousands, that ¢ may reap harvests of dollars from the Every business firm should have a pit in the ground in which wale of their potsons. can be put books, papers, typewriters, ete, the pit and ox nis to “eg e n pide , : Ri t be covered deep with earth The majority of so-called “patent medicines” are polsons, of a Cn teaeaniiens einai Wis das ot B meince, the me greater or lees degree of virulence. A minority of them are harn jority of » ean reach thelr friends or firme affiteted etty less, and a few only are beneficial, when property used quicker by mail than by other methods. The te aph and tele Hut there te no way of distinguishing between the many pol phone people are simply swamped and are vory apt to have wire vuble. a a im tre re ems am, letter, too sons and the few remedies, Lax laws permit both to be sold un trouble, Best plea is i» wire 0 meonsage apd mall 8 e der the guise of medicines EERE EEE REE EHO He | Hence, as a class, they all become dangerous +. * And like the “patent medicines,” the k doctors who prom | + * ise In the newspapers to cure all ills und aun, have clatmed thetr : 4 thousands of vietims and, for lwek of adequate stat they, toa | 3 * have escaped the gibbets which they so richly deserve * * The great problem which nowadays confronts the people and] a »* | their law-mak ta how to secure adequate protection from this | * =| horde of potsontng Borgiaa, who are filling the cemeteries of the “ eee - country from one ead to the other with the victims of “headache | 4 A Btory of the time of the Polish Insurrection of 1630, * | powders,” “eatarrh euros,” “regulators,” mereurial “medicines,” and | 5 BY COUNT LEO TOLSTOIL * the like * ie * The lack of some recognized high standard of qualifications for | » ‘ *) doctors has 60 far been one of great stumbling bi in the | # Copyright, 1906, by Newspaper Enterprise Association. oe | way of the protection of the public against the “quack” dodipr, | * Guide a while the lack of proper supe on of all medicines sold underfhe’ |] SF FFF F FFE ESTEE EEE EEE E EEO HS | general torm of “patent medicines,” has allowed the unrestridihd SYNOPSIS. him so 4 fully. Toward Albina} “ ¥ Joseph Migoursky, a you and | we what ironical, condescension, | But the danger of allowing these conditions to continue la rad wine wee Albina, ¥ oti whereag tows Albina as Albin ly impressing itself upon the public mind and some way to bring fhe r of Pan Yachevsky he felt not only « tender love, but| Borgias before the bars of justice and put a stop to their infamiim 5 an admiration and the conscious wierts «ill tn Sal ne the ut tu-| nem nf an une uble debt for her IF NOTHING BLSE CAN BE DONE, LAWS MAY BE PASSBD she te ba " army | ox “ « ggalg Bas hed 4 how ABSOLUTELY PROHIBITING THE SALE OF ANY MEDICINEL { at Oursisk 1 happiness COMPOUNDS BY DRUG STORES WHICH ARE NOT BPECIPICRL jeath of her father Albina) ‘The Migourskys were like every LY ORDERED BY SOME REPU TABLE PHYSICIAN at on ue cine, beth Raper and unbapey t | They were happy in each other Thousands of lives would be saved in the United States evry . be” thought Mig nate eran directed all the power | year, if h lawn were passed and enforced x At shed to S,of their love towards one another. | Of course sach regulations would result in an enormous devefip-, | heart as he & to the hall. Ip j They experienced amongst strange | , t of the bus e of the regul hysicians, bat why show u“ thw am of marked My wee} people the feeling of two beings who was on her head/ had lost their way in the ane so? Do not graduated, licensed physicians represent the ; " a eine | nad leat thelr way in t w in Pp - a a cr woman was ¢ Si winter and were trying warm | very best medical Knowledge of the present day? Are they not the | ine door of t nenel's aghrts leeds athah. hay Gare bane atest mon best qualified to fight dt ? and hearing hind her shel in their child The joys of thelr Any person of common sense knows ft is safer to trust the doctor |‘ ; round. Tt oe Ge, ape thellife were increased by the presence ‘ at anne a ace there sty ie Merry. tof the « natured and grumbling | than to trust the bottle of the quack, containing an unknown mix Bagge jaaee: eel tear cckeaoke aa cen Rut with the advent of stringent laws against “patent” poisons [bina Me Jumbfounded and ¢ year's time a bey was born, a year | and polsoners will come the tnevitable public demand for cheaper | ot know how to meet. how io Kres 1a half later gtrt, The boy was her une exclaimed, call- la repet ” mother: the service by the physicians. With more to do they cas afford to work ¥ — st f the m « him as her father used to and asleyes the same vivecity and grace for leas. Their present seale of charges is too burdeusome for the | yn, called bim in her mind girl was a healthy, pretty iit average man of family, and it Is partly to this fact that the exten: | caught bis neck in her bands 1re sive use of ready made “remedios” ts due preased her cold face against enforced abse from the It cannot be od that the regular high-priced physicians [°°* ~A seed igy - TE egies * hapy have played tate the hands of the Borgias, to a certain ent, and lang why she had arrived the felly humiliating po blag f.~= have « degree of reaponstbility for present conditions kind wife received her into alty eufteres trem thie indie ia, indeed. ve that the efforts of the lawmakers should be use until the marriag ¥. Me, her Yousek, the hero, the/ directed, not merely towards punishing « few murderers who kill « - “ i man, had to stand af attention | f ot in the spirit of revenge, but to bee 9s oe take eoting any officer, to drill, to| few people in frensies of pansion, or in the ap mie ‘ de Was gent for from *% guard and to obey without! wards the punishment of the arch- ratore against the people ~ oof ong cmcclboop se sania the vampires in human form who are murdering multitudes for mon ted, at ff accord Besides thin, the news received | ey, by the use of “dollar bottles” of potsoned liquids th . then the from Poland was mast distroasin « tual. ‘The cotenci’s wite|No end could ye foreseen to the AVe away the bride, one of Migour- | #it All attempts to solic aky's pupiie carried the and the] par on De it only some mitiga-| exiled Pole was best man. iD their pomit hia promotion however strange it avif the ranks, broaght no result gh he Emperor Nicolas held reviews, her husband, did mrodee, maneuvers, frequent all. She only + aden, Oirted with mad bie «& ladies, rushed about Russia without ” | } By “JOSH dey lee tonite tm. ehokaounet ta | flesh and & Nay ote St. Petersburg and that was Moscow, frightening mar white? driving the horses to itnage whe had ¢ when potr man he NO DOUBT ABOUT IT Jonn D. Rockefetier aave one of|tn her imagin age to beg any leasonis I don't think they've just t his grandehiidren $1,600 and a be this Was a man in flesh and) lences of the exiled Dec married.” » What solt € oust n posarnsed much thet Poles who were suffer ene mm the . e sf ond good and which was ery lowe their |" y 4 u necause John D. « of the act Image. She {i timeelf extolied—he, swelling hie 1 oe rept who doesn't let his money otk. acquaintances and) breast, would fia his leaden eyes rT he told he a the feet he me t Smithville, and she eald it y attt Let them go os | on, when the station was perty and! is tor yet 1, the brakeman called free ured him an al the time and he said, ‘Th , . and | those surrounded hat prove what | seid? ttfe with be. . with hie waual physteal atrength penetrated with Gen. Kuropathin ts writing « hie jaod bravery be tur st to be a woninianiity tory he Japanese war, Ite tot |quiet, meek tamb, a most imple! wied on « fa running story man with good-natured jokes and| Al 4, however warmed an tnextingutshable pipe, with the! there t f the Mig WORD FROM JOSH W me childish smile on his sensual joy an sorre mouth surrounded by the lieht, Thue they lived for five yeara short beard and mustache which| But suddenly over them there burst | WHY OUR EASY PAYME had captivated ber at Rojanka an unexpected and dreadful calam Migoursky alee now y came to} ity At firet the little tri fell mi! PLAN 18 GROWING 7 Albina. 4, for the first time. two days later the boy. Hel STEADILY AND RAPID through her learnt wh a ¥o t in fewer for three days and) * wae tr women whom he/ without medical tend * (nol i IN PUBLIC FAVOR had met 2 . riage he] doctor was to be had there) he died| A fool indeed ts th’ ould ' wore And! « fourth day. Two days ter} man thts been footed that wht in Albina res | une ied alno. an’ don't know it } ears general] } mat and might rath | *T ticipants if the [have disappointed him in wo: | rev Juring the ¢ kind if that which he feit the emperor's reign A Dayton, Ob ister predict AMUSEMENTS. the end of s short time 1 a —— ~~ a satiimapiiaeeansi Rs SR and saya t aco earth . “ | auak st algn. WY? ied Avenue RUSSELL &@ DREW, Manager , ; The Most Popular Theater gene m real § hath Theater Rath Phones 66 be « —— Reavlar Unchanging Prices A ; TON iGHT Witte’s a0 re aide All Week—Matinee Saturday—The Ayleaworth Company in the Bi whiskers. No wonder t * . h t ref Lett Scenic M clodrama pe Ot ss Betoem “TO DIE AT DAW sin on wide whiskers xt Week—"A Hidden Crime.” ™_ hored W vernment | - rs J sures wat aby re s Shows, 2:30, 7:45, 9 p.m. Summer Prices—100, 20e. i : 38. “a . y T Danny one Co, rural com ake Broadway Trio, singers! nd dancers; Major O'Laughlin, gun-epinr Vane and De Ch | ° *, how 1 apply E fi a breakaway aeri a no gtr De awa erial Brent Hayes, comedy banjo ¢ Russell Sag astern Outfitting | % vue Decne aoe, > TO GOV. HOCH Company Inc. 1 he scorned your kiss, , Y try again 1332-34 Second Avenue ‘NATURE S REMEDY w jeapalr of f re Tt) y p atu . ranteed to cure Const: Try, try agal Near Union tor Penis Seattle's Reliable Credit House,” Second Heady’s Barber Shop First and Washington. ruc Cait SEATTLE. WASHINGTON NOP 240, 1013-1015 FIRST AVENUE’ Ay PHOMES PAIN 1240 This Is the Store And serves y bargait the Kad Wn bent servile The Madiw Chewing G lark’ Le made w Wilat Englian ror pepala. p Antoaone quart for D 2 wines, E oe wattle boint, Tiga! air he fing The QUAKER DRUG co 1013-1015 First Avenue CoA#rp \ SRSEESEEL ESSA. FEAetssger_ M M Ring Geo, D. Ban Oneopatiic Physicians Bes ARCADE Maln 4492; Ind? gem Victor Talking Machines The music of the gre sicians in the world ts n Victor Records. The me 1 reproducer of Victor rds in the world is the Vie Tatking Mac The cor > weeks’ trial treatment, bination is w Slow anes *)) We Cure played talking ma Asthma chines an rds may ed Vietor eal’ pEETESSZET TSE. est mu Re tor nder anemia, constipation, oczema, skis om of all vronch r re be pla the rhoca r LJ cer, rhe palky, p whateve ki trouble nore an ache PEER aE. PACIFIC COAST DISTRIBU TORS OF THE VICTOR. 711 Second Ave., Beattie. Ban Francisco Tacoma Wash. Oakland, Cal Sherman, (lay & (0, 711 Second Avenue, headache, back. comonla, tamar, and consumption ts stages, by the ese efi Electric, Vibratory’ ire treatments, medicines or gprs! its early Osteopat? and Light ( 1€8 Seattle. STANDARD ROTARY DOMESTIC SEWING CHINES. AND MA. The Stationer 207 Pike Street fake from oe SPORTID GooDs Bal oy Bats and all Ball Goods K Base Glove — Sold without agents at less than half the regular price. You can save move half your money at CLINE’S PIANO HOUSE than one Li rULINGm Dip ser. eee, OL ¢ $3.00 TO 5.08. CROWNS. 2.58 70 shan All work guaranteed for t= BROWNS DENTAL PARLORS 713 First Avenue Periors 1. 2 2 4 © ond Union block. one door south ot) MacDougall @ Southwiet's, Ho » a m. Honest Price,” makes you mate We se planoa rn pianos. Werepair plance. “THE QUALITY STORE.” Allen & Gilbert Ramaker Co 1406 Becond AW Seattle CATARRH f ail wtages ure-aile in the because of the * Pg state _ PERMANENTLY CURED € % per cont chronic wi Great n ente bers treatment, thas eas $5. 00 A MONTH ent © Do mot delay.” Come Nation and S odaye WM. McHARRIE, M. D. ependent 420-427-4 Arcade Buthting of ire—® a.m. t and Fridays 6.8 to 2) pm 8 a