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TRAE SEATTLE STAR RY STAR PUBLISHING CO. 1207 and 1900 Geventh Ave | EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY Editorial: Independent 676) Sunset, Main 1000, Business: Independent 1198) Sunset, Main 1080, BALLARD STAR AGINCY.an Ra ra Ave Bunset, ard ee out per cone, ate conte ner week, or te euly five cents per monk @m the address f each paper When th arrives, (f your eubeerip | Triumph of a Vital Principle aicdaentiienin | | Hepbeara rate bill, whieh passed the senate yesterday, after feveral days of almost continuens deliberation, may fall considerably i solving all these railroad questions whieh have been upper » minds of the people for many months The bill was addled with certain amendments of a doubtful tmport, and court interpretations may gtve it a very different sie nifleance from that which {t now seems on [ts face to poswens. f the amendments are pot alt ther ish all that But even though some acceptable, and the measure as a whole may not accor was at first expected of {t, a mighty step has been taken in the right direction The great principle for which the people have been oo 2 and whieh the president has upheld In messages and speeches, wil! be established tending, That principle Is the supervision of transportation rates by an agency of the federal government The absolute independence of control which the refiroads have enjoyed from the beginning as regards rates for tnterstate transpor tation wil! be at an end and never will be regained. contly had a lively discussion aa to the precautions t taken lest ancient professors be faved into marriage by youn, wo | 1 and sis the 0 wer tox 7 few * wo = j The Quaker aken fr 4 . t he cit The government agency employed to a for the public just | Willte | matiors of iness interfered. Bo IN THE SELECTION .OF A MES aman in 1348, ine. 1246 % Om ‘bri tates may have to be modified, or strongethened to fit tanto actual [+ there's your ji told O'Reilly to »M Hrown 1 nis " » oh ita susie William and tell her I couldn't avall myself NEW 6UIT Pr doned j Yes wan 6 o'clock, I told O'Reilly to | e “Mor It would be remarkable if a single act of legislation affecting Well, he ts a distant relative of bring my dinner back with | me such wide and varied trterests and involving mauy-sided compromts Bee aged te the closest of all I Ile brought back a fine 4 OE EI ater 1013-1015 First Avenue the mene pe atistactory tn all respects when put to the test know This ts & great layout,’ 1 said to} rea iat caeman eat mo! @4, should prove satisfac ' anedven hipie ae him, ‘they must be having a regula careful attention, also, a If w trial de pe weake ad . yiiace os vamneny HIS TUESDAY AT HOME feast at mess tonight pas The ma k has t scoure definite recognition of the vital Mow Nw Ww k and J. ‘Ob, there's more of It," he sald, | Our hing comes up he T ote i 4 Rand © & pleasaat end handed me out two quarts of tandare thene little de Me 1 miet ‘ ' j otay again, ladios cha: ° The lady sald tatta, Serately priced per an . } 3. T. Fergus tf Hheffictd, paid | must be wure to drink her health me | the Sta 4 & pleasnt call on | Then it Mashed over me ‘Where o at Ture "8 alt are | aia st that dinner from, you To Outwit Woman | at Spt o iigiaelibaceceisisisee en ’ t our] | Well, from who else,” he an e Hg’ All ts mot plain financtoring with the trustees of the Carnegie | * a . es | swered i Mre cle hd by whee . oe Pension fued for worn-out ¢ ce professors. Some intensely hu « M | | she would be kind enough to put § ™ ma must be dealt with i is « 1 eee, sta | ianer ta « basket . eh Aceording to & dispatch from New Orleans, the trustees re Pay Orr. | Gin wana - re ictor be at abould be | ation, I} lyou idiot, 1 shouted at him—being “, gar men with a keen eye to thetr early demise and a keener one for the ent receipt during life of half the professor’# allotment fund The question was raised by President Hadley, of Yale, after tt had been decided to make this provision for professors’ widows And it proved to be a question before which t arned nea, masters of the sclenees, lieratures and arta, w y help Jens ‘ For who can outwit a designing young woman with a keen eye for an old college professor and his pension—who, unless it be the old professor himself? If i be admitted tha he is without means of defense of his own, thon bis case ts Indeed helpless. Among the preventives proposed was that to secure the pension the widow must have been married to the pre to bis death aeor 10 years prior Another was that the widow must be at least 40 years old. Half « day was taken up in the discussion, but sothing came of it All this is based on the assumption that young wor and would marry old professors for the sake of coming scopic income after an indefinite period of what under the ctream stances would be to them most wearisome assoctation. That they could must be admitted, for professors are but men, and, as 4 rule, perbaps amy woman can marry any man for whose ensnarement she ts willing to take a lot of trouble But that they would is doubtful. For the adventurous the world ts full of better game than wormout professors aad their pensions The Real Paul Jones ‘There ts « mild sensation in the assertion that the bones «up posed to be those of John Paul Jones, disieterred in Parts brought to this country with high honors, « &@ Welsh coachman named Bill Jones Where the evidence was #0 slight It was to have been expected that the Judgment of the commission would be questioned. Bout it is consoling to know that all the available evidence was carefully Weighed by competent men and that thetr decision ts tafinitety more Worthy of confidence than are the unsupported assertions of sease: thon seekers But, really, this question bas already been given more comsidera tion than it deserves What matters it really whether the bones are those of Paul Jones or of « coachman? wally the remains of As bones they would be just ax good in the one case as in the other | What the American people seek to honor ts not this little box ful of dead and decaying bones, but the tmmortal achie the imperishable spirit that fora little while tenanted them The eyes that were so keen to see opportunity, and the hands that @ 80 quick to seize It, the ears that heard t and the tongue that was #0 Commanding of «p Paul Jones, but only his tnetraments. ent of of duty, were not They are all gone, all the fiesh has returned to {ta native ele ments, and even the bones are crambling away, but Pan! Jones still lives in his mighty achievements. and will continue to live in the admiration and gratitude of millions se long as buman memory re mains | What really remains of Poul Jones ts secure. “Amarchy A Syracuse edacator, subsidieed by a million-dollar donation from Standard Off to his university, has boon calling President Roose | volt an anarchist It is hard name jon dollar subsidy naturally calls for great energy The president, declares Chance r Day, haw attacked corporate | and private bestnesa, has attempted to intimidate courts and has | dragooned the senate | The charge that President Roosevelt is an anarchist able in that it comes from a men with a militondoller contribu i It ts remarkable further tn that it can gain acceptance other men who tn one way or another have had th and patriotiem corrupted by Standard Ol] money There ts no denying that there Igence s anarchy in this country. Bet it | le never found seeking to enforce law. Anarchy ts det The clearest type of it Is Standard Olt fteelf, which owes its very existence 1 The ation of ta its contempt for and defiance of. the law t in anarchy and the father of anare The ant t with bil The only remedy Is the law. States have sought In waln to ap ply It. But the power of the trust is greater than the power of any | tate. It ine ns, like men with bombs, recognize no law but might ater than any power except that of the nat It is complain that President Roosevelt should ha ted by the problems prese: tandard Off Co.'s evasion of th tirety to the grand juries to settle. Aw If any grand jury in « Gould sieze and overthrow such ® giant as this moat in state conspiracy constitutes, As «rand jur attempted ft and fafled There leed, powerful and insolent. But It is no the white house Ws Night School Vi ttSt(t0S’ Nes, SM Summer EGE 4 Nice Cool Rooms ae I Wisp toatl AMES & SECOND Phones 416 “1013-1015 Be “JOSH” ‘ FIRST AVENUE’ SEATTLE WASHINGTON prior t I t na |e bunch f PAIN 1240 INDP 249 a tm the He | Berto wm fod sid Capt, Brown | of Ave 5 Aya , h fellow {fle snd ¢ m ti] ~ omy ’ ; re — ml Lieut. Tiranscombe, The two, w Wiahen " : . F . bh fficers, were awalting tt . HW whe the se ‘ al of e or al A Gtorm of o Pee ve berks is , , 1 naa # me knid wan brewing. “The gen , i me to put b ' , cvens : . : " . 7s guardho Irownl ‘ tay 1 ’ Seas wrk ¥ 1 do ‘ “ ' th here wasn't a dry eye b house ° i “ at QUIET SUMMER FOR JERBY ed . 8 it rior in ady Jerry Mis hk he fe me oF sorry jex " es a me t da like this coun i aur Ww Norton -« " R ! A Res vy soma f bh, unloam] Cy Herald ; yi on, 1 for Wee AT THE NIHILISTS’ MEETING, gun ' ’ oe i ' I have the honor to report M ' a . re in 4 day i op mar th mimittee He In, ie replied Oa rower ! x. ; = » a A WORD FROM JOSH WISE duction of # nment officials fh ley cae > y effort t ry out the Be Well, kep the tdiot in for «| a e order fatled. ‘The Mind | day,” sald the general, “and let bin ee was th the governor ge@prdi| oll hi ain > an t nae left the princes but Excuse 2 sald Browne “" rg ou mmitteeman’s alm wae poor| may | ask, general, what There's two om and the bomb fell 90 feet trom the! the old fellow has been « . aot whut — they on Ten innocent byw “4 The offense of being a rice § 0 @ replied the general earn to arin were blown up, but the « sircraten it ew tno mat] anee OF a eed e's Most, Important J eevere censure that be tmnponed, | don't agree t O'Kelly be ahem—d might say In the future see that selected to thre quite Well, Inst aight I was to dine with Mre, Brows, but unfortunately Quake « benefit for Shiner, to be aiven atl gp hea": annem toes nok find bie! the on Satie feo i Eastern Outfitting On ahead ed hn ne ona ™E TaiLon svstem. | Company, Inc. Talking r | A Wisconsin town te brammtng of 8119 worth $5.00, You ¢ a be that aye yelkions ones But (hen | Sther dressmaking chart for tesa (ff 1332-34 Second Avenue ff) Whats the matter with Sinn Machines Pe ee * People are bramming Of the rate | With this chart anyone who can | Near Union. leew, can make eny garment The | a Retabte Oreait Wess ‘Sea . eiable reds! 1 wish you would telephone Dr Star bas 2 lentted sussbor of | House.” |] The music of the greatest w te Prepare for Porope” i) charte which it will sell to its Gouger to call and see Witte, Hel the tite of « recent publica *™® It! seribers for fifty cents each. 1209 | musicians In the world t# re well toes hot refer once to the Insuranc®) Seventh avenue, between Union and | Gouger? Why Gouger? He ts the bu (=== aan “ CHAMPAGNE GOES AFTERYOUR =| | LITTLE BRAIN SENTINE Grand Opera House Profesor Willem Sterling te « famous | corded upon Victor Records The mout eneful repred of Records in the world ts the Vietor Talking Machine The combination ty wonderful. How —rs | Fft8 = Vietor ever, Victor records may be played upon other talking ma obtes and other records may be played upon the Victor Pacific Coast Distributors of the Victor. TI) 2nd Ave, Seattie. Ban Francisco, Cai. Tacoma, Wash. Oakland, Cal. Sherman, Clay & Co. TT) ‘Beoond Ave, Seattie. neem, Will stop you. They jows and Reep thetr owner oat Btosere. Rusecti & Drew Present, Commencing TOMORROW, SUNDAY NIGHT, MAY 2h, THE FAMOUS “SAN FRANCISCO OPERA COMPANY” From the late TIVOLI OPERA HOURE, Sar The Complete Organtestion In Francis Wilson's Original Version of the Famous Comic Opera, Ther greatest enemy te chanvpagn pensive Juice serves to put the sentinels to They are temporarily paralysed, and if you know what happens then, attend @ banquet wher ker is an drunk as « bolled owl, and ese wh and complete fool be con make of himasif thet wilt later cal Japan and China gifts beewen be ty. The ale way th ok ate witting The fire orfumes the mouth; the mee 4 drives oly; the third warme the Oe 6 y sadness, the fTty purt fee the body ralees the drinker to the level of Immertal qentuses, and the seventh lifts one abore the sordid cares of orth and he seems almost ready to fly by bie of power RESCUED FROM THE RECORD MR. TILLMAN. Why does the senator want (he people and the industries in the interior to bear the burden of txts great trans continental haul? Why @ot make ¢ fellow quit bauling if he can pot bee! at a profit? ‘The greatest of modern light operas, not depending om piotor pristing—the opera and company, the scenery and wardrobe wil get the benefit, and the public will “get the geoda” 35 People in the Company A GREAT CAST OF PRINCIPALS SUPERS BRAUTY CHORUS Splenda Mate Chorus Plegant Wardrobes New Special Scenery, an Pfficient Orchestre Popular Prices, 75, 50, 35 and 25c Next Week «+ +++. ees se «+. s+ “THE STROLLERS” « SESSE_LEESETS* ERS _ | MR. FORAKER: Somebody must bear the burden: and those runnmpornoncongil people who are at the terminal ts, where they have the advaat ‘ HA mE hea a at IRD AVENUE |. intermediate points and who camnot bh that advantage are sub | THEATER a) i ject simply to the disadvantages which the Almighty t! creating this —— world imposed RUSSELL & DREW, Mgrs. BOTH PHONES S67 | Miatines prices 2S and Ite: night prices Me, 206, 400 and S00; matt- I THROUGH KANSAS CITY agar a aos Week xtarting matinee Sunday, May 20, Mr, Arthur J. Aytes-. 1 BY CYNTHIA GRAY | It always seemed to me that if a Woman wore plain clothes | and attended to her own business she would be perfectly safe from attack or insult anywhere. | 1 changed my mind when | reached Kanase City | worth presents his company, augmented by the appearance of the harming actress. On Sale Following Dates to NEW HAVEN, CONN,, May 24-25-26 — GRACE AYLESWORTH | And a POWERFUL CAST in Mr. Hal Reid's Great Play, “Driven From Home” | Everyone knows the atc Of the Iittle Kansas boy, who, when told to say bis prayers bets and said briefly, “Goodby, God, f'm going to Mixeo There are good people in Kansas (it u bed when our train, four hours late, pulled Into t om Are you a woman’ Have You ever been alone tn a strange city at 2:30 tn the morning? In a deserted station, your faith im hu- | mans ebbing swifly from your toe-tips? | Never to my knowledge have I been afraid of anything or any one, but Kansas City took my nerve as If by magic 1 called a cabman. He looked Wke « pirate, I got into the car leaving home 4d to bis knees DENVER, COLO. July 10 to 15, im gone to at 2:30 | MINNEAPOLIS, August 749 .. MILWAUKEE, August 7-59 NEW ORLEANS, October 74 .. In addition to the will be m above. round A Reautiful May, full of sentiment: plenty of clever @ialogue wie for June 467.23 tinge sparkling comedy; heart t stand human nature, Bring your fi July wnt then a man. without baegeage, can along and asked my wife and dren. they w Joy this play . ; trate to take him to the hotel. “Do you mind o ~ if ST. PAUL, DULUTH, MINNEAPOLIS, OMAHA, KANSAS GFT Sidon ent” tek dali tec ton Do you mind if this gemtloman 1 v2: week the Aylesworth Company In “Caught In the Web.” It looked to me like @ good chance to get someone to protect Be from abby, so J let th gentioman” get in i} 7 , The “gentleman at Sat upeR my knees, didn’t lift his h -Breteestrigdaa: hh peatpee eee nor did he say thank you, #0 | con swiftly that I'd rathe st ” ] Si cieaadt aeicte “eee ore ‘ Tonight Last Time ee Pua? SORE SA ee COE: Tt makes @ half-dollar's differ to me, complained cabty I'll pay it,” sald I IDEN CR , 799 | Cabby slammed the door, handed my strange “gentleman “A HIl >) 4 >) Ten days’ going lit quarter, evidently a bribe, and aprang up to his seat I had bidden a little higher. That was the way it looked ¢ mol i bidden higher nd we What was the game? ven deaths I died bef I got to the hotel, and [ knew the el by reputation, or I should have refused to go to bed. An I t with the lights on and looked under the bed ta th AST LIMITED—its a Sm alars Inquire NORTHERN PACI# < Ticket Office, corner First Ave. and Yesier Way body go. Take the NORTH For part ntinvous sh As I look back I cn ing game in which I bid but a quarter high and won but wonder what was the game, that morn Agency 604 Pike Street, Seattle Starting Monday Afternoon ®ERT LEVY THE WORLO FAMOUS CARTOONIST CORNICIDE GLENDALE ee ren | CURES CORNS HB :T9)0) 9.00), | NAIDA, ; JESSIE DALE ; WHISKY ‘ psseecelbnacl i A Wail Known Contrane {I Score, PER QUART $s PETER DUNSWORTH =} | THE STARASCOPE, ; 0 CORNICIDE CURES CORNS CORNICIDE CURES CORNS WOODCOCK’S PHARMACY 604 Pike St.. Seattle, Wash, NATURE'S REMEDY nd to cure Constipa Plain Baths (2 -2c} | evens Heady’s Barber Shop| | Ragley’s Ses, Cor. First and Washingt GEO. H. WOODHOUSE Co. 1405 SECOND AVE, The Murphy & Liquor 310 Pike Street.