The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 4, 1907, Page 4

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vg aPC RGAE RRS TH SEATTLE STAR : —— BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. 1307 amd 1909 Seventh Ave, — s EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. 4 Teteprones-— gh Editoriat; Independent 675; Surmet Main 1050. ear Business: Independent 1138; Sumsct Main 1050. Ms ee BALLARD @TAR AGENCY 9m Majiart A unmet, Mattar me RVRRETT BEAR AGRACY W. 1 Loowant 108 Hewitt Ave Munset, Man 2m ‘One yer COPY, Mm Semis per weell wentyetive canta per Month. Delivered Pie meat ce cnreter Ne tree woples . Batered at the Postortion at Seatile, Washington, ee seaond-clase matter TO M see oe ate " your gubsortptie@ empires er yr : M abet) \\ date areivem. If your te taken frome (he et, & chang beet park In advanen Aditress label le 4 revetpt NOTICE TO ssc RIBRKS- sroudt y venting, pteaee ow portent LR beiwe a ae we can be certain of giving Gar subscribers a perfect service—and Than cawe = Quit Eating--Live on Air Don't cat—tive on air and water Here's the reeipe Plenty of fresh air; on teaspoonfal of pure Water every three The time ta about to be, so Dr. J.B Ralieoa of Toledo, O., saya, Whon man will cease to eat, the stomach will roll iivelf up in a nice ittle ball and go te steep, and mas will enjoy the proper and NATURAL made of lving—on water and air. Can you tmagine this «tate of affair, oh, Dyspeptic’ And what & paradise this oli earth would be, mow wouldn't It, dear house wife? No dishes to wash, no meals te cook! Dr, Raitison maintains that the child of 15 has cates enough to keep ft the rest of ft fife Humanity, tas it, ie food drunk Dr. Rulitsow may be right. He is fight f a ceratin extent, we know. People eat more than It la @esary for them to ext. The poor stomach is the most abused organ of the whole body In the olden times the people used fast as a mode of restor fog health. Athletes sometimes live om water alone for feven oF @ight days before the great field day, They lose no strometh, but de @rease their weight and are in the very pink of condition when thelr events take place. We eat too much, says Dr. Raltigon. Eating is @ very bad habit, he says. Live on air and water. Impossible? Not that it will be impossible to Hve on these @lemente—bat the trusts. There will be the Standard Afr Co, “6 eonts a breath,” also the Consolidated Water Assn.” “don't beware ef imitations, we own it all” Welcome to the foodiess age! We are to live ow air, Put the trusts are almost making us do that now, though, alas, ifs bot alr. eel Criminal Economy A man, crased with Nanger, strack another man upon the head ‘with a plece of ganpipe and killed him. That was murder. The man was a criminal and he Was hanged. The public must be pro tected. A steamship went down fn an angry saa. Expensive safety de Vices had not been Installed, the ropes about the davite were froeea, the boats could not be launched and 150 people were drowned. That ‘was economical management. No one was arrested. No one was hanged. Yet the dfrectors of the steamahlp company were as guilty ‘as the poverty-stricken wretch who in hie frensy bad taken one bu fan life. The public should have the same protection In a am Bhip or passenger coach that they have om the streets. ' EBeonomy is not always thrift. It f# often crtminal. The court * would not have accepted poverty as a valid exeuse for the eet com taltted by the man with the gaspipe. Economical management ls « fallacious # plea. Statiatics show that 9,703 persons were killed and 86,008 injured Deeause of the raliroads in the United States in 1905. This is the terrible cont the public pays for the economical management of the ‘The whiskey ring of the eity counefl will thie evening elect to the preatdeney of that body Charios jit Burnett, member at large, It will not be Ienewn until the vote in called whether aif members will SPOONER | SON OF WISCONSIN SENATOR, WHO HAS RESIGNED, SAYS FATHER WOULD Come TO SEATTLE IF HE WERE TEN YEARS YOUNGER. “lt my father were 10 years younger there te set the slightest doubt that he would come to Seattle to nettle down and practice here.” | P. Spooner, « som of Senator J. © | Spooner, of Wisconsin, who hae re figned hin seat In the United States senate to practice law He visited Seattle several times of recent years aad was very fe lvorably impressed with everything pananttn antes . MOORE TALKS OF HS WORK Mayor Moore this morning ad. dressed the meeting of the General | Ministers’ association at the First promise to give “the che@nest, bert and squarest administration Beattie j ower had.” eng ‘OWLS HOLD SMOKER | neat of Owls inet night at the Labor | Temple was attended by 200 ten |ners Edward Spranger, executive fof No. 9 of the Brotherhood of }Owls, acted as master of cere | monies. The program included | speeches, songs, dances, a threeact sketch and other vaudeville cum | bere, | The local nest now has shout 50+ |members and will receive no more jcharter members. (COMMITTEES PLAN RING IS R TO REORGANIZE IN SEATTLE | | Presbyterian church, He ed Jabout his reform movements | Sunday closing, refterating | The first smoker of the Beatle | cy | TO HANDLE CROWDS Economical management results in dividends for the bond and 4 4 4 stock holders—in DEATH for the traveling pablic. When economy means the lack of proper equipment, over ‘worked employes and executive inefficiency it is no longer econo my—IT IS CRIME. MILLIONAIRE QUITS FOR LOVE OF FELLOW MAN EDWARD M. HIGGINS, ONE © ARMOUR'S BRIGHT YOUNG, MEN, HAS ENOUGH OF BUS!- NESS AND WILL SEEK UTOPIA. (Beattie Star's Exctusive Service.) CHICAGO, March 4.—"T'm done,” gaid Edward M. Higgins, million- aire, as be shut dows the roller top of his mahogany desk the other day “You'll be down at the same time tomorrow, I suppowe,” said his ste * repifed Higgtna, who ts a first vice president of the Armour Grain Co. “i'm done forever with business “| have always leved men. In business you carinot indulge tn af- fection for others. I want to do} that. Besides, | have enough. If 1/7 take more from the general store! if will be taken out of the pockets of laborers, from whom too much has already been taken.” | With which unorthodox remark for one tn American business life, Higgins, board of trade operator. ; at the age of 47 years, put on his Bat and bid adien to the market. | Chicago millionaire who decides, ‘The rest of hiv life Mr, Higgins | at the age of 47, that he has enough fitends to duvote to seeking | money. EDWARD M. HIGGINS. —. . Higgins is ome stock ©x-) spend the balance of his life pleas change operator who had been able | ure seeking. However, cirenmstan ® bring himself to quit when he cos deferred the attainment of this fas enough. ‘That, however, has! seven yoars over the year he had been the dream of his life. Now, if| tixed upon. He has sold hie board of desire fulfilled can make one ba |\trade seat. and, with hin wite. is py, his halcyon days are to begin.| soon to begin a tour acroas the At When he ve 6 small boy he | jantic of a world of delight, in| Mr. Higgins started upon a pros which the denizens did nothing but | perous ps in 1880 r a Soohes fish, fly kites and roam carefree in| Phy D. Armour, who had a talent the flowered fields. for picking brillant assistants, took When he became a young man he | him under his wing unttl he became read Sir Thon, Moore's “Utopia” |q full-fledged “bird of prey.” Such and = Plato's §=“Republic,” andiis Mr. Higgin’s own definition of dreamed of a paradise in which al! the big birds of bigh finance. One men did justice to all men. He soon | of Higgins’ notable com found that the existing system of with Joe Leiter, when an sociely frustrated any hope of en-| was made to corner the wh countering such conditions. | ket of the world. When L« ats was ttempt at mar was He next amende foreed to drop the prey, Higgins and acquire money eno " big operators took a larg 40 to retire from the strife an of it —- s+ en geene menreemeey CARPENTER WILL ASSisT ASSESSOR PARISH.| face ciy agit gga Ae pce ree r efron Sen rar th pointed by Ansesso A. Parish 4 < as one of the experts to assist in| JOHN DO. HURRIES assessing the f hises and hold TO SICK DAUGHTER ings of cor tions, Mr. Carpen NEW YORK, March 4.—John D. ter 1s an experienced assensor, hav-| Rockefeller left hurriedly this afte Ing been chairman of the board of| noon for Augusta, 3 nn aasessors of Majden, Mass, for! by © message tellin ertou Gight ye news of his daugh M H ! r McCormick, who h Deen m E. A. Murphy, Skagway agent of) since the birth of a dau the Pacit ust Stearnshig months ago ; PIANOS _ J | Steinway =: Knabe FINEST LINE, ONE PRICE, HONEST METHODS, EVERYTHING MUSICAL, Sherman Clay & Co. Second Ave. Seattle, Wash. ‘The convention committee of the | Chamber of Commerce wilt held » joint session tonight tn the Cham bee's roome with the comuntttce chairmen of the 1967 Christian Ko deavor coavention ‘The pupone of the meeting ts te @o over with the C. EK. chatrmen the plane for the entertainment of the 20,000 delegates expected at the con. vention tn July | HOR FOR DAWSON. W. A. Hayward, of Dawson, has purchased in the enst « carlond of faraft horees and will soon ahip them north for service In the In- terior, Hayward will drive them into Dawsen with several handred cases of eggs bought In this city LAY CORNERSTONE OF Favored by bright spring weath or, the laying of the cornerstone of ithe new synagogue of the Temple | De Hirsch congregation, at Fifteenth lay, and Union st. peaterday waa at tended by a large concourse of peo ple, both Jews and Gentiles The exerctaes were commenced with the song, “America.” by the chor of the Aabbath echool chess. The firet sy | Leo Kohn, president of the congre ation, whe was followed by Mayor William Hie an 6Meore, Nathan Eckatets, Emmanuel Morgenstern and Rabbi Samuel Koch The following words in the latter's | mpoech Were, by many, construed ax ch wan delivered by eritictem of those members of the society who are also members of | Dr. Martin's society for universal | retiet | “Judiasm, and not race or nation ality, is the ret of the revival of the Jew In bostness the Jew ta non-sectarian: In friendship, in pot ities, in charity, he is non-sectarian bat in religion « non-sectarian Jew | ie a contradiction in terme BRAKEMAN’S HEAD CUT OFF. (Scripps Telegraph Service.) | RLLENSBURG, March. 4.—White itching a helper engine into a freight train bound for Beattie at | Easton about 9 o'clock last evening. 1. A. Tyler, a Northern Paotti br fn, Was run down and killed He was canght between the engine and a string of oars badly mar gled, Dis head being crushed. He wan dead when other re of the Sis r n. | Steamer Mapid Transit of the Ir t GIVE YOU CREDIT Of What You Want for | Spring. Our Stits are unusually | tractive i {fat and our price | are exceedingly reasonable OUTFPA, we % GIVE YOU CREDIT THE SEATTLE STAR-—-MO ADY ety to cnet thefr votes for the ving candidate “4 | ‘Thowe wilh be Wat ome vane titer Hit the program {8 carriembyout as planned, Beeing the uaplosnygnr of any other tactics the. Bowen members of the eownetl y gest thetr votew for Burnett ’S FAITH about the elty, He t last visit here, that if he were 4 younger would come out here and Aw it he regerde himself as past when a man should loave old associations, either in business or social life, behind and leome to & new country to start life bar He will probably settle down in New York eity | The Wisconsin statesman has many ways, Hoe seted as sponser for Senator Piles, It wae through Senator Spoomers influence that Senator Piles was able to get a favorable report and passage of the age appropriation for the AY JAP MAY BE A MURDERER In the person of K. Tanaka, « Japanese cabin boy whom Patrol | men Hayder and Applequist arrest ot in the tenderioin district last © captared {ve murderer wanted in Van cauver, B.C |. Tanaka was fourtehing a large knife when apprehended, and the lfrequemters of that portion of the ity were panic stricken The Jap wanted in Vancouver bears a name similar to Tanaka, jand his dewertption tallies with the prisoner ON THE FRONT | Carrying 92 peseeneers and S00 | tone of freight. the steamer Cottag- } City salled at 9 o'clock Inet might for | Bkagway Among the pamern gore were K. A. Murphy, steamship agent for the Pacific Const Bteas jship company, and €. D Lane and | ‘The steamer Ramona, the Pa }citte Coast Steamentp company, hex ltemett setected take the; place of the Corena, which wae w “a re / ently, on the fun te ~thy netece | The Ramona saile for Ban Fr at Pa mon March & The steamer Pendit a been turned over by the peor | Pteamehip company to « Hack | ball tine, and will be pet off the Port [Orchard run, The steeme™l State of | Washington wilt replace Ui Perdits teen GEORGETOWN, March 4.—The uncal quote of arrests of thirsty Se attlettes were made yesterday, and thia morning Judge Cory sent four jmen to the county jafl for drunk enness in addition to fining them The inebriates were J. L. Cashman, Jack Taylor, Jim Murphy and Heary Eilerton. PRESIDENT ISSUES PROCLAMATION WASHINGTON, March 4.—Prest | dent Roosevelt has tasued a proc | lamation creas or increasing the |aize of 2% forest romerves in the [he owe states, and said he believed he owed it to posterity to safe na the forests. Complaints were issued by Pros ecuting Attorney Mackintosh against Edward Stromberg and Ow mar Overland for Wegally selling Manor on Sunday Information was filed against K Nisheman, a Jap, for maintaining a bitnd pig at Bagle Gorge. MURDERER DIES IN THE ELECTRIC CHAIR O8SINING, N. ¥ March «4 Prank Furlong, aged 20, was olectro cuted here thie morning for the murder of his aunt two yours ago. J. B Thomas & Co. report the sale of the southeast corner of 12th av. and Yesler way for Mra. A. B. | Black it Andrew Meany for $16,000; the flat building and prop erty at 1723-25 Melrose av. for | Charles Nagan to D. Firman for $10,000; the Highland Heights ad dition, tn West Seattle, beginning at Alki av., for A. B. Campbell to W. A. Eastman. The cogpideration in not given ® home. STAR DUST By “JOSH” “1 want to see every Hne of the have to make over , for me or make mine for yourself ff. Cudlippe, of Wichita, Kaw Cadlippe must be running a news stand on the side your letters around in. his pocket for « fow weeks after you give) them te him to mail? Wore raised Inst week and Planned to faine the tolls showing the (elo Paniow are not always slow a thing.” } May Do a Little Gambling John Dahl went Guens he expects to buy them myself.” Frespondenee, make a speech (Minn.) Review nee make any more A woman tn Kentueky gave birth to « quintet the other day about prosperity Will Roll in Friday. Hoops and sons, Thomas Julian Hoopes and Wm jt, who have been touring the will arive in New York to Thus spoke this morning Charies! shown bis friendship for Seattle ta | day, reaching Chicago on Friday v Chieago Tribune A WORD FROM JOSH Wi fait, it fomite Doger an’ & lingers. Caraso finally compromised with bie manager by agreeing to aceept way, that proves he ten't superset! “What would you say ae mech money for candy an you de for tobacco’ era with « show of indignation replied the easy 0 tive decl than §20 “1 suppose,” tng Smithers, RECOLLECTIONS O EX-RUBE-NO. 1 BY LOUIG J, BTELLMANN, } “Yeu, stranger,” said Placer Dan, shifting his sixwhooter a trifle, as |e crossed his loge and took a fresh chew of tobaceo, “I don't go much Jon sentiment or love or anything your old hats) foal seft of « similar nature, but jout im these parts we ran acromn # lease of it sometimes that makes the |stories in the magazines look pale i sickly. I've seen men and A Moral in This. s Does your husband ever carry fare-ye-well here on the desert, but lthe best piece of real, genuine af fection | ever bumped Into was one that two men was mixed up fn “He must be a go.” a He paused and wat reminiscent dow mafl |ty “Maybe you now *harlle : ous eee: 2 ee |Witherow ap {n Denver. Yes, the ‘ |totning millionaire, Well, he wns Words ef Great Men, lone of ‘om. He wasn’t no millionaire VU. S. Grant—Gentlemen, I cannot then, though we called him Ki Do rado Charlie because he was ab FD. Grant—Gentlemen, I cannot | ways prowpectin® around promiseu jous like, expectin’ to strike it Wig | where everybody else knowed there No, indeed, He never afd suc Manteuristsa have been employed | wann't « spoonful of gold in a whole | in a Kansas City packing house to | hill of ore. Weil, Charlie, on one of look after the employes’ ha 1s. |them trips, mee Dp with a» litt np of Kam irent of a fellow we calle Chic Just wateh all the old aaa City rush to the plant for jobs. | Dick, bein’ as he used to rafirond ont of Jangletown, Dick wern't 6 inches over & feet, and Charlie stood Gfeet?. But, anyhow, they chummed together somethin’ sean dalous, Ul they hed Damen and Pythias outelaswed fer bein’ stuck each other, Dick was nervy and |eame as all creation, in spite of his |afee, and the two of ‘em made a team that it waen't healthy to buck | “Well, anyhow, stranger, them two went prospeetin’ out Death Val jley way one mornin’ just nachully | disregardin’ everything in the way of good advice we could give ‘em. | Bach of ‘om had a big canteen and & good horse and knowed every water hole in the country, so | guess it might have been O. K. a how if Charlies canicen hadn't jxprang & leak on about the hottest day God ever made, and right be leween stations he went to get « aip nd found be hade’t o drop left it's all about. Then thinkin’ how Dick w enough hardly to keep bisself ally “John D. Rocketetler’s representa-}@0 he keeps toum, thinkin’ he, bet on bis ince is not more | bigger and stronger, kin stick it 100,000 a your.” througty some way. He pretends to Humph. Working the eympathy | have a grouch on so he won't have PREFERRED AND COMMON STOCK. t have racket.” to talk much of any, and whenever he sees Dick driukin’ he jest turns the other way and thinks things to Dleself. Howsumever, in a couple hours his tongue geia to swellin’, and all of « sudden he pretty near eatehes him and holds him up. Dick, tabed hie own canteen, #0 there ‘t hardly enough to to much good, vowhow and Charile socs plumb loco, talkin’ “bout rivers and |lakes and places where he used to {frequent when he was kid. And | what does Dick do but lead bis own broneho and walk alongside of his | partner, holdin’ him up for 5 or 6 first water that night. He carries PLACER DAN'S STORY women what loved each other fo a) Nachully, he cusses right Muent ull) Diek turns around and asks what! rile gets to} goes out of the saddie—only Dick | in the meantime, has jest about fn | |hours, till they hit camp and the} Dan, winking a little, “thet, Diek did. Next mornin’ wakes up to ft partners hands ciutchin’ tb ad to hawk vein, He ok ssanel Lad out of it #0 fa they aay o ain't very h He's lonesome: s his pura ¢ Specials ; For Tuesday Rieger's Cherry Bude, Pale Pink, Pasadena Ross fornia i) regwhar per of, extracts. Special, on meat itt SF TSSSr_ hol Spirits Stoves has jude Yor Monday and for them at price of ABE. W 10-foot bolts ela ... och ail scalre Cylgegn Tublete, v Melrase Beau Cream, price 56 tal ‘ Melrose Beauty Powder, lor price S¢c. Spectal.... JUST ARRIVED A big tine of Kheetric jen and Pittiogs Call ang them. 1013-1015 Fi F2.. FESts2. EREEFL FFS3_ FkVee. bd f Charlie to the apring, gives him «/ drink and then he keels right over) before he can get one hingelf i WASHIN' UP. apluttertag and splashing lke a por polee—the way I had noticed dad »[and the hired man do—and next a hurried rubbing on a coarse towel, on whieh { left most of the dirt ond Tcases — Have TO HURRY ‘hile splashing around beth room this morning I thought war I used to when « bor on the old farm. No whitetiled. steam-hented, elec. | soan room then, with | & round, rosy face that shone ike nickel-plated plambing, bot and cold water and Turkish towels, old-fashioned on the back | abusedtooking brush porch in the gray dawn of « frosty | I first broke the/ kitchen. FT can smell it yet. fried ijmush. buckwheat cakes, acon, winter morning filled a battered tin Then with a fist full of home| but I was bungry, and my simple made soft soap, I of my tace and parts of my chapped eo (Star Shecial Service.) CHRISTOPHER, Christopher bowling taking the sealp of a y of the members of Steam baths 26c, Oriental Bathe You Waat Someone to Do Your ' FAMILY WASHING Cheaper than you can do it at call us it and give you prompt service QUEEN CITY LAUNDRY Both Phones 953 “Yea, partner,” finished Placer inch t Coin “a Bativte Chote pretty coin spota, in | fortable black, lavender, red and biue fine linen these finish. Per yard only z THEM OUT A eracked mirror reflected back —Heavy cowhide, nen lined «new milk pail, as T struggled with |f 1 Sr ee ee tee . the kinks tm any tousied hair with o [Brena ja rape All Bround, best. / Garden Hck | broken comb and a neglected and |f "*84¢, late patent lock; wale price WH 85.50 $12 HIGH GRADE CASE FOR $8.50-- Made Ma was cooking breakfast in the babes Gctalees aadeniten Goekt e cowhide, old | LET SET FOR $12— country linen lined Fitted with good and Inexpensive toilet completed, I side § pockets = and | lity, complete tot was soon at the table, giving an ex shirtfold 24 Inch, set made of Fresh hibition of a healthy boy with a wide straps all the heavy cowhide, good} Garden gurgling, |healthy aypetite BUSHNELL. way round; steel depth, strongly} in pai for 5 © frame, spring lock, made finished inj} each GONE TO VICTORIA. very strong handles tan; very attractive sale p we for . 892 Steamer Sian, of the Koemos line, Cc has we to Victoria, where she will sidal op pinned. ain: the dex. Gots doe: ct Big Cut in pairs CARPET 2-paund B PRICES | © Fi Your § rin $1.10 Brussels Car per yard Ye Brussels Carpet, per yard - $1.35 Axminster Carpet, pe urd $1.00, VELVET CARPET, $1.12 4 a Theae prices are the lowest or, new Viower Seeda, Here patterns. Come early and pick out your © packages E ry day our showing To 10 a. m aa ee tack: | French Plate 2 Se of the new spring sty for ap _ pring ets, worth Hand Mirror 2 women receives strong re . on a ; inforecements, rushed to u —— sleeves; blue ae Woe hina Nett sts o ty express from the leading ? lined with edge. Exes, doen —_ gers rs of the sets iSe an ene “ “9 ny Never has our showing 4 caly to to customer — sod been larger, or more va customer 15e ze ried—every garment is per par’ Onion Set fect in all details of styl BEST 100 OUTING 0c WIDE DARKE ver pound and workmanship Se YARD—On Sale as | PERCALE 7o—On Sale| © Suits in silk, voile, Pana follows:—9 to 9:15, 28 follows, 9:15 to ma and fancy worsteds 0:15 cee ee nae haga og steds, 10 to 10:15, 11 to 11:18. | to 11:30, Mostly dark Cc p17.50 tO 975 Can't fi ©. O. D. nor colors, Can't fill Covert Coats in many at by telephone, Be here ders C. O. D. nor by reise tractive styles, $5 to $25 Tuesday morning; 6 be lephone meg bo ave tol Stains, New Spring Hats—dain yds. the limit this a 08 . i quart cant tier than ever, $5 to $30. Tuesday New Street and Dress Skirts, .3 wide range of $1.50 EMBROID. i ' right” so Our stock of ERED CHIF every instance—pay a little Rubber Hot it a time for anything se Water Bot — lected tles is new Your chotee of Sitidithiien and fresh t exquistte pat ie We quote you ‘ee. edt Eastern Outfitting for Tuesday © T waite, sold Company, Inc Be, of which | black and | back 9 ° the drug abana 1232-44 Second, near Union store price f $1.00. Re “Beatties Reliable Credit House.” member on price $Me Extra heavy t in a ail new and ch patterns, Per yard white grounds with | Gingham, best for com ew he more tier they met $8.50 COWHIDE SUITCASE $5.50 extra select: | $20 CASE WITH TOI at this price, Be here Peery. y ~ |PSEqsERe. ESE, YE Percales, ¥ 122e Seersuc DELAYED SHIPMENT SUIT on

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