The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 27, 1907, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

j ) | "THE SEATTLE STAR Temporary Quarters, Old Library Building. EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY, Felephones— Editorial: independent 675; Business: independent 1138; Sun BALLARD STAR AGENCT~#n Raliard Ave BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. Sunset Main 1050. t Main 1050, Huneet, Mallant 908 werteller Ave; Sunset 166 BVERETT STAR AGENCT- Homer Beans, tM 1 One cont par copy ‘conte per Week, oF twenty-five Gents per month Delivered » mal) or carrier, Ne tree copies, Entered at ao Postoffice at Beattie, Washington, as second-class mattor TO MAIL SUBSORINERS— The aay mubscription « Bddrees label of each paper, When chat Sere es tai, 'h efreace, rour nome , the Addrons label te & reesipt RNOTICK TO SUNSCHINENS—sHowid y eiclock any evening. please do we the fe val eur WH, Intopent UM, between € a8 4 11 e'olook, and we Saco. HE you should mise more than oes, Bh ‘ Feu miles In this way we can be certain of givin e cur subsortbers © perfect cor vice and tt te the onty way EXPERIENCE-~IT'S A GOOD SERVANT, BUT A POOR MASTER oor time A woman died In a little Indiana town the other day who had not spoken te a man for 70 years A man jilted her when she was 16 getting even What do you think of it? You are sorry for her. Yes She chose this way of years is @ long time to pvonty keep silence. [t's a long time to do anything, It would be a long time to part your hair in the middle, or to live honestly It muat have been a tremendous will power that held on to any idea for 70 years. Rut It was such a poor idea. Tt didn't do her any good. It didn't make her any happier, Each new day was like an added magnifying glass, and as she looked back at her experience through one day's glass and then put another to that, and another to that, and that that experience kept getting bigger and more important more influence over her, until after a while her whole conception of life revolved around that one incident. There anything Her feclings towards all the world began another to and having waan't else worth considering and ended right there. There was no proportion in her life. Ls appointment Dut no matter how many there are, ever so many m ing, and no one is over exactly Ike any of the ott All these experiences are good for ua, A child never knows how hot the fire io until he burns his hand. They teach us what life is. The dog has only a vague idea that the breakfast bet! moarfs ery man and womaa has countless experiences. There tn dle and realization, and hours that bring smile © keep com or tears something to eat, but we understand about the breakfast bell, It be comes a part of our conception of fife. But sometimes, very often, wo distort our experiences. We let them amount to too much, so that they twist our sense of duty, or even make us belleve that we have to do this thing, or we can’t @onquer that habit, or we must keep on living in a certain way One man deceived this poor woman, and she argued from that @ne experience that all men were unworthy. We must have our experiences, and profit by them and from them. But let us be sure not to live too much by the past or tm the past, but in the present and for the future. learn BETWIXT THE DEVIL AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA What can the poor traveler do? It ts a hard choles for him between ratiroad smash-ups and steamboat wrecks. If he takes pas sage in a ship on the Pacific he usually gambles with bis life, There is no telling whea the old cheesebox may founder But if, fearing the boats, he turns to the railroads, he will probably ascertain that “the trains are all late today, owing to a wreck.” ae ae, NR There was a time when a railroad disaster furnished exceliont material for newspaper “extras. Bet such ts so longer the fact. ‘The wrecks now furnish part of the routine news of the day. “at gr aa ships” are bat the soa in passengers,” Those persons whe do “go down to the booked by the transportation companies as Rewepapers frequently speak of them as “survivors.” oo Sm eee a Nidurecaliliisead IN PHIL.CELPHIA He: Ohh bh dea-ear, aughaughwaugh' Leet's get m-married! She: Ob-h dear me, Humsuseow! ‘Awall right. (Yawn) For the strong—that they may keep their strength. For the weak—that they may regain their strength. For the young that they may grow in strength. Uneeda Biscuit the most nutritious food made from wheat. Clean, crisp and fresh, ¢n moisture and ¢ dust proof packages NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY . LEE, : PARRY THE SR) AINT THIS VACATION GAME FIERCE J: PARLY! and of women wrifers BY ELLA K, DEARBORN There many , marrying early marrying late, and each o: figure it out according to th temperament. Many pe never marry--in Tact, some have no as well for ple business to be born Marr the average a marr ious business. For and woman early ' age is iage ie bes it marriage is deferred the, wo man must, in many cases, #ook some means of livelihood—end so abe has no time to making and bh this Jack of khowledge on the woman's part ts re boarding- house habit, and also helps to Increase the nun vorces After a woman has been carsing from $75 for years, and has helped hor family it ia rather hard for her to marry & man with a $65 per ary and fool satisfied. All of this makes her fee! that the man ie incompetent, and. to & certain extent, inferior, and herein Hes an clement of discord. .dtat- rimony is the normal and rational state for mormal people, thereiese it (a better for girls to cut out business and devote time and lite 40 homemaking. The question is now up to the men-—ehall girle be od ueated for business careers or homemaking’ The only way to head off « business career ia to marry the girt The man who defers marriage Ull 30 grows blase, A vnanfe gh “p past” in hypercritical, full of suspicions ‘ Two young people can adapt themeaoty: to each other's pecw Uaritios wasior than older ones; they are more loving, less exacting and more forgiving ” Marry early ponai ble mooth “ or two month sal per men ohauld- . bags homgo— ro, (My Zelma Travers) With all due reapect to Jack, and the architect with bis toch nical skill, Jit! should take a tw share in the planning of her tome, for it is there she spends most of her lifetime it ia her wotkabop She would not plan flats so there would be three or four Nights of hall stairway to carpet. Think of the waste of carpes, and note, too, the energy expended to keep that long stair chute ad clean as the rest of the house, and the mt of dust swallowed in the hand broom cleaning process. Could not hall stairways be built outside the house somewhere? liow women have execrated the old atyle of house and fat bullding, with the inevitable high cefling, double parlor, whose cap nt of furniture seemed to quite (i up, and its small fire t seemed to draught all tts heat ap the narrow chimney replace certainty did not drive chili and dampness away on rainy days. And the «mall ball bedroom-—-the same in every house of that make—with the long darkhall that ted from it to the rethote, iitventilated kitchen, which sent the cooking odors to every room The house was finished throughout with a ghastly white plaster No Jill ever planned euch a house. | have seen the bathroom built off the kitchen in many a hom Think of its effiavial stee And why are bath tuba near a ely no w né¢ arm was ever made behind the tub, where dirt, dampness being wafted over your cookin ways wet close to the wall? jong enough to reach the apace and Kerms accumulate The double-parior idea still clings to us, for even in small fate © folding doors are used to divide small reome into tiny compart nts. Why doors at.all, where the room space is limited? Small ‘ches of some aia e grill work would anawer the oe aa well and serve to allow of one comfortable living room instead of two inconvenient on We don't want to make homes so extremely convenient that we can pull our beds and trunks the wall and carry the cook stove into the dining-room, whe in lack of space. That doe y well for people who ch« compactly, but the majority of us do not want to live w jon that we are aboard ahip dnd living In a ata all the time. We need air and move ment and room for both If intelligent women would evote more time to satadying con veniont plane foe th homes and time to elaborate cooking much of the ponderous houseke Id be eliminated And much more time lability FREDDIE FLIP, THE SUMMER PEST. would thea be allowed for study, recreation and #0 COFFE There isa time for PINNEY | For PHOTOGRAPHS tea, and a time for go cotiee; there ts no tun b First Ave, Washington Bie . 2606, eee | for poor either Vour «rover rety mur money See the Battleships at S Yard. §@ you don't & " iD eee ''p oe oe "TER STAR—SATURDAY, JULY 97, 19 ISN'T A MAN EASY “STAR DUST \ BY JOSH® ° 0 pn A Word Prom seeh Wise of the waves over which the Peet i le oooan ts 40 ready to throw A coy ering of water, A few of them, wet | w and bedraggied ag halftrosen, | te ey even in mid-summer, have strag Pr 4 glad ashore, The ship to which » . « ° they trusted, the clothes which r “Saane bald facts Prmight have “ ded them from pri-| wear wins.” vation and i feas, many o8 the | p! frien they had pon earth and we practically all else th have | be known ts down In the bottom of la the everchanging sea--feattle ac Morning Times. To the person who will explain | a what the writer of th hove in try fn ing to nay Star Dust will give « re ward, Also Star Dust will pay for information regarding the brand of dopo used by the Rentloman re ponsgible for the above | Unseen, Admired Hef voice Oh, duleet was its tone Her face In talking o'er the phone was wweet and honeyed, but that won't figure I have been engaged in the prac tice of law & good many years,” | Of course, Menrietta, the theat: | Police Judge # 8. Urmy of} } rieal. trust will co the prose 6d ‘and about the | cution of the lawl extor ous thing I ever saw troom was in Topelp | Honate tipket y an old negro man was | A Farmer Says jt tried in the police court | If this country w 4o rainions | that Was before the office of polles | an the vacationers want it there | Judse wan ore and he de | wouldn't be anything for them to | ™ a trial by a jury of his aot this winter | peers, Me could neither read nor | write, and bia lawyer insisted that From a Dime Novel. be jury, to be hin peers, as re quired by law, must be unable to read or write, too. To avoid dis pute | agreed to it. But we had a | time finding 12 men in Topeka who | could neither i nor wri ut | we did find them and the case went to trial Retore the jury retired I took pleeés of pa and = wrote guilty’ on one pléce and t guilty fon the other, and tnatructed the | | foreman of the jury to destroy t lone he id not wish weed and to/ " . Paper. return @ to me when the| rector rvices at 7:20 and 11 a. | Mleet of Battleships at Magy | jury ree dict. The jury|m. and 7:30 p. m.; Sunday school | was out only « few minutes When] at #:30 a. m.; morniy — eee it came tn. The foreman handed | “Wiser Than t Children of Ge oe: 1 | me a plece of paper with the word | Light;” subject of evening sermon, THE Y “Ft | guilty’ written on ft Unspotted from the World aon | “Our young hero stood with al Well, gentiomen, you find him wd Pen lsmoking colt in each hand | guilty, do you? | asked Christian Science. , j | No, wah, jodge, no sah; we] Pirst—8i2 Sixth av. Services at| “VENUE & | Overheard in Front of a Stationers! done found him not guilty,” wpoke|11 a. m., subject, “Love;” Sunday | S@ancn stone wy ‘ ee Window in Eocles. }up one of the jurymen. Then he|school at 11 « m.; testimonial | MKC 5T4wrs1 Saige ~ First Little Girt (eagerly point-|added with disgust: ‘I tole that| meeting, Wednesday evening; - fi ma ing to & ploture postcard of the | fool nigger that he was tearin’ up| reading rooms at 923 Alaska build IME QUAKER Shas i w bit week procession) You see the wrong plece of paper.’ ”—Kan-| ing Mary Ann there? sas City Star First Divine Science—Columbia | & Second Little Girt—Yea - college hall, corner Broadway and ree Ta And you see them boots be “What is your idea of a perfect! Pine st. Agnes R. McCarthy, pas hind ber husband?" asked the sentimental) tor. Sunday school at 10 a. m.; A Handy You wir! topic for 11 a. m. services, “The | “Well, thats me."—Manchester A perfect husband,” answered | Vision.” ; r Miss Cayenne, “is one who will aa i submit to any amount of reproof iritualist. | The King's Jester. | because he delayed dinner to see! at seaaiae es Pythias ball, First is | “Mark yo, sirrah,” said the king |an Lltoning baseball game to the] gy and Pike st, Harry J. Moore, At Either | “You are falting off in your mirth-| finish, and never once allude to speaker. Lectures at 3 p. m. and/ one. I have to have a refresh-jthe similar delays occasioned by! g Pp. m.; cireles at 4:30 p. m.; a ing bon mot out of you or there| his wife's devotion to lectures orlanernoon subject, “Secret Soci-| . will be something doing” pianiets.”—Washington Star. eties; ning subject, “Are Lies, Specials | “Wait, your majesty, I think 1 Hypocrisy, Profanity and Decep have one,” anid the fotlie jester, Just What He Thought cs EB Justifiable?” Platform | Satu jeudgeting his brains, At length he| “What {x the matter with my|inensages after the evening ser-|f U nald boy?” asked the anxions father. | jicos by Mra..Minule Jennings | PTIC | Doe you know who was the firet/ addressing the physician, who by | Tne eube Parenti coeteay wilt | Nhe Ome j inventor ] Just completed his examination hold services at Alki hall, 1420 Sec of Dr. R. A. Pea Who was j Oh,” replied the doctor, “It t*/ ong ay, at 3 p.m. Lecture on psy. cake—the kind | “Noah He was an electrician.” | only a case of corastafied exegents, | nic work by Miss Rice. | be bi Tommyrot,” said the king. |antlepasmodically emanating from| ee | “Ob | “Didn't he x om arat™ nerea arc Nght | the bactll! of animal decomponttio the jester producing @ prolific source of irri the king said it looked pretty | tability to the peri al epidermis dim to bin hand mental profundity 10¢ PER 3 FOR 25¢ Robertson's Grape Presbyterian. Broadway and Co J. M. Wilson, pas Westminster jlurmbia #t. Rev |tor, Subjects, “The Most Beneficent “Well, thats just what I told Re ~ 22¢. Quarts 43¢. other s t be | Purpose in a Great Commercial 4 og © ~~ vad ‘ & yman be chel, but she thought it weet ity.” and “The Master of Seattt Woodiark's Lemos ote has gone down into the trough | worms,” satd the father | Demons and SMon;” sermonette to can i % - . a = “=i the children. The Eclipse of a Liquid Foot Kase i | Mercer st, Rev. De Witt C. Frank-| Wise Man," Thursday night sub- | feet, bottle a | SUN AY TOPICS jlia, pastor. Subject of sermon at| ject, “How Working Men = Capt. John's Orderle: ‘i oe oan 11 «. m., “The Legal Status of the| Unions, the losed Pp an } mer laxative, box e . Saloon and Ita Ultimate Destruc-| Strikes.” — Sesstts 4 os eee atonal ae Untver:| lam” Rev. D.C. Joha will preseh| , mney rege 6 ge saumnonn a ymou| d av, and Univer-| at § p. m Spring st, Re | te. wt, Rev. 5 # J. Ven Horn, “Haven--Corner Howard av. and| pastor. Morning subject, “T The Quaker D DD, pastor. Serviecs, 11a. m. and! John st, Rev. F. KE. Drake, pastor. | harvested; evening subject, 1013-15 TWO STORES: 5:00 pm; Sunday school, 9:45) Subject of sermon at 1l,a. m., “A| Contagion of Determination rey a Ff. Y. PB, ¢ ™.;| Sure Promine;” subject of evening ore 24 tna ie Peak toe Me ».| sermon, “individual Agreement.” At Labor Temple. — a. Re . Fran ayley of] iat - | Denver, preaches morniag " al 1, anne wget, pe ey na beeen vl " Eplecopal. | tral Labor Council and the Minis- | } a St, Mark's—Corner Madison and/| terial Fraternal delegates have ar i 1 95> a ae and Bay se Bros@way, We IP. D Liwyd ranged a service at Labor Temple | DD. Pose "ae, ae ym 4 rector. Services at 8 and 11 a. m.;| Similar to the one held when Rev iD. D. acting pastor. Services 11 | MubJect of morning sermon, “Three | Charles Stelzie was here. A mints} PIA a ee yo am. | Acts In the Career of a Prophet;”| ter will speak on “The Chriatian | fh yee tee : "| subject at 8 p.m. “How All Th Ministry,” and a representative o i 4 and Y. P. 8. C. B, 6:45 p.m; Thursday, | 1, ; Togoth eat nines | organized labor on “The Walking|f .."s bec: Hy 7:20 p. m. Dr, Strong preaches. No weno 7 aa Sey Geeds" Suntey) Delegate.” Representatives of the |}, Merit. It Is the fa 1 aouhes ‘ s school a m i mere. | we “Gk tale. — ¥ ing Ook Lake| Trinity rish—Corner Bighth| churches and working men are in-|} Circles and is wi - achool. Rev. F. W. Griffiths, mints |*84 James st, Rev. H. H. Gowan, vited to be present. any piano, either for % os Ah veer a masmseneian - am —I) tustrumental nfasic, 1) ter. 2:00 p. m. Sunday school, Mrs.) > - “ | Lee Sonat one sO. worship | Fleet of Battleships at Navy Yard.| Boats leave Pier 2 for Navy Yard: |} tne elements of . and sermon by James Brand of a all our patrons are Rev. Rufus W. Fletcher, minister. | ° ° Phail has steadity ¢limit fe a.m, Sunday echool; 8:08 p.m ur Entire Stock o i ladder since 1837 anil il worship knd rmon by James a masterpiece of Brand . workmanship that ino meen tot] One-Half P Merle A. Frost, pastor resses Une-fMa rice energy can make. Wal ool, 10 a. m.; Y, P. 8, C. K, 7:00 clusive representatives, — The newest and most bewitching creations in this summer's silk | » m | [Pt Seattlo-Grand ay. and{f dresses, of chiffon, taffeta and silk foulards, in beautiful checked, Coaer a Telford Erick.|f Striped, plaid an@ dotted effects and plain colors. son, pastor m. and} Not an undesirable garment in the entire stock, but all bright 4.00 p.m “ 12m new merchandise, which were rattling good values at the regular l¥. P. 8. ¢ ) prices, and are now, at half price, extraordivary bargains Pi v Yo town 00 p. m., Sunday , ary arga: ano school; #:00 p.m. @vensong and 314 UNION 8 QL to $25LO an tow Sy Strong of Obertin hy 1 1 University cars pase Routh Alki Services in schoo! | honne 1 »” ™m 3 day school a i if, worship tmon by Tracy All alterations free—our littleatatime plan is at the disposal jj] he |}, of those who do not find It convenient to pay all ih. e | Christian See the Window Display. 1 ‘ore o (iroadway and) st, Rev. H. L. "reaching at Eastern Outfitting Co. and §:00 p. m.; morning subject The Promised Bleasing:” evening ubject, “Why Did God Permit the « incorporated Wreek of the Columbia 1332-34 Second Ave. 209 Union Street ' Baptist. | “Seattle's Reliable Credit House.” Tabern Corner 15th av N }and Harrison st. Rev, John Marvin | Your credit is gt Dean, pastor. Chuch Bible school at y * ie: 30 a, m sbiic. worship at 11 | The Easy P a. m.; sermon by Rev. Henry C.| } The Re Ved of Cro minary on House. Baptiat ¢ 1 Histo Young Buy now—Pay People rvices a Op. m.; ser All the Credit um by D Vedder at 8 p. m.; | it to. jay evening THERM ARE THRE GREAT PIiwos THAT HAVE Liberal Copa Third ay. and} | SPREAD THE GLORY OF AMERICAN ANT TO $1.00 a weeks George Robert! | YPRY QUARTER oF THN GLOD you well, bject of sermon ‘ rayer in the Founda-| {S¥] fect at | The Dest ive Mi ” | Christ nda be-the pa | . fore hs vacation 1 mbor 1 | LELELLEBELERELELG Methodist Ep RLELREREBE pastas be Shen: j 1 : i. ' a IN Bik bshen u [Ry 422 Pike St i! | 2 LLPERELLLLE PERL ERCCCR PECL = ? K |

Other pages from this issue: