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BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. — . Te phence— % Eattori Indepengey ee! leiopendent RD STAR AGRN Rgeth been pall in We eddies label te & recetp Notice © 1138; Gun CT te Mallar a Ave Winere eran AauNcy—Homer ¥ a 6 B75; Gunset Main 1050, tsi Main 1080. yotive Puneet _ THE SEATTLE STAR Temporary Quarters, Ow wibrary Bullding. Higher Avs f The Star fall to a EVERY AFTERNOON SXCEPT BUNDAY, Mallard 908 ° 7 re he Oe per MLA Kellvered on by | net | OF cour M 1 the Moran company wasn't in Sea ’ s city gathered together | and raised t ur $100,000 that the ¢ yiny n known] as the Mewan & v HCOUY } ward of the @ontract to bu tt A tleship Nebraska | fi Mr. Patte ' 1 c 1 with tt mipany at} that time he would ably v be « laining of the | treatment rece Latt hn munity in the mat | ter of taxation | Mr. Patterson, t probably not aware of the fact that] the city of Seatth he Mo Ur portions | of certain street the purpose of permittin | the, Moran company rla plant sufficiently to take} which the ship bu pany will be able to dispose of for] a stim in the neighborhood of $2,000,000. If Mr, Patterson had t ed of th rifts and con cessions from the peop! » the s. | company he would b y have i eriti r| and would have marched 1 paid his taxes like a little man| and without a murr | Mr. Patterson, howe s only jokin nen he says if the Moran company does move i be becat f the} high rate of taxation aluation ASS nt purpose } The real reason for the conten al of the Moran plant, as pointe n The Star ye the site of | the present plant is too valuable to be used for esent pur | pose and that the Moran company desires to « a com] munity of its own in which its homes, thus minimiz These are good from Mr. Patterson w that the company is bei must move elsewhere Seattle will be s« who have been here from poverty to affluence therein was done by present when upward of 1,200 men are em battleships are turn ed in the carly days by the ec vessel. lf the plant goes to city of smokestacks growth of Seattle always re from infa made more keen bec it when help was ne = 1 a Seattle inatitr icy to mat ause of the er ing the dang ample er of much better grace ng abused and fk labor troubles. reasons and would have cor yployes may own their own wv its Own protection wrv to lose the Moran plant } e, from the time ny, se of when all of the we the Moran brothers themselves until lout with is to be a fa urity wi essary tipment verett Wherever it r Seattle tor in ay ge 1 oye " rk the than the complaint | the carly days have watched it grow} and large | i the smallest ste " ity w upbuilding will rejoice, for und it v with a kindly inter re that we have hel; a8 little trouble as was occasion the and will est “IT 1S FAR BETTER TO BE AN OLO MAID THAN B® MARRY A MAN WHO 1'8 NOT ONE'S EQUAL.”—Mre. Stuyvesant Fish elal custom or elviliz Mos Stvvvevant Pon If a man has lived t A man who marries festricted contact with A woman always det unable or ashamed to . ree rior admit her eq i Goodness in a prospective has abislty indis- yensabl not much pb and stil! eat with his However used to 5 using her table kot its intensity An educated wi barbarities and unc speech and manne drags his wife to his spotied from the mire Financia! ineqnai unable to cope with homespun” that filis he eomtemptibie in her « an with no housewife There may be ar knife and us morally in trying natrimontal ym which his w wo mn retains the Mumit ad is a asage his wife for the batte: Love ia e beautiful thing, n constant tigarities A man of low his abirt may be and her a ansociatl he? ite stick man is bh his persona BY FRANCES GIL BREATH INGERSOLL. An old maid is a 4 placed article; bat be wander all than to become m warped and socially twi to straighten ble, mi that, an the woo tally kno & crook is nd tu a od can be excluded attor » which she ts minor item; education A man may be “good sleeve for a napkin she generally ends b pron for a erchiet inevitably becom ideats, however cultured level, or her is & daily atrog in which her feet are placed ost the worst. Ske fin f and the “t wants #0 complete » becomes—saddest 0 and a siattern in pe @ h but can lower its object fn proportion to le to keep un herself ad, bacon d become , f all—a wom onal prid proves the WHAT A SILENCE THEY Don’ \ HUM. ANY Boys Wanted To sell Seattio papers. For tnfor mation apply to Geo etfice, old library bullding, bet Engler, Sta on §'Bnd If in the morning and 2 till 3 tc the afternoon. paid by Hagler. Initiation fee o- We ma furnace H. Woodh at More battleships than ever before. he of hot 18 112 Universtt at navy yard eee herein it grew} | | | | | | 1 | ! What should a Should he work order that they wi la he way in th work! he can, and then have vever t 8 of his neight nding money boya Possibly bh leas than the poorer boys and learned | For they had me money and could give © time to having “a good time.” they came home they played the society camo for a A MAN AND HIS BOYS doing the but makes tite way for his boys, too? Or should he give them a sod an education and training® as start them our in In every city there are object man solve thia problem to hin own satisfaction. For there are boys whe were born with silver spoons in thelr mouths, and who smpelled to earn their own living by real work How have they panned out? Many & man has worked hard, accumulated a fortune, m way for his boys, and died dina beonuse his boys were rank failures as men, Possibly his boys or, because he could afford to give them more And at that time they were envied by the other pnt hin boys to coll JHE SEATTLE STA’ THUR DAY. SEPT. 5, 1907. binally bem ‘HOW enny wtooks, Advised wine And then tt Had been And not get { The w | No more I'll That tolls w atock UN earefal Do not str wake Too many It you can |have you ba Many peop an ley stare, opie wi if your ey man do r hia boyet J all bis days piling up wealth for them, in not have to work as hard as he worked? t thing when he not only makes his own | beat It out. Iluet Ife to make thelr own way? sons whieh ought to help a ointed, after an unhappy old er the pleasure of life nore than did the And there they studied ey didn't bave to work. Father earned enough for all, They “having a good time.” And finally there was an easy in «0 for them, the sons of the other men doing t ork in many casos, the boys who started in depending upon eat oh father to make the m, kept on letting father make thetr wa. And father tly unhap cause Kis boys didn't fron.” amount to much themse! vea He had intended to make bis sone useful men, Bat things came too eaxy for them and they kept on depending upon father, Aud it wasn't sur father died the boys lost all they had, « on somebody else A ple Kept in a wallowing, be for meat. That cally He of his b r doesn't get the whole gets who haa to hustle fe much more valuable pen race horse d. Hie work Kets enoagh sleep What are you he may wallow in degener horse to do hie own trotting Are you gotting him ready to dle or teaching him how to live? STAR DUST | apy ig And habltes | <i doubt it.” | } “fut they may it's made of greéa | cheese | I think it's Mkely | | “Well, isn't cheese inhabited tT” People who are running down the! vow'g you like to shake the ico-| automobile evidently bi jeaf from the autome book, if yoo hear a woman calling for} so jher Jimmy it's no sign #he's a burg-| Comforting. tar The interurban trolley car The passengers called a chost— Never Again. Too many were aboard by far }I placed some money in a mine And aalf were on | Bat the conductor had 4 pretty Wit, And waited, dreaming for the tim we And bis words ewent For he promised that wit When they rey: eat na that ¢ wan't cheer « Guns For Rent--Piper & Taft | 1024-26 Second a ¥ wtondily fntte } he was in wher own trotting. He hae bis lecitimate “good times” running around the pasture. And he gets epough wholesome food. But he also they all could U. S. Navy Yard @ are two kinds of moe Reston, Buffalo and the train jauitoes—the kind that ives in the ship Philadelphia, the mammoth | house and the kind that Tives out- dry “docks, torpedo beats and] « to some that after con tioned to depend up. pen and regularly fed, with no exercise save and fatter. Finally he tw killed nded for. The boy who can practt and have a fatherly hand put food tn bis month e ments) and physiesl exercke the boy bis grat, And he can't expect to beta in the economy of nature than the pig fatt ts trained, educated, exerciaed and * trotting for him. He must do hie care! can't ¢ and he has to work im for your boy-—fattening him to a pen where luxury, of (raining him Ike a race | more de new one of the fo’ fer at ve easy tern BY JOSH doors They get you acomin’ and) agwi | Actor out in lowa electrified the} town by burning real money | Dowbtiess unused to any but the | “De you believe the moon is In ve takes ®) mon? ¥ feet Upon advice of “one who knew peesing!) = W hen | I'd have cotn of rolden hu th county Take a trip on the Sound and/ visit the U. 8. navy yard, seo the battleships Oregon, Wisconsin and | up to learn Nebraska, the ecraisers Charleston, | ® prison ship Nipsic. Boats leave er 2, foot of Yenlor way, xix tir **© daily, Round trip, 50 Try them for lunch and you will have them for dinner. Uneeda Biscuit The most nutritious i staple made from wheat. F In moisture and dust proof packages. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Noxt, 1 bongis gor) raliroad lmatead, I think, the cointeam | “TAME @ turning glances are lable to singe the lashes If the town is wide open, close the lids oftener | Coal black eyes are susceptible | to injury from cinders be full of aqueous humor keep away from leaks When you bat your eye, try to \Whe|man that meddies with cold Of a first-class to purchase than a cheap The Meyer-Toner Piano Co 314 Union St, Opp. P. Bat’ Aftor wiillag twonty montha! Do you befleve that 1,000,000 hon- Aud not a dividend in sight, hard-working families in the an to Hee can't afford decent suckors are to bite. clothing, jee, fruit, good meats, butter, eg@e and milk? Don't mise Giison Gardner's articles on in Cont of liveng. y one T thought was Hg told me knowlggly that | 6 TT Dute-just my luck—titetwo days Fine t& brinewout fon time. y The i@irket took a fearful slum@! versation if anything will; lawned on me that I ‘ a Montmeptal chomp. | it coifpels to a little So I've resolv to save ® coin | leisure. Rogardlass of advice 1 got if you don't like Sehilling’s Best? | we pay him caught again within |. Your goer returns your money of some alluring net, | hearken to the vol of “sure thing nd ily salt in “ck | DRUG Milwauk Hinel MAIN STORE $015 1015 FIRST aig Baorniiges Bye Lore. AVENUE 4 in ane ain your eyesight. That! petcrsrone r » it any finer PIKE ST WEST eb! NLL OL LIVERY TO WAT TU ‘ Friday Surprises at The Quaker---Both Stores highballa affect the n't make your eyes be ve unruly paptis le get hurt slipping on SPRCIAL SOAP BARGAINS FOR FRIDAY AND SAT UMDAY ONLY ith laugting eyes muat on water a great deal rated Quotation, i“ An excellent sonp aft am ox Hently low price. We have nto at perils do environ SAMUEL BUTLER make is a sirable instrument Ve have several mer which we of ry low prices and ms. TWO STORES 1013-15 Fourth and First Ave. Pike St. j ess ed) Con | Bradbury System Clothes for Men and Young Men clever creations of master designers beautifully fab. ricked and tailored—“custom- made” valuc at “ready-to wear” prices Fall showing now ready—~ $22.50 to $40.00 Other goad makes . $15.00 to $32.50 Delighted to have you open an account with us for anything selected Eastern Outfitting Co. Inc. 1332-34 Second Ave.—209 Union St “Seattle's Reliable Credit House.” Yourself and friends are invited to attend a Piano and Song Recital to be given by Mr. C. Arthur Longwell assisted by Mr, Frank Hemstreet both of New York Friday Eve: September the sixth at eight fifteen at Christensen’s Broadway Hall Introducing The Artistano in Seattle The recital is complimentary and is ander the auspices of Sherman, Clay & Co. No tickets will be required EXTRA! Sample Line of , | ice NewFallWaistoh ¥ A _— Unusual Opportunity Right now, at the very beginning of Vall season, and best. elling Fall Waists at one-third less than actual value, ir luding In this lot will be found all size veiling, mulls, $3.00 Waists at 0 Waists at Waists Waists a 2.00 Waists at 0.00 Waists at Children’s Dresses Fall Dresses for Cl much Regular Regular $ e than at aay itr t Sale prices are s. All s, from | to O8¢ to $5.00 Children’ s Wash Dresses i Dresses for childie Reg Regular $! Regular $1.50 Dresses for Regular $2.00 Dresses for .. (New Fall Dress Goods! Are Here | i Our Silk and Dress Goods Sections have made rapid B progress—we think the most rapid f any similar tions inany Seattle store. The ¢ grown to be mighty] business, The sea- son's best styles are here. The prices are less—nutcll less. Read the list below—come to the store and see if important in the total volume of goods BROADCLOTH. CLOAKING. All-Wool Broad Cloaking, navy blue, card neat always REG red, brown and . John yatd ...:92.10 | %ld for $1.98; ompaa yard S25 rks NOVELTY BROAD- : CLOTHS. FANCY SUITINGS. Shadowed ff 54-inch Fine French Sroadcloths, in medium Stripes and | and dark shades of e dark and rich shadow stripes; yard $1.50. and $2.25 ‘ uth BLACK BROADCLOTH. 39, $1.50, $1.75, | t-inch All-Wool Fine baer $2.25. Finished Broadeloths. vard $1.50, CHEVIOTS. $1.75 and 1.98, S2-inch All-\Woot PANAMA CLOTH. ots, all colors 4 52-inch All-Wool Fine war nted all} j French Chiffon Pana BEAR CLOTH. ma, that new shade of i brown, yard 81.50 -inch | Cloth, for coats s white, CRAVENETTE CLOTH. 5 ‘ gray ar black; will inch Shower Prooi have tl colors in-® nettes ray nd " " Cravenet or A ee < every mn; also herringbone a §2.50' to ripe; always s¢ $1.75; our price, per ” e, yard.» yard wos. ees. OL3O PEE es $2.25 $1.25 QUALITY 361NCH OIL. BOILED BLACK TAFFETA SILK, SPECIAL TODAY ONLY, YARD