The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 8, 1907, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR Y STAR PUBLISHING CO. © 1907-1909 Seventh av. EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY, —"Felephongs — ¥ Kuitorial: trMepencent cedhinaifit Busine Independent 1788; ‘g Hatlard 204. BALLARD STAR AGENCY Sunset Magn 1050. Su t Main 1050, 321 Ballard Ave Munset GO RVERETT STAR AGENCY— Homer Beans, 2991 Rockefeller Avi Sunset 1640 ® One contene conte pert Hivered by mali or alx Cente por % ative No free ms ” attle, Washingtgg, 48 secot@-olasa matter Roter@ont ge Post ro oun the #0 has no of date MAIL NoTICR on hy © jnaet, Ma you « every *0 In and it == “THE “PANIC CRY” OF THE PANIC STRICKEN Panic is a state of mind When own ability to arise, he becomes panic stricken a man loses confidence in himself, in his conditions may that ot cope with whatever li condition he loses his mental balance, his sense truth and proportion, and magnifies misfortune, real or imagin | ary, into disaster | So, when people lose confidence in the financial they begin to mag-} ot condition of their nify the importance and effect ce each = difficulty hich arises in the business world, panic sets in and wns its course to disaster. Panic. seems to have taken possession of the] mind of E. P. Ripley, president of the Santa Fe rail-| “YOU'LL @0 Now, PLEASE, a ¢ is suffering from the railway presidents V oad. He oy ohana gd er pee de I | I'm done with the Jiggs Patent panic which has become so prevalent since Roose-| potato Masher and the lady can velt started his campaign to curb the railroads in the | vasser game. rit admit it, I'm ‘ Sines cise he predato owe ch they have used |" exercise of the predatory power which they have r Sa susieietk ShuibiS sina abies in the past to build up immense fortunes for them Anybody can tell you I've no streak " 7 —- of yellow in not even a pin selves and their favorites at the expense of the com po ag hte yong Dal ge mon people. Ever since the president started — this | the hard tuek tine today is undoubt edly tn Neait campaign, there have been frequent outbreaks of} Wit a se aver ot 000 Fy bs . with the Jiggs F ont Pi Mash panic on the part of railway presidents who see them |, 1 went out. hot In the ar and selves confronted by a power greater than their own seven to sell, 1 was really and realize that they may be brought to book and pun- | abled about sort of aimless, : . baving gotten the torn-down in so ished for their misdeeds many places, when [ came to a 1 as .|rather gloomy looking, large rest They have sounded their panicky cries in the hope | Senco auseiting way back tn'e lnrwe » sar w fec > f the peo-|yard. The gate wa od, but I that their own fear would infect the minds of the peo te yereelgthn aoa Regul ple and cause a popular protest which would head off | answered the bell, so 1 tried the door, While I was fumbling with | the campaign which the president is wagir their illegal methods of acquiring and monopolizing the wealth of the country. President Ripley's panic demonstration quickly and logically on President Roosevelt's declar- agaist oe STA Joah Wise Says: follows ation that he will not be swerved in his campaign for railway regulation and will not allow any guilty man to escape, if he has his way. Hardly has the ink in which this declaration was printed become dry before a eee Ripley bawls forth the old, old cry of “panic Sendiliieiue see “IT take a very gloomy view of the future,” he finerty’s ike — ; : ) | in’ trouble—yer ¢ said. “I cannot see how we can escape hard times rally lookin } for it at th’ time.” The country has been worked into a terrible hysteria | over railroads and corporations until the people are| j likely to do almost anything so long as a railway or | a corporation is hit hard. The hysteria has hit high| a | places and has resulted in ‘grand stand plays’ where| Pe pA Sees ae se Oe pe destrian, were he a barnstermer,! we might reasonably expect to find calm and deliber |would be walking to some purpose ate judgment. | “I can see evidences of trouble ahead, despite the | i diane : i ies : borrowed fact that railroads just now are busy. In a short time | ""\Yother will be able to send ps there will be two men to every railroad job instead of |4 Jar of Jam without paying an ex ‘ 2 press company dividend two jobs to every man. As for railroad buying or! You can send REAL Christinas es itn ts b it : : presents by mm tailroad building, I could not recommend to our di i" The portan way ° trite rectors to build another foot of road in Texas with | methine besides ctreulars ‘ You can send a small package the laws they have passed there, nor in one or two |at small package rates other states I could mention.” | When We Get Parcels Post— You witl send back that book you you! } You can send your laundry to be do up at b kind of a fel Your folks can fire it right back at you for you to have it done up yourself { You can send counter merchao dise to Hoboken as cheaply as you ne—if you are that Undoubtedly Ripley takes a “very gloomy view of the future.” Every grafter becomes gloomy when he sees prospects of his fat graft being cut off. Doubt less he sees hard times ahead for himself Hard times can now send it to Germany ; in see ‘ 3 ne at . ; You can buy what you can't get to him means merely the cutting off of profits out of th your home town, without paying the expreas ec than all proportion to investments which the railroad mag apany more to carry mates have been enjoying in the past | Very likely he does “ it costs we | Itustrat ti . see trouble ahead.” There is nsw dheengs oe likely to be trouble for various railroad presidents if President Roosevelt follows out his declared intention of prosecuting all the grafters in business life whose grafting is brought to the attention of the ment. If “hysteria has hit high places” largely to railroad circle fined to the rail govern it is confined The present panic is cdn vay president So far, the people have taken no part in it. And the people are showing no disposition to take up the cry of “panic They have given only amused attention to the ‘grand stand play of the Mngiand is a pleasant place railw president Phe ee no signs of diminished | For them that's rich and high.” prosperity to themselves in a movement which is aim Kind Lady: What is your father ed at financial bandits to prevent further robbery of | little be Tough Kid e ‘oba the people a toush Kid: He's a acrobat The protests of the railway presidents to Presi-| Kind Lady: What kind of an ac 4 Loose it’ policy e toc irile t a 4 — dent R sevelt's poli r 20 puril © be seriously Tough Kid rohelimber considered. It is the old dodge of the hunted “man Faising a hue and cry to direct the chase toward some that Z my ee mig be } 1 at spraying lavender water in one else. The railway presidents feel the force of pulb- | the 1 will freshen the alr in it .. c >mnatior eee singe’ too nae wonderfully lic condemi n becon ng trong for them and| "tt won't troshen it near as muck are trying to shiit it to President Roosevelt by work-|a ing a window would ing the people it panic of fear, However infatuated Corey may 3 But the dodge will not work The American 4 people have been tricked too often by the money ban Your Eastern Friends i di i ie deadiel lai Pagh Ses % Motagst ss May come west on the Special O dits to he ight ag ain n They realize that it| Way cntealst reree om. by the 4 is up to them to fight for their rights, that only by | Oregon RR. & vy, Co, during F fighting can they get their fair share of the product pobshagey sp and October from chs ot their own efforts which is he ing diverted so rapidly |Omaha, Kansas City and Missourt me into the pockets of the bz “pee ny _., | River points, $26.00. Toll them or Pr . 1 por f he bandit Realizing this, they sive me t addre Deposits J will not allow themselves to be diverted by cries of |taken at the Union Ticket Offios ; “panic” from panic stricken railroad presidents, fe rae Se ae om Age BY B W. SCHAEFER, YOU UNDERSTAND, DON'T Your" uw THE SEATTLE STAR=TURSDAY, OCTQBER FROM DIANA’S DIARY: Again Mies DillpicMies Goes Into the World for Experien@e, and | Finds She Has Plucked,a Deag Sea Apple. jit a lady with a faraway look let me te | Tam so glad you came, Prin | cons,” she said. “Step into the re ception room That was kind of queer | thought, but I went in and opened ap on her at once with my Jigga Patent Potato Masher splel It wan no trouble at all to make asale, She hardly gave me time} VU take 10,000 of them at your own price. 1 will make a 4 of one to each of my adoring subjects 1 a thts lady.” had no sooner spoken them however, than a sad-taced man came in, touched her | on the shoulder and sald, “Come on, aw the alleniat is here Then to me he whispers, “You will 6; now, please. You understand, don't you Well, I did, then, Poor lady! SSE oe DUST to fintah before she sald Gee eure a She dn, young ght, indy in BY JOSH have been, it's doubtful if he in tended to marry the whole Gilman family Wife: You ought to be like Jones; Jones makes the most. of everything ; Husband: I'4 make the most of everything, too, if I was the Har Jones is. Lumps of butter have been ex humed from bogs in Ireland where Nobody Undersells Us. Misses’ Coats. 6 to 14 year sizes. Dark all wool mixtures and plaids Beautifully trimmed with Values to | velvet silk braid and fan | e750, | style. Val cy buttons. Lang, loose fttin, ues to $7.50. ON SALE WED. NESDAY AT $4.98, Children’s Cloaks Elegantly made Silk $5.59. Cloaks, trim med with Ort ental — lace, VALU aiik embroid- ered 40 nate styles to choose from | Boys’ Suits and Over- coats. Ov in Boys worsted y colors $4.98. VALUE $7.50. good sizes, well lin ed and made gular $6.00 $3.48, Youths’ three-piece fancy mixed colors. well made M to $4.98, ar cout Suite all wool long pants regular sizes $7.60, 20 Broadcloth. Genuine Germ Hroadcloth nutitul and Chiffon be finiwh guaran | teed to be an $1.98 imported cloth | VALUE and $3.00, ywhere $3.00 yard colors cardinal, gre blue, garnet, brown a Our 0 quality inches wide navy black 31.098. | thing to j Started by it had heen stogyd in Q middie agen, IU suspected, also, that Mberal quantities of this butter have been smuggled into Shia country, Among tho Freaks. Spotted Bay; What did you do when the manager calle? you a mombey, of the Hehtfingered gen try? Armless Wonder beads on him I tried to lay " Patrons of the Philadelphia tele pho are asked not to aay “ploane,”"as It takes up too much time. Yot @ patron will say almost any the he wants number FRAUB ALLEGED (By United Press.) NEW YORK, Oct. &. ivil ac tion to Fr ver for the stockholders, it of wed to have been tlegally upwards of $10,000,000, patd from the treasuty of big New York » traction companies of politicians and finan in to be the public service com mission, Criminal action also ts to be taken against the reciplents of these funds and the u who turned them over. The entire mat ter is to be submitted to a spectal frand jury and indictments of big men will be asked PRETTY SUIT A chic sult of amethyst serge has | &@ long coat with odd-shaped panels inset and ornamented with aftk sow tache of the deop purple. Black sow tache outlines the panels and cuffs, and amethyst velvet forms the tiny tarndown collar. The skirt in cir cular, with @ tentnch band of the soutache embroidered cloth set three Inches from the hem “Turkish baths, under Grand the ater. oes MAIN STORE. CO { October Sale ow ; it Drugs and Toilet Articles wy Ne store in Beat 100 | i nea’ : es pod eet 1S used thin Bi heal BY. PROF. BUMPTARARA, fair Here we have informed, the Yellow Kid Journaliam and the AT THE OFYUMINGH "WOR nearimayor of New York. Hearst, by pam and hurey by waters Toda Spent $16,000 in St. Louts three Haye’ Hair Meatttnnp, fies years ago for electrie lights on the Beir, Re by outside of -his hotel and Hearst wthas Wate te te howlers on the inside, but failed to ve cohage land the Democratic nomination, | th Powder i Judge Parker of Keopus put him nh ewes he on the hummer, and then the Dem zs ocratic party proceeded to put *, the cee Judge Parker on the—bit that's Brown's Compound tha - he janother story, and besides, it is . — _ Junkind to recall old memories of a thin character at thin late date, for who knows?—Judge Parker may Reerine Teeth Pas regret it more than anybody, and it may not snow so hard the next! time } This young party evidently be |Heves tn free speech and plenty of jit, and in the free and unlimited jcolnage of ¢ als. He ts of an athletic build, and his hobby is swinging the hammer and | directing the anvil chorus, There Mra. Nettie and Wider ¥ he is opponed. His favorite jis nothing that pleases him more song is, “le Everybody H As j than to touch somebody up with a for himaelf, he wants White | plece of redhot tron, and he is the House for a plaything, and he | briabane of every public man to | won't be happy tll he gets it | = —= ~~ | The grand jury of New York pvels form ninetenths of the county returns on an average sixty- book output ‘mun wean ae REMOVED TO WASHINGTON eee rR w } U.S. Navy Yard BUILDING. ant Take « trip on the Sound and) The Washington Institute of On Hounwet, Dect visit the U. & navy yard, see the (eopathy, Dra. Potter & Peterson. ’ + special batUesbips Oregon, Wisconsin ané have removed their offices from Nebr the cruisers Charleston, the Mutual Life building to the Boston, Buffalo and the training fourth floor of the Washington | ship Philadelphia, the mammoth building, near foot of Cherry, on dry dock torpedo boats and First ay. This move was necessary prison ship Nipsic. Boais leave in order to secure sufficient room Pier 2, foot of Yesior way, six times in which to conduct their practice daily Round trip, bc oe 1013-1015 First Ave. : | Is the Modern Way of Doing Business — Many people amply able to pay cash py ntil Oct. 1 . the easy-payment plan. We are giad to se Come and see us about it today $10 to $100 | Sherman, Clay & Co. 1406 Second Avenue 9 yall themeelves of | you a Victor in that way [Pesc/Ee%= ETP pire FEL TEr. Universal This is @ ribbed garment, fleece lined; colors gray and cream. Get in line with this aroat ofter. Cotton goods are advancing rapidly pare for winter now salie B9¢. Pre. Hosiery for Women. This lot includes an extra wood = quality of fleeced cashmere a fine cotte Hose. uy now and save money. Body Brussels Rugs. Room size, 9x12; best five frame Body Brussels and cholcest ©on ventional patterns; save $5.50 on one of these hand. newest $27.50. VALUE $35.00, some rugs, Come in tans and red mixtures Cloaking. reoel ve about Winter Cloaking, con taining de signs ot | O8¢. checks, plaids | VALUE and stripe ef S1.75, fect full 66 don't r Just yards 100 inches wide any lining to make a big saving by buying $1.76 goods for OM¢ a yard quire now is the tim MAY MANTON PATTERNS 100 HAMILTON.BROWN SHOES. Great Bargain List for Wednesday New Fall and Winter Merchandise Marked Down No Tel. or Mail Orders for These Goods. CUT RATE PRICES $10.00 Set of Teeth. $7.50 Set of Teeth. 22 Carat pure Gold Bridge work $4.00 and §5.4 Pore ot F Richmond Crowns Fillings Children’s Bear Skin Bonnets. This pretty jot of Bear Skin Bonnets just received; nicely made; r sizes to fit / 49¢. any child to 6 VALUE T5e. Shoes. Sample Shoes what they are cream of the man uo factur ers stock known leather mn tm this lot There are shoes for everybody in the family but the lines, of are broken Pair You ~the $1.69 know very ALL WORK WAI 20 YEARS. years; at the same table are the $1.26 Curly Rear Bonnets, spectal at New Management. 1112 2dAi Skin Soe Trimmed Hats. Beautiful Trimmed Hata made of velvet, silk and French felt $3.98. trimmed with VALUE ostrich feath: $6.00. ers, ribbons all in the very best fall and winter styles Actually worth $5.00 and $6.00. ON SALE WEDNES DAY AT 83.98, Why Pay Trust Prices for Cash Registers? We are independent dealers, 1g all popular makes, & t half trast prices. Blankets. p afew bargains out of dozens of them in our Red ding Depart ment: 24¢-1b. Feather Pil val Tan and y Cotton Mankets, The val ve, and a large-sized Single Blanket, worth The, S5¢, 55¢. VALUE 75e. if. fils [isfials =. = = 3 Hf ¥ = Underwear — Men's, Lace Curtains. ALLW wear ool Worsted warmest, and most dur able goods made in «a pink Lace Curtains of the year always pe Under t fitting S9¢. VALUE $1. at this tin be $1.89 Values to $3.50, tit make the comes mer We want our cu tomers t R % yards pretty chants color This is our regular $1.26 theese taina, 3 en wide ues to $ grade. Special Sie. Let Us Prove It The Sundwalt GOO Pest Ave many 0 Clay Worsted. Our $1.50 quality Imported Clay Worsted Suiting a dan dy to shake 98¢. the dust, and absolutely VALUE iik; lots of nothing better $1.50. rustle; espe: to wear col elally adapt od for underskirts an inspection will convince 80 inches wide, and it's for O8e@ yard Taffeta Silk. Our $1.50 quality Imported Chiffon Taffeta Silk oll boil ed and a beau. tiful finished Fly on the Fiyer : SEATTLE-TACOMA nove i Fare 3Se—Round aye ; FOUR ROUND Rte . LEAVES SEAT = | and 10:25 a. my 2:05 and BOIS P. ors of navy Full blue and black and coats only 56 os wide m § TACOMA — 8:35 ® LEAVES TAC ‘0pm and it's yours for 98¢@ yard mand 12 18, 9:68 and? . U. SEELEY, Jr, Agent —Tel. Main 176, Tacoma Tel. 212 ee you yours

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