The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 4, 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)

i { i THE SEATTLE — OC ~Felephones— a connecting all parts of the Main 1080 and Independen' 2 Ask for the department or the name of the person butiding — Sua desired. BALLARD STAR AQENCY.221 Ratlar® Ave Sunset, Ballard 106 Buneet 1040 RVERATE STAN AGENOY.romor Rvana 298i Rockefeller Av: One cont par copy, atx Dvered by mall or carrier nts per Week, or twenty Gye cents per month, De @ copies . matter. Mniored at the Postoftioe at Heattle, Wash TO MA ihe address ha SUBSCRIMERS The da ance, Your the address Tabel is a receipt |, NOTION TO SUNSORIBERS should, your ening, lease do us the ta Ind. UDR, between © and 7 a miss tt more thas ones, please telephone us at one every time you tiaw It thie way we Gan be certain of giving our subscribers & perfect service in end Te te the oF eet: t you # COME OVER AND STARVE, IVAN? Suppose you were living the miserable life of a Russian You have peasant? healthy and industrious. heard of America. Still, you are You would like to go there. You | like to find honest work for honest pay. You would like to make a home in a country where you could be a man, All through the south they are crying for white labor ‘ ' ve ome to yo rer s fro e board of “Now, my dear,” said Mr | ee en Gan-an’ agent come t you, perbipe from the board | ‘id Sonat ae his slippers and settled | “I Wish it had heen,” she sighed./gan, and her frosty expression — immigration of the state of Louisiana, and say, “Ivan, Paul, j elf fo ve 41 am|'l. Ordered chicken salad, blue! frightened me so I nearly wept Gesstal hisnselt for the evening, “I am) 1 ordered | chick hl : thet! feador, y t a home state wa ne o work, ready to listen to your exeuses for | PS, chocolate {ce and oh, lote|casiiers arent very sympatnerie, | Feodor, you want a home. My state wants men t f things. Tho waiter looked so | are they? There is work for you. Come. T will get you work.” Can he say that? ance of work, given not by the agent of a railroad or a fac tory or a corporation, but by a labor-needing state? Can yot You cannot. You can leave Russia, get past the officials at and go out into the big, crowded, swarmir of the city to breathe foul air, or work in a dirty sweatshop, or starve. But the state that wants you and needs you cannot prom ise you work, because Attorney General Bonaparte rules that |om the spot, subject to Mr. this is in violation of the contract labor law We speak neither for one party nor another, although it is a fact that the immigration law of last February could never have been passed without the help of the Democrats, and it received their support on the express understanding that there would be no interference with the plans of the south to secure white labor, Now there will be will be more delay before we can secure reasonable, sane, in-| ‘telligent immigration laws. If the south wants immigrants of the right kind, it should be allowed to invite them; should have the right to say, “Come if the middle west wants them, it The government's business is only to see that these men} and women are healthy, law-abiding and of the class that will) make us the same good, industrious citizens that their hun dreds of thousands of forefathers have made; or, if more activity is demanded, why not be active in protecting the great west from the hordes of slant-eyed Orientals whom it does not want, from the rushing in of a multitude that can never be assimilated? It may be that Attorney General Bonaparte’s ruling is sup- ported by a technicality, stupid and ill-advised. LINING UP FOR THE PARCELS POST FIGHT but that does not make it any They are lining post. Conspicuous, of course, years president of the Around him will gather the members owned by the other ex press companics. Many well known railroad-controlled statesmen will stand Platt, f Express will be Senator United States company by the express companies, because it is quite usual for rail road magnates to hold express stock and express magnates to hold railroad stock, and because few patriots bite the hand ‘that feeds them Another group of obstructionists will be found in those timorous souls of the party in power who are afraid to enact | ‘radical legislation of any kind, for fear of its possible effect upon the coming campaign. Keep your eye on the opposition. Most of it will be) very easily explained. “JOHNNY BOYS” GOING AND 1S GOOD FOR THE AMBITIOUS CHORUS GIRL BY HATTIE WILLIAMS. (Once Chorus Girl, Now Starring in “The Little Cherub.”) The stage door Johnny boy ts| passing out and that's a good thing for the chorus girl } Untroubled by the Johnny boy, | the girl who wants to succeed can | get down to business. | My business I mean plenty of hard work, lots of fresh air, plenty | of sleep—-and more work The late supper will not fit in with ambition. I have been a cho-| ras girl and | know. The feeling against Johnnies nowadays is so strong the class is almost extinct, bat there are still many men seek ing acquaintances at the stage! door, But to the chorus girl I say “don't.” Go straight home after the show,| take five minutes’ exercise before an open window, drink a glass of | milk and go to bed. Then get up} at @ sensible hour, eat a sensible breakfast, and go to rehearsal look MISS HATTIE WILLIAMS, ing like a normal woman instead of | ~ and all new and stylish, M than three exceedingly modish and fetch | y ing a freak. Oty soc{,Smll#t You can't amilo tn the hundred to choowe from. | To 4,49 and priced at only The rehearsal that is agony for! throes of a lobster dyape row, at only . the overfed, undorslept be ‘ - i s $7.98 Bellows Dress & —Side extends 5» ae diye pana dlnanghle an ee oe oO Coa S Black Silk Chiffon Neck Ruffs—Worth up to 80 a8 to nearly cn ult ase s ne ' ry bright, your step elastic, and your! jack of healthful repose : | $3.96 each will go tomorrow, at 98c ly and durably finished memory clear, Don't forget the, It's to the ehorus girl whol only Tomorrow only . stage mauager notices these things and when understudies are ber named for principals the wide awake girl is the one to get pro|have no need wants to ris speaking. Those would Can you leave Russia with that assur- Ellis Island fetid back streets 1" another squabble in congress, and there | less up at Washington to fight the parcels many in her work that I'm| content to he merry villagers” all their days THE SRATTLE STAR MONDAY, Nov EMBER 4, 1907. FROM DIANA’S DIARY : Bosses 6 hayseed, why shouldn't | habit of eating 6 wate t a opto! “Oh, 1 bought the lovettest THE & tame bull be taught to town hay?| Mrs. Blobbe—Then for heaven's | watst”— Gi ° he Hoepitable But Hostile ed Toll the Tale.” The old songs even aro chang: | ake don't tell us what you would| “Never mind that, How did you} DRUG ing. Now it ja the child who sings | call a rake!--Cleveland Leader, | fix things?” MAIN STORE. ‘Oh, Where Is My Wandering Ma! - “S lost my Tonight The Modern Drammer, If the average college boy would] +7 want you to write mo a play,” think half as much about his vo} what sort of a play?” ation as he does about his vaca “Woll, we have 17 # tion, there would be fower failures) Got me up enough stuff ‘at thirty among thy A, B't=={om — apart."—Loulsville Judge, Journal appet%e for one thing. When they brought me that lovely luncheon T just felt aw if I couldn't swallow a = morsel—but of course I had to pretend, 1 wat there until Laas ashamed, and the } walter brought me the bill, $2.45. I gave him the 25 cents in my | purse and then f folt Fate Caate Mies Dillplokles Into of Everett True, But Bhe Gurvives t ° BY F. W. SCHAE Courter wo much Bette Ds us HiaoPreserves Oh, literature is a charming art [crying | had to keep swallowing Noah was driving the’ animals| jn spite of its burdensome go-bs| the lump in my throat, 1 hated to { whoard the ark ° tweens. offer my wedding ring because | We have to keep the world| such as stories, short stuff, pooma,| haven't taken tt off nino Toilet Irtides and stocked for Mr, Roosevelt,” he ex Purt | “Yen?” anked Hob, impatiently ‘ plained land I, but what wins the heart “I thought it would be a good } Thus early did history prepare|in the great display Jn the wom | wcheme to have him charge it to Sundries for the filustrigas Nimrod.—New | an's mart Jyou, then [ rememt d you # York Sun, Of the dishabille of the maga] you didn’t often go there. I saw | —— zines. nome other people leaving and I | Py Indianapolis News, |thought I would try to sneak out Or ANY | Something old, something new, with them, but the walter followed | Somethiog borrowed, something Our Wife Telle U jme, saying I had forgotten my blew “When those concrete | heck Pack. | homes become the vogue, the man|, Bob was part smiling, Brass buttons and patrol wagons crossed his vision. who loves to do Iitt odd jobs Unprintable. ound the house ” agains Pp round the house will be up against ian F ctnd te Cis Géuk on aw 4 by wettion Mr, Dobbw—1, madam, am fn the} 4 hard proposition | ' | ly as I could, wondering what 1/9 are kept freaks top | "could say The cashier took th They I r check with a quick, business-like ~ MRS. BOB $ DILEMMA eo ee ates ae jup at me so curiously that the Ee shivers ran clear to my boots.” By Lonne W. Stevens. jthat is all"—and Bob picked up Yes, Hob. as | Mis evening paper } “Tha MERE ARK some rHICKS ror or 1: m't any money, I be not meeting me at Heetor's.” Mra, Bobs choked back the tears perilously near the surface 1 did, but you weren't there.” "Just ike & woman, if you tell grateful to hear me speak that [ | ordered more than I really wanted.” “Weil, if I had not been running to the door every five minutes to my wit There is a resemblance to other creditors.” “Her looks frightened me so that | came back and I remem her to meet you east of the Masonic see if you were mixed in your di-| bered I had some money ‘except temple she will probably go to the |rections, I'd have enjoyed my | what I've got where I can’t get at Wied we “PEG TRIED TO CAVE IN MIKE&’S HEAD BECAUSE HE WASN'T | west side of the Board of Trade.” | lunch, too,” sighed Bob. {it,, 1 added, ‘I put it there because witeh 4 enjoyed it|I intended to buy my husband a d it up’—! present and I didn’t want to spend wouldn't have if you bad figur itut why should #hé do that? You That's just the point, She | elther PULLING FAIR ON THE BOTTL Boole’s Happy Hand a Re aa luee pe ong ag ‘Trae’s. | shouldn't ” “Bob kicked the foot Hang the expense,” said Bob|it Your bill is $2.85, medam.’ Quaker Almond ¢ nN me New GS jAMALS Of Hrerecs | T¢ . | stool energetically | recklessly It's in my—my stocking,’ I sate True's household and bottloholder | mother of triplets, but triplets ta) wr T gidn't, dear. I never! and hadn't but 86 cents ta| She told me to come right back of to the celebrated True triplets. the mother of invention She was so smiling I be | went near the Board lyour purse,” continued she the desk Mra. True breathed a sigh of re} From what I can judge, the trip Munctl " ; ' . | or. But, ob, Bob! j Mxactly, | never said you did Gee whiz! But I gave you a{gan to Iike her ut, ob, Oe nie Cate Gt coos +e art Piggy nen emt Pf! what I did say was that you did not | tenner this morning.” what if she had been a man! 5 |approval. She looke worn and | Mike's head because he wasn’t pull | moet me at yor ta HE a laa 3 Ured, poor little woman, and I am |ing fair on the bottle, Soiuer of oad ake manta oenkll” 4 glad that I cam be of some aasist-| “The little dears Won't oot ee ee eee a be a a ance to her. with any imposition,” Mra. True ae SERED SHES BO See Pe Sup F pressed Mra. True Introduced me to the explained. “So like their father. There, my dear, please don't tripleta. They were nestled in a| | tremble to moet Mr. True.| | big washtub; an ineptration of Mr.|What if he should size me up as|® *ptinklor turn,” and Bob assumed True's. They wore feeding from |n flourflusher? Iam afraid he will,/* *¥mpathetic alr, “Tell me ail one large bottle with @ triple tube; |for, while I have tended children | “out it” janother inspiration of Mr, True’s. before, It was never by wholesale. Well, | Thetr names are Sal, Peg and Mike, | (To Be Continued.) table" — : heeled eae wiaiaiatiiia acetone Great guns! I sald the”-— said you would be, so I busied my BY JOSH Charming New Arrivals in the i Suit Department =} == I went to the northeast era self with the menu, until the wait are looked at me as if they thought 1 was trying to make out @ for eign language. 1 told one of them 1 waa waiting for my husband and he grinned, Then | made up my mind that it would be nice to order dosh Wise Says: j that a woman talks Cimht tings S9\a fine luncheon and have it ail | Over two hundred arrived Saturday and this The Quaker aac overage 2560 sentences Mangei ready when you came. You see, I) morning our first floor was crowded with bh ge "300 f hf held the table almost an hour | women anxtous to and to purchase the Two ay eee on at tha ananet dhe ig |and the waiter stood first on one| very latest styles from New York. 1013-1015 |@ great talker i+ invariably Fobuy ated ps — _- the er a a and full chested | nel Jooked like a Christian | Teh finance oe 7 needs more bal As for tha most of us, wal ares ates that 1 am iad last haven't got to the gasoline ru [atte wy - — °> aoe tal | about stage of prosperity yot att Ace rine Mets Bd | alone an aerial touring car * a ~~ UTS. Navy Yard |idte Thoughts From an Empty!) Take « trip on the Sound and/ Think Tank. ivisit the U. 8 navy yard, see the! It really looks an though the | pattleshipa Oregon, Wisconsin and 1332-34 209 ocr akeleton in the Casteliane closet | Nebraska, the crateers Charleston, Talking Woman te Robust. | was a very onl affair {sree Buffalo and the training Second co. Inc. Union A man who figures has sent to| If an angry ball, by tutuftiony|@hip Philadelphia, the mammoth | Avenue. ? Street. the bureau of statistics some | mmscmnemmom ——mmmmems Ary docks, torpedo boats and jtacta of speech. He estimates PALAGE MEAT MARKET — | Utlson uhip. N Pe wag iniepeesieustiadiaaneseeniones mone | Carries the choleestand freshest | Pier 3, foot of Yesler way, six ti Seattle’s Reliable Credit House | Leave Pler 2 to see batth ips. | meats, poultry and fish in the city, *** Try it. 604 Reeond av WEBER’S Great Closing Out ——Sale— Weber Has To Quit We have to give up our store. Look at our Big Bargains daily. Round trip, We. CUT-RATE PRICES, | $10.00 Set of Teeth... 97.51 $7.60 Set of Teeth. ... 854 22 Carat pure Gold © New Goods on Sale today have awakened great enthusiasm. Many hundreds of Seattle’s women are elated over the bargains obtained at the Great Sale. More new goods to freshen up the stock to- morrow and splendid values in choice and stylish merchandise going at prices below all comparison. Bridgework 4.00 and $5. Porcelain Crowne . pond and Richmond Fillings ..... : ALL WORK WARI 20 YEARS. Associated New Management. 1112 2dAi A LITTLE FRUIT Jal $5 down, $5 a Month Per In the famous Ti trict Cultivated, planted and cared for, CALHOUN, DENNY EWING, Inc, Alaska The action of the Federal Court in ordering the purchase of all the goods shipped here for the McCarthy Co., and which reached the Seattle terminal after the appointment of the receiver, has allowed Receiver Baxter to do a The goode must You will save many dollars. be sold. splendid str ke of business for the benefit of McCarthy creditors and the Se $12.00 Suite for § 9.85 $15.00 Guits for $11.85 $18.00 Suite for 814.85 $20.00 Suits for $15.85 $25.00 Suits for $20.85 Raincoats attle public. The big discounts secured on the $25,000 worth of merchandise make it easy for us to underprice all competitors on many new and up-to- date lines. For instance, we offer tomorrow— | | anseban all popular makes, 500, 6Co and 650 Dress Goode—In light, medium $1.98 Cut Glass Nappies—Very handsome de | about half trust “98 and dark mixtures, plaids, checks signs; on sale tomorrow at ; and stripes; at the yard Cc only . ees c Women’s Dress Skirts—Worth up to $10 each $5 to $10 Trimmed Hate—Thia season's atyles, $2.50 and $3.00 Pu fine quality, Chote the supply lasts, at only -Leathor lined and very tomorrow while 98c 25¢ Tooth Powder. which has no su The famous Dr prior in the world On sale tomorrow, at the bottle, only Graves Nae Overcoats to read this—it i moted not meant for them. | } : se rn And please remember that all sale ire for cash. There are no phone orders The Same Reduction. Con d & i POINTED PARAGRAPHS | pr Rs ARC bd P b ’ = GRAPHS, | Scraps. taken. No C. O. D.’s sent out. No ipprovals The store will be open at 9 Beat Chicago Ne A 1 . ; icago News. | & tom Oe oll has been obtained i aR a, m, and will close at 5:30 p. m a loafer Pre us to i » the French sea i 8 Lots of men and things en would not oat potatoes, {t bel 1p ° a: : eter poner ay Ch gg Ey To e Weber Clothin The Sundwan ae a When a man aims at noth ing he freckles. (609 First ro Pe seldom misses bis target One tea company in India ha M. 1180 toed, 87 IEF) Pan; ‘ eine hl .* rd in season than an | under cultivation 1,450 acres, while Cc ar - ——= Brice sg a ne out of sen on other has 1,308 acres. It costa ti O e GorTRe— Vv evenge may be sweet, but seek-! pre and place it in the ~ “ tog it in apt to sour one's disposi-| mar tte 8 tte i; Hefe Base < Successfully enor) REG ton. | couts (HY: OROONE. AVE. COR! banecA. f axter, Receiver. Howard J. Sheehan, Managet the osteopath, doeu il ‘way Fleot of battleships at navy yard,| Buy your hat of BN. Drooks & 1512 to 1522 Se A > $1.00 each treatment pd ***| ©o., 1931 Second av. 2 to 1522 Second Avenue, Between Pike and Pine Streets. ef - ed ae maaan 378 Arcade a

Other pages from this issue: