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| ‘THE SEATTLE STAR: BY STAR PUBLISHING CO, © 1807-1909 Beventh av, EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY, | Telephonee— Private exehanges connecting atl parte of the dullding — Sunset, Main 1060 and Independent, 441 e Ask for the department of the @gme of the person desired, BALLAD STAR AGENCY BYERETT STAR AGENCE £21 Malia Matlara 800 Hamer Evens, 0@) Rockefeller Ay - twenty-five conte per month” & a second cle ) Ave Runnet Sunset 1549 Ope cent per ¢ Hvered by mall or te Bacored at the Posteftion at Geattia Warhingten. date w av wo ena be certain Of @iving Gur wubserinere 4 perfect seretew— | ona W te the onty war wales it swore thay bd a bende stali—saTURDAY, NOV, 30, 1907, THE PRIZE he Wants to Know. “Do you Jove me, Heury?” “T should way #0.” ‘Of course you say a, but do your’-Lantaviiie CourierJournal Tt in better to byve & geod uame than be for oO jay cash —-Puck Cogstancy. When the py dd crescent moor Bigds her silvered beuma, I aif thinking of meglove In dreams, When the night's uncounted stars Light the distant scion, Tam thinking of that maid's Hye eyen. When determined streaks of red in the east occur I am thinking, unfatigued, THE DESPISED PENNY Keep the pennies,” is a comnion expression in the west. | "The westerner despises the penny, ‘To bim, changing 9} nickel appears to be financ rirsplitting of an order beneath | the dignity of western life, The penny is too smaft an item to consider Disreg ers of our cx that the fe vinage lattice to meet the expected re the fact arding quitements of trade, the pennies have been disregarded and despised by the American people to such an extent that most of the econamic value of their circ on has been lost "The penny considered as a one-hundredth part of $1 is indeed despisable, but pentics considered as a one-hundredth part of the femme of trade in dollars is a financial consideration to be aggregate v reckoned with. Yet the general public does not so reckon them in the daily transactions ly failing to do so, the general. public loses a percentage on its money which would constitute a word anawal interest It is in the prices paid for rodities that the despised peany figares so disastrously, Paying even prices for every thing one would stagger any close bryer Note the hardware, for how the at a profit for spises the tailed at 7 or 8 cents is sold for 10 cents for the same reason. : which in the aggregate lude an overc if it for groceries, for dry buys in conld be definitely fi scale of all the Fist of necessities and lnxuties d. The 3 or 4 cents is sold at prices ‘ Notice article which would sell penny is disreg 5, because the public de pennies. The article which might be profitably re The purchaser is the loser Especially in food products is this scale of prices natice It is so much for a nickel, a dime, a quarter or a dollar able. The dealer gets the extra pennies, because the purchaser de spises them And especially dées this system work hardship to the pur of a cent or two in wholesale prices The retail price wholesal chaser when an advance necessitates an advance in retail prices can not be cawse the public turms mp its extravagant nose at the pennies The article which has ret 1 at 10 cents before the wholesale advance of a cent, is advanced to 15 cents by the retailer. The public does not consider them in his business The public alone disregards the mivanced to correspond to the advance, be the pennies. ‘The dealer can use pennies, The $100,000 per year president of 2 trust is on most familiar terms with the de- spised penny of even a quarter of a cent in the modity. for all financial ills ; s to the pub lic'as often as the patient public can assimilate the dose There are. vatious interesting ways in which the pubfic of Seattle parts with its pen it never secs or handles. For one of them, consult your fanndry bill. Then figure out the pfice yon are paying your mitkman who sells milk no allp at 6 cents per pint, but for convenience to the 16 pints for the dollar. Six times 16 is 9 is it not But you despise the four pennies They constitute #per cent discoant He recognizes the immense profit in the advance wholesale ptice of his com- an “Add a cent or two to the price” is his prescript a prescription which he g $, which rin public at The milk man does not. on your dollar The bother of changing nickels and carrying pennies is ascribed as the cause of this system, but why should it apply at all to the grocery business, 90 per cent of whic the secretary of the Retail Grocers’ association, is done on the credit system. Is it not just as easy to charge I) cents on the books as 15 cents? Why charge a man a premium for paying cash? ‘VESTS OUT OF FASHION h, according to SOME OF THIS WINTER" 8 WHISTERRTS: 1—A design in moire and white wilh White and Diack rocade No. + suit ’ of color winter No cloth Don't go into paroxyams with your you desire well dressed tne’ t coats this year are dak at that; grays of a hue, dark Wwe with a Ys » @ar Simplicity m tiv eoine with th cat lore, Th heavy 1 h last w we a me dimmer watstceat ia f rowe ald of lighte ade. F ick brocaded sitk A freak ¢ waistcoats have collars. M waistcoste t but two shades uf colo to be considered . colors for waist ex tans, rather @ tobe ximost black he more elabera tterings a . KEKE * : STUNTS BY THE NEW REPORTER : RARER KK hh hhh hh ° 2 i th ” Of her. . 7 . . . > . When this sort of verse f bora At a rhymater's beck, He’ is thinking Jargely of The check New York Times, HANDSOME COAT MISS ZOLA DELLECKER AND THE LOAF THAT WON, How do you make bread, Mrs, Housewife? Have you & favorite feetpe? Of course, if you bhwve, you think it is the best in the world. Hut you will be interested, dombtiess, ia the recipe of avother woman whieh woe the firvt prise in a breadannking coatest in which 1,000 woman (ook part, each submitting « loaf to the judges, (Seattio Gtar Exctusive Service.) and fashionable and from the OMAHA, Nov. 90.—Firat prize in| homes of the poorest working wo wal 4 ten, the Omaha Dally News bread con bn i was aroused to such an test, held in connection with a pure extent that women stood in line food show, was awarded to Miws Ze a diock long, watting thelr turn to la Dollecker. This was her rectpe: | hand in thelr bread to the judges For three loaveq—sontd three | Mins Dellecker is a young girl) cups milk; cool. to blood heat; dis. well known in social circles, She solve ot “ke compressed yeast | «tTaduated from the University of jim a ttle water; add three table | Nebraska, and whfle there took a *peons butter and three table reo tn demontio science. spoons sugar; add yeust liquid to! Her loaf filled all the require three cups flour; et rise one | ments of the judges, who were Mra hour Harriet MacMurphy, purée food in Add four to five enps flour and |apector for Nebraska; Mra. Mary two teaspoqne salt; mtx stiff; | Moody Pugh, one of the interne keoad half hour tional jury who fudged bread at Rutter bow! and top of bread: let the 8t. Louis exposition, and Miss tine until 1¢ doubles in size (one/ Florence Hillier, graduate of the bour;) knead ten minutes; shape; | Qread institute of domestic sel lard top; prick It; put tm landed ence. . tine; let rise one hour; bake in| Mrs. J, R. Maxwell, a housewife ‘five-minute’ utes oven 45 to 60 min-/of midéie age, who never attended {a domestic science or cookery lee One thousand loaves of tread! ture in ber life, took the second wns the response of the house: | prise Wives of Omatra when the contest| When the contest was over Wee armounced—-1,000 loaven that|1,000 loaves ef homemade bread came from every quarter of the | were turned over to the charitable yond from the bomes of the neh aoe of tho elty, ES SEL T Seo RR | MR. SKYGACK, FROM MARS A charming coat of Russian pony “FROM THE NUTTE FAMILY ALBUM Boing a Spiel by Hazel, the Youngest of the Mipnpe Mutte, as Reported BY F. W. SCHAEFER, €> = tEEw ‘ —e ¥ ¥ 4 i, , } ¥ ' oy SHELLEY NUTTE. . Here's the most mansivest mind in the whole Nutte family, You are Veholding the pleture of Shelley Nutte, whois got Bdeson and Macaron! skinned to dewth in the tnvent line, He's one of my cousins twice removed und once put away, but they tet hin again because he's harness, Sheligy don't do nothing now but tinker pence in a litle workshop in the attic. Ho's the discoverist of por tebul motion. That thing's ft He basn't perfected dt yet. itr by clockwork, ¢lectrictty aud faith, Al it needs to bring him in a un told fortune is to make It go without the clockwork and electricity Ho's « awful genius, Shelley ie. Ho's Inocerlated with the Keely mo tor fever; that's why he can't take the Keeley cure. Teedee, did you get that, kid? Ses INQUISITIVE EDWIN By F, W. Schaefer jmagecige article, entitied “When | Curteney Iam't Carrent, er, the Oir | culati na Medium Sees a Spook?” “But, maw, | wanna know abent “Saws” “Well, Edwin?” “Gimme « penny.” “Ne, my son. I have no 10086) you" joose change.” change” “I tell you T haven't any.” “Why ain't you, maw?” “Why “Because money's tight.” “Beca { didn't bold i tight “Why ls money tight” That's funny” “What is? “That your change ts jeome when you bold it tight, and tant loose when you dont hald it tight” “Child, 4 wieh you had never been “ecanee people won't loosen.” “Why won't people loosen? Heckume they ane theht Why are they tight?” Hecause financial methods are! #0 loone,” |taraed loose on me with this ‘tight’ gomnns: Sat, ee - tastee | ’Why are nancial methods /talk~ He Visits the Earth as a Specia! Correspondent and Makes Wireless | Waist and is hor ali eround The | ine? “Huh, you ought to hear paw's | fullness of the puff sleeve is held in by a large braid ornament The same garniture trima the collar | {Plain ermine forms the edging and | outts. PETE THE BARBER MONOLOGIST Observations in His Notebook. | "Sid binese a liddie higher up in|the “Mackenale Mifies.” Jack Na the short skert displaying the tin | |der chair Mr, Chowes. Dot's id.jsoo, captain of the company, sat lew of feet. The mask hid her} | Don'd you missing 19 absence in| back in the hall among the palms Thee, and as she glided out the ; |der shop, Mr, Ghenes’ Vott ij am) Without mask or comteme. 1 felt door before me my heart gave a } righd ore mit der chin musik as|jike a alster to Jack, as be had can leap, and then ft steck—stuck right / usually? Ha, ha, you wass making |fided io me more than once. So in my throat me der goat for a kid, eb? resumption, don'@d you soties der) siderable lomesomeness ad dc ent chair? Dot new feller iss nod/ jmit Us ho-0o0 mare, Yess, he has |quétted. When ke vent ould of here jhe ladeped like a tin vear peddier jon & rocking horse, No, dere tne no cobbler's Wax on der razor, Mr |Chones; foes 1@ pull? Umeyens, he | Bud to] reseived to solve the mystery 1 jme to be seated and sald loose talk when he's ght, maw For thie maw stretched Hdwin's Becauso—why, see here, Edwin,| pants tight while «he applied a iF anewered that in the first place. loose alipper for a change, and for }Do jet me alone so 1 can read thiaja minute there was a regular panic. SOG ESS = oe | ee THE MASK BALL By ROY B. HARBURG, It was at the annual maak ball of Hecaune money ts tight.” “Why is maney tight?” & covtume that showed to advan. tage her delicately molded figure. “I created not a little consterne- thon when | arrived with my fatry. &5 not one supposed it was Tillie. Listen, Mite girl; tell you! They got in ltUe groups and talked why I never dance at the mask ball. and nodded. I could see Tillie was Hefere the Mackensie Rifles were (enjoying it. Jn sort, she was the organized we had « social club | belle of the ball, and 1 saw but dit whieh also gave a mask ball once ‘the of her a year, Tillie Baker walted on the table at the boarding howse. He @rew up a chair, told posible though. He came to me and want “Some fool had invited big Hans, } | Wass canned, dot ent chair feller She was @ quiet. demure little body Der reason? Der rules of der bows | with the prettiest hands and hair ies no fightings mitt boose vile In|! have ever taid eres upen, but, sad der mop. Dot feller was oh) to say, her feco was marned from | tigit®, bud he hut to haf bie nip. He! ‘emalipox and whe bad a hideous | ose, 0 an introduction to my lady. 1 4 her about Hans’ request, not svepecting that she would consent Hut she, baif shyly, said she would like very much to do so tf I didn't }omre. | weed te pring id mit his cout ond [kip t@ to der towel cabinet tll der} | bons told him corn chuice shall nod | ring tonighd. He dit not grief long, bub soon brighdened up. Dine ap-| }pearanced suspicion to der bons. | Der ent chair man started to kip! a Hddle oan of coffee on der #tote | und hit it up frequencely. Von day der bons tasted 14 und tt proofed rye. For dat der to be 20 pro « feller & goot varsing got So he ont ould der dretfal coffee habid. Vell, infentifness tas der step mut > ter of sorsieossity, We vondert BY JOSH vere he wass @edding id after dot for kervite » dime. Finally der bons geds a Viseness won he seos Joeh Wise Sayst Bring me a glass of malted milk! him squirt from der bay rum bo ome graham cr jdie in der palm of bis bant and | Anything « lap id up Der ent chair man hat if you ow der bay rum boddle mit kimmel sua Aigma! filled. A Tiddle kimmel on y te curreney th’ | Why dou't you go, watter? rouble ad ali yo , ha. ‘ to comb chances aro th’t th I wasn't going to mention it, but | Here ins nod much of id. oe _ aff tch | the chefs made the moat de lictous — — , ur emough td-fanbioned minoe ple | Why didn’t you say Bring two slices, and be sure they*re geod and hot | And resolutety shutting tis eyes to the ate conseqnences. the True Prediction And the @airvoyant told you 1 be swindled dyspeptic Revised Proverbs or e charged me $2 The winds are raw, the fall fast; the hurtling blast; the world leaves sobbing in the the skies are gray, is drear, oh, where's the coat of yesteryear? Detected tt This play,” aid the manager to! the critic, “was taken from the Franch 1 mak the French fe epied the oritic, enif be “Pure Havanas.’ i thelaiheehe eet uid eke All departments are the top eco busines and 7 open and you will find \ | A Ming ts a8 Good as a Mile no better time to pur The Dyspeptic Orders. | When it's Safe areata What bave you today, walter te hink kiwalog is dang “A little Down and idseen eueainent on ‘ 4 ists a little at a time.” roni au gratin, saver ke parlo all the doors ar \ Modern Tragedy. Ea mm U.S. N Yard ot i 2 - ms y Yar A few drit nd & driver ra 0 fi M4 Hi soy a | utfitting Co. ee ee Mee : , : we Second and Union. : ion whip Nipslo, attle’s Reliable Credit f of Youle t a Running Over Houne I it “e ih f ! RN a et te ‘ 1 could not see through it at but what could I sey? Well, the dance was Hans. ! Hons Anderson, whe drove « all | wagon for the brewery, atso board. | od at the same place. He was loud could see he was begging her to tell ot mouth and a rough sort of fel. Who she was, but to no avail The low, forever grumbling ut the serv-/dance was over. They all of one feo. Tillie never replied to his re a wended their way toward the tittle shepherdess, thinking she would remove her mask, and Mane wtood back expectant. She was about to torn to me ready to go. and i saw it—and, with a ¢ made a grab for the mask, tearing marks, although many of them sent the bieod eurging to ber face, and the queer part of it was she alwars cave him better service than the rest Hans remarks aggravated me more and more. So one day I cornered him tm the hall and asked it from her face him if he couldn't be a little more |he let out a derisive ‘Tillie decent to her. He pushed me aside ‘turning to the When be saw it and crowd said with a loud laugh and asked me if thing about not judging a book by 1 was in love with her beautiful tts cover face. On turning ' anownd there Twas too much for me. Th tood Tillie, She he beard it boys averted a soene, and Ti i mumbled s@mething, bot and | wended our way Not said never a word. & word did che say an Things went on in the same die then a sob escupmd able Tillie for her and by the tir way at table me for the bw agre prepa man had his lady. pioke house had asked her to be asked A happy thought wif She joo! at me th me afterncon as i noticed Ti her tears and balf wi ies mov mente at the the mnt why onee more an ane with which she got So one and she mun pitity ammtie rn bight I} with a sob uttered the one wo asked her if she would not like t Hans te bail, It took her by aur Then # dawned upon me. She » aud whe stammered out loved my tax I told be tida't care to remove mas! about her face or what others would | at ly left the ha hink nner nen tensa —— The night came and when I sas o 1 could wot te ~~ SILK LINED OVERCOATS TO he was @ressed « OROER FOR $25. AT THE City Hall Market 517 Second Ave ; fs & shepherde | | London Tailors L | PP>d>>DdIDdIIAY SAVINGS DEPARTMENT W ry AN AN AN AN AN AN AW AN An OPEN TONIGHT TO [Ee W wy Ny . a eeecececece #, DEXTER HORTON N & CO. rs WK BUILDING ° ° lc-tye * IDRU JAM ston: for 100 runs AVENUE desire to thank oup * and the residente of at city for thelp ort during the Past have endeavored to OO'Y YOUF Patronage, cotcem, and Wt phatp al ntinued effort ty onest merchandigg honest prices, bs We are just entering pee bur seventh holiday tay, ve assembled » Coplay of gilt, shall be pleased of our stores, The ony catches the worm bo only and ha enaw are AY MINGK—W nite art mle; nownERO LM be a were ' pivot ‘Sn NEPTUNE more MAKE MAN ’ mes ~The erent © MAvk OTrnEn RUBBER GOOM togorc Cut Rate The Brown Dental are giving their rates on ali om ” rpase of rid-renowned ‘ta Our satisfied our advertising. once and take low prices.” All extracting .., All examination Full Set of, Teeth Porcelain Crowns ... 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