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1908 THE SEATTLE STAR THURSDAY, IP JUNE il, OOF POM 8 pale TT 84 face, autekiy THE SEATILE STAR BY STAR PUBLISHING Co. Ave lock ma on the poret tn the 1907-1309 Beventh into the sitter eens OF TERNOON Excerr euneny: BY JANE CHURCH ROSENBERG that I left that” pleture in glad surprise, The nex 4 1060. { can give you Tom's address office; | wrote as I did be ghe wae in her husband . These are exchanges, and connect with all de QED 4 rey; hy wa at A pe HS ng Se oe eee ood Aa A partments—ask fo department or name of person \Gouw tu@n, “Ob, dear!” she added,| send me another ph avh, aned herne fom want. * under her breath, tearing » the _ — - iw , a a BALLARD STAR AGENOY—ar Ballard Av Funret, Maliand 166 letter the postman had just handed . t a i lf d wt "One cont por copy. sin conte per week, or twenty-five conte per mente De a Oy ss jae \ could | : a Be, tered "by mall or om Ne trae copies } ed the w nxt be \ Do wh c he pet Batered at the Postefficn at Beattie Washineton t fa t read, fron Write a " tu b ~ Bg : | “Joe aid, “Tom Bee writ wher ! ft it b i tutoher am sorry, son, but the veal chops are all apolled to anf he had my letter with him i ‘ day and unfit to eat. You'd better take adtnothing ele eS (cot ina Sere 14 jal Small Boy (who has been drilled by his mother to accept no | oe "aged pick wp @ heavy | Oey At View NAVY VAR, iG atitutes)—WNo, thank you; I want what I ask for, Give mo the |) ,own envy ready t send The Atlantic Ficet ts now at the to hiw in the dr \ * i © 2A AEE ER EN EP Taking out the photograph arent caf tox : ‘ a m We certain of giving our subs looked earnestly at the piet | a Phe ; na ¢, which bore no trace of doubt| | : “ cog AN IMPOSITION UPON THE STAR | oe,” Mrs, McAllister said, turn-| | _ ©THE KER > vom , rag ph nly to the min, “I shall] | WHOLESALE DRU: ( oO RETAIL ad BY JOSH | not send it to bim now, | can’t even _ b CO. | write to him—how miserable I shall DOWN-TOWN STORE USE ‘YouR oe | ; PH is thing grows tiresome! kg ail yates ai race ae 40 Ghani | 8013-1085 FIRST AVENUE IMD. 2915 = Bape . don’t fool so badly—don't doubt | —- | , . Il tell her all about it when 1 get UP-TOWN STORE We DELI . Star is again called on to “protest” against a ma A Word From Josh Wise |. “One the echoed. Nonsense! Tom,” Joe Bailey plende He) “ a apt soe le VER oe Eee , We are 10. I'm the one and you|may have another plet you eng oA ping ph rd ee 83 4 aged Samy hem aad FREE TO ALL SEATTLE} . editoriali—one of those leprous thir 1 appear in are the elpber."—Cleveland Plain} “No, be hasn't,” she returned, | hvaded and will take lt ai) righ ehovaenek mace — = oe ale quick! I the last one | had | k#ow Wi QUAKER i235 CREE Hones aay Times. ein a great) Detler rane kind near nat Gam” | 200 Belley's vegly.4id not earry| U8) RUE AF ote The Colonel,” ! ided MA ag Tantalus in Petticoats | “Let me see it, Mrs, Tom? Oh,| the is of conviction | va “The Colonel,” it seents, has adde > against you try to down it joe o ian an ae Ae oe ‘Of course, you know best, Mac Ss Ss i " ; | the more it downs oi & Genghl « nee | Wh Pig + Seg Maw Bagg one Meo Mra. McAllister sat at her desk, | ummer pec als qs the community | you.” Se diteni- 2 wher a boneeia tel Oaa't Set , "l endeavoring to compose @ dignified liidtacee ates atin dite “tie j He has been inciting to riot shoes when I had @ bole in m Mra, McAllister had not heard | Yet sufficiently resentful letter (0/8 Loa very low, Look ca rt You can aie) ; y ie You can wel Scrat etecking.—New York Sua him, She had given up to her mis summer with open arms if you have some of these highgrade spe oo He suggests that lynching parties be formed to ‘ ery and sat on the couch. buried im the pillows her face clalties on hand Nothing Remarkable. Chester Thompson A Romance Spoiled. | “A new British ship is to make Joe Halley arose and, looking at Witch Masel Cream—Keope the skin » f and oo chaps ond sunbern— He wants blood. Tho beautiful girl waded into the | fifty knots his wateh, said s 4 ‘ yeasty surf Huh! That's nothing. My shoe An engagen at 10—-five min Witch Masel-—Full pint te And indignant readers of the Times write to The Star de-|" Presently she uttered a shriek of string beats that any morning that | Utes past now d-bye, little wo ¥ Abeulutely ‘ievialishe aise iste. terror I happen to be in a hurry man; don’t cry any more manding that this newspaper “roast” the Colonel and give him Phila-| Prof in a : As n § e she cried. delphia Ledger No answer came from the wom ‘wins | “what he richly deserves | There were seven men on the who had received her first } ep 0 - eeulariy dée; seed ‘Welle y ; ; The Star? hotel pinaza, They conferred hast A Fishing Tri upon the highway of fife ; canny {c ust upon The Star ’ shing Trip Latest ‘sieiriment tn ‘ienitia day aed’ at Why is this uncanny job thrust upon The Sta ily Tis now that you long for a spot by| It was Tuesday of the same week “buet ied Ot Ragas iy 5 newspaper is not a medium for the dissemination of news of] “Then the one with the clearest & pool and Joe Hailey had spent a few ditions” Aw “One Third Olt Megalar = hi i 1 ‘ wrae jae. hist . Colo ld Blethen, | Yotee called to the struggling maid Where the fish hours playing golf at the antry Teagan 7 the alleged decadent mentality of Colonel Alden J as Gally swish jelub links. Upon entering the Tt is not a purveyor of wrath against this individual, who is so Awfully eorry.” he shouted, In the depths clear and cool amoking compartment of the belated Pring us your developing and printing do it at cut rates, but there isn't am unmarried man |traction car he found Tom McAl So do the boys. And the and employ only experts. Ask for our rate card unsparingly condemned. other boys come around. That among us.” So you take a day off and you go| ister ocoupying one of the wicker Don't fall to nee the Golden Vibrator demoustrated at our Does any intelligent person have to read those leprows| Then the lovely girl coased her to & nook | chatra | a ~ P f . ” | We ont 91.00 a week Ave. Store. Vibration is b h. rf editorials? Do they have to read the Times at all? If so they |*ussles and = presently waded Where the files | Hello, Mac he exclaimed se or A me reg rg . . i ashore.—Cleveland Plain Dealer Supe {dropping into the adjacent seat, “I or We are Neents (w ale and retail) of King Solomon Stomach must be willing to take all that’s coming to them | jAnd you simmer and cook jthought you were off on a two |} trom Bitters—a tonic and laxative of great valve S organ for the! Dust and Gasoline. trip.” Sherman, The Star, once for ail, atates that it is not an organ fo “I had to sell my auto, but | have | Them you yoarn for a piace by a re lotter, Joe, polled me for sana Clay & Co. correction of the Times, or the control of the Colonel, It is a/n't missed it yet | tary fen. business and | am gc home te} Dru _ TWO STORES | catic 7 It has no police How's that? i And skidoo Sunday with Alice j } 1013-15 1stAv. newspaper for the publication of news. 1 | “You can get most of the sensa-| Thitherto “Twas sure, Joo beaté-¢dquict ii rs - di powers. |tlows by cleaning rugs.”—Louls-| tan you ean ‘ ‘ . ville Courter vournal. le © ourter Journal, If Times readers are so enraged and humiliated by the} : — speckled editorials, why, in heaven's name, don’t they stop Figuring i Out. | When a woman won't she woalt; i bad reading them? “Rut remember, my dear, that) but when she can't, she crics. es tha eh of , ' | You and I are one.” {Portland Oregonian ey bring the trouble upon themselves. queen senate a WHICH DID YOU ENJOY THE MORE It may seem somewhat harsh in The Star to talk this way} to the Times sufferers, but it does so with no other motive than to do them good. Sometimes a heavy jar is beneficial in arousing some folk to a realization of their true condition. There is really no danger of the lynching of Chester Thompson. The Colonel hasn't the slightest intention of tak ing a rope in his hands, shouting aloud for volunteers, and rush- ing after the slayer of Judge Emory. If he should do this fool-| ish thing, the officers of the law would certainly take him in} hand. | The Star is not discussing the merits of | Not that we delight in selling good merchandise at little or no profit. But circumstances coi us to sell goods lower and give the public better bargains than other stores can afford to do. Our price | reductions are not confined to a few specials, but every article in the store is marked down. You cam not help buying bargains when you buy under such conditions. The U. S. District Court says, Bed the goods regardless of cost,” and we are ina large measure obeying orders. The goods and p prove it. Leather Goods Remnants at Half Remnants of all kinds, Dress Goods, Wash Goods, “the Thompson | case” or the release of Chester. Many people differ upon this | Regular 36¢ Chain Handled Purses, black and i , " . subject. It is simply putting itself on record as being wnwil- | all shades; sale price 13c Embroideries, Ribbons, Laces, Veilings, includ- ing an immense variety, the accumulation of weeks of heavy selling. All desirable and most of them of such lengths that you can make ex- cellent use of them. Choice tomorrow at ... ee secs RIOR ” ' ams” rung from st. wild al ling to bother any further with the “ the locooed corner of Second av: and Ur P Fancy Hand Purses, new shapes; regular values to $1.00 each; sale 49c price Purses, or | Regular $5.00 Real Alligator Shopping Begs, sale price EAST IS EAST AND WEST IS WEST only These are Kipling’s words: “Oh, East is East and West is West, shall meet. It is the question of Oriental immigration that makes us think of them. This antagonism against the Japanese is racial. It broke out in the west. It blazed. up in Canada. Australia, under British rule, already refuses the Japanese citizenship. Why? Because they know what it means. A vast part of the world does not know. There is a Jap here and a Jap there in the Eastern states. They have their own pursuits. They live their own lives. They come into no appreciable contact with the citizens around them. The Chi- ese are even less conspicuous. People do not know they are there. They do not know what it we to recognize them. The West does know. Suppose hordes of Orientals should pour into New Eng- land. Suppose they should say: “We are here! We come to work! We have come to be citizens, thousands and tens of thousands of us! We have come with our customs, our Manners, our point of view, our standards of life; to gain. think as you think. Give us room!” Ii they came like this—and this is the way they are com- ing in the West—there would be another Boston tea party, and and never the twain vald mean to be obliged have it would ring the bullseye of history louder than it was rung} in 1773. It is the inherited feeling of race. and as résistiess as the tides, or argued down or legislated down than men can talk or argue or legislate out of existence the principle of self preservation. Labor contributes to it. The school question contributes to it. Commerce contributes to it. Religion contributes to it The economics of citizenship contributes to it But back of all is—race, because it is impossible that the Anglo-Saxon and the Oriental should unite. ‘That is why we stand for Oriental exclusion. Tt is not necessarily any reflection upon the Oriental It It can no more be talked down | is as everlasting If he builds up a great world-power of his own, if he transforms! British friends through the Indian his mud huts into marble palaces, his standards of life into lofty ideals, his centuries of darkness into surpassing light, well and | unspeakable It will be magnificent. We will glory in his achievement But let him do it in Asia, not in Ameri a eriminals is selfishness. than the exclusion of epileptics is sacrificing ethics. blow at the foundation of the republic, any more than is any other principle which will not permit the welfare of the republic to be menaced. Keep out the Orientals. It is not sacrificing ethics, any more POM Lr, we expect | We do not expect to contribute, because we do not} | | | | It is no| wealth of interest and amusement |lieve the Rockies surpass anything | Burope or any other land can offer, Going to school when you were a} OR, putting in eight hours a day ‘WHY SEEK NOVELTY ABROAD? IT | IS GOING 10, |boast of their |travel through the wost “ : |from every section of the country This is not selfishness, any more than the imprisonment of | kid and wished for the time to come | when It waa put right up to you to! when you cou'd work make a tiem (GEEeEnSTEERTEEenEE meen WASTE IN THE WEST Exciusive Service.) , western mountain country ts oastly ‘ON, Jane Ie Most understood “i who delicht to) “A camping trip through the In reign travels are/dian country, visiting the minstons (Seattle Star WASKIN American wor woefully ignorant of their own and attending the tribal dances country,” says Mrs. Thos, H. Car) camping out fn the natural wildness ter, wife of the Montana semator,)of a country where the alr is as who advocates the founding of a) in jeague of patriotic American wom en, with a view to rating an old wine, is the beat toric on earth for tired nerves, jad encouraging|od ambition, and the brain fag! | “s from overmuch trib- “Last summer I took @ party of ute to the demands of present-day a tries it once will endorse every word I have said outfit for summer without feeling the ex pense by making use of our Liberal Credit Plan —paying a little down and a little at a time for the new apparel. can No extra charge fo? the use of this credit privilewe—ask about it. HOS. H. CARTER. Eastern Outfitting Co. (Inc.) 1892-34 Second Av. 209 Union 6t. “‘Seaitle’s Reliable Credit House” country of the Little Rockies,” Mrs. Carter, ' sald ‘and thetr delight was We took a campi outfit and roughed it. They we amazed that ‘anything so pictur esque as the Indian dances could/ exist without drawing great crowds “They were unable to conceive that Americans would go abroad in searth of novelty with such a jat home. And aa for scenery, | be and when the glimpses of Indian life are added, that #o the British wonder few Americans visit the 15c Embroideries What remains of several splendid lines of Cambric and Swiss Embrolderies, match, morrow at fa widths up to 8 inches, with former prices up to Ibe & yard; on sale to- Summer Underwear Women yokes; sale price Women's Fine Lisle Vests. short high neck and Ke Swiss Ribbed Lisle with hand crochet 31c) with sleeves, the same as other stores sell at a garment price aalo 45c | Women's Muslin Gowns, ("> emilee, Corset Covers, Combination G Drawers rments, and | atyles and qualities sold else- where at $1.25, $1.50, $1.76 and $2.00 each; on sale here at only ., Regular 29¢ Colored Voile Wash Goods, sale price only only 18c | gular 360 Silk Striped Batiste | Wash Goods; sale price 22¢ Regular 3%¢ White Dress Swisses, a 28 beautiful designs, price . Regular fectly washable; price only sale J. W. Clie A. erry J. W. Godwin John Schram W. P, Trimble George F. Stone William Piggott 85c Homespan Stlka, per of the | | 9c insertions to 6c $1.75 Silk Gloves $1. 0 16-button, white and black, one of the best makes | with doubles ipped, durable, neat-fitting Long Silk Gloves, on the market, _ Gageres } sale en, sone Hats to $5.00 for $1.69 Women’s Street Hats, in neat shapes, trimmed ; row at only The newest designs, in Fancy Striped and Checked and Plain Panama Dress Skirts, all hand- somely tailored and finished, and worth regularly $12.50 and | Single Chrysanthemums, $15.00 each; sale price ' cCarthy Dry Goods Co Sutcliffe Baxter, Receiver ; Howard J. Sheehan, Mgr. The Washington Trust Company OF SEATTLE Capital, Surplus and Profits . Transact a General Banking Business. -. +. $585,000 DIRECTORS— H.R. C C. E. Burnside C. J. Smith Cc. H. Cobb J. M. Frink 0. J. Humphrey W. W. Chapin 8. P. Weston lise FIRST AVENUE AND MADISON STREET. regular prices up to von ¢ each, on sale tomor “$15 Dress Shits $7. 5a) Artificial Flowers | nasge Double Chrysanthomums, | hagen; worth $1.25 at at in the Bp same colors, worth 60c; Regular 82 25 Py sale price .... * 39c fits, while the lot lasts, each Many different patterns in Torehon Laces that were 7c Torchon Laces 3}c priced at Se, 6c aid Ze a yard are gathered into one sortment and Included in the n pesoatae mark-down tomor- row at, the yard . aoe Pe An odd lot of just to close thes $1.10 4 Large assortment of 35¢ Burn to be closed out to morrow at 91.25 U1 out, Regular 25¢ Stationery, odd to go tomorrow at, the box aie i Regular 10¢ Shetland Floss Yarns. Be in the Art Section and attractively $1.63 rio Regular 25¢ Chamois Skins, for the toilet table, each . Regular $1.75 Teddy Bears, Toy Section, at, each in tan, brown and Copen. | 89c | Regular Sc Brainerd & Armatrong, Embroidery Silk, sale price Regular 50c Seattle Sontealeill tionery, sale price A pe scene Tee ty aa iS. 8 Me ON ALL DEPOSITS Put Your Savings Where They Will Stay Saved nd where they will keep on saving for you. Four per cont oe sunded is as good return as many an investment gives, Tae y deposited in this bank cannot depreciate in value as af ment could, We guarantee safety and welcome small FIRST AVENUE OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE.