The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 6, 1908, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR _ BY STAR PUBLISHING co. ~~ 1907-1908Beventh Av a EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. HH ES Mar so IND. 441, ‘These are exchanges, and connect with all de partments—ask for department or name of person you want. BALLARD STAR AGHNCY—an lard Ay, Sunset, Ballard 206. EVERKIT STAR AQENCY—itorrett Broa, 8706 Rockefeller Avy, Sunset 108% ‘One cant per copy th, De Mrered by mail or o Botered at the Postoffice at Seattle, Washington, a sik Cents par week, or twenty-five cents por Mm No tree ond-olase matter, To MAI Whe addres: ae pot again SUBSCRIBERS The date when Your subscription expires te When that date arrives, If yo . Your name is taken from the } @ you miss It sea Bake way We cam de certain of giving eur subscribers « ta the only way. ee ee A FEW WORDS ARM V ferveticrn There is apparently nothing the matter Pith Rolggrd T. Hodge as a candidate for sheriff af Ring corgty. He recently announced that he will dagnomething tBat 80 live on the salary King county sheriff ever thought of doing which the county pays. He will accept no rakeofis from pris oners’ food allowances, or other “fees” but wiligbe conteyt with the $2,400 paid him as salary. ° Mr. Hodge carried consternation into the ranks of the other candidates when he made this announcement through The Stan Each one saw that unless he, too, came through with such a declaration of Hodge. As a result, every candidate except®one, nounced, stands pledggd to accept no mon except the $2,400 salary. The Star has been “sizing up” Hodge, and is inclined to support him. He looks acceptable both from a moral and physical viewpoint. Possibly he would not make a good sheriff if-elected, but all of the indications point the other way. He is an honest young Scotchman, big, broad shouldered and energetic forcing the law at Black Diamond and for awhile he stayed up nights doing it. Nowadays Black Diamond is one of the most orderly towns there was no chance success against oO far an if elected sheriff, As a deputy sheriff he has made a record for en 1p im the state and could give either Seattle or Tacoma points on| law observance. All of this change is credited at Black Dia- mond to Bob Hodge. This young man has I of the capabilities necessary to make an efficient sheriff and, as he is willing to work for the modest salary which the county pays, The Star believes the taxpayers of this county would gain by supporting his can- didacy. One reason why The Star takes this stand for Hodge is that the court house gang doesn’t want him in the job. That is an excellent reason why he should be there. It is almost a safe bet that anybody who is opposed by the Office Holders’ Alliance up on Profanity Hill has the interests of the taxpayers | at heart. As the readers of The Star well know, this newspaper dur- ing the 10 years of its existence, has been very careful about i endorsing candidates for office, and it has no intention now of entering into any partisan fights. But it does see its way clea to say a few good words, in a concise way, for Hodge : THE NEW BUSINESS MAN Tt used to be that the more business ability a man possessed the harder it was for him to whistle a popular air correctly. The good business man had a narrow outlook upon life in general and was little cultivated beyond the knack of knowing his own particular line of business. Conditions have changed, and the business man of today must have wider knowledge, use more discretion and weigh con- ditions more carefully than any judge or juror. In the complex overlapping business relations of today! only the shrewdest sagacity, the most far-reaching penetration q and the soundest judgment will enable a man to discriminate j between profitable and disastrous investments. A hundred things now affect the prices of wheat, cotton, wool, iron and tobacco, that once had no influence on their value. Within a few years articles once deemed worthless have : created new trades. The business man must not only be abreast of changing trade conditions—he must be ahead of | them. ; A new epoch has been inaugurated, and all profitable busi- nesses are being conducted on new and modern principles. The business man of today is a new man. He must have the widest outlook and the clearest vision. —___—__—. With the Fourth of July past and the ball team out of town we have nothing now to do but enjoy the oratory that will come to us over the wires from Denver. There should be more of it than there was at Chicago, for democrats won't hold a gag as repub i Means do. They will talk when they want to. \ Henry W. Taft, brother of the republican nominee for president, i; and who spent yesterday and today in Seattle, says that the con 4 vention in Chicago was the most satisfactory In years. From the a standpoint of the Taft family we can readily believe this to be true i 4 Yesterday in Denver Charles A. Towne, a vice presidential pos. ' sibility, occupied the pulpit of a church. In Seattle Senator Piles appeared before a congregation of young Methodists make strange bedfellows. pn a Churches do it existence into a miracle and a biess 4 j ing. | And yet all the world prates of 1 love—it is the one great fact of life ; surpassing in importance all else { of “affinities” and “soul circle around the globe ep the telegraph and wireless working overt taking 4 the ‘sh and f of our modern love letter literatu Oh, love, love, love, the many fool deed at are committed in th name @ Dear Hearts” fairly overlap each other on the pages that were ant to be sizzli d are merely incoherent. There ts big talk of dying and “eating my heart out in loneliness for you,” and such One of the most iit rds | baiderdash in any language is that littie com-| When a mentally anbalanced man bination of four letter ke mn, laboring under a rush of Real love, is comparative! rar blood to the head, | the object Many people live and die and pass! of their fanatle affection, it is her tuto oblivion without ever having alded abroad as a ve traged been touched with the magic*wand A weak man and a still weaker wo that turns the gray nto rose, | man of lif abandon home and friends and that transmutes th act of | far ha ng at the me blow ri safeguards erected t tect the young, bring shamo and misory and diagrace to everyone connected with them, and we call it lo soctety to pro By aire and folly ry shade of infatuation and de in dignified by the sacred name of love, and yet we are told by & man peho ne knew jaye” hoarts ma fontev u Nave alters nopowith the brief hours and ks, But bears it out even to the edge of doom Trove love wou not seek the loved one's life. It would not harm in any way, nor allow another to harm the person beloved; even | | | | MME. TITCOMB (Star Special Gervice.) LONDON, July 6-—King Ed ward bas amazed the British na tion by taking upon himself the role of a censor in the matter of women’s dress, Riding in Hyd park be observed Mme. Titcomb, an actrosa, also riding, and clad in & habit of the latest directorie mode, with split skirt. He or 4 the park nid commissioners to f | ADREANM Y STUART B. STONE. From a dream of a falr-haired, | biue lady disporting in a gar jden where red roses | wonderfully co! and murmuring spirit of the dr Maury changed wild places, a hut In a sage-gr grew and red birds d puntains played the me of Gilbert wo Wilderness with nothing good to show save the lady of the dream. | The lady of the wilderness was the lady of the rose-filled gardens. that her golden hair and her biue eyes were the same; but oth she was greatly changed. aS & restlessness in her panner and ® certain fear in her | backward glancing, which commu tn | micated to Mr. Maury a definite fe ing of something wrong, and {turned uneasily in his slumber, | while in his dream he peered about him for the cause. 4 he It was the figure of a man— | dark, handsome, evilly magnetic | who looked u the beautiful y }and seemed to @raw her near to him | Mr. Maury knew the lady. She | wore a ring with his name engray ed inside, and their understanding was a perfect one, It was this that made him shudder as she crept man with the face of |nearer to the He longed to drawing wickedness yell, to struggle with this man the he had ever hated; but something held him. if the lady willed to go, why then he should 60. now there came a change. The d evil man Ifted his hands and seemed to wield an trresiatible diabolic power, and the lady ap peared to slide toward him with no force nor resistance of her own. Mr. Maur stra d the unseen ties that | nd him, and finally attaining hi Uberty, r the dark fitle With the er in T © wasat ther dark, unholy man ed to crumble and disinte ad dead ywder waken¢ ith the andy greetix Maury lay now and meditat ed concerning his dream. The thing aat too strong upon him, and he arose and lit the lamp Though he felt every confidence in her though he could not doubt, yet for two months her letters had been in frequent and cold. She had tioned no barrier and his pride had forbidden tnquiry; so that he had merely answered and worried. And now the strange dream of gardens and deserts depressed him, though the ending had beon of promise The ing men dawn came with the Mr. GilGert M FANG ED HAD HER “CHASED” IN HER DIRECTOIRE HABIT, —_—_— bieakness and, OGm0o j though that person loved another. Love, real love, that divine fire fliched from the heavens, ts not a thing that can be given or taken back at will, It does not taper STAR DUST BY JOSH when lines mar the soft contoufnt the old wife's cheek and stiiver| | gleams in her dark hatr,| | one own Love's not Time's fool Nor doos love drag the loved one| || A WORD FROM JOBH WISE. —/ination I am of the opinion that you |though the filth of the div g are sufforing from clorgyman's sore jcourt, It does not tap in tooth, throat The ' 5 yet | numbers. Patient The b — you sey! | Love cannot five tn the same} “Life le not ae a PPA don 1 bd - H heart with revenge bitterness, base | By empty dream ax tong) quite possible I am wrong ul | plotting and low wion, And, if} nen re’e Weish | 00K agal jobem | this be not true, t nover writ ~ of tor be ha | | nor no man ever loved.” at Having a load hie mind | shouldn't distress a man if tt isn't] } all junk —Judge } One thing that ts so disaggeeabte | en a Woman Goes Away— =| about bad luck ts ¢ ref no 1 po sue HAVEQ@O WN hotony of It-—Nashville American. ICLOTHES AMOUNTING TO MOWE sd Quite Right (3) THAN THE COST_OF THE TRIPT 2. “After al) it pays to be hagest.” Yea, onfy” ° “Only what?” An ‘Ie there canythgye I oan do, inducement. "You can't always be certain orie © . ttle! b 4 rhe " on cena te ge whom It paya.”—-Nashville Ameri " miner, 0 induce y 0 60 Wl an ye “Yep,” responded the small boy, promptly Jan’ tottin’ de fools spit j ettin’ de fools eplit de kindlin it Well, for goodness sake what 18 | woodAtianta Constitution } “Lemme stay up an hour longer,” | Windom is moatly in lookin’ wine Said a boarder one day wish Don't jump at the conclusion that! you would put some health food j there is no such thing as luck mere | oa ly because you never had anything} yy Gish | elve.—-Puck 1 am happy to say * | I can always eat hay | Making a Diagnosis. I was born up in Battle Creek, Physician—From a hasty exam Mich.” Nashville American “WOMEN WITH HAPPY HOMES DO NOT HANKER TO VOTE” | Mme. Titeomb the use of the park for her rides. Nominally, Hyde park belongs to the king, but he makes it over the nation in exchange for salary. He bas about as mi right to keep Mme, Titcomd out it as « landlord would have to p vent a tenant from wearing a collete gown in & rented house. And King Ed as a censor of pab- morals is a joke, anyway | and the day was old when he arose. | His firet act was a labor of love & message of cheer and sentiment | to the lady of the dream—and then Mr. Maury proceeded to w wan a day of dreary, nerve-racking waiting, the worst of his fresh. young life, Then there was a night of troubled dreaming, with many wakings, and then another! day, which Mr. Maury spent in foor-watking and tu gazing moodily | at things that be did not see On| 80 SAYS MAB. GORE, the morning of the third day he was fretfal and unwell. And then the gray-clad postman brought a/ letter, it ran yeareat 1 send you my heart) and a million kisses. Dearest, one! had come between us. You must} have felt {t In my cruel letters. I |eould not resist him, though I felt always that he was evil. Last night| came the cilmax, He desired to! |marry me, and | felt that | would ay yes, though every impulse, every it Ue a 1010000000000000000000000000 G00 COPYRIGHT 1908 BY GY.GUCK. GORE. WIFE OF want suffrage are those who have | unhappy homes « at all OKLAHOMA'S BLIND BENA-| “it aiways rouses my ire hear that # write my h TOR—HER POLITICAL WORK |. coches,” went on the spirited lit JUST A PART OF HER HOME| tle southern woman. “He wouldn't be my hushand if I did. My poilti-| WwoRK, } cal work is just a part of my home| | work. Why, Mr. Gore was a law with good practice when he| came down to Palestine, Tex. to make @ political speech and fell in| love with me at first sight.” | There was no mistaking the pride MAS. THOS, P, none By DOROTHY DALE. WASHINGTON, July 6.— The only woman who nas really had jostre cried no. 1 gruggled, I in Mrs. Gore's 6 She always ght, but felt myself slipping. | "er In the congressional ple this! speaks of her husband as if he lAnd then I seemed to hear your | year does not believe that the right could see | dear voice and feel your dear spirit} to help make the laws should be The senator, who sat beside his calling, restraining. I made a great| extended to her sex | s she talked to me, bowed effort and won. He w ot return; . po . ye of her hands. his record is known now, I am| She ls Mrs. Thos. P. Gore, wife of| “she's my right bower, whatever happy tonight—a thousand kisses,|the blind senator from Oklahoma. | she says,” he declared, and the way |dearest, Write HELEN.” Mra. Gore has always been in a| be lingeringly moved her bracelet | Mr. Gilbert Maury found his way ; Poeceet © belongs | #2 and down on her arm showed Ito the broad mantelpiece and|°°"tcs! atmosphere. Sho belongs! via: ne thought of his political lerammed his pipe with a very fine|t? the Kay family of Texan office | gig cut. Then he burst into song. The | ders and is more than “his! Gore ts 37, the youngest sen song was eyes,” as her husband often calls) ator in congress, The couple “It was there that Annie Laurie| tT For, besid her reading | have one child, Nina, 4 years old. gave me her promise true erything on which the senator's! The senator is just out of a hos. PIE minal sant dl hose work is based, he depends largely | pital, where an operation was| on her intuition In reading the char-| performed in an effort to give him| acters of the men he deals with.| st jeust partial vision. It. was It bas been unerring, he says not successful. Mra. Gore ro-| Furthermore, Mrs. Gore managed | mained almost constantly at her| the Hterary bureau of his campaign husband's bedside while in the hospital he was Summer Outfit last fall and is ready to do it again if, as short term senator from th newly admitted state, he is som nated to succeed himself. The Eagle Transfer Co. ‘Giving woman the ballot would Office—-108 Fitth Av. South. Wivide the home unless both hus Our charg band and wife were of the sat aieure sind,” said Mrs. Gore, “and if b _— hand and wife alw A alike here might just as well be no wom. n's vote. The only women who Payments VICTOR You can hear Caruso just as well —a little down and a little at a } on an “easy payment” Victor as if you paid all at onoe, Gadski, Sem brich, »ttl, Planeon, they all s Your Vict os home with you after eo 4 ent, And you pay the balance n comfortable inatall ment that never bother you Eastern Thus we solve with oredit to both, the problem of a grand-opera taste with a ragtime iticome Outfitting Company 1332-34 Second Av, “Beattle’s Sherman,Clay &Co 1406 Second Ave. 209 Union St. Roliable Credit House.” — HE'S THE MESSENGER bors CANDIDATE. boc > — Ce, lo) PANAMA~ cot 0 — TEDDY SENT HIM ‘TO OER PHILIPPINES = - AND MAYBE HE‘LL SEND ME, Su ‘ : = Inorcayine, : & meas DOWN-TOWN STORE 13-1015 FIRST AVENUE UP-TOWN STORE PIKE ST. mo WESTLAKE AVE, Swe kn rm amene me ,--» OFTHE SUBSTATION Wak VP rowe STURe July Drug Sales Offerings that will attract you to Washington's largest and most up- Heme of importance for quick Tomorrow drag stores. lor Harlem OU) ¢ Regular to @ customer) 1013 FIRST AV. pe cake Parke Davis’ Peroxide of Hydrog oo each Lister's Antiseptic sive, per dox © sine, per don Powder —tuii etreneth ound for Campbor Gum —1 * blocks, Free sample of Krause’s Liver Pills may be had for the asking Don't forget our Kodak Departuy The Quaker Drug Company Two Stores. — RETAID, USE YOUR PHONE THO. 2015 ~ — MAIN 1240 we DELIVER . ive FREE TO ALL SEATTLED bill is pa Rand ; Paowes to0, maar nox as eon wea pomp Sulpho. Napthal Germicita and Ate regular Lee bottion; ape es’ Tooth Powder Taleum Powder —Per can or tube... Ie For scaling fruit srpomes, full 2 tor t6e t. We develop and priet at cut rates, eres Se res only 90 Hemmed We reserve the right to limit | the quantity sold to a customer. | Pillow Slips, 10¢ Extra Good size tomorrow at quantity chaser sold Hemmed a yard | | | | ries have be a ya Special son's Beautiful Dama r We reserve the to linen cial price tomorro ach any 12%e Pillow ¢ 4x36 inches, the special offerings are among 10c one Damask A assortment of Dress Good: volles, organdies, str tistes and many ot large proportion of Fancy Suitings, 12%¢ | Fancy Plaid Cotton Sultings, 35c Wash Goods, 15¢ _—_—— h McCarthy Dry Goods Co | Sutcliffe Baxter, Receiver | right to limit pur. $3.50 Damask Cloths, $2.83 women’s suits and children's ad wes; good, durable color ings; nice for summe ; big variety of st Spe. 85 for Bargains for Everybody. rices Tell the Story. Read Below: Bed Sheets, 43¢ | For Tuesday, if the supply lasts, we offer large Maslin Bed Sh | | 35c_Waistings, 19¢ Cloths, y ds in size, tn several ve attractive de- | signs; regular price always $5.60; this lot lasts, mc each $ ' Goods and 20c Turkish Towels, 15¢ = Extra Heavy Turkish Towels, 39 x41 inches, bleached; every one of them a good 20c valuey offered for sale tomor- 15¢ row at, each sips We reserve the right to limit the quantity sold to a pu Beautiful Striped Effects in 2 and 35c White Wai among the most attractive the season's white goods ured at 29¢ and 35c a yard. Ow] special sale tomorrow at, yard 12%%c Toweling 9¢ ass §©6 Toweling, in assorted! checks of assorted colorings; sold regularly at 12\%c a yard) is offered tomorrow at only ah Rewind We reserve the right to Malt quantities, None to dealers. 40c White Goods, 22¢ Some of the Waistings 5 year are tp most attractive n anywhere this luded in this lot of materials, Lots of different wi patterns. Former prices have bla been 35c and 40c a yard. We have reduced them to 22 65c Voiles, 23¢ B Voiles Large Plaid D ‘ WwW a th s that have t a « « ot th s 7 a y i Th a iol. 49c Howard J. Sheehan, M ° °

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