The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 13, 1908, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR. 8 STAR 8 PUBLISHING co, : 1907-1909 Seventh Av EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY, “e PHONES IND, 441. These are exchanges, and connect with all de Partmente—ask for department or name of person you want. ARD STAMAOENCY—091 Naiant Av BVERETT STAR AGENCY Main 1060, Buneet, Mallard 206 Horrott Bros, 8106 Rockefeller Ay, Sunset 16: te per week, OF twenty-five cents per month, De- Ne COME Per Nopy, ax Htvered by mall or cartier lqae mattor, Botered at (he Postoffice @t Beattie, Washington, ae teoond Jate when Your subscription When that date TO MAIL SUNSCRINERS The a sur name te taken from the list the address label of oach paper Aas not again been pald tn « of date on the address label is A your copy of The Atar fail edo ua the favor to call wp our He mo Gand 190 ise 1k more than WRENS. or NOTICE TO sURSC ou by € Golock any junaet, Main 1080: nd. 442, t CODY At Ones If you should time you mise tt In this way We cam be certain of giving eur subsertbere & perfect service fad it le the only way. a SS WANTED—AN ANSWER @ please telephone w ae What are we going to do about the automobif®s ked before The No one has yet by Star, by That question has beer other publications and by the public arisen It is means are found to ansWer it still pertinent and will remain so until some { making-impossible such accidents as oc curred in Seattle last Thursday. What are we going to do to make it safe to cross our pub lic streets? Licensed drivers would help, but wouldn't remedy the evik The man who ran down the street sweeper the other day could probably have secured a license without any difficulty He knows al! about the operation of an automobile and is of adult age. or not at any time after his examination he would violate No license board could possibly determine whether the speed ordinance. But with a license law under which licenses would be revoked upon one conviction for speed violation, this particular man wouldn't have been driving this automobile for he had twice been convicted and fined for speeding So while we would still have accidents, a license law would help. A driver knowing that he would lose his license one conviction would be more careful upon That we must do something to check the reckless driver ‘on, LOOK WHO'S HERE—THE VACATION GERM THE STAR—MONDAY, “Or con A inte of t VACATION ban: oou M a f ‘. dol nev whe HA STAR DUST BY JOSH A WORD FROM JOSH WISE. Jam surrounded by from my own head thought waves Mise Tabasco—-"Thought waves! “Th apple o' dix | Gracious! Now I know why you! cord must of had a|/00k #0 pale—you are seanick re) WT SE MOWAT | is oal pescureatel min” pall epese anybody hed! v.16 mben, “when some one hands} ter beg very hard to| Une pen hen some one bands | Ce in” him @ lemon ts ready wif de sugar] and other fixin'’s to m it tol'able pleasant to take - Order ef Precedence The Fickie Gummer Maid We've a bouncing boy at our Candid an gpator.” we Old Man ULY 13, 1908. ‘ammar for Heginners,” to woman may fool her b » believing that he in t he house, but she can't el gag 2 Disturbing. the kicker doth a power for bar e vieweth with alarm, Her Expectations Friend As you d died intestate, you a third, Widow Ooh He was rae devry ourth know! | An Oversight vung he y wt about it. 1 ter—" There was out Pity Better What's the Hurry matter, Kasy it was (wine pn I loft,”—Fite NOLES A RAZOR only ton you LIKE A VETERAN, husband » head fool the decide, m Hoy to point with pride i hee will, of T hope to got 4, you s no out for were por? Herr Hutenant fe wanted at home | Immediately already, nde Mlaetter . Rodr at the seashore |) ‘ows more and more apparent every day. Not a week goes} gisoo ds in the surf.) ~ a sh a BOCS | discovered diamonds in the wurl’| “1 wpose you take second place tp MISS SUSIE FALTZ. by in Seattle without its accident. The responsibility for most | ; pony bay my the househ now? WILKESBARRE, Pa, July 12 Y a |when you were there sae samt fgevioed rae KE ®, Pa, July 13.— of these, rests with amateur drivers, although the driver of the | Van Albert-—"I thought I discov r plant gots <i back his Mins Susie Falts, 15, a barber by car that ran down and killed Rafallo Sego was a professional pdigg jewe! last summer oo After! piace number two. | accident, has fow superiors in the ahe silt to the evon jolty. Beores ’ « 1 But to amateur and professional such a law should apply | one, Jed et came ee im. Mae ee ~ er like. ftation.” eeting the Nee resh, invigorating salt water alike. ; ‘ , rs Lady 1 don't want dd) d@thing in the nana Park Natator But a license law will prove by no means a complete solu Heavy Roll ("room nor no laces! jom. Take a awim in it for that tion of this automobile problem. We may send men to the} Reggy Sapp—"I can fect that 1 dier—Hore you are, madagg | Ured fovling a penitentiary for running down and killing pedestrians, but there} will be plenty outside of the prison walls who will continue in} the reckless work. will act as a deterrent—the fear of going there will save many lives and| prevent many accidents, but it won't get rid of them all It is up to someone to suggest a way out of this automobile The penitentiary, of course difficulty—to suggest some means whereby the automobile may be permitted to remain upon our public streets and “ the same time we who go about on foot may do so in safety True, in this day and age the man of moderate means} hasn't much to say about how he shall be governed, but he| should, at least be permitted to walk across a street with the/| assurance that he will arrive safely on the other side. THE TRUE HOME Earth's best gift is a true home rare than most of us think The home, to be truly such, must be a shelter not against the storms and the cold of physical life, but against the | fears and worries and disappointments that weather-scar the} soul. The location of the home is not the important thing the home ideal American homes are of a thousand varieties, from the sim-| plicity of the barest to the luxury of the grandest; they are de- tached and independent in the country, standing one by one amid fields and gardens, or they are cells in a crowded hive in city blocks and apartment houses But home, wherever it may be, and however grand or poor, is an abiding place of happiness, or it is not, according to the home ideal. The home itself may be in one room; it may be in a hut, or in a houseboat, or in a dugout; or it may be in a great avenue mansion, or a stately palace where for generations ancestors have been in enjoyment of ease and culture. It matters little. The home idea! is the main thing. Without love and faith and trust and sympathy, the grand- estemansion is a cheerless barracks; with these, the humblest roof is happy home. Home means people of kindred blood, congenial disposition and common endeavors, gathered around one table and onder! one roof. Striking its roots down deep into primitive soil, the family signifies the permanence and the progress of the race. © The middle ages invented women, and thereby established | the home. In ancient Greece woman had no standing at all, and} the home was only an abiding place. Plato knew nothing of the notion that woman may make man happy in the order of creation, woman is coming into her priestess of the sacredest temple ever reared on earth We are apt to forget that, after all, the greatest of all facts | is the imner life. It is our own attitude of thought that makes for us the| world bright or dismal—that peoples it for us with laughing| princes or with moaning paupers. And it is through the windows of our homes. our own loves or begrimed with our hates, And maybe it is more! only | it is Last and highest own as | cleaned with |ff widened by sym pathies, or narrowed by suspicions get our} i real estimate of it, iI} Through the windows in our own keeping this world is|f beautiful, harmonious and sweet, or hideous, discordant and | bitter. | 4 - |) That old lie about requiring blankets over one in order to 5 comfortably hard Saturday night that we view life, and see our place in it. no matter how hot the But spell of weather Just was hit | we'll go right on telling it the same think much of either of t leans to Mr. Kern, Lincoin Steff de dential candidates, T) but he an't » vice presi for the reason that he understands Mr. Kera sometimes hay an idea of his own } | President Roosevelt and Secretary Root yen. | terday, Aw there have been no reports of tidal waves it is believed | | | | i | Mr. Taft took no plunge | | went in swimming And now the for Willie that Mr. Bryan is to be congratulated. republicans will say kind things of William Hearst has stated he and his papers will oppose Bryau Mr. Dagdale {s still in the coal chute. } | Clothing Sensation | The Big IPIANOS : TALKING MACHINES * RECORD ed; fine for chickens and ber hen be Joune W, i IIb Netienet Lang 1 1010 First Avenue € LWALLING CO, onal Land Inv. Cay ine. TT om, ie of the Atlantic ed here yesterday RAILROAD CO. SETTLES WITH D. S. JOHNSTON CO. Big Claim for Costly Fiance Damages Bu Route Is Promptiy Pave A shipment of costly pianos cam to the D. & Johnston Company several of the foremost Eastey od ¥ marred and scratched. tances the vensering was 4% through. Fortuentely, tone and interior mechan: tom was not injured. The damage reduited from the pianos a other after tearing away ee Teetsnings nes gph st = have a the Jotmeton Company, glow. In some inetances ¢ ‘a piano for the damage. ly brand new, latest style instruments. pianos becoming loosened in the car hobnall prints left in the top panels. strument is just as good as t hidden defects Stil others are only slightly marred paid us iberally for the damage: ffer these at a half and less in}some The mere mention of the makes that were damaged and the btartlt fice to dispose of every one in a few days. Here you'll find the finest and Lesters and Haddorffs and Hobart M. Cables, and which you may never see again a6 long as you live. Hurry in Tomor- row Morning We can't begin to tell you one-half about thin really great money-saving event. You must come in, see and judge for yourself. Bring your musical friends with you and convince yourself that what we claim is exactly so, Look for the big yellow cards—they tell the whole story—the regular price— the amount the railroad has pald—and the price you now pay—all in plain figures Pay $25 or $60 down and the balance as best sults your convenience, Remember, if instrument 1s found not exactly as r ented and entirely satisfactory, “Mon History cases have become considerably marred and damaged and fully guarant The injury is to the cases only Some are more badly hurt than others paired #o that only the closest examinat tracts, easy terms ar line and lake $100 clow level, ¢ GARDEN TRACTS@ TS an to ar father’s shop attont this and always insist upon her shaving them. ever ox at mo prov barber as @ man. tomers aay I am even M 8 the atro The at shop on am, 1 6:20 p. sired “Seattie’s like the rected work bet to,” she # tha ys. able “The ners are all nice and polite to am proud to be 4 girl can be as good a ton Paltz w day when he Moat of my cu was short of She washed the faces of the customers and brushed aftor her fathe ¢ displayed such aptl he kept on tn th |she handles a razor their tude t Department Store Burns. AULT Fire TH follo MAIUE wed by ar Mich plow cause of which is unknown, yed Blum gutted total lor TO SEE BATTLESHIPS, Roata leave Way m. ronen's Miller's damaged several nearby 2, foot 00, 40, 2:00, 10:00 block alr ¢ bad shaved them hat work until now ke & veteran July jon de and buildings is about $100,000 of in Women’s and Misses’ Summer Suits, Skirts, Underskirts, Waists and Millinery No extra charge for alter t if de- ions—lib: al credi a little down and little at a time pays for any- thing you select Eastern Outfitting Company 1332-34 * Second Av. Inc. Union St. Reliable House.” The Greatest Event in the of the West Strictly Brand- nob Highest-Grade Pianos—cases damaged— almost half price and less. Big savings make The only thing is th owing others were Musically walked ov fro most of them can be re. nm will show the injury The railroad company has enabling the House of Johnston to instances. ng $335.00 $375.00 $425.00 $475.00 $500.00 $550.00 $650.00 $750.00 $900.00 at the to the and yt m any Pianos Pianos Pianos Pianos Pianos Pianos Pianos Pianos Pianos prices now asked #0 as to close of Chickerings and Schuberts and Kimballs and Story & Clarks ¥ other equally meritorious high grade m Buying now t# a duty. $310.00 Pianos now now now now now now now now now now them out quickly, kes at unheardof prices Credit \Railroad’s Loss—Your Gain| Piano Buying| Buying a Duty Get One Ere It’s Too Late The pianos offered in thie Railroad Damage Claim Sale are strict will suf. price Prices That Strike Bottom $190 $218 $242 $288 $317 ane many others at $162, $195, $237 and several as much as ing to r year, will nat ey Back.” Come to buy or out of idle curtosity, but be prepared for | the surprise of a lifett A careful fnvesttgation will convince you 270 less than the regular established prices—accord that what we claim ts exactly so—and will be the means of sav. | al of case, “Pay all cash or by the week, month o ing several hundred dollars in the purchase of a fine, high grade as you choose, Don't delay; the hig t bargains piano, The Railroad Company stands the loss. urally go first ' Orders by telegraph or long-distance telephone will be honored only until letter can arrive. First comey first served. No will be held unless a deposit fs paid. This ts posttive, Delive will be made at earltest possible moment and in order selected Better come the first thing tomorrow morning. Remember, “money back” if you want it PION = N Johnston Co. Building— J —Third Av. and University St. IANO HOU > OPPOSITE NEW FEDERAL BUILDING 11:2 4:00, 4 and Sundays 7:30 p. | | pianos f Reductions department | Sixteen arre Culbergon in connection mn the « 1 that o io ground that Le rnura bs John A, Hayes and hin! doned the claim a WHOLESALE PIKE ST. m0 WESTLAKE AVE | See ae eeeuesTation + a 8 Pree Ome ————406 PIKE ST. Mid -Summe Suits, Skirts and Wai Seattle. share in the plums offered in t sale. come often. appointed in the offerings of thi | sale. SUITS AT $6.95 SUITS AT $9.45—Imagine a high- wink Panama § Just the thing for the mountain Narrow Width Three for the price of ame. Many Arrests for Murder, GRHAT FALLS, Mont., July 12. 11-year-old daughter as 9 ® quarrel over a squatters which had been located Long and later taken 7 sts hay at the with DOWN-TOWN STORE USE YouR * $013-1015 FIRST AVENUE IND. 2915 ~ hae Tenn UP-TOWN STORE WE DELIVER ree ane rRee TO ALL —— Monday’s and Tuesday’ stra Special | Styptic Pencils Bquibb’s Surgical Powder—Stops bleeding from cuts Instant. @ Pure Paraffin Wax—For canning and preserving: full ib.” enke for ooaall 10 J Mr. Tanglefoot Fiy Paper—4 double sheets ie annow for Manahan’s Tarine Moth Bags- th-proof—protest 4 Sie furs and clothing, Made 1 , Drolet. ‘noune Teddy Bears at Half Price—Pick out the hw want and pay daugh' one-half its marked price 50 Per Conia Ariand Zema—The practical, actentgfic and popular remedy for pak and all #kin troubles the Large bottle for ‘ $1.09 will mm » Flea—They flee in haste when you use G ; Ris’ Fleas can't live near it a . Per bottle pe Liquid Foot Ease—Cures sweaty feet; helps tired, swollen, scald ong burning, bilstered feet a cooe ieee 25 pag Allen's Foot Ease— wrens ae Se Mennen's Taicum Powder—- aniey Por box oe, The Quaker Drug ‘Companys Two Stores. 1013 FIRST AY, Peedi StF > ‘i x n £ = ia EO By far the best bargains Everybody welcome Come early; come late You won’t be dis- Wht we 3 A price that is less than the cost of Made of Jacquard Mohair. You know » rs, and what an admirable cig These suits come in navy and black, with a pin check of white. The jae well lined and splendidly Has pockets and fancy buttons. a four-inch band for trimming. This is an excellent suit and our special Clearing $ material mohair is and how it we it is for a summer garment semi-fitting cutaway, Sale Price is only $9.45. Here they are in a fancy stripe and two each of brown, tan and blue. A semi-fitting jacket box front. Strictly tailored. Cuff and slashed-back med with buttons. A thirteen- gored skirt trimmed with a fold, Special Clearing Sale price . A wonderfully beautifully ment. Some black and plainly tailored. Others i med in fine Val. Ince ly embroidered. Very Launder perfectly. Most climb, wearing In the woodiand camp or for horseback riding Made of cotton covert and well Gotteret, Regular price $5.00.) ls Sime worth wee Clearing Sal ri wr mepensstelh $3. 95 worth $7.00 and $8.00, —= mn || © A Splendid Ribbon Bargain Ribbons, of satin The Midsummer affords you an opportunity morrow of choosing from 1 2eF 5 and taffeta; nice for veil trim: 3 mings or for any parpose in which wash ribbons may be te,” 7 x corset cover used; are % inch wide, all) shout one-third thei pure silk, and come in a lar ue. Finest qualities swiat widths run from 68 See the display’ the window at the stom trance, Every yard is @ real bargain. Sale price. Val. Laces at 5c a Yard All sorts of pretty pat Kdgings and Insertions, 200® matched sets, but such cambric 18 inches. assortment Midsummer Clearing Sale price, per yard, ts only Belts to 25c at Only 83c ot colorings. The | Ac Made of duek white with assorted colored embroidered designs; | have nickel and gilt buckles and | 48 will go well togethem ” | cause the lines are brokemy clasps. Clearing Sale price, | ineluded in the Mid while they last, 8 | ring Sale tomorrow a

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