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THe STAR—TURSDAY, ULY it 1908, to, may wo be permitted to dibiecs the. wish that. there will: be snipe enthusiasm apparent than there was at the Taft ratification gather THE SEATTLE STAR ~ ing? 6 BY OTAR PUBLISHING Co. 1907-1909 Seventh Ave, | '"# : " ° ‘ EVERY AFTERNOON PT SUNDAY, The Gil forces were ur a sufficient number ° of votes las@night and the council was not asked to men record in “NETY, DO YOU KNOW PI in 1050, 7 o © he cc HON ES Ino. “1. the garbage fight. It may he that Mr, Gill's repeat Hnance BY STUART B, STONE. pee iano abees oe joo fen tap my , ANOW Yaar Those are exchanges, and connect with all de will never be heard fog again, Mr. Gilt would be wine shoulDhe so Yhen the pompous, solitary po ing Sane Waeky you dient pap ths gabiopat judd ce argue 4 rtments—aek for department or name of person doter@Mne.o ° bd ot niown vgked hia! got jam and onke when you did gat OP by AVES fou aan ee ; din the door of the ewentieth | fr" day Ane onke nen yom aid Ber READ TO SOE 8 LIE ~ — ne -* ‘4 a Century Tonsortal parlora for @ “ | |AROn Tw 0 Yk (O0ON __ BALLARD SAR AGENCT—n1 Raiard Ay. Sunset, Mallard 206 Phey are going to abolish the tin drinking cup In oe pubtlp Soente scien tees gee os Bee weests sow ‘nintons of the law | [AWD IWAN IVE wareR YOU === BveERerT tan AGENCY— iy wre ”, “Tree Rockefeller Av. Auneet i That ought to suggest something to some class poe or in the firet chair, the Sandbag Kid) prowling Reagie. asked | i sent per Soph Gin conte oF twenty-five conta per month, Dee » tin cup may be made Immortal as was the old, oaken bucket, | wre 4 loose and plunged down dar. Veena: Paaee see anon fivered by mall or carrian Nv af com pS ‘ . “ j the stragating wig: a gpa the | a strange, rough Jooking man? eae . clase ma ° r 2 e priticiaes the Seattlc press for ite sing of yneooat realized that a pris U) Ne irre re joated Row stored he Poatoftice at Seattle, Washington, a8, sqcondiclans matter Rev. Dr, Matthews ertticines th | Ma ple prevar rut Pi natant oa | omission. should de more gencrous, The Seattle prons | bad actually dared to excape from | gig, triumphantly To jeu Her my cent his tenacious clutch the Sandbag)” “Are you sure?’ questioned an addess lane has been very good to him. | Hi@ had rounded the First National | other of the pursuers, They say | okt! Sek, : ani y | Bank corner and wax half way to/he came right this way ~ o* e Hi GU wants a skyscraper city hall, with stores on the ground |the blessed fringe of woods along naan py of The Siar fail to , p ‘ Cross my heart and body,” de HoepeR FO eunec eh pene oe to call WP OUF AAT Te | floor, That sounds just like the suggestion of a man who smokes fk | the North Fork clared the boy And I never did Boy dale BAL! we will send you | oy siNoucase (aiaghene us | eprncod pipe Then Corntown took up the hue | si. it yeu shou! xe 1) more than of steal preserves and I've got a hun and cry and the august marshal } time yor se tt - dred and fifty dollars and I've been mete: ‘Ay We CAR be certain of giving eur subscribers a perfect service s i . dignified for headlong chasing,!to heaven <r \ eset ay wey Nothing happened yes we wore traveling, pelved the one bright idea of Y joktr tht ‘ | | he by dea 0 ou're joking nis ornin | en eee mem. eee | . |his career, He telephoned to the Reggie,” sald ~¢ of ian cope j ACCOMP Lis H IN G WE LL AND piccats:ardbee nei dfeancs.t te abana oe |pumping station on the banks of ‘Then turning to the rest, “He's not le . the North Fork and excited, Ko#|nere, 1 know the boy In absolute! t |Heulating men began to spread out|yellable. He's the straightest kid | A HONESTLY | DIANA’S DIARY and to hem in the fugitive offender. |] rer oaw | Confound these hodeloppers! The posse proceeded to shuffle | oman is murmured the fleeing Kid. “It's @ out of the — at and Ree ER I at tc suas ot Gusking Into Shantytown | crowed fubllantly I'm a fine lar, | une cegceMigatele alla, pageants th ang Miss Dilipicktes Takes a Fancy to Ballooning, and, Oh, My, What bo |tired Ot the Game! ns Ort am. Tt won't tell the truth. any , net dependent upon “how much,” but upon “how well and hon Doe: more at all t Pase Through! And he headed tnto the rambling. And then the closet door opened | unsanitary less dis va “a celle dak ae ER, maze of alleys and rub and the Bandbag Kid stood forth estly” they ac plish, there Would be pr « | bish-filled lots where the under-|in the midet of his amazed purse > less fruitless strife and more opportunity for the nobler side of BY F. W. 8 CHAEFER, | orkd Of Covntows ranée std out | ore — at living, Down two blocks of a! “No, you won't be any Nar, kid,”| WHOLESALE human nature to assert itself one a ton =. way he bounded! he cried. “I'll lay in their bugey, | _ DRU | and diving into @ yet narrower al-| dirty old ealaboose for 60 days be . After all, what do we gain when we have striven dishon | ley, he moderated bis pace, foe nih ra eres gece Sen Seer eee as Bhantytown had not yet wakened $013-1018. FIRST AVENUE € to the great hue and ery lend of the alley At the aloof from ite mis | UP-TOWN STORE can hold | PIKE ST. © WESTLAKE AVE, A gleam of gold which is ours only so long as we realize, Name, if ye preceding the nineteenth whom the world has cared to re member ! A rich man seems mighty big to us in our day can, a half-dozen rich men in all the centuries long run, even as this world goes, he is very small potatoes But you have Raphael, Milton, Shakespeare These wrought little for themse and honestly for humanity. And so will it continue through the centuries to come no trouble recalling Columbus, wton The nates of today will give place in the last- millionaires and ma, ing record of this age to names perhaps unknown now, to minds occupied with higher things than money They have their time and place book. They must put high use, because the doing of good. So, in the mind of the mass! As a certain proportion of any development depends on the and its making these princes of the pocket- some of what they have accumulated to world’s standard of right living is the spite of their wealth, they are slaves to many, some of these great fortunes are employed in uplifting and upbuilding the arts and the sciences and in promoting in dustry that is honest and life-giving vd Opposed to it is their chief harm—the breeding of a desire for wealth and luxury which cannot be This is their chief g satisfied. In this human marsh flourish the red weed of anarchy and the callow bloom of | discontent. Up on the hillsides, where the air is clear and pure, and the sky unclouded, are the trim little farms and homes of fied—those content in accomplishing well and honestly. There dwell the men and women who have learned the great and sub lime lesson of simplicity, of simple desires and simple measures of fulfiliment. It is from the windows of these houses that good stars shine | steadfastly by night. The universe within a greater. EACH MAKES HIS OWN WORLD rein are the fixed stars of this small The sick think if matter. The hard-working man thinks if he had leisure he would be content they had health nothing else But happiness is not the prerogative of any class of people or station in life. Bernard Shaw says in one of his plays that “the man with the toothache thinks every man happy whose teeth are sound, | and the poverty-stricken man makes the same mistake about! the rich man.” So it is with most things. One always feels that the thing he doesn't possess, or the thing he sential to his happiness But the things which really go to make for numerous and varied can't do is the one thing es happiness are alike. that helps to for no tw think or feel If there is one thing than »ple f ore all others smooth the rough places, it is temperament ‘Fhe man or woman who is inclined to look side, who is confident that on the bright} louds have a silv lining, and who} realizes that life is only a game to be played to a best of one’s ability, is bound to be t pier than one who is always expecting the worst, or who, because the sky is clouded, is sure that the sun will never shine again The important question is: Can the cheerful attitude be acquired, or is it one of the gifts of the gods and bestowed on| only a favored few? » doubt some are gifted with a happier and more cheer ful temperament than others. It while others are naturally cems to be natural for some to be morose unny But this is no reason why the melancholy one can't change but in the} Ives, but accomplished well | would | “Wella | sy 1 AM ABOUT TO POSE AS IM PRESSIVE AS IT'S POS: £ TO 00 WHEN YOUR HEART iS CHOKING YOU it | Of course, nothing would do but | had to go out with our boarder Mr. Flote, to see him manage the firat ascension of the Aero club. it is & great day In town, eapeciatly as Mra, Whiffie, the only lady mem ber, is going to make the deathde {fying trip. The destination has been definitely decided on. It la to FUN Independence league next! ee The body contains enough fat to make 100 candi eee A man ts worth what he gives to the world ot what he gets from it. Read this again / i cs | | A train ran down an auto in New |York. This proves there is some. thing that can run down an auto, “er First Aid for Sunstroke—Loosen | clothing. Get patient into shade Apply ice water to head. Keep | head elevated +66 Bricks are red because of tron | naturally contained in clay being | converted tnto red oxide of tron by action of heat o ee Oh, the harvest time of poesy To the land has many lured | But it doesn't look so rosy | When no hands can be secured oe | | Lawyer: How t tt that you have | waited three years before vning | Muller for calling you a rhinoceros? | Countryman Because I never his point of view jsaw one of the beasts till yeater. , ‘ | da at the zoo. There are always two ways of looking at every question, | @ 62% and one’s point of view as to cheerfuln is largely a matter of | January 1, 1644, Michob Ader, habit | ling himself the Wandering Jew appeared in Paris, pretending to It is as easy to see t as it is to see the worst in peo- | have lived 1,600 years, and that he i> ie necnediae on wi a Aiditheadiite on bn ottis of had traveled through all regions of Pp , fa ling nat habitual in others, each Of |the world. He knew all languages us peoples his own world He was familiar with the hi ry Joys, woes, successes, failures are real only as they appear to us to be so ws the orld hat w hoose t public thir well of George F. Cot terill cand to jal honors, the Ledger ways tterill Kin who has filed a declara tion of candidacy for the democratic nor for United States sen ator, Ww senator in the last log from King. Mr. Cotterti by his earnestness, intel nd honesty, won the respect of the senate and became one of Its inf al memb Among the meas ures for which he stood was the dir law Tonight at Kgan's Arcade hall, th thful democrats of Seattle | will ratify the nomination of W And in regard there >A MONTH > REALTY Bui Smile! | ‘0.2 “Goodby, Jim, take keer o'| yourself!” eee convention | be between 80 and 200 miles, Just that far and no farther, Whether it be east, west, north or south will be left to the wind. Just now It ts N N. W., but the wind fs Mable to change its mind. (I've taken along my diary to jot down overything just as it happens, for this is a great sight to witness.) We have arrived at the grounds. ‘They've enfiladed the balloon and ket ts ready, but Mra. Whif- hot came. Flote and the Aero members are impatient. Mra Whiffie te sttit non 8 The camera men threaten to! go back to the newspaper offices. Mr. Flote entreate me r the car and be photograph. the intrepid lady passenger. | He says Mrs. Whiffie evidently has | an ingrown case of cold feet, Mr. Flote tna . but | am awful afraid. Mr. Flote says I could get right out again The mora men second the mo tion, They are se nice about it that 1 let them help me in the bawket! 1 beg them all to hold to the ear) tight about to pose as hapiechive| as it's poustble to do when. your heart is choking you ( Continued.) woe eee FICTION MOST ANYTHING FANCY Jof persons and events from the time of Christ | | | Be yourself? ' | i ick How much do you earn a minute? | | St. Petersburg ia built chiefly on| & peninania | The moon's from earth is 2 maximum 830 miles | Bryan says that if he te elected he distance | | will never run agai Then, for j heaven's sake, let's elect him. J. Saunders, New York, in 1882 ran 100 miles in 17 utes and 14 seconds. still the world’s record ee hours, 86 min Hite time ts | Highest batting average ever held by a pitcher In major cues was that of C. J. Ferguson, Philadelphia, | who batted 412 in 1887. aie PS Oren C. Benedict and wife, Pitts field, Mass, had just celebrated their sixtieth wedding anniversary | They eloped in 1848 | oe «2 | Mothers, do not let baby suck one jof those rubber “comforters.” All| physicians agree they are injurious. | Bentdes being breeding places for germs, they deform baby's month. Tomato sandwich! Great for hot weather! Cut thin slices white bread with clreular cutter {ato }rounds, Spread thinly with butter. | Dust slice of tomato with pepper salt and lemon juice | os 8 “Would you kiss a girl if she asked you? Was the question asked of Pat Sure,” he said; “I comply, I do, | Before she ask J. B. "BRISHC 1S Hotel ‘or. Biest Ay. and ™ Private Offies, tnd | be garding him tn bigeyed wonder Helle. nA, he pattered Are you the Sandman’ The Sandbag Kid started. “What do you mean, Kid? Here, you shut up now I'm going to lay low ta this closet and if anybody comes nosing around you tell ‘em there's here Hut thet would be a story teated the boy My nobody pro mother said it is wrong to tell a story No, It ain't,” corrected the Kid All good people tell lies. Your mother don't know She's dead a reflectively waid the boy. and the Kid winced But nevertheless he equecred himself into the p oe fore I'll start you In the fable bust ness, It's wrong to He and your mamma knew what she was talk ing about.” | And the Fauntleroy boy some: | how felt much easier. “She was) the goodest woman,” he said softly STAR DUST BY JOSH A Word From Josh Wise. “When business n't lookin’ up, th’ wise merchant ought er be lookin’ up busl- co In a Quandary ‘What's the matter with that tall) — man over there’ whispered the! manager of the big department store He's absent-minded od the fioorwalker Absent minded * Yes, he says his wife sent him down here to get some article that’s full of holes and he can't remem ber whether, it {s a porous plaster or & peekaboo wal rep How did Rake you find out their stock was watered’ | Barker 1 dabbled in it.—Life. Below the Horizon. Towne now Jigley seems to be pros He says his incom | just at present is out of sight Hrowne—"l should think it would he lives so far beyond it The Magnate. He gets rich step by step Puts coin away; And winds up with dyspep Sia To Be Exact “This meat,” protested the board er it ain't,” At a Time pays for anything se lected from our. stock of down-to-date appar el for men, women and children. Prices right Styles right. Terms to suit your individual needs Eastern Outfitting Company 1332-34 Second Av, “Seattle's 209 Union St. Reliable Credit House.” Se the waiter. “It's done over. This is the same meat you had yester Different Names. waid the old-time you are gettin’ right “l understand,” friend, “that exclusive We answered Mr. what mother an Cumrox, What do you call it?” Plain ‘lonesome gold or in U where. back 25 cents. The Famous Pequot Sheets and Sheetings Hill's Semper Items, Fruit of the Loom and Pepperell Sheetings are going at ONE-FOURTH OFF @ Ginghams, in the pop rings, are all priced at ONE-FOURTH OFF Steven the and Other Crashes, best grades included, at ONE-FOURTH OFF all Table Linens, priced regularly at a Tbe, $1.00, $1.25, $1.60 and 5 a yard, are all on » at ONE FOURTH OFF All Linen Napkina, and we ONE-FOURTH White Lawns and have OFF Linons ude, going now at ONE-FOURTH India Orr erable fellows, an unpainted, pop Swe eure ames shhh it from others who are striving and scheming to have it from us, laratripped shack stood, and the ik , clowed ne pre th, And what do we lose? ——- ae ee rs nee a prep j | fe ® wrighteyed, sunny | A glow of purer gold which should illumine not only our} |haired chap of Fauntleroy age and own lives, but the lives of those around us and shine long after getup 7 Here's where I lay out the we are gone. storm.” mumbled the Sandbag Kid There is more of practical fact in this than we always Then he bounced into the shack | and closed the door, the boy re the girls With Other Discount Sales Being Advertised in Seattle Remember, This Is a Bona Fide 25 Per Cent Cash Discount Sale on thing in the Store (including Contract Goods). You get your money right back in your pocket—either in Go For every dollar's worth of goods you buy we hand y Seventy-five cents does any department in the house. dered this store out of business, and the goods have got to go. Here Are Some of the Notable Attractions Included WHAT COULD BE SPARKLING. COOLER AND NICER THAN A @ UNFERMENTED GRAPE JUICE? Fremont Grape Juice Satisfies the most exacting. Try @ quart bottle for . Pint bottle for Halt pint bottle for . If You Perspire Evereweet destroys perspiration odors. Per jar .. Free sample for the asking The Quaker Drug Sema RST At ——-406 PIKE ST. Twe Stores. 1013-15 FI: J.W. BU Dealer ta Coal and Bunkers—Rear James | | Power House, 26th sm, Dearborn st., 2nd ave Boston st. Til Westers a | at Bunkers 1 Phones—East 8, led. East 102, Ind. 8170; Anne 1885, Ind. 768%; 3873, Ind. 289. Pe | _Renton { y eres; oy . Id Certificates—good any time and any- a dollar i District Court has or the work The U. S. The Newhall no better Stationery and Books, in big riety, now marked t . ONE-FOURTH $2.00 Kid Gloves, made, priced now at ONE-FOURTH OFF Merry Widow Velling, in the cor rect shades and designs ONE-FOURTH OFF Toilet now Articles, on sale a ONE-FOUR All Staple Notions, Spool Cotton | Royal Worcester, Bon Tor and everything G. D. Corsets, all go a ONE-FOURTH OFF ONE-FOURTH Staple H , including the | Shirt Waists, Suite and chotee 25¢ and 50c lines are now on sale at. ONE-FOURTH OFF ONE-FOURTH ‘Arko" Guaranteed Silks, well proven quality ONE-FOURTH OFF Pictures, Pyrography, Cut and China, are all ONE-FOURTH © Embroideries, w duéed to L4 ONE FOURTH OFF rth to “50 Trunks, Bags. Leather O60 Umbrellas are ue ONE ‘PouRTH :