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+i he PCO _ THE SEATTLE STAR BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. 1307-1309 Beventh Ave. EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. IND, 441, These are excha and connect with all de partments—ask for artment or name of person you want, BALLARD SEAR AGENCY — 9400 Mallard ay EVERETT STAR AG Merrett Brow treg packete w Av Sunset I OF twont-five cents par mont Sunset, Ballard 908 One cont per 4 by mall or Attia, Washington, as second-class matter Sulered at the Postoffice at NOTICE TO SURSORINERS ou by 6 0 janaet, Mt @ copy at time you - zs . reach of givtag our auesertders a perfect service an be In (his way we ortaie and it te the only way ex = Husband Again,” is the “Why title of Journal Tf all the husbands I Would Not Marry My an article in the current number of the and all the men who are ever going to be husbands, in this broad land, were to read and digest the things set forth in this article, there would surely ensue a most tremendous boom in domestic happiness and a slump in the divorce market The woman who tells the story starts out by saying she band probably he he had been married 30 vears, that she and her hy live as happily as the average married couple, and that expects they will go down the years together till death break their bond “But,” much as I do now, I would not marry my husband again.” would not Then she tells why she Condensed, here are the reasons. Read them, ye married men, and ye who will some day take wives Because her husband did not manifest affection for her after marriage, but let her take it for granted Because, instead of waiting upon her in little household matters, he allowed and expected her to wait upon him Because he made her ask him for every nickel she got to spend and account afterward for what she had done with it Because he was less polite and less courteous to her than to any other woman Because he often “shut her up” when she wanted to talk with him, by taking no interest in what she said, or by mum bling at her from behind a newspaper wf his acquaintance Because he smoked to excess, filling the house with the stale odor of bad tobacco. Because he never complimented her on her dress, her cooking or her housekeeping “Oh!” you may say, Mr. Husband, “no wonder she | wouldn't marry him again. He's a pup!" No, he’ not. He’s just an ordinary, selfish, self-satisfied husband, perfectly ignorant of the longings and the needs of a woman's soul, and miserably unaware of his ignorance How about you, who think him a pup? Now answer! Do you ever give your wife more than one kiss at a time? Do you make love to her as you did ning her? Or do you think it would be silly? Do you frequently tell her how pretty she looks; how well when you were win some new gown becomes her, after she has worked off it for days; Do you? Do you expect her to live contentedly in a smudge of toba re you? how good a meal has been set be co smoke and to enjoy kissing a mouth that smells like a quart of cigar butts? Do you give her a regular allowance out of your salary, or do you dole her a dollar or a five-spot when she asks you for it things she Do you talk with her evenings about the litt wants to tell you about—the little things of her daily. life that you have elected your Do you? lo every service you she wants to talk over with you because self to be her comrade and companion and chum? Do you, in every detail of daily life, can for her? Answer to yourself and decide whether your wife would have any particularly good reason for marrying you if she had it to do over again and knew you as she has learned to know you in the years since you married her Concludes the writer of this interesting article: “A woman in love is the most tractable creature in the world. Why, then, can the man not keep her in love? That he does not even try to do so is the common history of wedded life.” True—absolutely true—and what a commentary on the folly and the stupidity, as well as the selfishness, of man For sometimes the wife does not go patiently along to the! end, carrying her heart full of sorrow as the to-be-expected por- tion of matrimony. There's nothing in this. You go your way and I'll go mine.” And then Mr. Husband that he has thrown away the most precious thing in the world to any man—a woman's love and devotion Occasionally she says, “I'm tired wakes up and realizes too late Senator Bourne, of Oregon, in the original lime light gentieman. As the Roosevelt second-ciective-term boomer he succeeded in keeping fn print until the day before the nomination of Taft. Then he hurried after Mr. Taft joined him at Hot Springs, Va, where, as the candidate's opponent in daily golf games, he is again keeping himself in the public gaze. As an unqualified success and advertiser Senator Bourne is ao If Mayor Miller is determined to carry out the program an nounced through The Star last night, in reference to the restricted district, he will earn the undying gratitude of overy respectable man and woman in Seattle Mr. Bryan has been elected an honorary member of the typo graphical union. This gives us a choice between a and a printer for president team shoveller \J.W. BULLOCK | Dealer in Coal and Wood Bunkers—Rear James Sst Power House, 26th ave. and | Dearborn st., 2nd ave. N. and Boston wt. 711 We at Bunkers Phones—Fast 87, Ind. 87 Hast 162, Ind, 8170; Queen | Anne 1885, Ind. 7538; Main 3873, Ind. 289 | Renton Coal Fire-Proof Storage FOR FURNITURE, PIANOS, TRUNKS, ETC BEKINS Moving and Storage or Third & Wasbingtom Si rent a. tad. 71 co. | FOR MARRIED MEN AND OTHERS Ladies’ Home] she says, “if I were a young woman and knew as/ OUTBURST OF EVERETT TRUE } Daw? BE FRIGHTENED, 1 AUST WANT YO MAKE CERTAIN STAR A Word From Josh Wise. | Man's inhu manity makes | countless = thow sands mourn, 80 does woman's vanity, b’gosh. This combination sweet Would truly be elystan; To have a grandstand seat ] Combined with knot-hole vision. | 1f | Were a Doctor— | | | | }1 wouldn't fourfiush much If a man were sick; I wouldn't hoax him with my jokes Uatll from fear he goes and croaks, 'd jolly him right slic | Then make my Ilttle touch | mao |. All the world may not exactly | love @ lover, but it always takes/| Dorothy somebody (who has been ex throwed away a iIPIANOS | TALKING MACHINES RECORDS «2. . | | LJ OUNC.WALLING Co.| 71 SECOND AVE SEAT TLE WAY MY DERTN NOTICE WON'T APPEAR iv TOMORROW'S NEWSPAPERS Will BY JOSH THE RUMMAGE INSTINCT | jloring THE STAR—TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1908. DUST quite an interest in his letters when they are read to a jury. Puck An Ultimatum, He has no job Father, | am determined to mar-! ry the man of my cholee Very well, But tt will be use! less to fix on this abode as the! boarding house of your choice, that's all.” j : ] All True. | “John, were you really visiting a! friend last night?” “And was he really sick?” You bet he waa sick. He never won & pot Father's Bummer. We hear « lot from poet chaps Who move our hearts to pity Because poor father has to stay And work hard in the city, | The while bis family enjoys | owe that the poet tribe missed its calculation. i For what dées father do But quit hix work at two, © And, after a most nifty lunch, to the baseball ground At eight dines a la carte, Then makes an early start § For the local Coney Island, Where the wheels are going round We hear about his tolling hard To meet his wife's expenses, | And how he sends away each week | His dollars and centses; j But that is mont fictitious stuff The poet chaps are strewing, | Por meking gray hairs sprout is} Sunt What father is not doing. » He sees & summer show a Where the cooling breezes blow, And then he gets a touring car, and | has a midnight roam And the only care he knows | la when this message shows } We've all been bored to death | here, and now we're coming/| home! Denver Repubiican. | | the ash barrel)—Look, popper Call Tomorrow And be relieved of that dead alive feeling. There ts oO ch ie. ARNOLD VIBRATION CO, 339-40 Arcade Annex, '. }17% carats | . |whtip Tommy Burns, Jack Johnson . Mie at "0 a 9 bn seen or anyone elwe, He couldn't train |by &. F. Edge, of Kngland meen We res ' ee Ladies and gentlemen going out : In Tastee of tb ity for their vacation are | #é'a, Gener fens ‘Gonna requested not to bring any typhoid There's something the matter, | fever back with them, cee lone This me worse mood than usual "| painfully severe and pitifully cheap | 9999909000000 0000000000006 FIN °°, BACT FICTION FOLLY FAME FANCY Pneumonia kills 126.2 persone} i Pili out of every 100,000. } There are 327,975 miles of rail in the United States: eee | way track = There are more than 100,000] md ‘ ° a WHOLESALE ©THE GQ apanene he United & > wo aunts of Jas Sherman eu samspade ght geste i Taft's running mate, spell thels —_ DRUG Population of polar regions in 80,-| ame “Shearman DOWN-TOWN STORE u 5, 4 400, exclusive of polar bears! ehie dee 8013-1015 FIRST AVENUE mo teen One. ee | A atreet car conductor's life neve UP-TOWN STORE’ MAIN rage yh yooa Date of Independence party con simply t vention is July 27, Place, Chicago. Chi Anson, dying pitcher for cago in the days of “Cap is in a honpital at Fresno, Cal Vargin Garvin, A book agent says door mats with| *Welcome” on them are all lars +R of ¢nberculomis Eighty-five thousand less acres of eee tobacco were planted this year than! g- wiey says “wifey’s poor brend | inst ota has caused more divorces than any lother one thing.” Women, this puts Siaves in Hrazil carned thelr free-|i) oretty squarely up to you ee dom by finding a diamond weighing tt Ie doubtful (f Jim Jeffries could ll Ed American workingmen on Pacific | coast obsect to competing with Jap. anese, principally because the latter rk 14-hour days for one-half of white man’s salary for an eight hour day ah Bed “ee “Another terrible calamity.” “Why don't you let your husband What's that carry that heavy basket of wet Mra. Gilteoin's directoire gown | clothes, Mra. O’Lympick?” got wet and shrunk eo that it Decnuse the poor fellow has to aqueered her to death.” be careful of his strength. You eee know he is entered for the hammer Boll the water! throw and weight-lifting contests.” “While the earth remaineth, seed time and harvest, and cold and heat and summer and winter, and day and night, shall not cease.”—Gen voll: 22 } sever, looked fearfully Into the next BY SAMUEL G. PETERS. room and then shook his head. A Bil Ward was «4 “grouch.” That was all there was to ft shade of disappointment passed ‘And Silas Ward didn’t care OVr the face of the little woman. | either. He said be bad so time| She bowed low ber head and was turning sadly to the door when the volce of Ward roared from the ta ner office “Who is that, Martin?” “It's just a woman selling mage eines, air,” sald the clerk “And why do you presume to dis miss her?” demanded Ward, ap | pearing at the door and eyeing his clerk aternty. Then he looked at| the little woman who still stood | at the door, a gentle smile trem bling on her thin lips, With men | Ward could be harsh. But in the/ presence of this litte woman all ‘his bluster vanished “1 want one of them magazines,” he said, and fished in his pocket for the money “Come to think of It buy two,” he added for a friend.” He produced the money for two of the Weekly Magazines. The jlittle woman thanked him gently jand went out. Silas Ward sat for ent 2 4 time at his desk and for once his FLAS WARD WASACDOUCH | thoughts were not on business. a a | Im the week that followed he and found fault and his clerk in| tried in a quiet way to find out the outer room moved about on| Who she was. He succeeded. as he tiptoe In very foar of aggravating | prided himself he always did. She his master. | was the widow of Garfield Rogers. It was at this moment that the /a former hard working citizen, who door opened and admitted a little | had died, leaving bis widow noth women In black. Her bonnet was|ing but his good name. Thereafter a change came over for women, and he proved it, for he was never in the company of ning Silas wes in o He fumed guess I'll Want one and she tried in vain to hide the holes in ber black cotton gloves. In her arm she carried a bundle of papers - Would you like to buy a od Se See ee ee oe of the Weekly Magazine i eg: Ftp ee Batt joe. ree * and asked of the clerk In a gentle voice. | Coming so close upon the sound of Ward's roar, the clerk scarcely d it. He turned round, how RAINIER CLOTHING 00. 1108 Fivet Ave One-Half Price Sale of Clothing Now on at the Crown Clothing Co. 1121 FIRST AVENUE Wateh tor Wri ve aa and a Little at a Time Open an account with us—our splendid, easy to-pay system is the most convenient way to dress well without emptying the purse. Join the Autopiano Club AND THEREBY SAVE FROM | $100.00 TO $150.00 ON YOUR AUTOPIANO. | Including free use of our ctrow lating Iibrary, Special prices will be given for a few days on | second-hand Autopianos, Some 48 low a8 $360.00 with free use of the muste library. Votes tn our great voting contest will be allowed on all cash payments. Kohler & Chase 1918 Becond Ave., Beattie, Wash. | Weber Piano Dealers. Eastern Outfitting Company 1332-34 Second Av. “Seattle's 209 Union St. Reliable House.” Credit {ata Ward, Mapectally on the day| mark upon the fact when the wh 1 Mugasines was his manner gentle| buke which he and considerate hepa | Martin happened to enter the pri ° Qo ° vate office he anw # pile contafiing |he arom at aines, which was a greater number r | than 3 | “distribute | When the eye of Silas Ward sur fo “I am golr prised the eye of the clerk on the| era next W edfienday,” te Mew | magazines ‘sk Diushed his timidity and he PUKE ST. WESTLAKE AVE, pe tad) a nk were STORE New stock of plain and fancy ink | ——406 PIKE ST. to insted no with the Vhereuyon, a he vet : pened. Kop sharply at him, em and carefull * lending to. the owgame te One day olne when | thing Ward loc od least 20 of the Weekly Maga-| dc Then bt Silas Ward clerk among could hia frie Silas Ward actually} To bide his confuste om Bilas. Warg | COSOOSCOOOESEOOOE SED OO ESO OSESOOESOOOOOOOOOOOOD then quickly extraete da box : 4 . The next week Martin, who waa| gars from a draw of te Laugh! Te : A knot th &351 mile perhaps 1 vant than he}and foreing tt ina Mapt{ an, had any pn noticed t yushed hi Thank your "a whl topher Columbus’ ‘married|the widow did not cme en tnt! pushed hi 110 te door an . bd life wee ideal y a ] 1 day with the Weekly Maga-| behind which the Everett True says he Is going in} ‘eo * Nor did she come the next) ished shortly tora clare was for physical culture | Weight of human heart averages! wook nor the next nor the noxt.| ches ily to eae the wound aay } } ; r iiutling, ° from 9 to 11 onnees until the clerk's curiosity over never heard nor whieh the expected to hogy ventured to re-\ from that soure OTe ENTRANCES me _ HOW'S YOUR NK WELLS _ FOUNTAIN PEN] a 7 ‘ Our big sale of Fountain Peng gp | reduced prices is still ig you need a new one—ga® now and save money. If yam old one needs repatring—ag ert will do it reasonably, f Ink Penetis, worth eoq ; Special ....eees GLEE ' i wells, for office, store or home priced to suit the Come tn and look them over We always consider it a pleas- | ure to show goods. times. The Quaker Drug Company Two Stores. 1013-15 FIRST AV, One-Third Off on Everything Is the Low. _ est Point You May Expect Us to Reach, and It Means Wholesale Cost Throughout the Store. The Stock Is Going Like Wildfire Now, and You Will Have to Hurty If You © Get Your Share. ie MANY PEOPLE BOUGHT BLANKETS, — Pillows, Bedspreads, Table Linens, Dress Goods and Silks yesterday and today atas low and lower prices than the same goods would cost in large quantities at the mills, There are no restrictions, and you can have all you want at— . 1-3 Off GLOVES AND HOSIERY, and all staple articles in the store, as well as goods of” every other kind, and are all going at— 1-3 Off THIS IS THE END—In another month the McCarthy Store will be a thing of the past: The U. S. Court has given the final order, 9 and nothing can prevent the closing out ~ now of the entire stock. It’s up to you. Get all the goods you want now at— 1-3 Off SUTCLIFFE BAXTER, Receiver For the McCarthy Dry Goods Co. eas —#¢@ec2 Don’t Kick Yourself Jones bought his Vietor months ago @n the easy-payment plan Smith only got his yesterday and paid cash. Today he remarked to Jones What a fool I was to lose months of music and fun! Say, please kick me.” Come and hear the VICTOR and ask about plan Sherman, Clay & Co. 1406 Second Av those Jones, our easy-payment