The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 1, 1908, Page 4

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_ cose nnesso-esreecetantanyseainrer iene: esetemmeati sight nuionioenenieenneser Soran ee THE SEATTLE STAR _ By BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. ~ 1907-1900 EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. PHONES wx These are exchanges, and connect with alt de partments—ask for department or name of person you want, BALLARD STAR AGENCY — 1400 Ballard ay Bunest, Raliard #08 EVERETT STAR AGENCY. ‘One cent per copy, wie conte Nvrered by mail er’ cartier. No tv Main 1080, vot 1H, Horegtt Brow, 1704 Rockefelter Av. Ow week, or twenty-five conte per month, Dev copies _Batered at the Postoffice at Seattia, Washingt “FO MAIL SUBSCRIBERS —rhe date when your subscription expires t* ow label Wh vives, If your subseription on trom che list, A cheng oe, your Feveipt oR fo SURSORINMRS—Should your copr of The Mar fall to by & AAY evening, please do ve the Favor to call up our main Benes, un Tote, tea. at, betwee nd 1.30 o'clock, and we with men ® copy at Af yeu should mise ore thas onus, please telephone us every i alpen donne tareraataanrt AN ARMISTICE DECLARED From Secreary Loeb, who has been arene missing from the public prints of late, comes the official announcement that President Roosevelt letters with the political opponents of his friendly and enlarged replica, Mr. Taft. The battle royal has been called off epistolary slugging, the biffing of Bryan, Taft, Haskell, Hearst, Foraker and the rest, who was knocked out, is done with. We are to have peace and quiet henceforth and no blood has been shed A general sigh of relief must go up all over the land, only]? muffled by the fact that Mr. Bryan and Mr. Hearst have not yet signified their intention to lay down their pens, furl their blotting pads and forge their inkwells into something that will correspond with the utilitarian purpose of the ploughshare Casting back over the pages of presidential campaign his- tory is enough to cause the shudders, when thought is given to what might have been the result if this sort of thing kept} up until next November. At the rate we are going, it appeared as if the bowie knife and the bullets of the days of Jefferson, | Jackson and Clay would be brought into use as the peroration | for all political argument. We might have been called upon to witness the unfair spectacle of the bulky Mr. Taft standing} ten paces distant from the lank Mr. Kern, emptying automatic | revolvers at each other, after the manner of the romantic Burr and the unfortunate Hamilton. How close we came to these times is shown by the fact that the newspapers have raked into Mrs. Bryan's past and dis-} covered that she was expelled from a boarding school because | she went riding with her present husband. Alexander Hamil- ton’s clandestine correspondence with a young woman was pub- lished by his political opponents and he was forced to bring evidence to show that the letters proved only his infidelity to Mrs. Hamilton and not treason to his country. Next March might have seen either of the Bills going to; the White House with ducting pistols, handily oiled, in a rose-} wood box, after the manner of the triumphal procession of! Andrew Jackson from Kentucky to the White House. At home we might have had Mr. Pattison and Mr. Cosgrove, never getting within range of cach other without their gun hands in close proximity to their hip pockets. But President Roosevelt's reluctant withdrawal from the} fray has saved the country all this. What it cost him to retire] from so inspiring a fight none but he will ever know. It had to be. The shadow of the peace congress at The Hague was @ warning, and the trend of the times will not permit of the “nothing barred” methods of olden days. will write no more controversial The indiscriminate Roosevelt, as to without a care A policeman who tntraded on the privacy of husband and wife ea- OnE OF THE CAMERA 8! SYNOPSIS: omergus Harrtmanium!—"Hold my maze.——Ahr har, cornered! — not needed STAR BY A WORD FROM JOSH Wi Better Than Nothing. To have the goods is a delight— The real, full-jeweled loot-— Put still, a classy bluff is quite A pleasing substitute. “=e The Silent Chancetlery. And yet a the noise and fray, Comes not a word from Dr. Day Of Syracuse; |He might hand out a ringing speech, Por he at that is Just a peach, But what's the use? . The Bitterest Kind. “Relong to different parties, oh'™ “No; to different factions of the same party” ~~ “ee Peroxideals. “The dictionary bem a1 finity as a chemical attraction. “Most of toeen he . Lobster a iad for sup per—that’s high jinks. Sawdust pane aareetins wii Sreabiees- that's gaged in wiping the floor with each other, was property bitten on the hand by the lady of the house. Such connublal devotion is worthy of a better finish than the police station. About the time the Haskell cloud rotls away, both parties are @eing to look around for tho man wh started the trouble and ob serving Hisgen, will point their fingers and these words to him say: too, are in the off business.” —___--— Mr. De Bruler, at republican state headquarters, looked cold aud repelling when asked concerning the rumor that “Joe” Cannon was going to stump this state for the perty. Mary Garden, who shows her alluring and rosy tootsies in Salome, fs about to capture a five-rmiliion-dollar prince. But poetic justice gets fm ite work. His name is Mavrocordato. We'll have it understood at the start that the blessings showered 08 Cadmus or whoever invented books, do not go for the man who hit upon the campaign letter idea. ‘That St. Louis parson who preached « sermon against kissing has nerve enough to write a letter to President Roosevelt. om ah WILLIE, THE WONDER L ~The combat fo the dark AS HAMLET WOULD TELL THE STAR—THUR THE TEDDYTRIP—BY JUST INNEGAN TARP CHAPTER IX.—Under the Earth. Familiar tracks tn the wildwood.--Terror among natives. Af" EI Sinister dingbat nabbed.--Tuesday on the job, gun boys, I'm going aft DUST JOSH hygiene. Tetween these two oml- hences, however, there's room for) some genuine Iving F Open Shetf nine in Pubdtic ad | ‘ary. Where are the tales of Sherlock | Holmes? g “A hot tip oft And where's the “Scariet Letter” but cold now? a Somers” Sel) Where are those precious calt-| bound tomes? And en those bound tn cheapest Where's Omar's song of verse and bough? Or Raffles’ yarns of midnight pel Where's Smithkin’s “Kasay on the Plow"? Al Bheif! Pray, tell mo, too, where Pickwick roams, And where's the [acon Shakes peare row? And Mister Stoddard’s foreign sew thought maxims. Prim and %mething wrong with Regey domes? spectacied visitors no longer frown! A rowing child develops many, | And kL. J. Libboy’s “Broken | gown the newer citizen and mouth | ™&ny Nettle traits and habits that Vow"? over that wormy chestnut, "Chil | @tip the parent's heart with fear; Where's “Down the Danube {9 & \aren should be seen and not heard!” | the habit of lying, the propensity Seow"? | Because, don't you see, we are be | steal, the tattletale streak of) The Brothers Grimm on troll a04/ ginning to realize the children have | Fellow; bat as for platn old every eit? “They are bitter political ene} And where's “The Way to Make a) ow", All vanished from the Open Shelf! Kavoy. {| Where's Bismarck’s letters to bis frau? The wars of Ghibeline and Guelf? They've even pinched « hyma book owt Shelf! HOW TO EAT ON COB BY FRED who ul got a cra I ° wp poli 6 ped it too; he chops the. kindling [Ec razor’s edge is dwindling. 500,000 RAILROADERS portation on many lin in the united kingdom, is imminent as the MAY GO ON STRIKE | resuit of « reforendum vote, The pein juniuns ask an increase in wages (By United Press.) averaging about 26 per cent, and LONDON, Oct. 1 A strike that | the definite limitation of the hours would uffect 500,000 railway em-|of work, with double pay for all ployes of Fnetand and tie up trans | overtime Consume the corn, 1 pray you , With the incisors, but if you mow ers do, | had as lief # razorback not take » strangle hold on the ¢ mitt; for in the very torrent, tem of gnashing, you must ease it al goat to see & robustious rum d very shreds, when going to the m such @ gee do time for burleaqu look listless in comparison; pray Be not too fastidious, either them without appealing to the ap the size of the ear, the size of th lambrequins, with this spectal ca than ye nm maaticate without t overdone far from the purpo tap of the gong and at the finish from nature, Now, this done too though it be good for a giggle fre dreas circle O, Mere be boobs ear of corn that so grunted and ¢ nature's understudies have fash yards for the makings. An innovation shirtwatst sleeve is a leg-o'-mutton with a couple of groups of tuck that ran from shoulder to cuff along the outside. Luna Park Natatorium, hea Alt water GENUINE OAK TAN GOLES. Cheaper to pay $1.00 for soles that will last rather than Tbe for & pair that won't MEN'S SHOE STORE, 805 First Av, Colman Building. SCHAE an I dope it out to you, nibblingly th it as many of your feverish f hog went on with the act, Nor ob, thus; but poise it gently in ye pe and, as | may say, whirlwh ong on the low gear. O, it gets um rip @ roasting ear to ploces, at with the same. 1 would hat ing Boseo; it makes a fodder alk you, cheere It Get hep to the rules, but interpi orting editor. Suit the action « ear to the luxuriousness of y ution that you gnaw off not my he ald of @ net, for anything #0 ¢ of cating, whos® end, both at thre is to grab off, as it were, pabulum much ecrabbed in the doing, m the gallery, ls bum comedy to the that I have wised clinching with an hoked that I have thought some of joned men and went to the stock On some of the hats airettes are u sometimes aa m on one hat new French in profusion. h an $100 worth Lana Park Natatorium. Sw ming lessons. vanished from the Open ita vanished from the Open, RAY, OCTOBER FADS THAT WERE. THE BROGAN, foot are more] hion in foot own sweet way brogan is passing but it keema to be Formerly .every would with a leather oman was the tough on the market unylolding nod. There upper and t was o f very ittle to the sole. powged shoe, and after the first weeks of hard wear the insole felt like a aMieh grater ‘por wa nly two together. Unuatly the it cut coptous slits tn the toe} to give his tooteies a chance to ‘culo, because the leather wouldn't brogan | lgive worth a hang. The waa cheap a lot of a had to ha working in them. There are too y tenderfeet new for the bro- | gan to make the hit {t once made. AN. OLDGIGH Run to earth The Rafl- nderground through a devious fiome of the large hats are dectd-| od in down curving lines, others; are flattened out, and all carry lo crowns ‘BY JESSID-MPARTLAY, A long time ago, say about ne or #0, we thought the most him, anyway ining virtue for @ child was obe- | Wollycoddle dlence. You are not saying much for your All that was necessary for little Child if ali you can truthfully say Miss Muffet to win the reward that|!*: “He never disobeyed me in his Is everlastingly promised virtue) life. | was to ait tight on the tatfet where| Jimmy, who comes bemping jmother placed her. and never budue. home in the twilight, breathing Even when the aplder came along | heavily, with his hair wet and his and frightened little Miss Muffet, ®birt on wrong side out, when you) ida't expect ber to move. told him not to go near the water, | And we've held ft up against ber | 8” be a car i a trial and a dis ever since that she took to her | *ppointment, but under that thatch heels and ran! of sandy hair he has real thoughts Since those dim, and they are his own most of us have changed our winds| Reginald, who solemnly wears about constitutes a “good |%!8 Norfolk suit and standup collar obild.” right down to the edge of the “ole We are replacing the old time | #wimming hole” and right straight thottoes on our breadand-mitk | %8ck to his mother’s side without howls and our drinking cups with ¢Yer setting wet — well, there's 10;out of fashion. Boys never liked! he was the original | j distant days }as good a right to be here as any of day disobedience—well, it's not 60 | }te--and In the case of some of us a | bad | tery much better right. | — | Doing just exactly as you're told, r and nothing else, is not a virtae— it ie @ sign of wenkness—one might almost say 4 vice. ; You cam take a normal, healthy! child, and, by working on it 365 aye a year for about 12 or 14 years, you can make it into a semiidiot that wilt obey the slightest quiver |] \ of your eyelash { Many atrange things are possible | tn this world, And the human mind {9 very plastic But'do you want your child to be & sort of humanized phonograph | & little machine that will tick out words and actions when you hare released the lever setting the! Wheels in motion? | | Obedience ts not the rarest, or fin- | j i i aS <a ost, oF most-to-be-desired virtue. It ‘ is not the actd-teated, virgin-gold of | our youthful dreams. 1 To teach @ child obedience with-} out reason ts & base betrayal of trast, A city misstonary once told me of | a little girl who attempted suicide | because she could not reconcile the | advice of the two supreme oracies | ot her life. i} The Bible said: “Children, obey | your parents.” and the missionary | | We said: “Don't go into a saloon. / Make use of our Liberal Credit Plan in the buying of your Fall Outfit. You're cordially invited to open an account (pay a little down and a little at a time) for anything selected | from our immense showing | | of Fall Apparel for Men and Women. Prices right Quality the best. Eastern | Outfitting Company When your mother aske you to get her liquor, refuse.” | Here is a plain case where obedi- | @nee was bad for the child. But no | one had taught her to discriminate | between proper and improper obedi- | enee, and she suffered in ber effort to do right | | Little men and women now play ing marbles for “keeps” and dreee ing dolls will need initiative, self-re- |liance and resourcefulness when | they grow up and begin to wrestle with grown-up problems 1332-34 209 They won't get it if they never! ‘i break over parental rule, never do|| Second Av, Union St. anything forbidd ment for themselves Little Lord Fauntleroy has gone never expert WA “Gus Brown” SAYS MODERN CLOTHES AT | | : MODEST PRICES r | A very important feature for you to consider, | | when looking about for your next Suit or Or | | coat, one we considered very carefully when | we made our purchases—how well we ed we are anxious to prove to you Good Suits for Men and Young Men $10 to $25 succeed Second ard Yesler “Where the Cars Stop” | A Table Linen for a Dollar a Yard That’s a Wonder Honestly, you can't Great it rey even at $1.25 a yard ularly in America This is all linen, a fine satin damask. 2 comes in various new designs, ufactare, ; yards wide; and is of Scotch man- A dollar a yard, two yards wide, tern Cloths, with a border all arouse but 25¢ each more than if by the yard; hemmed ready for use. Napkins‘ are $2.00 and $3.00 a dozen. Patterns and qualities are the same, A Special Sale and Showing of Toilet Soaps Castile Soap—4 cakes for re Scotch Soap—Violet, rose fj ly perfumed soap that < | and buttermilk; 1 Antiseptic Soap — For | ox of 3 cakes, —- chapped hands, sham- | ; pooing, ete.; 25¢ a box | Violet Glycerine—A nice- of 3 cakes, t | Juniata Soap—Plain and q ‘ c ‘ ’ ! ’ t " ‘ ‘ " Guns agrees with all com- giycerine; both large ‘ 5 pale! S6.cabay Sea plexions, 25 a box of 3 dozen. j cakes e French Style — “Guest | Our Special—Well milled i room quality violet, | cakes, old - fashioned Ls rose, sandalwood and | elderflower, oatmeal . Peau de Espagne, 25¢ a | and glycerine; 25¢ a fi box of 3 cakes. box of 3 cakes. Room Rugs, 12-Foot ‘Size, $12.50 and $13.50 Each ae = Burmah and Kashmir Rugs, in both floral and Ori- ental designs and colorings; size 9 by 12 feet; sery- iceable, le i ns rugs. Dr. . Denton’s Sleeping | Garments for Children and Splendid ' Values Dr. Denton's rment is the best in the market at low prices. They're gray, very soft, wash easily, cover the entire body oh can't be kicked off; ages 1 to 10 years; SOc to $1.00 a suit. Children’s All-Wool Gray Underwear, SOc to $1.00 a garment Children's Gray, Ribbed, Fleece-Lined Vests, Pants and Drawers, 25c, 30c and 35¢ a garment. Girls’ Gray Underwear, half-wool, soft and warm, ribbed; don’t shrink; wears splendidly ; 50c to 70c a garment. Boys’ Gray, three-fourths wool, real sd 5c to 75¢ a garment. JA. Baillargeon 4 & Co., eee: One Block , of SECOND AND SPRING, SE ORE ES MRE TS Te ae LOW RATES TO CALIFORNIA The great Scotch Comedian, makes three new for the abel owner of a Victor machine should have o —The Wedding of Sandy McNab. Tobermary. $2009—K illiecrankie. Sherman, Clay & Co., Pacific Coast Distributors. 1406 Second Ave. em your Household Goods (any oar service to Los Angeles, San Inquire BEKING MOVING & STORAGE CO. Cor, Thipd Ay and Washington Mate 1528; Ind. U1 “<egept ess antity) Through isco and Oakiand. BUY TIMPAHUTE GOLD MINE STOCK AT 25 CENTS, it is rapidly arriving, and will make big money for present buyers KAVANAGH CO,, Inc, Mine Operators, 704-5-67-8 JOHNSTON BLOG. DOWNING, HOPKINS & RYER, Inc. BROKERS a i te Wires q 304-205-206 Alaska Bid: t oF on Margins * SEATTLE-TACOMA ROUTE, Fare 350—Round Trip, 500, FOUR ROUND THIPS DAIL LEAVES SEATTLE — 6:45 10:25 a. m., 2:05 and 5:45 p, m LEAVES TACOMA -— 8:35 a mW and 12:15, 3:65 and 7:80 p. m “id a, U. SEELEY, Jr, Agent. Seattlesy | Tel, Main 176. Tacoma—Tel. MEALS SeRVED Three founa tripe daily wt : the Bs Leave Se ond 8 op om m= i

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