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4 _ THE SEATTLE STAR STAR BY STAR PUBLISHING CO, “1307-1909 Seventh Ay bE M4 ERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. BY JOSE ethic ot Fsccchily coh: ET a _ PHONE Main 1080, A WORD FROM JQ8H WISE, | lottors after Mr. Colquhoun's name IND, 441. | were “R, A, T, 8." Those are exchanges, and connect with all de ae Partmentesask for department or name of person A physician, upon opening the} yeu want, Lace joor of hia consultation room BALLARD STAR AGENOY—s av. Bunael, Ballard #06 ae heed fi Who has boon waiting KVERETT STAR AGRNOY tT 1610 Pa Am, Geneet 026. 1 have,” spoke up. the tafior, "I FL cr twenty-five conte por meath. De “Foealls te! delivered your clothes three weeks land he ough One cent per Uvered by mall oF nie per week 1 tree optes very Bntered at the ‘cept those which | ctfloe at Searcia, Whesuntginte, as seoond-ol TO MALL SUBSCREMRAES When Grat dite mnpieds Wy reese label of ckgk pe , Gate on the sidrese label te & renetn NBER FE RUNNE EES Sho. Pye dake wher Pour wubsowiption ae ee Me Te meme we the & to owl up our mal Yad. 441, Between and 7 rol, and it you should mie Mt more than ones, please you by 4 o'clock any evening, pleare Mein 1080 ject gerviee certain of giving our eubsoribere a Young Lad a oat got of you was so hard | couldn't eat it Raker (indignantly) — Young lady, |T want you to know that I bread before you were born Young Lady-—-Oh, I don't dowbt tt I think that was some of It you sold anticipation of a comfortable bed, will know enough to be able} ™* PoE ae Th ee A CAMPAIGN OF LASSITUDE mad Within their Election day has come and now is nearly gone a few hours those whose interest in the result outweighs “ee accuracy, | Different Brands. | “How do you sell your mustet” asked the prospective customer It depends on the kind you | want,” replied the smart clerk. “We sel! plano muste by the pound and jorgan mutate by the cheir ee Clerical Advice. A suffragette sneered at Mra. Humphre Ward's queer logic the jother day, “I know the prolix lady | was against votes for women,” sho not been any issues that might /#4. “At & lunch for suffragette in New York. by means of a parable be termed popular; issues of a nature to arouse enthusiasm |ahe pointed out her belief that the } ! 1 immediate home cirele, not the die on the part of the people and equally sprightly opp im OR es polling booth Or aenate chai the part of the interests. true feminine sphero Subtracting one platform from the other, leaves no re to forecast the result with satisfactory The campaign has been a peculiar one, From the spectac ular view, there has been no campaign worth noticing, except perhaps that portion of it which was enacted in the newspapers t in the memory of the oldest voter has there been a contest for the The word “apathy” has been used to death in describing the} The campaign has been worse than 1 interest esidency apparently so devoid of gener nonchalance of the voter apathetic In the first place there have It has been moribund of usefuin |} aaeure you. m the crowd | “She sald an aged Seot told his It | ™intater that he was going to make & pilgrimage to the Holy Land. | And whiles I'm theer,” said the | pilgrim, complacently, ‘Tl read the! |Ten Commandments aloud frac = « We dido't applaud, mainder that will bring cheers fr To Tom, Dick and Harry the is an insidious device which operates without callir tention to its operations. tariff is rather remote. y their at The bank guarantee law and the injunctions came the near-/top o° Mount Stnat.’ itv , » othe . | Saunders, sald the minister, est to popularity, but some way or the other they did not ap-| ioe Bide at hame and} pear to take that solid grip that was characteristic of other) keep them. “ | “* questions in previous campaigns The personalities of the two presidential candidates may] itude of the t and) Successful Pupils. “Your business college for young ladies seems to be all right Tt ts alt right “Do you give the girls a good, practical business training? In reply to that question I can only say that 60 per cent of our the stolid a vut by Not that it is certain have had considerable to do with voters. The fact that Taft was picked forced on the people has had its effect that the convention could have chosen a better man if there had been no Steam roller. But Taft's nomination lacked the) Ersduates marry thelr employers Spontaniety that makes for enthusiasm wide ile admiration for President Roosevelt, and in selecting the man The Perit of “Buttin’ tn.” whom he wished to be his successor he created the impression | store, and one day, to Mie great dis that the office was to fall into less able hands. Taft has served | SU** “ heared 0 sow clerk ony to 8 Tong and faithfully at the many tasks to which he has been! “No, madam assigned, but the domineering spirit of Roosevelt rose higher | fr # jong time.” than all of Taft’s perio: we heard, or thought we heard, the commanding voice of the| president Candor compels the adniission that as a popular idol Bryan | a = ag forme _— see no loager holds the place in the minds of the people that he | learned that the clerk's remark had Roosevel There was a With a flerce glance at the clerk, the woman, and said “We have plenty in | ma'am; plenty upstairs.” reserve, once did. But he is a better man, and better qualified to hold | ie “We. y brad, aed at io yt the office he has sought so long, by reason of this fact. Theil. : al eee magnetic qualities, which attract the hundreds of thousands Coutt to a standard, are not always of the character out of which 7 = , |ahe entered the drug store, “but are great rulers arid lawgivers are evolved. In losing his POWET | on a reat pharmactet?” to lead a crusade, Bryan has advanced to more sober and far-| “Certainly, ma'am,” ans , siege “ de clerk, Seeing abilities that would make him a better president 24 “Yeu haveve dip Tony - But the people have missed and lamented the inspiring r “Yes, ma'am. figure and the passionately pleading voice of 1896. It cost “Bxcuse me.” sald the old lady as “How long have you been in the x “ business * Mark Hanna over six million dollars to beat him that year,| “About ton years.” i i ime: “Well, | guess you are and many will assert that it took five times as much _ | Give me a couple of postage stamps, Bryan came a second time and was defeated, and a third | please.” P ela | time he was forced to step aside to allow another to carry the ‘The Euplanction. fortunes of democracy with even more painful results. Bryan| “No wonder graveyards are came before us twice in the heat of a campaign, and in the ra on Ome the hemegrome pal interim spoke wherever opportunity offered at Chautauquas and other places and occasions. In this manner he has Siete | ee <Se e ~~" @ common figure in our lives, and coming close always results| cuffed all his life, it’s only natural in the dimming of the glamor that surrounds popular heroes. bt bed Se ee Speaking in the light of past expenditures, there was no) ally for the purpose of reading his money spent in the campaign. Within the next few days this oe the philosopht- will be denied by many who can never see defeat by fair means. | eee Probably a million dollars was spent by the republican national | Pt WERE A~ committee, and for the democrats three-fourths of that sum, and money always has the ability to enthuse. just passed through a period, carefully noted as a depression Business has not been so flush in the last year as to permit of & great interest in anything « While there are all too many men out of work, there are not enough to cause any national The country has worry, and those who are working are thinking more of their jobs and their private affairs than of political problems All these conditions tended to a quiet campaign. We have elected a president nevertheless, and quite as effectively as in the days of the torchlight club. wear and teat on general conditions, and if this be true Probably there has been less the placidity of our pre-election conduct has been a blessing ———— convinced we The more we read about him the should » that Mr without TRANSFER MAN |U'd quit the moment that Vanderveer not be allowed to roam at large a mus zle, handeuffs and a pair of Oregon boots }I couldn't tote @ trunk rae S io If not so strong I'd join the throng It is from The Hague, the permanent perch of the dove of peace, | WMch seeks employment further that the news comes that Holland is about to throw the wooden |1q let ‘otheve ug the jeumts shoes into Cipriano Castritis. Down from the fourth-fioor fat i) ct oe Ger oa Incidentally this has been a day of deep, inconsolable thirst for Hor Bhs ser | wong one Mr those who lacked the foresight to “take one home” last night : Sloboy been courting you? iacepuitianeschpaaietaie The Daughter—Nearly two years Her Mother—1 should think he'd When the medals are passed around for ready letter writin rnc i around for ready letter writing, an | get tired of making love to you. honorable mention should go to James Fullerton for quantity The Daughter—1 guess he ts. At| least, he proposed last night car Maybe Captain McDona was afraid the chief would get “stuck” The Same Family. for the $50 reward | An official of the Department of a nes | Comm and Labor, who had been ‘ : ; : | directed by his chief to draw up a No one can overlook the fact that Vanderveer is running for of- | summary of the conclusions of cer flee anyway |tain distinguished }engineering, n horities on vt with disaster not jong ago, when he had occasion to A 600 refer to certain statements of Mr D WORD FOR THE AEROMANIACS 2% ‘cocsmn ees am gineer = The official had been told that} BY FRED SCHAEFER jafter Mr. Colqnhoun’s name there |should be placed the letters "M. | The fellows who burn with ambition to turn thelr endeavorings into |C. ©." (Member of the Institute rare channel jof Civil, Engineers.) That's easy With adventuresome starts into aerial parts are filling the century's cd re - mber, the official had said adopting an easy system of mne Th e t of the notion of perpetual motion, have given up squar ee M. |. C. 6.’ spelia ‘mice. ing the cirel iis memory syatem was of it Are not, as of old, turning fron Into gold, wr seek now to cura the |‘! avail, however, for when the of tubercle ficial handed in his summary, the For the most fancied fad gt this moment, bedad, is conquering the | ne unstable ether * , And every back lot sky ship hes got with a genius Unkering pe |SChOol Children’s Eyes ° neath her Given special care and attention by our spectalist, If you suspect any trouble with your child's oyes, we can advise you. Sehuchard Op Some are heavier than ale some are bullt like a bird or a skeeter; anchored right there, some are fome take « brief Flight, some drop out of sight, some skew and some | teal Co, 1207 Bec twist and some teeter —— 2 Some make a new mark, some lag like the ark, some go and then fail to gome back; But every guy who's determined to fly continu: to seek for the knack, For which sublime hope they're deserving more rope and not 90 much skeptical jaughter, Private = Gladanon And the survivors, if any (there'll searcely be many), will GET Why mm to eration Sn ad gate we're oer. " _ By yy A cortain man owned a dry goods | we have not bad any i mances, and in everything Taft did/|the amart employer rashed up to j “What's the explanation’ queried | THE STAR—TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1908. DUST. intereatin’, | age.” ain't dead yet.”|CAN’T BE FAT AND FASHIONABLE, TOO Patrnetoine atylos wit ty Inffluesoe wemen's chetles for wore thew te comm, mind their pe soba 4 tte developing — ragitytly | Ne woman who is stout oan wear | these supple, sinuous garments, in undowbted which fashion * that ashe muat appear or be hopélessly out jot it The woman who wishes to get rid of her unhealthy fat and revel ahttul bue sit » in the de once me ancy and slegance of and and @ flexible watet become an enthus Ineline to self-in~ itivete her witt- t be made well the of thie life. superfiue willowy fignre, and hips and, if dulgence for sacrifices rm most of us lke ushions and cream dispose of mu tamty pvuet « power and too m ie unnat but « " jet should be by starve and dangerou carefully chosen, and certain foods must be avoided, Speaking gener ally, starches, sugars, fate, and at shol should not be taken, for they idernens ot or cold water. are tr foal to wh A glass of ott with a few drop» of lemon jules, should be sipped white dressing, and m going to bed. It ia impossible to ay down an snalteratlie rule ae to the amount of food to be eaten, for the powers of Ngeation the individual OSGAR UND ADOLF AN ATVANCE GUARD IN AFRICA TH MEDDLING GOD | BY STUART B, STONE. that ’ king was out th ure for the price of a thick old sight omerald sete—big ving with ones Aftor that, Mr, Hawkinn preached the doctrine of the hatred ot wo. to the pationt customers |who lounged in the first ehair at thediig Nickle having Parlors. Mr } foolish, | ond assimilation vary with | been there-he had to know; and wouldn't Hawking b you have @ little tonle? Now the second adventure of Mr Hawking and the great god Jor cum fault of th forw didn't play Mer Devil cm fu the a hearse and tt Amply Hh that 1 i remove his win “ haunting dream d when Mr, Mawking read in the Weekly Sweepetake that Mlue Devil wae good “dope” for the Menrietta be resolved to rick #10 on The other barbers ridic bot Mr. Hawhine Inore venture to $60 and then to $160 And then, as Luther Hawktos en grandstand the uied the the « barb: climbed to where i had been days when bia dear } ping the repatrer bretias. and the observant guest had seid that the landlady had ther rejotoed Now the lady in red was very a ' well, Mr How de him. Und Hawkins him of the old aren momortes, prunes days s and f friendships and th th ne wore beautiful red lady days and the ait {ter of nixty centuries of witching woman was in her ayes, It wa the glitter thet pulled Mr. Hawkins from the dag#ling, mirrored ahop Ir to dreaming and talking of olden times and olden loves, Under the wilttior hie mind worked f another thing came to be de the hy the trip and the that Wik heart desired, Th f vm with ady tn “Mr. Hawking, with the moat triumphant, l-am-avenged look in the world, “this ie my bus 4, Mr. Mooney at, sinfully 1 by her sid led the the betting of backine Hine Devil, a great of @ finished race rapk outsider cried Hawkins realized that his with the red lady or on had cost him just $500 disgusted sportsman Dose Intrepidless Oxblorers Do Some Pioneering for Roozlevelt, und Rebort!| Vaiting for Him. | “MANY DAYS DIT WE TRAMP DROUGH DER VILDVOOD LOOKING FOR BEASDS OF PR DEY REFUSED TO BE AVARE OF OUR BRESENCE.” | Speckial Cablegraph From Ocger to Fred Schaefer. Roolo-boota, Compressed Yeast, Afika —Leafing der lightet coast of der Dark Condi ment, We squeezed ourselufe into der trackless interior to fint der haunts of big game, We dit nod elegtric | from der heat Dut All der Big Game Iss Nod Oxtinct, But Merely in Vinter Kivarters “Bint?” I knew Adolf wass crazy fen ad der Nort | Pole he voult be similarly. | Resuming, we hacked a vay our We wase now vere der foot of a Carcassian hat nefer valked on der ‘face on nadure. Par meet many haunts. Coult {@ be|asitiekle vines und parasitickle in- | becoss we dit nod aggombany our-|drough der jingle, und der dismiss: | seluts mit a trance medium? | Bote of us gums, me mit a exbrese rifle, vich ise att! in der exbreas office, being & quick caliber resolver varrantet to kill a elephant ef mixed mit hiss food For many solitoot Hetened like a deadly still ness, oxcept for Adoife deep breeting as he suspended him seluf by chewing der leafes of der el put. Dot iss why he iss #0 browed Soon we abbroached a table lant but dere wass po chairs visible. Biunging recklessly into der top ography, we soon reached der summit Here wase a herd of warangas, Obtaining aim, Adolf pushed der trigger. Dere wasa a piercing silence Ha!” I chuckled. Vot of tar’ wase nod | sites be You missed spoke Adolf, “1 ting ad a fire, Be my gun tas bitnt.” | | | helt for chartches, und Adolf mit) miles der) ed segta wase creeping on all sides aun armed to der) of us, especkially on der ouldsites. Hut animals waas scarce to on counter. Aldough still lifing in diss breginct, dey dit nod come in to retchister. Many days dit we tramp drough der vildvood looking for t is of prey, but dey refused to be avare of our bresence. | subbose dey brefer dark meat to vite Later we hat some nck. We cab tured a monkey by rattling a tin cup mit a noise like ® penny, Alzo, dere jas lots of biut sucking yam pires, Adolf wase attacked by two vich were dipsomantos. On der Wotarotta rifer we met some ifory traders. Dey wass al ready quoting brises for Teddy teet Dey tolt us der country hass been toroughly billed for der bretatdend’s viaid, und asked ef 1 wase der bret ridend, I sald, “Not yet Supsekiventiy we wass der guest of « frently tribe of vell-bropor tioned natifes until we discofered doy wass gorillas, We eseabed be Id hase no sight, haha, | fore dey fount ould we wasa nod gorillas, too. But our bleasure wass yust com- meneing. A party of cannubials tot Adolf wass a missionary, und vou took a bite ould of hiss arm. Der choke wass on der cannubial, becoss he soon died of ptomaine poisoning. Der less famished savatches {as more suberstitious. Dey vill nod eat a stranger unless he iss tattooed on der brisket in violet ink; “Gov- ernment lnepeetet, Chicago.” Der most vonderful natifes, how efer, iss der dwarfs. We heard some near usin der high grass. “Vot ise dot grunting?” sald Adolf. “Boers?” “No, you fool; pigmies!” I as- et. ot's nod fight dem,” sald Adolf. “I ean'd train down to deir veight.” So we refused dem to molest us. | Abouid diss dime we learned der| great segret abould der big game.) Id fae all in vinter kivarters until 1910, ven td vill be turned loose for} der big show | A most thrilling escabement was} der reason we finally left der jingle to ids future fate. We wass sweeped down upon by @ posse of head hunt: | ors. Dey wass going to decapitu-| late ys, but suddencely realizzed dot | our faces voult frighten defr chil tren taken home to dem. So dey fled, leafing us tled to a ouldpost of clvilizadion. Bi remittance me here ad $1 per vort ea. ih Beite a ¢ New Directoire Me to 99.60 ted stock Interesting News Regarding fully wo We've g | ‘ showing of neta Cloths, Sets, Teaand Tray Cloths, Alt have borders all, Table Linens ri, sme ya Buying your Linen in Pattern Cloths caused by straightening, a - Saves the buying by the al lished design le ngth we Instances also there is a border all ar ud, a the cost for these above what the sa by the yard is but a trifle—ir i for the entire cloth—and the ce These Linens of ours are | st linen Scotch damask, fan ghout the their beauty and service. We've them for years, and know, with hut payee Uustomers, their absolute reliabilit o Hemstitched Cloths, of Heavy Satin Damask 36-inch squire, 85c, $1,00, $1 $1.50 " : " each; inch, $1.75, $2.00, $2.2 hy 4. 4-inch, $2.00 and $2.25 ; 64 OO and $2.75: inch, $2.75 and $3.50 i” 2 yards by 2 ards, $2.50, $3.50 and $4.2 i2bys DesignomAn rds, $4.75 to $ yards, $4.25 and $5.00. 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