The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 18, 1909, Page 4

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BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. 1907-12909 Seventh Ave. EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY Bntored at the Postoftioe at sea eee ie W as econd WRITE TO YOUR SERVANTS The ” sinar finds himse agrecal become himself at socia tocratic and wealt hap natura permitted to win talent entitled to a He € The attentions paid him are with design. His environnve at the the impo! pital is purp capital is pr rlance uw wea » ar a forget the needs of the farmer and city t trict. it is the up ate ashion ; »bbyin b th est or element wealth.” The to the vulgar pur over”; make than couragement Vested cap munity get a against ¢ The congressman eed h you keep to him cep in ¢ with y How close do see | him know Washir a fact that at Ps Isn't talk with |! withstanding fold your han at Washingt you rarely in nd still way let how y or in any he is your servant?) With his ¢ ave him .to worked by those influen ates want dev ofa merchant r at Washington don't. nt marine We want m for harbors, navy yards, channels £ tion, roads and reclamation in our United Pacific States. Th national pie has long been cut to suit the appetites the fa East and the middle West and South, while we've got th crumbs. The “interests,” fr Duluth to New Orleans, are always on hand at Washington to elbow us aside. We want tariff revision in the interest There's an army of mil milita Bide, at the capital The people of the United Pacific States can not get what of Coast producer nt stand-pat at our congressmen’s they want by relying upon an occasional newspaper editoria They must get into close touch with their chosen servants ir the national legislature Write to your congressman! Let him know bow y On matters affecting your district's interests you are passing upon the service feel that, no matter what influences surround him at ington, he is particularly aecountable to the wlio are powerful to aid and command, and to co od a st feel Let him see that you Let h Wash e vine he renders Sa BY FRED SCHAEFER. Adolf (entering): Wie gehts, oft Schmalzgesicht! Osgar (in a whisper); Sh-ti-h' Not so lout. Adolf: Why? Isa der baby asleep? ~ Osgar: No, My foot's asleep. tem a STORY OF BEN-HUR ‘The Meeting of the Nazarene and, Hur's recital of the wonderful mira Ben-Hur. jeles performed by the Nazarene Ben-Hur has returned to his an-| 3M bas learned that the two mys ‘eettral home in the Holy City, |!@t!0%8 leprous women prisoners re ringing with him Simonides aod '8#¢4 by Pilate from the Tower of er from Antioch. tusplred by *"tOMla are the long lost mother the faith of Balthasar, who was |f') tte! of Hur. Throagh Amrab one of the three wise men to whom ate acd "> learn: the fate of his © coming of Christ hed been | °° ones, for whom has sought lowed by the Star of Bethie. [F “!#ht years, and hears that they hem, Ben-Hur believes the Nazar |f"C \ {he tombs of the ane to be the temporal, but God the " ue Hinnor. Th given king, wh coming has 80 |, f es ~~ Pear news js pl Jong been foretaid. To aid Christ 7) 10 Fumombore that the Nazar when he shall declare himself king “PS (8% healed such griefs as these @ the Jews, Ben-Hur has raised | 4. “ ms an all night's search’ he three legions of armed Galileans to eng Oy aera ‘ "n nae ws @verthrow the power of Rome. As 2? "* ioe ping he is dixcovered by Giriat approaches Jerusalem, Ben. | Ms Mother and sister, Amrah bens Har meets him secretly, with his '"* nd sister to leave th and go with her to seek th The railroad monopolists| j ee erent A a nt ten ee teeta manana BY EDGAR ALLAN POE lady, with her throat so entirely ov forced, and then sud that, upen an attem to ra he They seemed to be the head fell off. The a ne person or persone well ax the head, was fearful “ id and drawn mutilated, the fort niueh \ hort m1 eh of humantty uing the fiyat landing To this horrible te » Yolces in loud and angry The next day's pa had thene voice Could distinguish particulars some words of the forme which ‘The Tragedy in the Rue Margue.| was that of a Frenchman, Wa Many individuals have bean ex-| positive that an not & woman's amined tn relation to thie mort vice Could distin h the words) nothing whatever he anepired as the a foreigne Could not to throw light upon it ive ive whether It was the voice] all the material teatime oth 1 fa of a wor i" Could} Pauline Dubourg, ta 1 a t what wa aid, But) poses that she han known both the | belleved the langnage to bo Spanteh.| GAR ALLAN: POL deceased for thre vare having Hen 1 “ r and a) Residing in Parts in 18, 1 be | Washed for them during that period evamith, depe e wn acquainted with M. ©. A The old ty and } hee eof the pa ered] Dupin, @ young man itty jeomned affections toward h The thin} triows family, but who, reduced to) eh other he wore Ox t thir w ita erty by 1 of hie family for. | P8Y. Could not speak tr ard to|lan, Was certain ‘oned tune, had Jost: both courage and| Heir mod means of living, Be-|Cowld mot be sure thet it was a] ton feved that Mime, L. told fortune n It might have been] came to live with me and 1} for a living. Was re to hnve | & Was not acqiainted found delight tn his habty that of | Money N had ‘ent in| with Italian langnage Could onstantly seeking to read the | ¢ Th appeared to be no| not distinguish the words, but wax ninds and motives of men and to! farniture in any part of the build | convinced by the intonation Som through trivial ¢ con, |1BK except in the fourth story he speaker was an Italian. Koew he end and cause of actions Pier Morean, tobacoontat, de | Mime and her daughter, V The activities of b ind he ex nen that be by m in the hati ' shrill volee was & that retsed his own fe amuse. | Of sellin nall quantitie ft ther of the deceased ment, until, on the sion of co and nuff to Mme L’Rapa Odeubeimer punderks in the Rue Morgue, o or nearly fou de Thie witne ie a Oe which | tell, he permitted t wn ceased and bt daurh ha . ing French, A i AmMuKement to take the form of a] Pied the house tn which t sex | through an interpreter pase fous endeavor to unravel o of | Were found f more U wx ar Ye house at the tim the » most remarkable mysteries in| it ¥&s formerly occupied by a jew: | wt They lasted for severa » annals of Paris cler, whe riot the eons | 1 abably ten. They were The teas came atten. | 'o ve sone, The house wa , € wwial and dis | on through the owing para | '!@ propert Mme. 1 she ‘ ated the previou aphe in ar ning paper came sfied with th ab ‘ t t one her tenar , brill wa Extraordinary Murders a, eeesit, “eatvaine ees at a This morning at th any lad ‘ould not distinguish the w t shabitant eh wae childish, W nm the J were a and quick aronned b ee daughter some me yu woke a arent tu fear Joession of t oke, issuing, “fing the atx re. The two lived | as well as in anxer. The voce was apparently, from the h . e——were | harsh—-not so much shr harsh. | ~ a house ' M e Did not | Could not ca ta ab 1 volee Phe} known to in t ree urpanc fe nes. | gruff vole aid repeatedly ‘sacre,’| of one ime. L'} ay and he fia ble nd on m Die 1 | daughter, Mile, Camille L’Kepanaye lady and (To be continued.) — | | “After some delay the gateway | }was broken in with a crowbar, aud jeight or of the neighbors en j ered, accompanied by two gen | jarmes, By this time the crtes| | had ceased, hut as the party rushed the f t of staira, two or rough voloes in angry con ention were distinguished, and med to proc from the upper part of the house. As the second landing wae} reached these sounds also had ceas ed, and ything remained feetly qu The apread themsaelve and hurried from room to re Upon arriving at a barge beck chamber in the fourth story the door of which, being found locked with the key tuside, was | foreed open, a sprctacle pre . | Itteelf which atruck ery one ¢ | ‘The apartment was in the wild st disorder,.the furntture brokeo } ad thrown about th directions | There was only one bedstead, and from thie bed the clothes had beer | | | | Gallleans, and guards him. Leay anti toul | ing the Nazarene resting for the |? ee see te enon) night at Bethpage Hur returns |1, Pass on his way to Jerusalem Eeerusalem and relates to Simon. ; “ry hey realizing that My their) the ‘wonderful ‘miracles per, nope, the Nazarene should fal = ole aye gy it will be the last time she will nee| Observation has convinced him [fy on on warth, kneels beside him | that the Nazarene, in whom he rec. |404 murmurs in anguish: “A hope! | ognizes the be now grown to man me bul “4 quenched, oh, my son | hgod, who gave to him the cup of 7M! Cyek have seen thee for the Water in Bethichem when he was '@** ‘ime on earth me Zoyne Bane drageed to the tatleye does #008 of the multitude Is heard in BOL seek temporal power. The Naz-|{he distance, and they go to seek Him, leaving Ben-Hur wrapped in afene will enter Jerusalem the next Gay, but not in state; with w mutt. | slumber of exhanstlor A great multitude come tude, but not with an army, The yo fi out from Gallleass may n as they came, ® Holy City to greet Him, way for there will be no swords drawn. ('@% Palm branches and singing an Miiboaides inquires if the reports theme sihey wurge up the slopes @f him be false. Ben-Hur admon. oe Seen of Olives a the fohes him not to judge too quickly chy © Bethpage, whence the Say atid relates in detall the wonderful “ is coming, accompanied by tiiings he bas seen. Again refer. (irons of followers. Ame the ring to his meeting with Christ as | {) yw appear the lepers, guided by ike. hen-Hur says: “The same th faithful Amrah. Christ passes Yes, 0 full of pity; so mystic, so” r up the Mount; the afflicted fat seeing! The same brow, about yt “ ralse their hands to Him in Which a halo seems to shine! But eg ope dh, t white ight the face of a king? No! Meel aoe att heir heads in benedic. With the meekness of a woman! |iin' her nene inate at enouence Sorrowful, but with the foreknow! te ra ‘i hea y? The Nght of edge of a martyr! The face of one | ;, Gree dness fille their eyen horn, not to rule, bat to suffer, and, |) 0°, 1’** proclaim themselves I fear, to die!” healed. At the foot of Olives, in| r the midst of the seemingly Innumer The Mount of Olives, able throng, the lives so long parted | <Amrah, the faithful servant of are reunited | the house of Hur, overhears Ben (The nd.) Sy Te Divvie. a safeguard that many men acquire after It is too eo.) © 6 J etood In one corner wer with horror than with eat not} vetonishs removed and thrown trto the mid dle of the floor, On a chair lay a/ razor beemen. with blood. On the hearth were two or three long | and thick tresses of gray human hair, aluo dabbled in blood, and} seeming to have been pulled out by the . | Upon the floor were found four | gold « an earring topar, three large rf spoons, three smaller of pewt and two bags containing | nearly four thousand franes ($900) | in gold The drawers of a bureau which and open. had been parentiy ified, @t though many articles still remained in them. A small iron safe was discovered under the bed (not un- | der the bedstead). It was open, with the key still In the door, It had no contents beyond a few old letters and other papers of Mittle comsequence. “Ot Mme. were here L'Papanaye no traces , but an anusual qeantity of soot being observed tn the fireplace, a search was made fn the chimney, and (horrible to relate!) the corpse of the daughter, head downward, was dragged there her twiee, aed « physician so or ten times. daughter, a “AS THE PARTY RU THE FIRST FLIGHT OF STAIRG eo UP ight en ZOOLOGICALS | BY-ADOLF BY FRED SCHAEFER. Knowledge iss power, #0 I sub-| TWO OR MORE ROUGH VOICES | bose horse senae ine horsepower IN ANGRY CONTENTION WERE} ra Der butterfly does nod toll sor DISTINGUISHED. doos she spin. Neider does she porter once or /ehurn, for dot matter | Ven @ dog vage bise tall id tne a! sign dot he iss In goot humor. Ven stir in a little coarme from, it having been thus foreed up| “Many other persons, neighbors, |% YOman vags her tongue you haf) the narrow aperture for @ consid: | gave evidence to the same effect. | go Bogen a 2 i how ‘trhteter,4 erable distance. The body was;it was not known whether there het rp Ms a slow trafeler, quite warm. Upon examining it} were any living relations of Mime. |) 4 ee ee many bruises were perceived, no|L. and her daughter. The shatters | Ueke | doubt occasioned by the violence! of the front windows were seldom | Def crawfish hase nod much with which it had been thrust up.jopened. Those in the rear were |S"? && & brook trout, but you pon the face many severe | alwnyn Cloned with the exception of | C224 fool bim mit a celluloid min-| aeratches, and upon the throat|the large back room, fourth story. | °°% f dark bruises and deep indentations |The house was a good not| You can'd wean a calif on dor of finger nails, as if the «itl hed| very old. milk of human kintness« } been th d to death tstdere Muset, gend Der hippopotanmes bass to 7) ter a thorough investigation | poses that he was call four-bushel mout to swallow von portion of the e, with-| house about y’cloch Hiddle peanut Diese | call a vaste ther dixcovery, th ty | ing, and foand some of space. ite way into a sm paved | sons at the gatewa A goot vay for a mackerel to yard in the ar of the building. | to gain admittance. Forced it open. | PT himself ine to in in where lay the corpse of the old| The shrieks were continged uti! | 4¢r first brine he fints bimeeluf io m : | Der boomnble bee a sveet : toot, bat hiss harpoon fas quite bitte Der hen sere for a Hfing 7 but der dog te t rit ~ jot der lifing | He Visits the Earth as a Special Correspondent and Makes Wireless Observations in His Notebook. } HOME HINTS | ——— e eis | DAW SUBSTANTIAL LOOKING FEMALE KARTH~ | | treaklast © cooke half BEING SEATED STIFFLY ON REST-UTENS/4 AT \ | willk and half water has a delicious FORE MOST PORTAL OF HOUSE vem SLLMED flavor TO ANTICIPATE /MPENDING DANGER FROM | wirnour ~GR/PRPED YWO-HANDLED | Dust pork chops and pork roast THUMP -THUMP WEAPON FIRAILY /N HAN D-~—— | with leht brown sugar as well as nnn Wik RERORT LATER DEVELOPHIENT: | pepper and «alt It leaves no nee = me pee | Sweetness in the meat, bul adds a } s ~ | delicious favor, A trifle of sugar i | al#o improves veal mipmignt ! | AND NOT | A toy dusipan Is one of the most jconventent utensils to keep about ja sink, With a brash and th dust jpan the sink oan be quickly | cleaned , } | | | w atripas of stiff buckram Jalong the edges of rugs which| have a tendeney to curl up. Boll a new clothes ne for half an hour before putting up. This toughens the rope and it does not snarl Brown sugar ts an antidote to} fait, If soup or gravy is too salty] | jen w AND oF Hemet down I, " ya an awtully Bhe—Mewliy? How's that? ‘ He~—I'm siways trying to cut down expensen and to keep. w eat Gneen—New York Tolawram, up and wete with tho lame and you rp to lim) atin, ‘Curlous-looking i? € pe army atch oh, wa at hau tfour yohan wtant ¥ ustte Alone God euffereth A woman can t fire for a to give C hem ’ Montreal @tandard at, "Tor coy to herwel ona. brown sugar © her to trim ship. and K her a | COMES AT PROPER MOMENT.) The fact that over three car loads | of 1909 wall paper has been landed | in Beattl ral Paint & Wall Paper Co., at 1314 First av, cent to 60 per cent less regular prices, to be gold di y to the public, cutting out all middle, men, t good news at this | partioular time, at 20 per than MONE (Without Comm! on mer, Bebe Pel H. Campbell, 112 Columbia TO LOAN ) ' BY PRISCILLA PRIM Is th ephotographer a beauty doc doesn't dabble with ble 1 ckle cream 4 t he accomplish wonders Just The w nt n imp Ite em ' it before th camera na ph aph anyone ca t a plate the amera ap the shutter and mak print, Hut what woman will be atisfied with the resul When or hard up in beauty oats or wrong in general make-up, or ba minent feature tke th ‘ t insists on spread ng tte © « » large section of the on the operator must me tae save and proms by his a And he mus att his « be wa gracef A Word From Josh Wise. “It's a sarcas. tie artis’ who'll paint a milkma in water colors. lan't He the Greedy Boy? Mother bone with wished For what dia aft caking the A Lachrymose Moment } Professor's Wite (to new cook) Does the pealing of the bells make New Cook—No, mum; it's the peeling of the onions makes me ery ie This Telepathy? Mistfess--A penny for your thoughts, Nora. | Cook™That's just what I was thinking of Mistress—Explain, Nora. Cook—1 was thinking of a cop- ber “*-. Easy to Tell, Condactor—1 can see that is an eloping couple Play a Conductor hunted look, a8 if some one was chasing them with kage of rice and an armioad of old shoes. Popular. Why is Jaggsley so much In de- mand as an afterdinner speaker?” tw say his he spoochions plece is usually . Congratulations Wanted. On entering hin club one eventing, not long ago, a young Philadelphian was accosted by a friend, who ex | They haven't got that| a five-pound | Because when It is time for him | | Poned ally for 7 ta ay particular stress on the ject greatly improved in appearance ce of frequent seances be-| as a result of her own efforts, guid camera and advise their pa-}ed by the photographer's ot y take. this certain beauty tlons. $n the interval between the cure » one wave the ¢ pho- tUme of the first sitting and that of tographer can detect 1 jnma of the second she has paid special at factal expre on that are marring to improving the carriage of h effect, and to him defects in eat She has acquired the or mista n hair d ng of holding hér ips a trifle at one parent. The correc: | ¢ pressed and has also cultivated m of these errors frequently ® ( facial expression be traced to his credit alone mderful transformation of The effectivene of the amera the ee origin ppearance ts method of beauty culture in- shown in the thrid sitting. Dignity illustration The facial expression has The first pi shows the sub arkably improved. The ject as she appeared at the time of lips are thinner and more mobile, her initial visit to the studio. The Sagging tines no longer mar the head is thrust awkward! ward cheeks and ehin on the neck. The lps are thick These pleaving results not only do for bea and the Hines about the eredit to the persistence and adapta mouth sag toward the chin All bility of the subject, but they also acks to 1 but mark the triumph of a new phase of her's art. On the 7 me tae figurations such ae ch they a ' is hailed om med eputable beauty RACE TRACK ENTRY LEFT AT THE POST wees up AGAINST | THe Rem THING BY AND ABOUT OPINION DELVING INTO HISTORY, WOMEN By Mrs. Catherine W. McCullough, Evanston, Ill, Only Woman Jue tice of the Peace in the United States. Adam was a loafer and Eve bad to hustle to keep little Cain and Abel housed and fed Prebistoric man spent his days chasing wild beasts swamps. When he got tired he came home and slept was expected to have supper Steaming hot on the table. And she did While man, with his ponderous stone club, was clambering over the Jurassic hills, looking for ninefoot Heards, his wife was at home tending her garden She discovered that cern, ground up aud baked, was a pretty good diet. She learned how to smoke and salt the meat her hus- band brought home on his lucky days. ‘She discovered of animal pelts as clothing and bed covering, and chewed the hides with her teeth to make them soft and pliable against her lord and master's delicate skin. She wove mats out of rushes, and thus in vented weaving. Then the cave woman was the first in the The wife teacher, She taught her claimed daughter how to spin and sew, and her sons how to make their Why, Charley, you are positively first bows and arrows and their stone-headed spears. Her daugh- beaming. What's ap?” | ter taught what she knew to ber children, and they in turn tanght T'm ta the greatest luck imagin- their children, So knowledge kept growing all the time, able,” reaponded the other, “You That was how history started. know, I've mn hanging about al go AMIE TRAINEE SOT ronnie pretty Yonkers girl for almost a year. During all this time she |} would never admit that she loved || apected me. But now, old chap, con she would only say that she re- || gratulate me, for last night she con-| feased that she ed me no jonger—-that she loved me!"—Lip pineott's Sauce for the Gander Shortly emony the prospective t called on the Rev. ¢ 4 Boston jergyman, to give instructions bef I have heard,” said he, “that you customarily omit the word ‘obey* from the marriage service, Will you please oblige me by tuserting it tomorrow? The clergyman promised to do so, and when the crucial moment came he sald; “Wilt thou, Lucy, promise to love, honor and obey? I will,” promptly answered the bride The minister went on wit thou, Ralph, pfomise to love, honor and obey” The bridegroom hestta stam, mered, gulped and responded: “I will,” evidently not wishing to ore ate a x by desiring an amended question, But later he reproac the minister Hut you asked me to use the w obey,’ protested Mr, Wendte, with a twinkle in his eye How | was I to know that you wanted it for the lady only?”——Woman's Home Companion The Sorrows of Man. For ten years I've been trying to} drown my sorrows-—-and they drown! No wonder! to learn to swim won't They've “* But What if She Weren't. Miss Boston—And that Minerva! How chaste and pure she looks! Miss Broadway—Yes, dear, but she's marble, you know see Do They Take Theirs Straight? The Camel (flattered)—Did hear that the prohibitionists had chosen me as their party emblem? The Hippo (enviously)--Why should they? The Camel Marle—1 think Chollie is a de- Wenetul dancer; he's wo Hight on hie ‘eet! Lilllan—-Whon Cyou're better ac. quainted with Chollie, youll din. rer That he's gn at both ends ‘own and Country, | had time you Because I can go tor| days without water, | suppose, When making a fruit pie stir the ft with chopped nuts sugar and flour together before add- | Slightly Roll in powdered ing, thus avoiding lumps of ar the pie. Always heat erackers before serv ing them with salads or che Prune Relish. — A @elicious after lunch relish ts Cheese Balls. made of prunes. Boak good-sired| A dainty accompaniment for @ prunes over night. In the morning salad is made of cheese and nuta put them with @ very little water! Take a large teaspoonful of righ and a half oup of sugar in the American cheese and molé inte « double. boiler, Cook slowly about) ball with your hands and press @ two hours or until soft. Drain off half of an Kngilsh walnut on either the syrup and place them Individ-|stde. Place one ball and an olive wally on plates to cool. Slip out the on each individual dish of salad. CREDIT! CREDIT!! CREDIT!!! CREDIT!!!! use your Credit in the buying of any new apparel you need—pay a little down and a little ata time for anything selected from our splen- did showing of Men's, Women’s and Children’s apparel, Thousands of Seattle’s best citizens avail themselves of our Modern Credit Plan—find it ALL satisfaction—why not you? Eastern Outfitting Co., 1332-34 Inc. Second Ave. a Uniow St. Seattle's Reliable Credit House*’

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