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THE SEATTLE = W STAR PUBLISHING Co, oe 7.1908 Seventh Ave. EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. Bovered at ine lone matter ostorn NOT JUDGE, BUT JUSTICE IS SACRED at Beattie, Warhington, as second 3 Daniel Mr Thew Wright who, as a mere SAYS SOME most remarkable Gardher, printed yesterday in The Star, must ¢ © ferentiated from Justice Dar Wright & coutt of the District of Col They man, but in different capacities And yet what Mr | ing upon the full authority Wright Mr. Wright, as €riticise Justice be able at all Cfiticised justice Failing to so satisfy the criticised judge, it would appear] private citizen things in an interview by Gilson | autiously be dif Chew of the upreme one and the same nbia are Wright says must be accepted as com nd with the full approval of Justice warns the public that it cannot mere man Wright except at its peril The public must Wri f its criticism times to % lustice ght himself (or any wy judge) of the The Conclusion. DY Tho sailor had recovered his that not congress nor the president, nor even the constitution, | presence of mind tn & groat meas : while Dupin uttered — these GaN vave, Justice Wright implies the latter by declining to an-| Words “tok ae dehatnal Salbmene Swer Gardner's direct question Jof bearing waa all gon | So help me, God." sald he,} But ever Justice Wright, whose official power, says Mr.| scr a trot tun a hey Wright, is greater than that of congr and perhaps tran-| you all I know about this affatr but I do not expect you to belleve Scends the constitution—even Justice Wright has no authority | ooenait | way—t wo > = 4 €© restrain a frank discussion of the remarkable utterances of | indeed if 1 did. Still 1 an cent and I will make a Mr, Wright, mere citizen Sonal it X des toe tat Justice Wright—so Mr. Wright would have us understand; What he stated was in substance ., | thi He had lately made a voy being a judge, is infallible and irresistible, and to express a Sabin crekaeiines ty @oubt of it, which doubt is not shared by the judge himself, is; at Borneo and had orang-outon te one of the greatest crimes in the calendar. | kreat trouble ‘Gacauanet te — Only it happens not to be in the calendar of crimes, Con-| intractable ity of his captive 7 ho at length succeeded in landing _ tempt of court is the creation of no statute, in thi MNAtTY OF} te’ satoly in Paris, where he kept may other. It is judge-made “law.” Its only basis is prece-|{t carefully secluded until such . SS a ve has| time as It should recover from « Gent, and precedent is only a decision which some judge has) young in the foot received from a formerly rendered, whether just or authorized, or not splinter on board ship. His wlth eee i om ‘ Sen a #4 © design was to sell it Do object to the judicial system is to advocate anarchy,|"Ricirning home on. the night,| Very wood; but the objection is net to the|or rather tn the morning of the ele. | mur he found the boast occu put to the acts « divic who ar i but he acts of individual men who are el sotea: te Giem tedeobens, tenn whee _ vated to the bench, and to the method of this elevation it had broken from a closet ad ont fails to note e icig] | Joining, where ft bad been, as | Many a man on the bench fails to note where his judicial | 8 thought, securely confined. | prerogative ends and his personal prejudices begin—where he | Razor in hand and fully lathered, | it was sitting before a looking S Ceases to be the court and becomes common clay The president of the United 4 ; fously watched tts master. Ter ‘ 9 the proo! who could States Senator as a liar, and produces the proof, but who co jatied 0s tap ait ot op doneecoes construc this to mean that the senate is an official source of|a weapon in the possession }of an animal so ferecious and ao well able to use it, the man, for * attempting the States denounces a United! shaving, in which it had prev jto do. He had been accustomed. however, to quiet the creature, even | im ite flercest moods, by the use of th, and he claps you into jail unless you can satisfy him that Jow estimate of his act is correct. He decides the point ‘The rights of free speech and of free press, Mr. Wright Neg) * this be now resorted. | would have us all remember, are not guaranteed by the constitu- | sprang at ones through the door of Very true. But the Declaration of Independence estab- | {}* chamber, down the stairs, and) them among the inalienable rights of men; and, since) The sailor followed in despair; Morgue, the ape's attention was ar reated by a light gleaming from the open window of Mme L' Espa naye's chamber, In the fourth story open and ite contents lay bealde it) was just discernible. The fury of} A Practical View. ‘ ow ; man of her house, Rushing to the build on the floor. The victims must! the be whieh no doubt bore stilt! ae i | “If you don’t play with your things ing, it perceived the lightning rod, have been sitting with their backs in mind the dreaded whip, was in . ncle: Huh! you get your Mot | and leave me alone, Fi put you tn 9 onsy—$100 for a two-hour com|, dark closet.” The man glared; | the Princess Wilhelmina blinked, Pianist ephew: Ab, but I get) and Carlotta backed about. “Thi | noxpins for pra oa | OO crowd—if a fellow only kne a nele: By you mins P. @ O.'s going up. % Ine o not being a doctor Then Carlotta isid the royal ' a e When ts an actress not a0/bed, taking care that no waking of. beet, four tablenpoons.| take from fire and add beaten yolk Shel don't know.” He] light glared into the placid, sea ff water; one teaspoonful of | of two eggs; roll in ogg and cracker | Chines cat of ton Kansas fe 2 orgy poll hin ne Nandi pore rene appara : | j City Journal ped over to the man again and) @% IMMPROWH PARRICUTAD ccpAER 2 CALLED HER DARLING. | tigen shouted “Boo! !” doesn't know how silly he look ae one. enmapnenatel of | A young cadet was complaining . om ‘and one tabsespoonful of} A well known Seattle woman. | mang The man jumped nearly from bis because some other man down town Put the butter and onfon|*!0** given name ts Mary, as is jof the tight fit of his uniform. “Why, | chair and shook his fist. “Ugh-t-h'” | got the eame dollar he was after—- a emelet pan, cook until the) sie? (be Ramme of her daughter, had father,” be declared, “the collar | he growled once more; and Carlot-/and the papa man is eo angry that ite frowned and take from|ts Int entontenent un de presses my Adam's apple so bard/ta twirled about like a dervish he thinks he's a tiger, you know.” Ee Moat she egue-tntil wolllered that the esrvant’e name, toa, {can taste cider!”—Harper's| “The bears,’ she pleaded. “Tell! ‘The man turned a shameful red |, not light, add the sall, pep was Mery Eagtes kly 2 eee me about the bears, please, pop.” and managed a sickly grin. The yéley end extract of beef spon there enmued a atrug-| ee 5 He snorted the angry man. | Datch princess kept her lips part- St be wened: mix well. Stand bing ticant to Fe- | “You go around borrowing mor Do you think I ean figure out this ed in an understanding smile ipan over the fire, and when linguish her idea that she must be and yet you seem to be prosperous.” | deal with a kid jumping all over Now,” the child went on, “if the ie is the sixtere. addresmed by her Chvtetion unane | "T am. How do you manage it jmy back and yelling about bears | papa man would play buck-horsey the eggs are thore ’ 0 mle aed My motto ts, ‘Always put off till land princesses? 1 won't stand for and hold-thegateshigh and come fold and turn on a@ heated ctreuma tances. aid tomorrow thy you have done to- jfer" * tosee with you and me, he would ed gawd ot énce to the table. | the lady of the he day Cleveland Leader Carlotta slipped from the pres-|soon be so happy that he would ing to 1 | oo % ence of the worried man and sat; not be angry any more, and he Deimenice Pudding. your Inst The reason a girl likes to have|in her own particular corner in her could get that doliar back from the quart of milk, three table music lessons ia, it is such a good|own whiteand-gilt chair, hard by |other old bethered man down corn starch, mixed with the girt excuse for not being able to help|the castle of Yak-Buffalo Bloeks, | town.” cold miik, the "yotks of five sl — do any pg. New nm pone at the anne of the Wilhelmina, tilting backward, al- beaten with six tablespoons ‘ork Press. Z jue Paper Doll People and tmme- lowed her drowsy Dutch eyes to ‘gt sugar. Roll three or four Beanie | nat te Tg | Gtatety Susie 4 tiny bense bed | droop, but the man by the fire ac: Pour in a pudding dish jogs no » vg a ge stening : he key vee - veer 4 ae sleeps. ones chuckled about onehalf hour, ole is a womans tric Mrs.| There she remained for a minute, “By George!” he muttered, “the the whites of the exes with , «gd mag, of est | Hixon—“Why a woman's trick? |undecided whether to cry out for child's right.” Then Here, you Aablespoonstul of sugar. spread : on | Mr. Hixon—"Isn’t it Eves-| very sympathy, or to be angry at| morality prattler—prop up the roy- the top and retorn the pud- training it an art. | The dropping Baltimore Star, | worn business man, or to arouse al Wilhelmina and let's have a rip Se the oven until it in a dele ee eee Ty iederetesne eae ‘er jthe Princess Wilheimina from | roaring, foot stamping, ring-around cate brown } ficult thing, It looks easy, but it Is Courtesy {s the bond of all so-|dteams of doll dragons and pies |therosey game, Come on—you A — jhard; and thue"—Mr Hockefeller clety.—-French to toll her the story of childhood | Dutch princess—all hands around ad Croquets. smiles—"thus it te like the man at Bee ig |neglected. Carlotta decided on this | now-—here we go!” eit im palted water 20 minutes | fe ee eine tor wie por Mrs. Jinks—"My husband doesn't |!ast course, and the princess had| And when her royal highness of Pairs of sweetbreads. Throw trait, suid impationtiy to the play poker any more. He promised |to open her sleepy eyes. Holland-in-dotidom really slept by into cold water for a few artint: A i me not to.” Mra. Blinks—“Doesn't| In the corner the grouchy man |the side of the wise little mother Remove the skins and lit-\ ant sepreasion you dearest" he 5 anything at all?” Mrs,/Muttered: “Bulls—66\—sell short | child, and the fat, red papa man sat Pipes, cut them into dice, add Y nis ¥ ia th |Jinke—"He says he only plays|~Bank of England,” and lots Wke!|in the easy chair, panting from his Tntteeded mushrooms. Put a table ea. percent mee Pharoah;' must be some Biblical| that; then he relapsed into moody | hour of riotous play, he really found I of batter in a saucepan Te REE SB ALS gt | FISHERIES BUILDING TO HOUSE THE Fis $ EXHIBIT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, | game.”—Syracuse Herald | sllence the solution of that bull-bear, A, B it bubbles, add one table Herald. ssiniesiiines rd ue REN e i . * | “it's this way, Withelmina,” be-|and C deal, so that next day he ac- fal of flour, cook well, add’ 1, 1907 3,123 miners were killin i — . PICK-UPS. jsan Carlotta. “You see, when aquired the other men’s dollars right Ome gill of milk and a wete 8009! In this country the living forces of this cosmopoll- A cheap pair of gloves don't al- | P&P# man goes down town to make | along. SHATTLOS WORKINGMEN Liv: Silent Mves for 6 most part |"Many « flower is born to blush on and waste fis fragrance on the ert air,” sang the poet. Many « workingman's life is live ‘ in this bus honored b and stab way, a these Thetr deeds shame miltte oftentimes, It is easy for feller te . a Chi university e to om 10 reading public ts helpful Yet the irred in this it an uct that we. ob Hh Having an city at th and the goowe borrow a saying from my Mooster friends But ncotdents wi Whitle acting a4 ni © fell on @ pipe tine, ewin & Wiley, at the corner and Bighth ay Witicken and the ne family became of W In a moment he was bread problem of ite Cholly—-Can you flag the next train for me, my deah fellow? Station Agent—Sure, if ye'll stand beyant th’ station where th’ | His “tes were unkeeded by many fnginoer won't seo that It's for th’ Ilkes o' ye he's stoppin’ Rie Good Mamarttan fe cortatnly upto operation of} But v venture a grimace at the appointee of a president on the some moments, was at « loss what! j | | } ) } the ape, rator still tn hand, made nor the president, nor the courts, nor the states have | (1° “Ph Wha. Continued tor # lone | granted power to take them away, they remain with us. | time. The streets were profoundly No man will ever be in contempt of court if he shall remem- |auiet, ax It was nearly 3 o'clock jin the morning. in passing down that it is not the judge. but justice, which is sacred fan alley in the rear of the Rue GARVIN’S CORNER elve, yet it ix fine to receive with] No man can invent an excuse ateful spirit, | Steadman knew | original enough to be patented BY THE REVEREND JOSEPH L. GARVIN “in to mf | There are people who belle leverything they hear, and a lot they PASTOR OF FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH | don't stantly converted C »| scious of having ment, into fear deserved ned deslrous of con puniah- | al ing it y deeds, and skipped | | about the chamber In an agony of | EDGAR ALLAN POE rvous agitation, throwing down and breaking the furnite a moved and dragging the t the bedstead, In conely Slambered up with inconceivalff , toward the window, and from the coin Tret ee Pd Foye? cae agility, araaped the shutter, whfoli| time clapsing between the tinge tor and throst it ap the chimney, | } wae thrown fully back agninet (hh) of the beast and the scresms tt | f itdbit probable. that it was not im. |** !t wae found; then that of the| wail, and, by ita means. swung Stee - old lady, which toimmedia hurl | direetly upon the headboard of the ately perceived. The flapping . | ed through the window headlong bed. The whole feat did not occupy | to of the shutter would naturally da the Ape approached the ease A minut The shutter es es ¥} ~ Penge od te od Mer — ment with ite mutilated burden the open again by the orangoutang Aj 6 th wf looked in, the gigan- |W. shrank mehast to the rod,| it entered the room the animal had noleed Mr and, rather sliding than jambering fhe sailor, in the meantime, was! L’Kepanaye by the hair (which was j down it, hurried at once home both rejoloed and perplexed. He |loowe, ax she had been combing It),| Groading the consequences of the had strong hopes of now and was flourtehing the razor about : | chery and gladly abandoning, in| ing the brute, as it could y | her face in imitation of the motions cae gh celidiods about on cape from the trap into which ft barber The daught lay 4 r ' fate of the ank-oulang The had ventured except by the rod,| prostrate and motlonions » had words heard by the party upon the whore it might be intercepted an tt wooned The screams and strug staircase were the Frenchman's came down, On the other hand gies of the old Iady (during whieh |®° atria clamations of horror and affright ther waa much cause for anxiety the hair was torn from her ad) ‘ mingled with th fiendish jab as to What It might do in the house, | had the effect of changing the prob: |) ore ot tha teoatn This latter reflection urged the man! al pacific purposes of the orang I have een Bet saything to add.| to still follow the fugitive, A light outang into those of wrath, With | ap, orenpon mpd ‘gmat have 4 ning rod tn ascended without diffi-| o rmifed aw of its mune 4 trom the chamber by the rud culty, especially by a allor but ta it nearly severed her head wat before the breaking of the door when ho had arrived as high as the! from her body, The sight of blood |/ “ It must have closed the window as it passed through It. It was subse — | quently caught by the owner him self, who obtained for ita very large sum at the soo Lebon was instantly released upon our ration of the clroumstances (with some comments from Dupin) | at the headquarters, The} chief, however, could not altogether | con his chagrin as fain to indulge In the propriety his own busin 1 im talk id Dupin. “Let him discourse; it his con science. Lam satisfied with having defeated bim in his own castle Nevertheless, that he fasled in the solution of this mystery is by no means that matter for wonder which he in troth, he ts police aroasm ay two if every person mind-| ing eane pposes it, for somewhat too cunning to be pro-| found. His wisdom is all head and| siders, like a codfish. But he in| d creature after all | (The End.) | STAR DUST | A Word from Josh Wi “WITH INCONCEIVABLE AGIL. ITY IT GRASPED THE SHUTTER AND SWUNG ITSELF DIRECTLY. UPON THE HEADBOARD OF THE BEO.” window, which lay far to hin i his career was stopped; the me that he could accomplish was reach over so as to obtain a lim of the tatertor of the room. At siimpee he nearly fell from his bo! “A man mum through excess of horror. Now a Accurate. wes that those hideoms sh inflamed ite anger into frenzy.) peac 4 thick is the) arose which startled from slumiffM™l Gnashing tts tooth and flashing fire|,.unse" | t°™ | the Inmates ef the Rue Mo from its eyes, It flew upon the body 5 Right thousand Mme. L'Eapanaye and her daugh™ of the girl and imbedded its fearful | ines aed ‘sis inches, ter, habited in their night clothes,| talons in her throat, retaining ith! Teacher: How do you get the! had apparently been occupied in ar. grasp until she expired. its wild| / ranging some papers tn the irty§jglances fell at this moment upon| chest, which had been wheeled info! the head of the bed, over which the the middie of the room. It wae) face of its master, rigid with horror Johnny? six inches, Johnny inches of snow Jon Because x fell last night 96 fn mae: Menuedl to etve th ways got the glad hand Even the fellow who likes to got his farnily ja run for his money may win in a fate A stranger finally gave ee jn wife, upon whose shoulders | walk Broken im seven places. more | Was thinking of some one else. ried ohe regrets that the church or work now for the Willing worke So the workemne jean isn't @ brass band t Rated Tae ieee “Howe prosshes might {thorn shouldn't prejudice us against to the Be! never be Rut for the in-| the sweets of life pitals | five blo deods as thia| gome feliows complain that they the at kes ituhwod f he toler rhe | diac be peso the totter might) don't get all that’s coming to them, | The wean ts aoe tter. In| and are lucky at that ite of the fact that per cent The people who sneer at us ordinate the eens Satay, ac- | would probably be very much sur ork editor, te made. ‘orien | prised to know what we think of| suleldes and evil acts 6 | them. | b is for) Some women are such bargain | hunters that they would gun around jfor cut rates for a surgical opera had to Hv y mut of the destruct | hearts, lines te: tion, brought ‘ 4 most De Tanque—"Oh, I believe tn al Nght forth ‘a noble deed surro »nen | short life and a“inerry one.” Wig! and delegating one at their | this , m com: | Was Well, I guess you'll get the Act as apokexman, went| mon lives tat iis Weleht te| benefit of the first half of your 1and placed the money, | haw an ol vatlog and ennobling in-| theory, all right initcatetliiads oxo ear Now, matrimony and olives,” be: is men who did this! gan the Cynical Buchelor. “I fail] Ailently they made this sacrifies.| did Ht in the working mens apirit of | 880 the ¥ ~ Silently thay relurned to thelr toil.| love towards a fellow in. trouble. |to see the connection,” interrupted | pet oy elt ft Seattle A aw all sate Hhny that spirit pave ail in ‘a midet.| the Married Man Both are cultt iMucbeates what is common emong| worst of men and semathing bad in A tontes,” explained the Cyaloal ° Lot not thy lett hand! the heat of ua. tom | Bachelor now alieve that the to | _ ———— wald not i od Ve JONOG, ato} . eet. f tes nat = us| Dance Tonight Rover | 4 ho nor te tine theu Dance tonight (Saturday) at dreds | 0. living In a wach! Bark pavilion. Gentleme act. perform ail of 4 Going hevolo ena inapire | pathy ina bond thet helgt in pla | 50e; ladies, free cit jcommodation, jand children’s apparel EEL RIN EU DAINTY SIMPLICITY IN MODES FOR DEBUTANTES Daintiest ¢ the eventing frocks and wraps for the te and the nigirl. Tissues, chiffon, net and lace are the fabrics most employed. A touch of embroidery or lace ts usually and daintiness being the deemed sufficient trimming ideal of them all CARLOPEA AAD TAL BEAR aim plicity money, everybody else ix trying t make money #0 fast that the paps man comes home angry and acts like our pet hen, Jessica, when the cook throws dish water on her.” The man in the corner, catching BY STEWART 8. STONE. When the clinging lace, sparkly jewel lady had gone to the play that was too deep for Carlotta, there was no one left but the man over there in the corner, The man was Carlott: father; but you would @ few scattering sentences, cocked never have dreamed it. For Car- bis ear. The Princess Wilbeimina lay very still and listened. “It is very foolish to flutter like wet hens and grow! like big Rajah at the Zoo,” continued Carlotta But, you see, dear, the papa mag lotta was eternally biking the big, pale blue ribbon out of place on her brownish locks and twisting her red leather girdle around and hopping about on one red shod foot, while the man was flabby and grouchy—oh, terribly so! When Carlotta crept over and showed him the Muffy, pinkish prin coas of a broken headed doll which she adored, the man growled ike a bear Abtr-h, gway' How can 1 think with you bothering me so?” “It ia Wilhelmina,” explained Car lotta, “and she's a sure enough prin cess, and she wants to meet her | grandpa”; and Carlotta thrust the Princess Wilhelmina right into the m purply here stormed the Our Modern Credit Plan “makes gi —In not a single particular does it disappoint. all that we claim for it. 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