The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 28, 1909, Page 4

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4 THE SEATTLE STAR BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. 1907-1309 Seventh Ave. AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY, ky EVIRY [SEATTLE RESTURANT CROWDS | ARE DEMANDI ¥ ‘ end w : tan OLD RAG TIME AND TOM-TOM = . “ - —— + - AIRS NO LONGER IN VOGUE, 2 4 “) BAYS THIS MAN, MR. VANDERVEER’S INTEREST | " BY BARNEY DODDS. | Tt i al that I Attort ttle ativfied with | PN r t a MY n 1 ling @ on a Pr ot. | P MG. Bram , m Mr. Vanderveer is fearful for the welfare of Senator Piles « tinued, “th are He has so stated within the past fortnight. He is worrying 1 val lest the publicity of the affairs of the Sullivan estate may in ee a jure the senator, and for that reason is quite willing to do what tnt B. ae he can to stop this publicity dim the diaeation and pepper B. Howe \ ? " ally we | to ay th Hov 1 it vf arrest the | better class « Y this elty have * has been one of much imp et oth iin a certain s - nd Mr. Howe best muate was, ‘Love Me and the Chrys i . Vorld Is Mine’ was the very height portance has this matter been to Mr. Van-| } e h tt iy ty 1 as been) b i] > ary in nearly eve _ . © ater ao BS m sume Ionenome rancher for ° 8 he t ¢ t h t hinnse hat ‘organ grind delight t 1 tion The Most Popular Music se : : »| Right I thought best ¢ with a t en, ANC) switeh from the classical to the ther 1 1 e atte alone as it t relate to a opular brands, owing to m etior ; " ' P . acquaintance with the lat I possible ct al libel charge ono 8 a asked him for the favorite song The Star is not angry with Mr. Vanderveer for issuing | from the late operas the warrant for the arrest of its editor Vanderveer for his display of unusual interest in the case if he will see that it is not dismissed before coming to trial. Our only fear is that the prosecuting attorney is engaging in a It will forgive Mr. game of bluff for the benefit of the law firm with whom he used to be associated. Also The Star wants Mr. Vanderveer to know that a little bird has brought to it the story of what Mr. Vanderveer has threatened to do The Star if Th dares to ¢riticise his action i atter When Mr. \ as a candids uting attorney last fall supported him ed hin to be the man for the job, and by cx g his mame with that of “Bob” Hodge, just managed to pull } We rejoiced at his v tid of Mr. Hodge, and look of the affairs of the olfices to him through to victory tory in the gloriow 1a as we t wward to lid ad which the two had be Vander md out shortly after his election But our rejoicing was short-lived, in so far as Mr £ We fe that he was essentially a pol veer was concerned. ician, We were sorely grieved tion. We waited patiently in the hope at we might be mis taken, but as the weeks went by the conviction that we “had landed on a bad one” was driven further home cach day And now we find him in the role of censor and very active- ly engaged in his new job. We have no objection to the cre- ation of this role if the man who fills it will be on the square. But we don't believe it should be filled by a politician. And Mr. Va He is a poli We are sorry to speak thus harshly of great a friend—BEFORE ELECTION. nderveer is esser a polit an an first—an a servant of the one who was so If you don't put your foot Yown on the My, he'll put his down on your butter and jam, so that it may street car, We call the attention of certain city officials to the fact that require considerable ingenuity she waan't riding on the fender! for you to stay alive this summer. either / Wilegegate and the fshwives! Now if the sultan had only pro-| at their best were never but sec ondary vituperative forces when compared with the epithets of the vided himself with = nice, quiet ranch in New Mextoo where the re | Woman knocked off a crowded |* % THE GAME The ‘Glow. Worm’ by all means NEVER A GAIN | overs Se SIMs WwW 4d The Artiat—-turts’ Coarse yer goin’ tor be or deep sea sailo kid. THE LUCK OF ' porters wouldn't take the trouble to By Harold Carter San Francisco graft cases bother him Peters, the anahior of the Invest coneereneasmsnicnin | . |ment Trust Co. locked his drawer An American rifle team won from | bo a OR lat the minute of the bank's closing some Japs in Los Angeles, but [t The manner in which Mr. Dug-|\time and snatched the evening fe hard to tell whether the Japs | 4ale’s young men are encountering | ‘ Were polite, kidding us or just| the Tigers entities them to some} Raturally poor marksmen fame where faunal nateraliats| | gather For peace of mind, quiet of soul | | and happiness of heart, the $2 a) If anyone cares to contemplate! day laborer has the sultan of! the vanities and futilities of life,| Turkey appearing at a decided dis | the rise, floresence and fall of Ab | paper from the hands of Brownsen. hie assistant My God!” he muttered, letting jthe paper fall and staring blindly at the sheet Brownson followed bie gaze. He saw the cashier's finger tremble upon the notice of the breakage in Copper preferred Hit, Peters?” he ventured mu,” sald Peters Nercely | dul Hamid t ase in point What business is that of yours, you 4 evs notin ma -_ wi : etn cub? You'd better tell the direct ny Pe ELS yy ors. You'd lke my place, wouldn't you™ THE INCOME TAX, W BY GILSON GARDNER. HY NOT? ‘That is one geod argument in {ts favor An income tax’ To be sure. } It ta a tax on wealth Why not tax wealth? Is there anything incendiary aboot the Proposition to tax wealth? Is there anything dangerous’ | A man has inherited @ house and lot from his father. The rent of the house and lot—the house happening to be used as offices, the lot chancing to be in a settled portion of a large eity—ts $10,( That is net. It is thé man's inco it on to him without ef fort. It comes to him without the exercixe of any particutar foresight or self-denial; without any unnaual business acumen or tive ability. It comes to him merely because bis father happened to buy the lot and hold it; and because his father used @ reasonable amount of industry and thrift, and put a butiding on the lot. Now it ter ly the permanent producer of an income. The son does nothing but “awn” the property, and his agent hands him his monthly checks for the income Why not take some of that unearned money for the government's OX penses” The government does not hesitate to take a part of the wages of the man who works for what he gets. The man in the mill who sweats for his $2 a day; or the youth in the office who writes figures in a book for his $9 a week; or the girl behind a counter who stands on her feet and selis lace all day tor her $5 d 9 exec ore. & week—the govern mont does not healtate to take toll of them. The $340,000,000 a year raised by so-called “customs” dues are tariff taxes levied, for the most on articles of daily consumption, such aa sugar. canned goods, preserved meats, woolen and cotton clothing, soaps, crocker rent-—the thousand and one small things that enter into the cost of daily living. The government ralses haif its revenues at the present time by the indirect taxes on these Bue, encourages monopoly and subsidizes certain man ests, which return the favor by demanding increased using their t-gotten gains to buy agencies of government articles, and while tors, representatives, and even presidents That system is not good A tax on incor earned and unearned incomes—would be a better way to r 168 And, if reve i alarmingly, congress could reduce the tariff taxes. This is the answer to the the sudden and quaintly surprising plea—of Mr. Aldrich, the tariff revenues are “look. | ing up,” and a tax on incomes would be unnecessary | le iC > ETTERS FROM THE PEOPL y Editor Star; Dear Sir—With; 1 presume it is the moral law also sorrow | read that you have been | which keeps you from taking filthy arrested, and I presume that, if| medical advertisements; also it Bob Hodge had not been sheriff, must have been your senue of jus you would have been thrust into tiee to support that man who spoilt a in-infest cell. 1 have a good office—Bob Hodge warned you before, and if you don't’ Keep up the. good work: don't be shut up and join the gang you'll afraid of any one, not even the have more coming to you devil, and you will have the sym I have been in this city a long pathy and support of that class of time, but I never knew or heard people who are not afraid to show of & man amounting to very much any « at any time, just how they financially who always and persist- make their money. Yours | ently upheld the greatest law of ail W. WITTHKOPF the moral law 1629% Minor Ay & Ta is | CURSE BAGGAGEMEN acoused of cursing him. The judge AND FEAR NOT. held that baggagemen ere often ? a, April 28,—|80 discourteous as to arouse just! out fear of pedalty Welch bim. Such wae Judge Page's de cision in the of B. Welch, whom ©. P. Case, a baggageman at|taugant? If 60, nee the business the Ohi Narthweatern davot lahaias calumn on nace 6 Por it's coming to Do you want to buy a good res caw jso much trouble at home—er They put on thetr coats and hats in silence. At the door Peters turned to Brownson @ | ormive me, ol ." he sald offering hia hand T didn’t mean to be rude, but the fact tn, I've had that is He broke off incoherently as the lame excuse he sought to semmon up died on his lips and went out abruptly in a dream. that Brownson Por th meant ruin nt home an same pante he well sur | “MR, PETERS, YOU WILL NOT LEAVE THE BANK FOR THE PRESENT,” GAID THE MANAGER mised—to Peters, meant prosperity to him, and freedom ftom that} haunting vision of the penttentiary that had been growing nearer and ever nearer He had not failed to notice Peters’ abstraction, his,tncreased irritation his frenzied haste to purchase the ening papas, He shrewdly sur mised that the cashier had been speculating, taking advantage of the rising market in Copper And he knew that one word from him to the directors would give him P with its Increase of $6 place year a rownson went home, He had forgotton Peters now, for his mind was occupled with something that had been there for dreary long wooks, & haunting torror sud 4 changed, but immeasurably greater, For, with his release from danger, conscience had awak All at once at down beside wife and wn to tell her He had stolen systomatt ally for months, taking a hundred here and a hundred there to specu late with, a break in now tolen in hopes of And anon the a wana! THE STAR-—-WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1909. STAR DUST A_Word from Josh Wise. NG BETTER MUSIC) 39332 2339 333 333332399; * f CLOSING-OUT PRICES ONY. | | | find @ real munte lover in the audi PYROGRAPHY GO 4 4 s00Ds ¥ When asked if wv was susceptible ; to the applause afforded by $1.50, $1.00 and &5e I ; conde audience he admitted bis guilt, 3 ‘ , ‘ aid that all mastcians were. Mw dic. Sie ond a0 Applause the Life of Art, 1 patted ole pha 8 niall ‘| 1 care not If tt is the simplest as th’ publio/ AN 00, $1.50 and $1.00 melody in the realm of music,” he doos Einctiaed jsatd in oxplan ¢ his words, "if : ht we play it through as It should be. ith jreeetved, th next number ts not 47 < vr done near! wo cheerfull nor ae well, Applause ts the very life of wN all ort, and It is the plaudits of our ar ah k fellow men that we live for, Lots In't call the kettle t " P of musicians will not admit this tal C dl. k C | . trait Ia thet charsctar, but down | The race. 1s not wa Candlesticks Complete in their hoart they know that it in| Pwirt enpectally ‘i Py 4 true y Hometimes,” he went on, “it i| qe~e no hard? Mission Shade, 2 for 15c ) |nearly impossible to stir an audi-| name for oneself d PROF. M. G BRAMGILLA. once, and at others a round of ap-|can adopt an alias Ginia' Cactlabicta Walon taper snl ain he revliod.. civ so Creamy, ant |Kasareliy, we are betier.plonsed,| _, When.0 singer | hai plete; special, 2 for 15¢—a decidedly ; a glass of wine, We are And 4s @ matter of course will play | SUGlenes oan” tractive offering 4 to play that every night, ' better, when we have an approcts lose Candle Shade . and at times still oftener, But in than when ve je,| It Mp i — : . yellow, te, New York we played such music as! 1s exprosned.” | regularly 15¢ and ea al 6 .T%6 cay Madam Vatterfly, La Tosea and La taboo . od kin me Pr Pad Hoheme every night for over a kravated at the audionce rofes = p year, We suaply ware forced 6,/ 027 | iy tee tf fae Three Extra Good Lines in he ame handle is when a would-be music lover ’ js stecd, partionante te @ pende & request for @ ¢ A watch ba Women’s Hosiery, 35¢c and Sunday crowd On in a half-hour after it waa p ow + ps oe as sing Medium Vi he e c ; while durtng the w 9 will play & tired waiter up wantt edium Weig 7 ne quality, im me of those old ay sre, and we why we haven't obliged him To be tn th 1p ie mor mt black, tan or black € feet ESE SM AIS maces | ee Nee "a : Fine Gauze I t ‘ WITHOUT PA i 66 i able | “THE STAR” | cater atte : | ~ | T t . matdered ery A moasure of justice, « champion The a sen dae ‘ y beear- go | heaithy. ‘ners Tamara The Newest Shapes in Men’s A scorner of evil, a menace to mind your yan femme reptied . 1 might; if oon = | Uplitied tm character, grand ta} Collars Special 10c dentre; Whiet Four-Ply Collars, in the new styles; special, 10¢ Well poised on ite pinions of truth | month £ each | ts The Star! sme toe ou . : dai $1.10 & dozen iftts % a new hipment of a always eo | Opposed to base sinnder and low i ridicule; party,” unused | High, high ts the standard it floats °F Oppression near and far A Diplomatic Stroke. vored brand, | Bound down by no those Frenchmen i] p4 M t 4 Lf : | aa & “tool” thelr pem-tos nexpensive Matertal tor Ita motives “are lofty, whatever eet Sfectes Cela White Froucli Lawn, of » fine, shear gin | they are | j s wide ceptior ractis . e | And honor i read in cach line of “A es wide; an exceptionally attractive fabric fop i The Start nds—the manicure. price ‘ ++ BBO® 7 j - 40-inch In Linon, used for ists and dr x | t ‘CRSES, A tone of sweet purity ‘round it | The cyclonic orator isn't neces also for drop skirts ae a yar heard; marily long: winded 1¢ ; iy tte truths have the hearts of U ‘ ons adil — <\oe multitudes stirred 7 inetance don't give your frion Its candor and fearleneness all do ||" in*t* ad ° .. aAmire | | a And glory beams down from above! pine jones takes everything 8 ~ I | ow The Star! lfor granted. Slobbe-—Yes; every i thing except « hint ‘ os | % Immune from corruption; to malice Se d St. | unknown Hoas-—What would happen if, we cond Ao. an Spring | s ~ eretio - ah an eg trast? Joux | The chek of de Wotton around it | should over have an suf (reat % | True emblem of righteousness Aw-—-ye know, Ade- | reared by The Star! - eputing | ot the | On on with the good work so nobly Saeed began ~ > = . . | Om, om Ul thy radiance outshines | © ae ot mae une no " hit or miss S when you it hurts ter git tattooed at if . hwy ros 0 Aaya | . ‘ iat . | eee eatin weil begin right, | Til the cymbals of justice, an ot _ ° F poe EE 2 ED aE | truth’s guides lyre | Mudoy—it a man steais-oo mat-| TVESt IN @ “Bradbury System” ont =| Prociaim to the world the true | ter whal It le—he will live to regret ° . worth of The Star! aie es Page - ’. 3 * to be audited acd the assets count: | 1 econ vent tp steal kisses trom ime Suit—you get what you’ve a right od, discovery was tnevital lowe | . . bby you iat s samen nel _ 2124 Sith Av, Seattle, | said Atiy Slope could replace it, and tn the nick of |” time, for he cleared $4, § that afternoon when the atc broke. He would go to the direetora, pay heck bie stealing» with ipere font, and throw himself on their twrrey And Marcia, sitting letening dumbly, ail her world shattered, could only acquiesce. The directors not be likely to prosecute. With their own paltry savings, « few hundreds merely, they would face the world anew The following morning Brownson stuffed the six thousand Into his pockets and welt down to the bank He had resolved firet to replace hie piiferings; he would take the two thousand to the directors later, He managed to replace the four thou sand during the course of the morn-| tog. | Suddenly the auditors appeared The books were investigated.| Brownson saw Peters suddenly col-| lapse and his easpicions rose to « certainty. Peters had been gan Diing with the bank's money; he had been hit by the same slump that had rescued him from the pent tentiar Suddenly one of the auditors uttered an exclamation of surprine and went over to his assistant. They | began talking tn low whispers. A| bank director caine huatiiag ta and the managers put their heads to-| Peter, Peter, Pumpkin-eater, had a wife who wouldn't work, Every Monday morning, the washing she would arther Brownson heard t whis shirk per “theft And suddenly, ae} , ' Hi though by electrical communteatién, | Till he bought Fels-Naptha and showed her how srorrone began onion, at Pi oe ‘tis done, d drew away. Peters took up his . i rg m mie With cool or lukewarm water—hard rub or boil- Mr. Peters, you will not leare ing none, the bank for the present,” said the Now she finds it easy and does it very well, And he never needs to shut her, within the pumpkin shell, manager, ignoring the cashier's plea | of sudden sickness. “There is a discrepancy of two thousand dol-| lars. Brownson, see if that bundle! of bills bas by any chance been misiaid among the papers in the sate,” Very faint and weak from the strain Brownson went to the great Just as the capacity of automobiles is measured in horse-power, the cleaning fe. He eed bac The: « P . ‘ele . a Sos arog akianoed back, ‘They were! value of Fels-Naptha Soap should be meas- thing from his coat pocket; then ured in woman-power. Fels-Naptha Soap gets rid of more dirt in thirty minutes than three or four women he rose with an exclamation of sur prise Here they triumphantly are, sir!” he orted| The money was inte h; mt) Pa worst it would be sue that 9 9 9 » had been an error in shook in half a day. ying. “Thank God shoutdh’ the | manager. r Brownson saw Peters stariga at him with gray face and sunké@p, in credulous eyes. He had savéd the honor of his superior, and, by this act, averted his own ruin an need of confession. Fate had hor balan mn You've often wished for an extra pair of hands on washday. Fels-Naptha Soap is better than several pairs of hands, Because Fels-Naptha Soap actually at- tacks the dirt and dissolves it. EQUALITY Who ts ft sits out on the striet, A dinner pail between his fedh And eate his dry bread ei Who ta ft sits in the cafe meat? The worker And stuffs himself both night and day Or Porterhouse and “old Bombay”? The shirker No boiling is necessary; no hard rub- bing. You just wet the clothes, soap well with Fels-Naptha, put to soak, and think of something else. At the end of thirty minutes you rub Who fa it, when he swipes a dime, ged day yb grbee Bye. them lightly, rinse out and they’re ready « Koen oO ! d er 1 4 . . —et te et for the line. All. this mn cool or lukewarm The worker water, mind you in Summer or Winter— no boiling, no hot suds. For all uses of Fels-Naptha, follow Who ta ft, when he steals a pile, Can strat around and put on style Or 40 to congress for awhile? The shirker ce directions on the red Pe ‘ Who that some day will see e re a u ” That thing ode not ‘a they should red and = WIAD Det, And raise o ‘ain from sea to sea? The worker ad to expect—Style, Fit, Servicethe : “ oa label is a guarantee of Clothes Satisfaction.” ae The prices of Bradbury garments insure bounti | ~ ful return for your money—and if it will make the f ™ buying of Newer Appare! easier, feel perfectly we come to open an account and pay a little at a time for the clothes you select—no extra charge for the it ee * : > q commodation. Eastern Outfitting Co., 1332-34 Second Ao. 209 Onion St. “Seattle's Reliable Condit Hoase™ | On the isn't alwaye” al cially by the - good things of li where he caw am he comes to » life here roast bat meals for a king cooked fit American. to 12:80, Including Sunday Serv RiGHT Fine Music Each Evening from 6:30 THE BOULEVARD the 't 4th & PIKE ies } , | — Us | po You wa y |] 16 view tots ‘wear Ixy i and University svert }) lakes and mountains, near \ oar lines. Price only, YOU WILL have to ONAL MOND & I} FIRST AND MADISON. J ank ‘Wattatos wee Three pounds } of delicious, aromatic coffee for one dollar |} sold by gro- cers in sealed Exclusively for Household Geode.

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