The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 7, 1909, Page 6

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iba Siagdlt PN Nhl es i PRES BABE Se Al | AM aye RA eo A AM HAR ace Oaks ke ag A all # THE SEATTLE STAR TURE BY STAR PUBLISHING CO. 1907-1909 Seventh Ave. THE STAR—-FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1909. NOW VISITING IN SEATTLE a EVIRY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. : s party of friends the real rough Entered at the Postottion at Beattio Washington, as second-class matter, | WOMAN SMILE® WHEN INDIAN Hiding ability of his regiment, when > sneeneneemnemnn om . oon reg ni SCOUT TELLS OF HIS they ware mustered out of the Ber | ad | } vice at Montauk Point TARIFF AND THE AEROPLANE ADVENTURES. be wh Mamluk POU — | proud of, je the one tn which hie Once in a while the legislative muckraker ps and looks By BARNEY DODDS. head. was tearly severed by a pow f ! : i 1 sordtd |, This & the Woman who wou the erful blow from & Mexiean machete up from the ap which his narrow vision an PO) heart of big, bluff, Cherokee il during @ hot, hand-to-hand Gght dn Graft i gathering into little pile Occasionally oné of these | years », when they were Texas, The jugular veln was eut " t | lemistative body raises up his eyes |< as handeo! and in twain, and but for the fact that! Members of our national legisiative bo t jbonalre as she was pretty and coy Carter Blockton, his best friend, and looks toward the future, where the real gown glitters and) Thay ag i New ibe held the two ends of the vein Ugbt just after he had been mygtored by» paige Ft aver » ait " sakes the horizon brig ¢ look ly between hin fuger t ops un of a different day makes the horigon bright. fe {Out of L troop, Roosevelt's, Row any Jows of blood, Hill's life would Mp and with something of poetic prophecy he really sees In| Riders. They are in Seattio now, | Geebabtediy have heat ost iA i = arriving here last Saturday after Hi Buch a moment John W, Daniel of Virginia, grizzled veteran) joon, and they have been soeing Real Thrills Here nel five . » aly »Yer alnoe. " other adventure while of war and statecraft, pausing in his discourse on tarit se hed. | the alghta ever ain He had anoth of war and statec I 6 | Bi speaks fourteen Indian acting as & Toxas ranger that tiles, said: }ianguages, and was at one time might have ended seriously, It pan m » yov obbery \ Yraper, a student, a philosopher, and an author, said }considered invaluable to the gov | was during & bank ro Wm. Draper, a stdde ' , , erament | The captain of the company with that, ‘When the iron rail was laid, the bones of the giant grew Straight, statwart and with mas DIN at hie ide rag received word When the steam engine went forth upon the iron rail, the great-/ sive shoulders and the round bub ot an intended robbery, and they | A - }letwtaped, fighting head, perched lay in walt outside of the butld-| est materialistic evangel of peace and plenty and of concord that] on a serawny nook made thin by a A ever went forth on this earth, started upon its journey “IL may add to this that when the telegraph came along, the nerves of the giant grew “When the telephone came, the voice of the giant grew vaster in volume and farther in range. “When -Marconi invented his wireless signal system, be hold, a miracle like that of the whispering wind, which carries the thought, the voice and the heart of man as it listeth, * * * * “The pioneers and skirmishers of science are exploring and conquering the air. Ere long the heayens will be filled with Commerce, and both peace and war will look from an aerie in the skies invented and lying in waiting Question to deal with, as well as war Guns to shoot upward at the flying fleets are already But tariffs will have a new “I love to look forward, as in our dreams we may fancy Detter things than have happened, and I believe that in time tinshackled trade will come to all the children of man.” er | Yes, Tennyson dreamed of the aerial navies raining blood | And commerce, and there is more occasion for that dream today than when the bard wrote his Locksley Hall. Why not? How @bout our tariff barriers? What will happen when the'aero- plane, made safe, whirls through the air at a speed of one hun- @red miles an hour, and at a height which makes it look the dimensions of a hawk? What will happen to our customs houses then? Who will chase the diamond smuggler, dropping & thousand miles to the leeward and landing possibly at night fh the center of the continent? What will the senate do to the amendment to the Aldrich bill offered by the Wright brothers? eI -Behively didn’t keep his word, The cyclone season arrived sivwt the Investigating committee.|in time to rescue Oklahoma from le with his peculiar ideas of | oblivion following her Indian up ing & tivelihood as a rule aren't | rising, particular about their word. -—- = Yesterday's misfortune at Dug contractors’ assertion that) dale park indicates that accidents railing was not built to lean) will happen in the best regulated would have peen much more! bal) teams. ble the day before yesterday. —s “A twolnch screw in a one-inch at the very least is 2 waste “Placing the responsibility” ts a Very exelting pastime for a while, although tte willity isn't always Apparent. The state militia appears to be that the plans and specifica. coming in for more than Ita due were followed exactly. {share of misfortune, ee Soa — eeeeeeaere S FROM THE PEOPLE QUESTION. | showed by experiment, forty years 1, that a ae very scarce tion, |{@ Mountain air, and Increases rap- “uberen. | ly right slonk as lower levels are reached, till in cities and hos pitals the alr swarms witn these destroyers of life. These being facts revealed by setentific investi and long observation, tt fol- that western Washington, while @ fine climate for other peo- ple, ta detrimental to and the i z a siti consumptives, their death rate in Seattle for past year confirms it. Open Air Best. The open air treatment is the best thing that can be offered here, | dat om thorongh trial, it will be found delusive and a snare, be cause climatic conditions do not exist this aide of the Cascades, Be sides, It holds out hopes to the poor sufferer which will never be rea | Hzed; this benefits will be only tom. | porary, following the natural course of the disease, which has ita ups and downs, and ts very de tive in ite apparent promises. Ww thus frittering away time his only chance of being restored to health in a proper elimate. The practical solution of the question, then, tw: It is suggested to help these unfortunate sufferers the medical profession and all who have been clove observ- that climatic treatment {» the thing that offers any hope of t relief, Climatic treat it requires a certain state of the nts and environments with h the patient {s brought Into The air must be dry, and by altitude—mountatn air with ozone, and pidertes ding, plenty of sunshine the round; an egquable tempera- <4 with protection from cold winds. Wherever these conditions pro wail naturally, it is a good place » for consumptives to jive and take or even some places in eastern good, are nearer home, It has long been known that asthmatics and consumptives do well and are re. | stored to health in the section of | country about Lake Chelan. Many patients have gone there and found natural cures. The climate and en- | vironments possess many of the conditions necessary for climatic treatment in living there in con- formity with nature, or in recetv- los the Te of sanitaria! care, Ye. cure, also to enjoy the b: veral sanitarluma might be pened thereabouts with great ite from sanitarial treat-| benefit to sufferers, and relief to friends in Seattle, sinee it would not be far away from them. B. FRANKLIN, QUITS YOUNG IDEA TO MAKE PLANTS SHOOT. it. t Dry Air Needed. Why? Because, the earth and being dry, the patient is less abject to bronchial Irritation, h is unfavorable; besides, mi- Crobie life can hardly exist in dry, farified air—to thrive they need Moisture in alr and earth; contin tal sunshine ie disinfecting, braces the system, and is most tnspir- ; the rarefied alr ci the pi it to take fuller, deeper inapira- | is to Meet natural wants, which | fp turn opens ali the alr cells of the lungs, many of which have fai to do duty for some time, Td Lesre them open day and ht in natural breathing—thia ing the prime consideration, as It destroys the home of the bacilli; the ozone in mountain alr is exhil- ) @rating and gives a death-blow to Wmlerobic life, and the balsamic ex- " jones from the pineries tond the same direction, In the best sueh climates the flesh of ant- may be hung in the open air cured perfectly without any ition whatever, thus show the absence of microbes. Mi- the distinguished acientisat, RIPON, Win, May 1-The call of ofthe farm and the Insignificant salary he can earn as a college president has led to the resignation of President Richard C. Hughes, of Ripon college, He came to Wiscon- sin six years ago from Tabor eol- loge at Council Bluffs, Ia, and in this six years hax doubled the en- dowment of the college and has doubled the attendance, and opportunities he loses, perhaps, | to a home ip New Mexico, Arizona, | Washington, which, while not so | MAB, E, 8. KINKEBAD. Sure enough, the men put in an appearance, and after they had en | seem to worry Cherokee Bil in the tore, the two rangers followed | least, rather he ta.proud of bis C00 tinedintety upon thelr stepping section wie thom inside the door, ® fusilinde of Was 4 Real Scout, nhots greeted them, but pushing on Bil} himeelf has always been a| they at last confronted the robbers lawabiding citixon, For a number | and at once opened fire. bill #0} of years he was & Texas ranger, | his man at the firet shot, and came and before that he waa 4 geverm | out with only a few minor } mont scout | Bill came to Beattle to get a job) AN “fut best of all,” says BU, “I)as guard at the Pair He was em) wan & Rough Rider with Teddy.” ployed at the 8t Louls exposition | And, sure enough, he produced «| a attracted wide-spread attention | fn letter bearing the e@x-president’s by hin Areat wize and qneer man) signature, stating that Chere ms, He «till “totes” his gun. |" kee Bill, sometimes known as E. 8. 'd be lost without i,” he ox Kinkead, had been chosen by bim, | plained, and the wife knowingly as Colonel, to demonstrate to & smiled assent. 4 }a vicious saber thrust that severed | the jugular vein, he looks the fight jer, every inch. Proud of Indian Blood. He admits the Cherokee bicod | which flows through his arteries,) and seems proud of tt | “i'n my fighting blood, | guess,” fa the way he put it T miwt be trae, for Hill's whole family were fighters, even to the mother and his one sister and elght brothers, He had two | brothers who were associated with | | Jesse James during his notorious | road career, and who are now sery ling Hfe sentences for a series of appalling murders while with thelr joutlaw lvader, This fact does not "AND THEY SAY THE ENGLISH HAVE NO HUMOR! "2's toes mud at bie neighbors never throws any dust in thelr ever. You givin thing should | WN ( to think the « wine them fire © all fond of Orumete’ just as good us home pplained the « ner You] un.” replied the dragmtet | f Sheolete. We now etter | ormething much better queer fellow Biobhe Bjyones te You never know how to Hobbe--Tes, he ought to cx Medicine, with direetione | | say that Harduppe Wiag -They Miss Gotrox at firet fell in love with wight ‘age Nonwense He didn't wait for first sight. He fell in jove with her the minute he heard of ber Not Her Vault. It is the duty of every man an Woman to be married at the age 0 n, turer man of 90, with) beedn't tell me the yne aaperl that in | Wa ing fi with styles ‘Lie Matsie—te onty kissed me once ure rebuke j 4h, 1 told him he must be atratd overdoing hits self. — Byrecose Herald ~ An Tow od wit con Village Idtot cyclist went over that n came back” Dear me! MHjet—1 duane, Fraps “« down other side!--Comte ou ad you ad-) Wa Where ai he floune Al Verplenity. Made Clore Creme bas a little “Walter, ‘ow d'yer expect this lady to eat ‘or peas with a knife ‘ 4 youre of6. Her tame is Franere | like Uhat Tatler. dozen $2.00 000004 0000S000S0O0O0® A -cwnin’ Cut'n de skin an’ drippin' | )drippin’ all ober dom eweet ‘tatera, the Jury brought the recital to a By Geo, Rowsey. “Weill, judge, t jes natcherty took Jim Bronson had been arrested for after dat fool hoon’, but be was stole & possum and & steel trap be-j start fur home De day wae jos jonging to Charles Washington, and, | breakin’ when TI see dis possum ried before u juation of the peace |I eee he foot tn er trap Den i walk by & jury of atx colored fotke. or way, ‘chuse | won't take ne man's “Jedge, | sot @ trap near a cohn “When I git or il way off, I fie ‘stde a big gum tree for to) look back, an’ dat li) possum he or ored folks need once in er while. | askin’ me ter take him erlong. Den When I go ter see de trap dere’e|1 aay, ‘Jim, you oll ain’ gan’ let dat am gone, on I ses man tracks all|fn de big ewamp, is yo? He don't erbout dat place. belong to de man what sot dat dat tack like er houn’ an’ bymbye| Man don’ own de land de trap am I soe din hyab ‘fendant on de road,)on, Posmum he own bows’ An’ den, shook dat bag, jedge, an’ my trap) poswurn an’ dat HT come watk right an’ possum drapped ontn it, Delin, trap an’ all, 7 know dat trap possum done brung it wif him inte my bag, dat’s no business ob “An’ ‘Jodge, dat's de trpot, This pore I'l porsum's foot «ff in it 1 ain’ got or smell ob dat pnasem, an’ San’ er jug ef" larceny, the charge being that be plum out of hearin’, #o T guy op an pursuant to his demand, was being right ‘fo’ me, Den Tt look ergin, ‘Washington, sworn, testified: | possum, Jedge. coteh er possum, which alt us col- | sittin’ up holdin’ out his ban's jee possum sign eroun’, but de trap | il possum out hyah all by beself “Jedao, | sho’ wos mad. 1 took) trap He didn't raise him. Dat wit or bag on hin back. | done |Jedee, I hol’ my bag in front dat poawom I eat, but dere's de trap an‘ |‘tong some man, but ef dat I) fat nv} touch dat trap. Dere if ls wid de I ain’ stele nothin’.” The justice read the jaw ad to wid animale and oxptained |the meaning of larceny, and ‘the fury, looking at each other miktiificaqtly, j returned a verdict of “wot guilty” without leaving thetr meats ems! «ft THE GREAT PETROSIN: CAN. |] show that Aw ! Josh Wise, / Lg, AS COMPARED wiTH ai] DArpen MAN OF ORDINARY STATURE. NEW YORK, May 5.--For five years « light will burn for Lieut Joe Petronini, famous Italtan deteo- five, murdered by the Black Hand) in Palermo, Italy i A giant candle, nine feet high and thick around a*® an ordinary has Just boen completed | a | | | | About one “DESE HYAH TOWN DUDES,”| POINTING AT THE COMPLAIN. ANT, “MAKE ME SICK.” heah's dat's all I y Washington stepped down and the jury looked solemn, It appeared bad for the defendant, but he was) not In the least downcust as he} took the witness stand. by a In thin elty burn five years with mathemation! certainty The candle will be ahfpped to the eburch in Petrosint's birthplace in | tence & man has where his own | fauite are concerned, fe 008 to dom. Dey nin’ satiety at red to accept It. ‘Threats had home, but dey come trapesing down - 'boen made to destroy the church if’ || cident. pol h acting biggity, tryin’ ter put #ay« he has|the memorial candle were wet up | @ month, r us ‘cause we all is country fortunes. there } Ask ua * been engaged oon, and ‘Jodge, 1 Ukes possum myself but [ hunt ‘im wid er dawg and er torch like er game spoht oughter “Dat night I was showin’ er houn’ pup how ter foller a trail, when he we than ale ne threw him ever. A RHYME OFA _ DOTING MAMMA By Don Marquis. The people who claim that to err ix human alno think that to forgive themaelvew In divine. 955-066 Main 2202. iit out, and 1 knew mo an’ de off " P Mrn, Mugiine—What In the beat ooman ‘ud have er possum Te wehpAlavay to koep a cook? Grandpa tn the Morris chair, por. edge, I dexs see dat possum] Mra, Buggine—Try to discharge | Snoring sweetly, noseanoatr her H rite ‘fo’ me in de dish, all browr | Mouth wae 6pen very wide, tans, virls’ fine Lisle Hose, black or tan, Specia Roys’ Bicycle Hose, extra heavy, an unusual wearing quality.... Pure Silk Messalines A Sale of Pattern Veils Marked From 75c White, Brown and White, and Green and | White Stripes Gingham ; extra well made, with sectional ce showing half-inch tucks, $1.50, Gentine bearing a pair, The United in the United States every year. THINK OF IT | ARE YOU PROTECTED? | A combination health and ac Coast Agency Company Beattie, Wash. CHEROKEE BILL AND HIS WIFE! grmenreevepeeanmn ne nnne Deneee 'BAILLARGEON’S| The Smartest of Rough Silk Suits § in Values to $45.00, for $18.75 Tomorrow’s Shopping Event in Seattle Cason, Exp Rough Silk, the favored fabric of the smart, up-to-date models—that's the gist of this rema Colorings, too, are those most sought after—-Wistaria, Rose, Pop celain, Reseda, Peach, Linen, Light Blue, Gray, White and Navy, Values to $45.00, Saturday $18.75 Every New Shade in Lisle Thread Hose 50¢ § Pre-eminent are the new Bronzes—fashion’s latest far in plain gossamer lisle, in lace boot lisle and all-over lace patterns, Heel, sole and toe are double; garter top is extra wide. Also shades to match or harmonize with any gown gold, wistaria, rose, reseda, new blues, grays, etc., et Gauze Lisle Hose—Wide garter top, high spliced double heel, sole and toe; a regular 35¢ quality... ....ccecerereeereecreeeners Medium weight Maco Cotton Hosiery for hard wear; new tans, and black with white feet, A rare quality for... Children's School Hose of strong elastic ribbed cotton, black or tan, all sizes, «= Special, @ palf.s..s..cseccsssesovs - Special at Russian Net Pattern Ve a half long, having lace to 55c a Yd. A soft, lustrous quality; ideal for cos- Square Russian Net Veils, tumes, evening gowds, waists, etc, Comes Black, Brown, Navy, in seven desirable shades, Green, etc. On Sale Saturday at 55c Yd. | Extra Special at 65¢ Each Exceptionally Desirable Wash | Petticoats at $1.25 sh Petticoats of fine Percale, hav- fteen-inch tailored flounce trimmed bias bands, in two very attractive } Cambric and Nainsook, ity, splendidly made and ht Blue and White, Navy and | represent 65¢ and 75¢ val Gowns of Cambric and ing in four styles, includi front and slip-over effect, V-shaped necks, long and Splendid value, $1.25 each, sh Petticoats of the best quality ighter quality, $1.35. “Heatherbloom” Petticoats, the well-known — trade-mark. with wide sectional flounce, hem- Corsets stitched, all colors, $2.50. Our Special Dollar Glove Is a genuine Freneh Kid that hasn't an equal at the price in this country, Is per- fect fitting; comes in all sizes in half a ing in various models to figure. shades as well as in black. $1.00. ty $1.00. Values in Bedding ali Quilted Mattress Protectors in three-quarter size, $1.50; full siz 4 eather Pillows—Good quality filling and covering of blue and white tick? size 20x27, special, $1.25 @ pair; size 21x27, with tan and white tick coverin a pair, r= [A u { v) K-s. SHON STORE, Take Klevator to Third Floor, mr Raok bidg., nd ond Mike, j 416 Second 15 view Ma IA. L. HALL| } | woods of all kinda, Aj = car lines. in every five people | For sporting fine line of bowling shoes, Come} It fs our business to furnish |) i and sao them {20T Second Ay, you with this protection, 111t FURST AVE, == Trunks | Suit Cases Traveling Bags The Home glove tn this First A ley costs you but $1 more about it GREAT OF SALE, 0 valves all Empire Building, Private ——— 7 PROM, STEVENS PRINT BLURS. 1 man whe rier! Ive » wuars oh you to «9 a to te T ry became inte n- | . e PP ann I inten: in Wedsh-e: wish onge. GAaioean't dae |e a ton inside; Irritable temper and general dis PRIVATE yourapit om, Kh to koey for. | P {il at ease, comfort result, We positively eure | with’ music et my eyes an’ I ‘kee dat! gets that the well | Made @ turbulent denitee this condition with our specially | and evening | pomwum wid sweet ‘taters all plied| as sparrows round him, jedge, and de gravy oozin—not runnin’, jedge-—but jes’ » sald; “You naughty dear, ground glas Home people never know a goo thing when thay #ee It because tt fear.” (av, Beattle, toad will give you warts, 1) Co, Bye Specialists, 1207 Second nd assemblies Ladies free. 4th Telephones. i ses, Sohuchard Optical | and ¢ Pine Muslin Drawers 47¢ | Instead of 65¢ and 75c A choice of three styles at 47c. ¥ Values to $1.25; special, $1.00 Models in Kabo An extremely satisfactory make con ing long, straight hips. ade oy Batiste: cuppoctions trent ond | The Raven prescription | means that the doctor's skill [scribing is most efficiently samt ; ed by the druggist's compounding. RAVE title 15 ° INTERNATIONAL BOND RBALTY ¢ 1009 American Bank By Ss “WALL PAPER GOING On the walls of hundreds of SHOES —SHOES—SHOES | & 5 OO Rewa eannot cure In from 8,to0 J. B. BRISBOIS Globe Hotel Dor, Mivet Av, qed vr wehicnieabh da ye: it yy ilored ig 4 kable sale, a mM coming all the new 25¢ all black, ae 65¢ ils, a yard and border. Alsp ribbon bound, nis Copenhagen, on of good quale well finished: 1 isk, jnes Nainsook cont ng both open in round af short slecv@h 4 87c each, ace ee or aa fit almost side. ¢, $2.00. Av. DO YOU WANT lots near University, ov lakes and mountatns, neat tt Price only U WILL have ft) met this Opp. of “PRERFR city for #100 88 “Dose hyah town dudes,” ald Jim, southern Italy. It was at fi ’ the ® inet homes. We have papel pointing to the complainant, at ae id ig | Dlanned to light the candle in the MEEK TRUNK & BAG CO, ands of rooms thie ‘Sp whom everyone th the court room Mileve anything hejeathedral tn Mott st, here, whore if 010 iret Ave. ati! they come. Baran gased, “make ma nick. Dey "low aw | ¢ Petrouint used to attend mass every || | 7 FED how dey own ev’ything dat looks nishing how much pa 4) | crete ne ch pa) morning, but the church authorities \ —_—— PAINT & WALL PAI oftes phe"

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