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THE SEATTLE STAR BY BTAR PUBLISHING CO Taaediaaetdetettioen sdetacieteeetaeadi nae amemmimmenae 'WHEN KITTY DOLLIVER PLAYED WITH MOUSY ALDRICH THE STAR-—SATU RDAY, MAY 15, 1909 Denver Man Invente Machine Which HOORAY! GARVIN’S CORNER _-$807-1309 Seventh Ave. xe Spo He Says Will Hook, Button and] BY THE REVEREND JOSEPH L. GARVIN EVIRY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. AT | | ' will t PASTOR OF FIRST CHRISTIAN CH red ha ¥ te oattin Washington as second-class matter FIRST REAL REVOLT IN CON. | fact that Nélwon W, Aldrich sat and diselples to learn from the lHpa of Lace “Wifey” Up and Wi owe . rl URCH rl tena callak dD 2: - “ = GRESS FOR THIRTY had to Haten. He told of tricks and | the senator himaelf that in this cot- | “Hubby” His Job. . - " -— | . , |oubtorfuges in the past and present | Con schedule the changes that wore a Seen Do WE NOT CAME : WHERE THE SHOE PINCHES | YEARS, Hiouialation, and the galleries looked | made did not represent the genius | fire ilae Stewart comumite wut 1 ll the reader's down and saw in Mr, Aldrich the of the man who enjoys, In the my The « mrs ’ bie It might not be » at this tir Sa AE) eee BY GILGON GARDNER wuthor of these tricks, He drew on thology of our public life, the repu we Heatile owes this duty é Attention to the latte uy definition the “time principle’] , aren C history and parable, He Was both | tation of being the greatest living le ow rt si F| | ag ASHINGTON, D ; May S| vohoment and cauatic. At tines he expert upon the toohnicalities of king? I ; t of pr Iti Rb S e~ 4 ‘ pA 7 t and wae persuasive, and then again al-| cotton manufacture, but that the] | : f “Sich es as will equal the difference between tt fete. te Bo —— ron SNC} moat playful, On the whole he} senator from Rhode Island, myntt-| lo 0. nothing thet @ You t i a ollowed the doings of congren®, 1) Wade a apesoh more daringly antag | fled by the task set bdfore him by | seeks freedom ff i ot prod at home and abroad, INCLUDING A REASON bie” Prey tion of Nol re aid: oniatic than anything which bhas/his constituents of ralsing the nen. ipa dit iy ' Goa ¢ a ABLE PROFIT TO THE AMERICAN PRODUCT | Hoh come from the party of the opposl ies pvt ae re nfs ee na dnon ¥ woman *, Bi ) tlon. 14 etn urned ve ob ove o 4 I'l 1 “w acturer” would be more wopos than This comment by an old resident | al te ork.” sa ihe w | ; e'tim cnnital was baled forth bw Vitrotic Bpeech. j the appraiser's office in New York.” | en 6 a oh waheooy 4 “procduce i this definition, but let as it) UCe TNE) ine roc oooh of Senator Jona | Cold words in type give buf al Lays It on Thick | ome a manutactur a producer even if he isn’t a farmer, and even) than Dolliver of lowa mall idea of the apeoch of Senator] Bpeaking of the wool ne he | : « onda) teauedy a he f aig ‘ : ‘ | Nothing ike tt ha been seen In} Dolliver, Yet the touch of vitriot /Menator Dolliver said; “What k} f . an f - oe if he does get the bulk of the protective legislation | the weonate alnoe the days of Ingalls.) may be seen in a passage Nhe the | today of party le | te hn of ue t “e 1 therefore ask all | Now, it is not so very difficult to determine the difference | Nothing to equal ite sarcanm and | following jack, vot to 1890, when MeKinley | ae <j i if a Stott 7 } } Labroad. An|{ probably nothing tte daring, Noth-| “All men bow naturally before the | tH deapalr turned the making of the | torn mind aud broken heart destroys of between the cost of producing an article Abroa "Ting which #0 reveals a genuine per-| Divine wiadom, even when they do| Wool tariff over to @ mans meeting | | herself Pirwt « i average can be struck on the wages of Hillmen, Ma- | ao antagonism, based on rea) not und tand, All men regard | of ita beneficiarte not to 1897, | A civilieation that forces such «| and 4 i i he | Noel tems that enter into the | "" which ean only be durmised,) with reverence the wisdom of Solo | When Gov. Dingley's avowed pur) - | veeens ine eure * 7 an ee f — | chinists and the like, and on all the items that ente Jearried to the point of Open rup| mon, or Franklin, or Lincoln, But }po » the McKinley rates | MOM \ony it, but there ara ao many ul: |t : cost of production of a given article here or abroad that @) mre between members of the same | it is another matter for men filt|/was Yeloed by the threats and jeides ‘that she only represents a * rg? . tinh he difference in cost, | PTY and veterans of the same|qrown, sitting In this chamber, to/Wlamor of outside Interents, but to | were rrr 4 |clane. Hut why s clase?) How long Very close approxznation can be made of the alter 2 |brand of tariff partisanship, jput thelr individual judgment into | 188%, when the senator from mbote Le Fs oo aes _ woman be permite 1 With these reliable statistics, a schoolboy could figure out what Turne Againet Leader. servitude, not to the great and good [Teland labored month after month, | FRANK CANFIELD, ile mask net ahimine bow’ tee 4 2 " : ais } | » » put With 4 fear | meh Who adorn the deliberations ot (May nod night, with Wm. Ht, Allison | and cowurdice of suicide, It ise 4 the duties should b But just look at the words we have put Kthout merey and without fear! (onerous, but to the persons on the {18 the preparation of the only sched DENVER, Col, May 16.—TAsten,|1t is coward It is unwort f m duaulag thinw fc tot Ps 4 jenator Del woe one ' , . extraordi-|4ny man oman made in the " ) in big type above. They are a mountain of doubt They open s nator Dolliver raived & Strone) oi cide whose very names are un-| tle of wool and woolen in 40 years | mon Announcement extraordt-| +" #. r ¥ jlife. We s we on 6 ag i , reg. | iand Againat the suave and power | own to ua It ia not necessery (1 Which either the public Interest | nary! ty on | Brevent it. I ey | 4 the door to private greed, public deceit and popular oppres- jful leader of the senate, He gripped) comment tiarshly upon the work |r the Welfare of the republican| In It possible? You, tt is powsibie | wh hese bur pb Sayest rs 7 ste him, a it were, by the seruff of his! (6 Gov ningley or Win. MeKinley,| Party was made paramount over| Not only possible, but Frank Can-|tantalized, xo hurt that In their des-|Yoman and Sener ‘oad , neek, and shook him until ery . . . sordid private constderations | fleld, of 727 20th at., Denver, says ation feel th heat pret A mother leaves three What is a reasonable profit? tooth tn his head rattled in ita place, | Much lena ta It necessary to appear | S08 Pun id bh ted | it is also practicable erable, Ho they do an awful thing, | apy, ry | sah 8 G Bh. © Fopeewak ibd er ‘e wanting in consideration for my} Senator Dolliver sald he wantec @ alao prac ne «aun et-eutt tves tantha 3 j i Your money in a savings bank earns 3 or 4 per cent profit, | He set bim down and let him-start| cored friend trom Rhode Island.” | "to an end to the seandal that] What ts possible PT Fa ale By Be @ 7 to walk away; then he picked him }has accompanied the framing of That men shall be emancipated | destruction, Hut when | read ; Most of the states have fixed a legal limit of profit on] up and gave him another shake. He Springs the Expose. lovery tariff bill, and that bas cor-| fram buttoning thelr wives’ @ sa. | Foun s money, at from 6 to 9 per cent cuffed him, tossed him, nipped him, With this gentle tntroduction rupted American industries and| unbuttoning their shoes, their} ef wrone hs - . played with him, seratehed him nator Dolliver proceeded to ex-| made great enterprises 11 ad-| cloves and kindred things in con s It is the general idea among real estate men that property | tightly, scratched him deeply, He] pose the action of the commiittes |junots to political agitation.’ nection with a woman's makeup, % m . aye ati s yielding a rea-|Doked him to see whether there/on finance and its chairman tn | to say nothing of tugging at hooks producing 10 per cent rental on its valuation is yielding were sigue of life. Then he bit| turning over the conatruction of | Enemy of Aldrioh. eal thea te on tlet 1a teak 0 sonable profit. him through the spinal column. | the cotton schedule to the apprals F ” dotvering his speech Benator| waist into a 16inch wkirt : , —- “ * de Jolliver has won the temporary en | ‘ * a ; ae ofits instanced are not profits on manufac Thus the eat Dolliver with Ald-|ers in New York With this and rary | Can it be true? Glad Udings, in But these profits instan ‘ i rich the mouse the trick by which Senator Aldrich | Mity of Lander Aldrich. To say | dood tures. In manufactures and similar investments the percent Doiliver Taiked Tariff. almed secretly to increase the cot pe Page _—_ ogg oe pig d Canfield, who within the last ton | P ¥ . | oppe ould be doing an In| : age of reasonable profit should increase in proportion to the] genator Dotliver talked tariff ~ d schedule the public are fa | Santee a pty pire 4 yeary has sec ured more than A . . 7 millar . patents on useful and practical de amount of capital invested or employed, in the estimation of ek i = Nig aimnste trot. It fe even possible,” sald Sena Aldrics oes not cherist personal vices. whieh he sold for $100 4 nn Py cause he Spone ine | " animositio heme, wit other | ¢ “v8 capitalists. Ten per cent profit, to illustrate, may be reason-| He told how lobbytats and special | °F Dolliver, “to comment adversely Howson siedtante aoe are ag > 000, has recently secured a patent . $5 t ne $5.000,- | interests had written tariffe in the | 2000. the cotton schedule as con . ‘i a jomaeives (0) on what he has named an auto- able on an investment of $50,000, but an investment of $5,000,-} tained in the senate bill without |te ends toward which he strives.| matic ball bearing locking device ; . | past, and how they were WrillDg | impeaching the abilities of the sen: |!f he needs a man he goes after him. | which he declares can be applied 000 ought to yield 15 or 18 per cent, | hace today, Only he named DABS | tor from Rhode Island, becanes, | #18 feclings play no part. It ia the|in. the fastening of weron's ~ < ded -_ a ul a a hy fastening ol ome! The crux of the task now in the hands of congress is the poy — ee totisies creel? ho has himself stated’ upon this | method of the better: He te suave, | arecess, corents, ahote Gad other determination of what is the reasonable profit and again he handed out the facts|%00% the amendments offered to | Sum. Sire et: has an excellent | articles of apparel to take the ; - . er le — and figures. He denounced the| te sbate by the committee were memory, He has experience at bis | piace of hooks, laces and eyes. Experts must be called in or consulted to determine what whole thing na a fraud and timpost.(20t (8 work of (he commitioe, but jeommand. He has resource; and)” jt was Canfield who invented the is reasonable profit experts? trusts, the magnates of corporations that are bonded an double-bonded, and every dollar of their investment means that 15 or 18 or more cents in profit is a reasonable profit. thing. profit. President Taft's plan of cutting @am pays a quarter of a million dol-| sufficient credit ‘brs a year for rubber bands. annals. As the Bremerton postoffice rob- dery was without thelr Jurisdiction, "we are deprived of the police opin- fon as to the professional abilities of the cracksmen. the Smithsonian institute. Deapite the fact that the man who Killed Mrs. George admitted the crime, an incredulous coroner's | Jury is earning its per diem finding this out. ‘Those who protested the increas. ed tariff on hoslery will take con- solation in the fact that the duty on Spokane Indians will is not to be taken as a license, nothing else to do in New York indicts Heinze, “Uncle Joe” Cannon presents the unique spectacle of being 73 years national popularity. to obey. —_— Health Culture, Author “Food Vaiue of Meat,” “Common Disorders,” Etc. —___—_ » WHAT SHALL WE EAT? SHEER ERNE People all over the country are anxiously asking: “What shall 1|* Be ne eWORD. In these articles | shali tr eat in order to be well, strong and! % to give you plain and practical active, in order to live long and|® directions as to what to eat, aitain the fullest measure of the|* how to eat, when to eat and Joy of living?” how to use food 80 as to get To answer the question to the|* from it the greatest possibie betterment and satisfaction of the) * amount of health, strength and tioner js at times a rather) * power of both body and mind, ifficult matter, But to get him or | have no “fade” or iconoctas- her to act upon the advice given tle id: is often a atill more difficult mat-|* common sense. | shall no ter. doubt say some things with B The reason for this is, I believe, | * which you will not agree. Am not any lack of intelligence or of|* | right or wrong? Here's the docility on the part of the inquirer.|* test: Follow my sugg The mere fact of his applying for) * advice is proof of his sincete desire| * C. LATSON, to learn the law and to apply it. | *® The failure to follow directions In, *# * * eee eh th tk I think, mainly because some of us| ———— om who profess expert knowledge along, When, however, | explain to these lines are all too prone to give that the presence of cane sugar in see eee eee dual so advised realize that for| plete conversion of They're on the ground already, all right, and will not require process servers to get them to testify. What Why, the fellow who invests millions, the heads of Duties based on the difference in the actual cost of manu facture at home and abroad may protect the American wage- earner and be something which the common people can stand If our national elections mean anything, it has been decided that the burden of this arbitrary “difference” is not a bad It is in the “reasonable profit” that the people get the harpoon thrown into them, figuratively speaking. Certain it fs that the benefits accrue to a very small proportion af the © people, and that small proportion the fellows who pocket the To falr minded readers it seema @wn government expense should | that the barefoot persons who have Ot overlook the fact that Uncle|to round up the Hons are not given in the faunal There ought to be quite a lot of dollara-word material in Kermit’s getting lost, even if it doesn't help The next month's supply of scare heads is insured to newspapers. The cyclone season has opened in Kan- kindly understand that yesterday's liberty Whenever the grand fury has Now is the time to evict the fly old and utterly unconscious of lis) Pretty soon he will be (oo numerous _ Written Expressty for The Star By W. A. C. LATSON, M. D, Editor is to present-—just plain & ions ® for a fortnight and see-—W. R, & him | tion on the people, and to this de ounclation be added force and the eloquence of & man jong trained in public speaking He exposed the leadership of Aldrich as trifling and paltry; the sensation lay in the dd The Village Cutup, In His Capaci BY FREO “GREAT SECRECY AND THE HO! POLLO! ATTENDS THE RE- HEARSALS.” Hegin saving your money, fellows. Reeleysport is going to have a so elety cireus. The Most Magnifi cent, Marveloug and Mastadoni¢ Ag: *| gregation of ‘Abituals, Acrobats and ®) Amazing Freaks, Fakes and Frosts ® | that ever gladdened the eyes of a ®) blind man, And I'm press agent. %)~. Every member of the local 400 ts * | going to take part, If only to keep *| from paying admission, ®| Great secrecy and hol pollal at *| tend the rehearsals, and knot holes *®\in Abner Chicksey'a barn are at */a premium, Sudie Clodhammer is *\ going to do the Salome dance in a tube gown while riding bareback %| Sho Is practicing In # strnitjacket *| The Hunsnider brothers, trapere * | artists, will have a flying fish act *) without the aid of a net, diving | from the center pole into a tank, If }it is a water tank they will swim jout, If it ie an oll tank they will |stay in and give an imitation of | Norwegian sardines as an added | feature There will also be a effuriot race * * a advice without making the indivi-|starchy mixture prevents the com.| between the depot express and the that starch village hose carriage, Tobe Beede COMING! A SOCIETY CIRCUS IN BEELEYSPORT. COMING But He la No Patti. every one of them made by per sons connected with the treasury department Cruet Revelation, “Tt waa, | have no doubt, a cruel} revelation to some of bis Ianguid | ty of Press Agent, Sings Its Praises ACHAEFER. | | | There will be no parade, except jease of rain, when it will be poned. Also, Old Judge Skoover has cdf. sented to don a Mother Habbard and be the bearded lady. He says if anybody tries to flirt with him with a cud of fine ent There will be plenty of red lemon- ade. We have already engaged the lemon, Don't ask me for passes, but if you make a nolse like « caterpillar i might let you craw! under the tent, BY STUART B. STONE. Gorman’s stenographer allowed the | unfinished letter to project stiffly | from her Invincible No, 6 while she! dreamed steadily out of the big,| open window. Gorman stuck his head into the | office. "Mornin’,” blurted he, blash- ing furiously. low day.” Mise O'Rourke nodded, blushing | too, and Gorman backed out, nearly slamming the froited glase from the door. EKavh morning he entered the office with a beautiful atring of com ment conceived during the rid town upon the tip of hia tongue for delivery to the girl at the machine. Kut when he popped his rather bald head into the little subatfice be for- got the prospects of early spring, the chances of the Cubs for the pennant and the new kind of birds upon the | indies’ hats, and said “Mornin'—niee | day.” ‘There were times O'Rourke found pinkish, valentines hearing dolictous mott of sentiment upon her desk, or may= be red roses peoped from a vase filled with hydrant water—and she was far too shrewd not to guess where the tokens came from, But the only time she had endeavored to thank Gorman *he had denied the | when Miss lace paper i i for many years he has commanded influence, money, power, He is a dangerous man. No matter what the future may bring forth, Sena tor Dolliver is entitied to mach eredit for bis courage in what he has recently done to him. jmurmared Maggie O'Rourke. German grinned foolishly and re- murned Dear Jonon momentous step. feet my whale life. ly, Jones. for me. thing.” Gorman stopped and eyed the girl He was red an a well burned brick and actually perspiring. The sten- sarapher tfted her head of caramet- copper halr and regarded him with her gray eyes. “Well why don't you ask her— that la him? she inquired, ‘Oh—or-—yea,” stammered man, "We muet proceed “There te @ certain peson who ta eupential to my happiness, but te beyond my grasp. Bhe | red rome, & pearl and worthy to marry a duke. ind 1 better forget this sentiment of sweet 17 in the month of June, or test my fate tn one bold blew? Write Tam conat one that will af lam very lone- 1 want to ask you some- Ger. Po, Jones, I must now say good-by. “Yours, 3 “GORMAN.” “There,” said Gorman, with trem- ulous tones and with « strange look at Miss Maggie O'Rourke, “You may typewrite that.” It seemed to Gorman that the gir eventually she returned and nided him the completed letter, “I 4 trouble with my notes,” she ex- lained, blushing violently ou Nealtated and looked at me so queer- Gorman read “Dear Jones—1 am considering a matrimonial step—one that wit pro- | he’s going to’ hit them tn the eye | Yide me with a wife, I am very! homely, Jones; but what girt minds | P a little thing like that | | “WHAT ADDRESS,” MURMURED MAGGIE O'ROURKE. to ask her somo time In the next million years. Thore ix a certain girl who is dying to have me, but w n't wet a chance, She In a red headed Irish girl, And hor name is Maggie O'Rourke. have the wedding on the June, as s00n an Maggio her trousseau? Goodby, Je must now Kies my ftar “Yours, “GORMAN.” “My stenography t# getting some- thing awful,” apologized Maggie O'Rourke. "But your transcript is perfect,” 17th or n make No one In the world cares 1 ain going | Richardson, AN ODD NAME ANDO Hadn't we better | :“T ALWAYS USE every one of these restrictions there into matter capable of feeding the|'* going to drive one, dressed in a is, or at least there should be, a per-| body; when I remind him that, by | %lt of red flannel underwear, rep fectly clear and easily crac po on a piece of broad with every | resenting Ben Hur, I'm going to reason. spoonful of cereal, he Is ich avers HN the other, but I don't know For instance I may say to a/quite certain to masticate it thor. | What I'll represent, unless it's Ben patient; “Avoid taking much sugar oughly, and actually digest at least) Him. Ha~ha—hee—heet with your cereal and cream; and a purt of it in the mouth. The town undertaker and three always take a bit of bread with a| When I have taken the trouble | #rave diggers chowe to be the spoonful of the cereal.” Now, if I) to do this he appreciates that there | clowns. They've an eye to business, give no reason for such advice, he is @ reason for the advice; and, if a| because they hope to make you die fs very likely to think my rule un-|reasonable man, he gots his money's | @-ldughing, Nellie, the hash girl at reasonable and arbitrary. | worth by obeying directions. | the Broadway Beanery, i# going to }do a cup and plate juggling act, while Tom Slade, the old squirrel stunt at the same time, using the chinaware that Nellie tossed aa clay pigeons, In the menagerie we will exhibit Dick Slicemire and his den of performing billy goats, You ean }@et In for a scent, Tee—hee—hee! Furnished Free, deod with vigor and, pleadin gagoment, had remained aw the office all day. So tha | i, news, Mike O'Rourke kept her to hernolf. J evident that Gorman was mu turbed, for the second time, “Morn day!" grinning most id Later he rang for Miss © only to inform her that he all, Finally he r ie long an 999 Ju “Mr, John Jones, Jonenvilie” “What an odd name and a «an on ay from t after. in the interests of the bust. r thanks This morning, though, It was quite ich pore For instanes, he thrust hin head Into the inner office and sald In’ nie fotically. ‘Rourke, belleviad hunter, will do the sharpshooting| Boston would win the pennant after id vig ously, and when she responded, n tioned for her to take his dictatte yne8 ddress!” bubbled Gorman, “It tn Just what I've been dying to say far two years” Then he stooped and carried out the lant dectaration in the wonderful patter To see the battleship Oregon tn the dry dock at the Puget Sound mavy yard, take the new fast steamer H, B, Kennedy, from Col man dock oes id You Know at the Kingfisher Casting Lines vr trout and bass fiehing are the at? Never break when you have big fish, For sale by A, L. HALL, 1111 Firet Ave. sean i MT RELA NO IY, AeA RNAS GARGS | woven wire feace. The Canfield | Jar fastener on fruit jars is almost | universally used STAR DUST from Josh Wise. “Never in om my wife” “Ran pretonds to belteve th louisville Courter- The hand of the diligent maketh rich.—-Frankiin “My son, when Tow ‘our age 1 never told « le” hen did you bein, pop T’—New York Even- ing Telegram. Thrift i ttxeif a good Income— Dutch. onl tein. } ‘Some men don't » muse they don't ca ugh tor men” aye the Philosopher of Folly, “Others don’t get married be- ause they care too blamed much for women.”—Cleveland Leader. married be- Thoory ts & good half but an im- ponsible whole.—Alex Koberteon. Madame—What do you mean by coming home at 3 in the morning? onsteur—I esh-ah 7 not my fault shut up—lilu Although ft Is idiotic to love at first sight, it is mot pinasant occurrence to be fallen in with first sight—Frank ov at Digne—Tha clined to be #0 he? what contrary, isn't j | Contrary! Say, if he bad | is head they would | her.—Chicago {Sew what ts a ‘joy rider’? n whose ride uaually ends in y sont'—New York Herald, “A jarief, m: Visitor—Can you read the pa Fortune lier—Certainly; that’s busine en I wish you'd tell my wife told me to for her,—Boston Globe. Step by step one goes very far— French wife ts a “So your y dows she want to “Bhe docan't w te vote, n- awered Mr. Meckton. "She wants to | make speeches.” Washington Star iffragette, te Woll may he stumble who chooses a stony way.—Spanish. “Drat the cot!” . "What's the matter, girl?” “Oh, the cat went to # new hat, and | wore her ¢ nd hack.” —Loutsville Journal - w Courier- Good news aweetons the blood — German. ke haw a fine new apartment,” hing stattonary in it, 1 except pantutely Harper's }his wife and the Razer. rything THE STAR” Mr. Montgomery, 590 Bast 59th at. told us that And no wonder he Always nees The Star The last ad ho put in this paper, May 11th, was like this; For Rent—Two-room house elec tric light and water, two blocks from Meridian ay, car, $8 a month Rod 586. led Guess what happened Forty calls were taken, The house was rented on the first insertion. “T always use The Star,” sald Mr, Montgomery, “and I certainly can praise your paper for the good re wults it gets for me, Kill the ad Peop! re calling ua yet.” It's the same all the time, Tho folks around this neck-o'-the- woods know Call these numbers any time Sunset, Main 1060, or Ind, 441. ) “G'wan an’ gib me some candy. I'd gib yer some ‘f } had it” “Yop, but yer never hab any.” BAKE — OVE NEVER FAILS Loughney & Loughney baked in their oven. cured even the chronic | great many years’ standing. | come in, ofttimes on ¢ go out without the use after only one bake. It ts wonder of the age and after} have tried every other they can learn of and cases can be sure of @ Loughney & Loughney. four bake ovens and i nurses to care for ladies in the ovens and cooling rooms, you the best of attention prices are surely within all, $2 per treatment, me when all other o and I had a very severe Rheumatism. No matter tried I conld not get I tried the bake oven. well, Loughney & offices are in the People’s § Bank Buildin Pike street, Suite * to ea Matti ve MR, SWAN MORIN, I wish to advise all who are af) 210 Occidental AY, fileted with Rheumatiam to. go to) Care of Hotel Richelieu, Credit-giving may attract you to a store once, but you won't go back to trade a see ond time, will you, unless you have been satisfied with the merchandise? ers is made up of people who tried our Liberal Credit Plan once and have come” the quality and the prices of our mercham- ; dise have been right—the question of ered- it-accommodation being a secondary com sideration. The same satisfaction awaits you—why not try us in the buying of that new warm-weather apparel? Eastern Outfitting Co., 1332-34 Second Av. 209 Union St, — “Seattle's Reliable Cred House”