The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 10, 1909, Page 4

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Member of the United & Hered datly by The Star Pabit In order ¢t @ the probability of a prejudiced att tude of Ur 1 States senators toward the industries of the) gountry, by re per il business interests or connections, In the d n and \ on the tariff bill, the New York Evening Post has made an investigation which is interesting and important i rec f each me bet f the senate was gone into Here's the way the senate lines up on business and professions, Bee to the Posts Farm 10, Mere ' * rpora 1 lawy ré Lawyers without special s, 40 Bankers and holders ks, 21 Manufacturers, 11 Holders of railway stocks, 19 Holders of ind al s % Holders of steamship interests, 6. Holders of mining interests, 17. Holders of lumber interests, 9, Connected with public utility corporations, 8 Owners of large tracts of land, 9. Rated as poor men, 10 Rated a naires, at least 22 Indefinitely reported to have leanings toward corpora-| tions, 16. This list clearly spells “property rights.” Read it and see if in it you can find the s “human rights.” We do not have to be d that the U, S. senate grinds daily in the interest of the special few, but It is interesting to know to what extent our resentatives” favor ther when they are favoring the ric T leanings.” We believe that is misleading. The very fact that they are men of t ing, for the bulk of written law serves property rights as and powerful in general Post mentions 40 lawyers who are “without special written law is an indication of their lean against human rights, and the average lawyer thinks that way.| So, the 40 lawyers may be safely added to the 27 corporation and lawyers, the 21 bankers, the 22 millionaires, the merchants manufacturers and others in the list who by the natural order! of things stand for property Ten men are rated as ‘ Perhaps these 10 of the stand the article appear whole number, being poor, ing in this newspaper yesterday in which a reporter recites his| experience with the hea asked, “Why are the prices of meat so high? Maybe these 10 “poor” senators know of the struggle of | ma'am the average poor man to keep his family in respectable circum gtances with the prices of life necessities higher than ever be-/ fore and wages about stationary. Maybe these 10 “poor” sen- ators realize what tariff revision upward means to the major tty of American citizens, We know that some of them do They are, of course, a hopeless minority The United States senate is, indeed, “The Millionaires Club.” Whoetber it is a calamity or a With John Burroughs in Honolulu Diessing is a matter of jndividual | and the faunal naturalist in Africa | experience, but the fact remains nature fakirs will bave the same} liberty of speech as all other preda- | that after today it is about 70 cent and $§ more difficult to get | tories. married than it was yevterday | on as good little coys amd girls can't —-- even have prunes. A few more necidents to the pipe |Hine and lawn cultivators will begin Remember if yoo smoke o cigar @tte from now on you're guilty of & misdemeanor, in addition to all ed ether things the neightors| 2onethan Bourne, Jr, beat Pree think about you. | Went Taft in a golf game, thereby adding «ross personal injury to third elective term” insult. With the Fourth of July and the} special session ahead, It takes the record breaking A-Y.-P. attendance had make life at all bearable. }with Sherman's description of war At least Mr. Prye’s advice to the county commissioners should have the weight of words from a mao Who knows what pe is talking about. Pear not but that the waiter will openers gtill take the tp, misdemeanor or Bot, and the chances are he'll buy j tt lar brand that recaps ot 16 tea. joular ct at made Milwaukee Mayor Rose at least will have to | tumous. | a The sinking of the Sea Lion only! Naturally {t would not do at all goes to show that accidents will |to permit the Vancouver ball team happen on the best rogulated | to become monotonous In their own ecrans. jtown THS JULIET FIRED SiC BULLETS AT HER MAJOR BYERS AOWIING ROMEO N_TTENDER BY FRED SCHAEFER, he clambered into Jim's lunch wag on. “Tra-lala, tra-la-lum!” some very hectic hamburg steak “I have an exclusive idea which I intend to develop,” sald the m: tlon of western Nevada and eastern California, It is nothing leas than Death Valley. This will make that desert valley an Inland sea. It would cost only $8,000,000 to do it." < “And how?" queried Jjm NANCY DI MICHELE, “By the siphon meth’ coptir DETROIT, Mich., June 10—Here’s| ho carried across the mountains Modern Romeo, whose Juliet emp-| We blow into the land end, and the . | reflex pressure resulting will start | rs extracted one S2caliber rim) ay inrush of water to initiate a flow ch will pour the brine into| ol is her six-shooter at him. Doe- ire cartridge from Romeo's hip.| w 6 question of whether that is h Valley, until the ye way for a nice young lady tO) equal to that in the Pacifl my “No” is up to the jury in “Uh-huh,” said Jim. “But what's criminal court here. the use of it?” On Palm Sunday Miss Annunziata!) “ge!” snorted the Di Michele, better known as Nancy,| you prate of use? Look at the w awoary of Matteo Confolo,|thetic side of it on Imagine what id sent back the diamond ring,| an improvement to the landac ape ity @ gold watch and other presents | wiil be. o had laid at her feet, But Mat And Major Byers doparted tn feo kept acoming. Rumors came | such a huff that be did not eat th. that Mattco was going to carry her|last of his roils, but took it away | off some day when she wasn't look-| with him tn hus pocket ir and marry her, anyway. So janey ge a wie shooter, and| The Maid—Ian't she fooll it the first take me into her confid while she keeps a matd | aide’e approach father property { the beef trust, whom the reporter] There are so many changes in| Feeding delinquent children | the new code which goes into ot-| strawberries ts hardly the proper feet today that the only safe plan | menu, when « large number of '* to take no chances and be good | raising the product that Is Idestical | thave equal footing with the par} annie of “Tre-le-la,” sang Maj, Byers, os | REV, SIME! YOSHIOKA STAR DU DUST A Werd From ‘Jesh From ‘Josh Wi ‘beret obitd dread th’ “The world owes me @ living That's all right as * you ean gst & while jthe bills Sult the action to the word, the word to the action —Shakespea re whe But, perhaps, dear, yc He—You, I did) unfortunately turned aroundNew York Kveuin, Tolewram : Y not lead men truth jby tricka—Chieago T Cook—The mas stove t ut _ bady—Woil, get a matoh and Mant took-—But It has gone out through | the root. Jude God resists the proud—tMble Great floods have flown from iit. Ue sources —Greok Giiee—Peckdn has a bad case of| matrimonial Miles—-How Ghies—-ihla wt with him.—Chleage 3 “Ro you are an optimist™ “In a certain sense.” answered Mr Due fy on the antot wheel. Aseop. Kipps makes mountaine out of advertising circulars for « pictur eaque eummner resort : Hread tint He—DMige Marion 4r—-name my app fhe (nelecting @ specimen of an other kind of fruit from a basket on the table)—~ Now, Mr. #lowman, don't you think it would be ever so much nicer if I would name a date?—To anf Country won't you! Puthertand. Mot “Can you . Mr, Henpeck. in a Inpse in the con versation of bis spouse, “that when the upenk of thelr matt mantry it always le the (athe but when they speak of their niry. invariably call it mother tongue? Salve! Setve! Her Pather—Whea you marry noble girt T'm sure she inherits the from you. —Chipe qualities Impoonthte. The Preacher—My boy, some day you'll bring sorrow to your father’s \aray balre The Bad Boy—No danger, sir. about me has made him NOW IS THE TIME TO SIGNAL MARS Mars i jeors should be getting busy. * planet is approaching the earth at the rate of many hun- dreds of miles a aay. Soon will it be shining ruddy and brilliant By the 16th of September, 1909, Mars will be practically within about 96,000,.su miles of the earth. No will never get any closer than “Why the funny nolses?” asked Jim, stirring a minced onion into jor, palling his coffeo and rolia to- | ward him. “It will be the salva-| turning the Pacific ocean—or fo | much of It as ts needed—into the great natural depression known as ued the major. “A 10-foot pipe will major. “And “Bay, ma, I" tin Stax. “Whenever I @o into a| teal I hope for the beat of It Washington Star “What a dust I do rates.” gald the motent tt Ton He is the writer! my daughter, you marry a big-hearted : jultor—t know that, sir, and} LIGHT ON A DARK SUBJECT \JAPANESE WORKS HERE SAVING HIS COUNTR YMEN .. An istsaiiing Sais wall my t School Found Here. BY BONNIE WHEELER There is a missionary in our nildat . Of course, there are many others but Rev, Bimel Youhlokn, wratded has accomplished a work that | houne-topa. some It brings memories of foreten lands and heathen people. ‘To rome It means tributions taken up at }the Sunday morning services | There ia one person to whom the | word from now on will always bring j}to mind the life straggle made by | this Japanese minister in the cause of his pec Needed Here Four years of the mintatry tn Japan proved to Sime! Yoshioka that bis people in this country need ed missionary work in thelr be half, and be left the land of his birth and came to America With bie w established hin: wlt in Seattle, the gateway to thie ountry from Japan. Here, unaided. jhe has built ‘up one of the strongest | Japanese minsions on the coast. He has established a home the un | protected Japanese women, and a training school for both the boys and girls the bottom of It all, Many women come from Japan here in good faith, [he says, expecting to meet some to care for them. They are lost by thetr inablitty to make themaelves understood, This is one of the rea sons why this ontiring misstonary meets every steamer landing from pan | Denounces Slave Traffic. nounce the trafficking tn the women “lof hie race, and many 4 story could he tell of snatching Japanese atrls from lives of shame lmteston,” sald Mr. Yoshioka | yea | terday, “for we believe in the ounce; coming to this country as workers Many of the students of Japa come here to learn the Englis! language and American ow These we find employment fo: give thom a home until they ® work.” For five years Rev. Simel Yoshio ka and hia little wife have strum with the miaaion for the girls aud | boys of thetr land. A might echoo) has been established. a home pro | vided for the girls, and one for the} boys, and a chapel fitted up—all j through the efforts of the one man His Boys Help. “It 1 want anything done ——— 25,000,000 miles, but it will ge ay many wmillion miles farther I tell ibefore it will return again as close | to the earth. | Even with good opera lanaer in l@eptember, one wil be able to tee ithe canallike linings on Mars. | The tolke who are going to sig | Boerere oF our RAITT BRS “Ame On CEPT SOR for the planet will soon begin re ceding from the earth aad #un,) assing out into space fully 60, 100,000 milex, then appearing as a ting point of light without diameter or bodily appearance, other than position. At that time our earth Will be so far away from Mare that | the earth cannot even be seen by) the Martians, not mentioning a st hal, though all the earth's sor was covered with mirrors. SSS rE WHEN A FELLOW’S IN LOVE BY WEBSTER m engaged" 1, oltpat yr | wiitoh ens boy ithem t# really @ be a College Man Mt 1 not toll me oy haa worked for the wt hundreds of the five yeara he y wand put inte the did toll me with regret, however worthy of being heralded from the | ve three tintes because of the re | grading of the district A missionary, What a world of| were meaning there ta In the word! To | tally husband in the wonderful work caleulated just how much thie Packed to the Doors! Crowds are still saving big money at the BIG [5,000 lothing Sale OF THE CRESCENT CLOTHING STOCK AT THE GREAT WESTERN STORE Men's Suits as low as $4. 95 $11 A5 A saving of 100% Children's Clothing as low as $1.65 $4.97 saving of 100% Ignorance of the English language | je what Mr. Yoshioka claims te at) Ritterly does Mr. Yoshioka de) We do not have many girls fron: | pl the restricted district, who have; fallen through ignorance, In Dury of prevention, and protect the sisted }nal the old Martians will have the | best opportunity this year Chat will | +. oq {be offered for nome time to come, | asked | ! “Young Men's as low as $4.45 $10. 25 | A saving of 100% Prices on Furnishings, Hats, Shoes and Underwear ' Cut to nothing Attend the big s week—Saturday is a jam. will continue until the Crescent stock is entirely disposed of. sarly in the The’ sale Great Western Clothing Co. 1317-1319 1st Ave. Opposite Arcade Annex Center of the Block—Be Sure You Find the Place An Extraordinary Special in Boys’ Suits at $778 p Even wl 1 l the | id store, oup WETe Con. RI ) The uits ri hand tailored OF nd line comprise the | latest ide doubte-} | Winaahitios Jet east. of bees “ti und Norfolk it ; ty » ish worst He joy velour ( Y clothgenall § apres P s—~all jg H On Sale Tomortr and Saturday 17 Prizes in Trimmed Hats for $7.5 Some rare value lor effects, with nuch - all- wiles all. black and white and bled ON SALE TOMORROW Other Sales Too neg to = Shantung Dres in the } = larly $1.50, for Large Size Comforters, with fine cotton yarn tied, special sie. +sses or Guaranteed Feather Pillo \ special White Bed Spreac full size; | ropar's STYLES TODAY | New Shipment of Those Stylish | Pongee Coats for Summer | $23.50 to $28.50. —— | Cash or Credit =e These desirable garments are of fine ae Pongee—guaranteed to wash. Core in fitted’ inch length, trimmed with jet buttons, and vance Fall Novelty Models. Excellent - 50 to $28.50, Ss rete ogre plain tailored Rep and Linen pond 5.50 and up. New lines of Linen Coats, $8.50 to $15.00. Eastern Outfitting Co, | | 1332-34 Second Av. | “Seattle's Reliable Credit House" 25 Cents Per Instrument | DON’T PAY MORE serve you in both @ partments, The ing directorate conservative, safe na agementi Title Co. 543-544-545 New York Blook Ferdinand | Seattle, Wash, 4 . Main 1133 tied. 4081 | | Guaranty Abstract & Live “ILAUNDRY COLLARS, 2 Aon CUES i ousARs Iwism ) suigis ¢ S&ACK DOLLARS DO DOUBLE DUTY AT THE BUFFALO STORE 424 PIKE 87. Branches at Gallant Georgetown and Rete ton, Union Savings & Trust Co. of Seattle Corner Second and —_ v +10 o'clock and Gay funday fort working _ people absolutely *free. First ave — = eS eS ee >

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