The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 16, 1909, Page 4

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Momber of the United Drews. Pub Mahed dally by The Star Publieh= tng Oo BALLINGER BACKS UP — One thing has entered into the national mind never to depart—the idea that the earth belongs to the pe »ple The men back Bf the sevelt “conservation movement waterway in vonsible for that stry, reclamation, all these have for their justification the great idea] planet on which we live belongs to all of us, not some| | that the nation as a whole is interested in the matter wasting or conservation of our coal and oil and gas and When the protest of the people and press went rolling into Washington, Ballinger seems to have seen his mistake, More over he seems to have reversed himself, He did not withdraw the same lands he had restored; but he turned to the ge logical survey, which has records of many water powers, and asked that service to designate the actual lands the possession of which} would control the power sites, and when these designations ar made the sites are withdrawn, Better yet, wher specific sites are not known, lands all along streams believéd to afford rks out the } ' the geological survey wi ure withdrawn whil this is a return to the policy of Garfield power profiles. Practically with the added accuracy lent by the work of the geo! Followed out conscientiously it will do everything that survey the Garfield policy did, and more. Fe the Garfield withdrawals did not all of them more completely, while leaving open to entry much land not affording power sites, which the blanket withdrawals of Mr, Garfield necessarily covered It shows that an honest protest is never thrown or it covers many streams er, and it ought to cover Good! away. The people will watch the new policy with interest, And| they should remember that Ballinger’s with lrawals are “in aid of contemplated legislation.” That is, Ballinger has with: frawn| these lands to give congress a chance to pass laws permanently governing the disposal of power sites. If congress does not act, he may restore them to entry—and to loot. Let the nation not go to sleep, Let it be as active in constructive directions now as a few weeks ago it was in protest. Let it din in the ears of its congressmen and senators the fact that the secretary has put a temporary lock on the door, but that it will not always protect the nation’s treasure house of power. The permanent lock and bolt must be supplied in laws to be passed by congress. that about baseball which the Portland team knows. - Exposition officiais insist fidelity to nature and compliance with the Nquor law demand that the streets of Cairo be dry, even if it is only for the enamels’ sake Our prominent Japanese citizen is not the only one who had to go away to find out what hie friends One thing about an exposition. It) 4 the officials really thought of brings out al! the nice words,|).. phrases and clauses that promi-| nent citizens have secreted in Lawns that put their trust in the weather man are several shades greener than those depending upon the Cedar river pipe line. their « The Mrs. Gould who Is sobbing) in court is not the one who married | a Chinaman. She chose a million- aire. Despite Dr. Crichton's kind warn. ing the small boy and even his A retrospect of yesterday is con-|fond mamma still continue to as vineing that there are some things ' similate the deadly ice cream cone ee COSTLY TELEGRAMS. obtained at once. This took 20 - hours to send, and cost £3,200. In 1881, on the oceasion of the issue of the Revised New Testa When you send & telegram, you probably strain all your contractive THE SEATTLE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE American. This 96 per cent, how: | aniding unionism,” said Van Cleave over, has not the contro! of the! mit eannot be properly ts ta untons, It ls the other 6 por cent. | oitrover ca & rl the ortminal leaders and walking ; i y"] delegate class, who now have con-|*meraniam. 2nd personal I y ; : Upon retiring from the prest trol of those organizations anise al Nationa! AnecMiation of | Will Go to Alaska Manufacturore Mr. Vas Cleate was Mr. Van Cleave, in company with | p nted by the asseclallogd with Mra. Van Cleave, te here, not on|a ruby and dinmond scarf, pif, the | business, but pleasure bent, ani r m of the association set with after a short vielt in Seattle will mda, and a check for $10,000.) make a trip to Alaska and from have been an employer for there f California. 25 yours and no one baa the wel Mr. Van Cleave last night ox | fare of his men at heart sitiai phan pressed himself as greatly pleased [ have. My men all respectyme and with the conditions here on the |I certainly do them, I Pacific coast and sald he could! Mr i Mre Van Cleave are at | talk hours on the changes he found | the Washington hotel Many -pleas jthe labor unions, 1 endeavor to say ali | @eDt. the Chicago Times had the! mm can go in for the manly art, ec cae narod Dah ay al text of the whole book telegraphed too—a full net of fiveounce boxing | ,, ohn ding looked rather pursled : from New York, at a cost of/ Gathor round me, boys, while [| gloves; only there's one with al \t apne gents | you may send for sixpence. But} £2,000. In 1898, 1,800 words were| unwind the latest, Are any of you| stove lid tn it for good weight, Out At that moment she passed out all telograms and cablegrams are |cébled to the Argentine Republic, | athletes? Do you want to become |in the yard there's a cinder track jot an inner office, not thus thriftily composed. A eget Py word, amounting | contortionists, hand balancers, acro:| Where you can take exercise whoa FR ad is she!" explained the} message of no less than 4,000) “4 s |bate and head spinners? Then joln|ing cinders. For those who like| wy... “Ayboie sae tak thatasii.” wah. sont 401 ane — cone Tele: 308 188) the Boeleysport Athletic club, It|them we have dumb bella—a tittle ‘ici hy, ae fool!” ‘exclaimed the | 4 5 u yre#.) won't take any time from your work | {dea of the Héeleysport noise sup. eager in angry tones, “that's my in orderiand at another time paid £6,000 during the mtine revolution. D NINE a full account of the trial of for a week's enables beltime of an Aree ieee from Australia, murderer Deeming might Fer every dozen couples thet are; An’ married in this day married life goes these census figgera every night this June wo've prayed that God would gly this pair As much of His own tender love aa) He might hev to spare. We thank Him fer His blessin' that | has kept us good and true, Mandy kisses me and nez “God help the other two,” One couple's smash, way. Reminds mo uv an old, old hymn my mother used to sing, Then ‘Bout ninety-nine safe In the fold| and one lamb wandering | I guoss {t's June and rom om that —#) with all the accomplices—I mean ac | steady job on the section. Old Jconsoriee—of & firstclavs cigb.|Judge Skoover is our honorary | ™*thods may have been. There's shower baths when the| member, Ho's also our strong man — | roof leaks aud we'll have a Turkish |—he raised our rent higher than it|* * * TORII ek | bath as soon as we can find a Turk | was ever put before. His only rival bd who'll agree to take one, All the/ in feats of strength is Scoggins, the|* COPPER ARRESTS GIRL «| gymnastic apparatus is in place.| egg and butter man, Oh. lis great! FOR SKATING OVER TOE; # | There's a palr of Indian clubs; but | You'd better join sede i, save =| SS ee ee a ee: nd | | — CHICAGO, Ill, June 16.—A | Chicago magistrate has estab #| | Mashed a precedent In favor of * roller ekaters who are using ® THIS MAN SAYS THE DAYS OF LABOR UNIONS ARE WANING JAMES W, VAN CLEAVE, ENEMY ™ -_ eeenanenenanananensagacnageseesaagetsertay OF ORGANIZED LABOR, |6 » NOW IN GEATTLE \ A REAL SHERLOCK gunegenensnneaaaanageaassseasestaegaggeeaatys | “The days of the labor unions are | numbered, unless they recede from the orfminal methods which have been employed by them during thd last 10 yours.” Thin waa the alate and soll and streams ,., ;ment made yesterday by James W | BY RAB, JOHNGON | All the cour went up in the air when Secretary tal- | Van Cleave, who until a few months P pile ge ar : : rt : with. {40 Was president of the National Suey WOT OE altel linger restored to public entry the water p Association of Manufacturers, aud vator in it Inrge ottlos wl ne « wn f nm ¢ by h »yredecessor l {t was! who for thre years, as leader 6 maw her first; then she drawn 1 entry y I of that orgar , Waked an un firet a glance at him, He went up} given t t tar ¢ protest of the na a SiN-| ing war against Watonism. Hel o the op story to oe tain at] ; ter p er ao restored to try should turn up in the|and wife are now visitors in Seat whieh floor she nt ight; she gle water powe ‘ 1 entry | | : Bae P at the sixth hands of the new water power trust, his administration wou t bedteve th la weener this ‘walt That was all they saw of each other prop be ally disgraced men of all crafts should organise that da Ste aaaere & vent up, “Stop Bale {Dut ! have over hold that tt tn Jennings went home that pight| } nh every part: re la re cry wen { LOE right that they should take upor | wor fering, pondering — does he linger ! then vos the direction of the work i ne of the offic He | : ‘ fa ee ee i buatnoas of the employer, and seek would se And S 1 I ert wn ett . h to relegate to thelr own organtea The . ald he had were or the power of r the « nands of the presi-/ too the right to control, and resort a tar tout lady who kod or 1 1} t ith refe to violence and orime to the seventh That war t the dent stopped h cy is being & we their selfattatned rigt one ence to the pov Scores Present Methods i i see the clea bea Bel tee : t 1 him that « tall lady The er were as requested by the There are #0 many things that mw th eventh, who wore d reat proy Kanization ean fhe w lo ugi reclamation ser at ent found a | peoure for Itself, but the present jas uct tas lac certataly waa not the righ with power sites in the smain, it recommended that| method te criminal and militant, as ther cleaner wald she had the lands along it be withdrawn from public entry so that the| "Pe the case In (he boyoott declan | — JAMES W. VAN CLEAVE. — | soun fat lady who wore | power trust could not have it entered, and thus de il the} company, of which I am preaident I'the x r ofOn i“ i" 1 hict hall Lin the |The boyeott was dectared becaure that the firat object of the ® ne thire woe never saw Her! people of the mechanical energy which we shall need in the et That time the proaldent of jolation was the expansion of Amer: | at all. | future for light and heat and power. When Ballinger came | the Manufacturers’ association and |!ean commerce, but that It became » Jennings tried a new nouree ; , Si cake . renirenta (ROt because the boycott was neces |& protective association af *, be prowumed. The man into office he procured from the reclamation service reque baty eoven years ago, David M. Parry cigar stand was the rea for the restoration of these lands, and they were restored, and] “Men loft my employ with toare| then president of the assoctation owlball I | he first comer to pick up, [Streaming down their faces, ‘They | sounding the alarm, when the pres: | Slender build, blue eyes, and lay like precious diamonds ready for the first comer to | had been with me for years. It was |ont militant methods became ap | through no fault of thetrs that they | parent never returned to my employ, and Here ts His View. through no fault of mine The » be only one < 7 1 consider that 95 por cent of! of the socalled ‘controversy’ whict the members of labor unions are w in promrese between tbe ¢ good American citizens belleving fs now | « a ploying « and the Jabor os, and that is decent and law lnesoe the principles dear to every true in Seattle. ant receptions are being plannéd In In speaking of the organising of their honor. They are to Wislt the manufacturers againa, the exposition as the guest of President Mr. Van Cleave sald Chilberg. “SLENDER BUILD, BLUE EYES, ANO DRESSES VERY NEATI” REPLIED THE CIGAR BTORE MAN, eo $vtiren | EEE a CT — ation _ |dreases very neat?” answered the || Jelgar stand man, “Wh DONT a all rant. ‘Dos. ft j just the very person you } in't chew the kind we met} OF BEELEYSPORT CLUB hunting. She's @ stenoxre ted t the G. & M. office | ; Heat Motive Power. | He did not walt for any further is love Uh makes the world go | Yi P. l t tips The thal) wee street. “All tree = our raiate All Kinds of Advantages for Those Who Love a Little Athletic Diver: | he shertork had to do would tlm win notes Wee Ot Dee we ° io gO up my Wen 'and How’ Care How They Get It Arriving at the sixth Moor Jen | The litle weekly cheek | Will Tell You 7 pecan ne nings peeped cautiously into rin - | BY FRED SCHAEFER, door of G. & M. She wasn't th) there. That wae strange, Ho went \\ ‘ Betier than can be put into words, of the Slama, hext door | ‘Oh, yes,” said the gontioman tn | "!"* w absolute parity of there, “I know the young lady. She Tragedy i ia employed by the advertising com | 1d you notlee sien face to “Poe As ap a pany on the fifth floor, Do you)", wet about itt ‘ want her to write your ade’ 1 think her powder rag ex Liwwid . “No.” sald Jennings, and skipped, | ploded. Semahine” 10e The trail is getting hotter | Siistanea -¢ In the office of the advertialng WANTED TO company they lemployed no young ladies, but the one for whom he was anxiously seeking was on the top floor tn an architect's office “T am sure I know about whom | you speaking.” anid the archt tect, when be inquired. “She may be found at this time down in the manager's office.” Down to the office of the build. ing the Sherlock speeded. She waa there. The detective (in love) was well "BOB DIZE, TOD HUMMEL AND | grquainted with the manager of) LEN MECKENMIRE ARE ON OUR | the buliding. Ho went right Into} | TRACK TEAM, THEY'VE GOT A | the office STEADY JOB ON THE SECTION.” Why, Mr. Spaulding, how do you . do! I came to Inquire of a certain} they aren't mates—-ono's a anche and the other Sioux young ‘ety. | ft may osews rather » 1 _} odd, but I saw her on the elevator, | eae erteamtal DAFT |and I Just couldn't koep from think: | We've erected & trapeze, too, but Peerage: her, Coulda’ you im + oo, jtroduce me? I understand sho is as it wasn't batted no one has bit | employed here. Com- Swe pre soctety. Bob Dize, Tod | *'f*." Hummel and Len Meckenmire are on our track team. They've got a | If you haven't gotany. The B. A.C. alon aym has been thrown open In the rear of Bide Healey's pool parlor Jonnings hag not applied for al jjob In the secret ne He did locate the Indy, however crude his the aldewalka In over increas & ing numbers. Margaret #) Doyle, aged 15, skated over a # polleeman's 0. Groaning \% with pain the “cop” hauled «| her to the nearest patrol box & and telephoned her arrost, #| then after having hia toe at | tended to, he appeared against | the girl In court. Munietpal ® Judge Girten first told Mar # t to akate home, then he ® ded the pollceman for ar ® resting her. * eee eeeeeeeeeeeeeeet eee 2 > >» * >» * > * 7 = * * > - 7 THE CUREALL, told him that they) ** STAR DUST Jon Wine tare “A 9 humor te people more like by ance © humor” | Silk Dresses and Satin Dyes On Special Sale at $9.75 One-P nig, graceful a th back, Ttche ed gird t ke, black at mit satin trim. Cgrefu " te int Pe . ‘ y ch a ' black, 1 green Splendid Values at $9.75 Moderu Mytholowy Dioger ‘ ttle wit h ' t honest 4 eld V t shed Frying f\ tract y bled 1 bewwed tor a kine flirt © iipe 4 perty I t Query Answered ik tt ange of a & h i treak # eeont was handed to ua } watt and have everything in it na f 4 to b od way nothing Member. you manage t so jong? yo or ae a member of the i replied Mre eat her with kindness and conatder My goodness Kapital Mi the utmost nd-hand auto tress X.Y % WILL F. GRIFFIN wagesstes eS : “EO ON T | | | same | (From the Houston, Tex; Post, | by a man who jen't coming because lhe can't get transportation.) Everywhere we hear the prattie, “Are you going to Seattle, Are you going, are you going, will you go?” But we haven't got the money Por ourself and for our honey, Bo we sadiy and dejectedly say No,” No, alas, we are not going Where Pacific breeses blowing Bring the perfume of the faroff) Spicy Isles; What's the use of all the talking It's too far off for our walking, its too many, many, many many miles. Hut keep quiet if you can, eir, This in just a whispered answer, It is not for publication, not at all, The next time that question pokes us It does not coax us, we do not hear Be-| attle call!” We'll reply To Seattle? You are drinking! Man alive, we are not thinking Of the spending ot alx days on} ratiway traing Think how warm ‘twill be and duaty, | And the coaches will smell musty, And up tn that town it always, always rains, No, indeed, this yeat we'll roost on} Our front porch down here tn) Houston, | And comfy in our shirt sleeves with a fan; Lat those who feel a longing For the jostling and the throngtng, They can go who know no bet ter, #o they can, We prefer the low of cattle, And our prairies to Seattle; And our perfumed breeze holds| ns In its thrall These days, inatid o ninety-nine, make us feel that way; , Li te n, Ongar I saw a plano mofer der odder day who Dorothy was being taught to say And fille us with mild elation | rT tn the number Is eleven |And readin’ in the papera of wod-| Hs, motionloss |her prayers, She repented each! ANd—we don't got transportation Withone pais missin’ all the love ding every day | Bab, dot's noddings, 1 know laty wfo kips a delicatessen, line perfectly aftor her mothor un. Like we used to tn the old that weoms to come from| P08 every dozen couples, when| M4 she aln'd a bit delicate til they reached the third—"if’ days, darn it all heaven. files are bright and bine, | === SU ee = comma |should die before I wake"—-and I mentioned this to Mandy when| Should Join In prayer with Mandy: | 2 Wwassen, When woe mount to the chartot [ere Dorothy paused with a look of Minnesota in Dry Dock her kitchen work was God help the other two?” | Whon Barth's last ploture f* painted, | golden | terror in her eyes at the thought of Bee the steamship Minnesota, | through, hve Pau Teekind Tee a hedain | inne ae tubes aro twisted and) wo hear that choestnutty |dying, then she hala with a look one of the largest ships afloat, tal An’ sho replied with tondernces,| house? Bee en ue ny 21Mt08| when noame fo longer ara printed tun soe yelling tke thunder {Of tense rellef, "No, we won't die, |the dry dock, Alwo visit the Pa-| ‘God help the other two," column. ance | And the forme are sumbled and F people to “n up In fre >| mamma, we'll take castor-oll.”—The | elfic fleet at the navy yard. Boats pied ' WILL F. GRIFWIN, | Delineator for July leave Colman deck eee Ruffled Curtains of Suing Ibe ae cs wide, ‘i ‘ # ed with full » Good Roller, Window Shades, Mo Men’ s Collars, Toner Men's Four. est styles and argeon “Spe. $1.10 a Dosen Wanted Neckwear of Every Kind, 25¢ t t 55¢ Half Dozen stiff Dutch Collars 4 Lace-Trimmed Lawn ( re ql F y Silk and J a is 1 Net Stock Wt te Madras St broidered “i White Ascots, wit ‘ ° conan » Lace ed Jat ibroidery, Six Lengths Chiff ng, boxed, Six {1s Tourist ‘ boxed, Excellent Values, One and All, at 25¢ Closing-Out Prices On Pictures 25 15¢. 3: , for $1.15. c and 30¢ styles cand ¥ yle for B5¢. Bat we con assure you of tis entire freedea from al impart and substitutes, gearantecing thot every drop ts tmpatiea by | made foam the “frst press’ of ihe choicest eltwen af lip | It stands supreme for all uses—table, cooking, vale walle inalmend we guarantee i to be the best thot can bemade a Accept no msbstitutes nor excuses, | JOHN VITTUCC! COMPANY | Direct Imporer Seattle, Wash, and Vencouner, BC , | Credit ! That Satisfies —that has no red tape about it —that makes unlimited allowance for sickness or loss of employment —that costs not a cent more than if paid cash This is the Credit we offer you make the buying of your outht easy. Why not take advantage of it? 1 Eastern Outfitting Cay 1332-34 Se rcond Ao. Seattle's Reliable Credit Pe ‘Cline Piano Co | AGENTS FOR Knabe The Worl i's Best_ Pian Best P 1ano One Priced Piano House 1406 First Avenue

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