The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 25, 1909, Page 6

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foo Seem ae! FRIDAYS JUNE 25, 1909, THE STAR i or of the United Press, Pub D MA AZINE P Det, on clty—1 year, i) 3 , ' oe di = = > wd | —_ THE PEOPLE'S POWER MR. NADEAU’S JUDGMENT WAS v & — a Ae Bs VERY POOR ON ONE OCCCASION S ’ cy . 0 i patina rorfunit : ty ue wh i el WHEN ACTING AS AN UMPIRE| r le eason $ utt Pp y tired ie @ n "| HE CALLED A MAN OUT AT \ — z : aghy’ ‘ee . THE HOME PLATE, plea ' By W ¢ ‘4 “s * ~ D ° wh Hy ‘ but ' Stirring Times in the Sait Room Tomorrow Bi tae : = ).| Ofa ht mind nected - where eB fecli: es, ‘They see a ( 6 official max nt of the . F 4 to eH mF ‘ " > ce ere BE og: yin New York, thee Fao Paitcextoton 138 Handsomely Tailored Suits, Unusual Vale | 8% a» ; t r 1 as capable 0} q ’ ad dgmeut that display . ¥ “ ae the duwent than that dal ues for $35.00, Tomorrow al So i: “\\ | general good opinion of him health j CP ha i } mower t N ‘ y nea ne wavered to ent : ant summer he and F There A pts y . ( Pp ; ‘ t { hitb ry were in Aleake st like a Ne me tele at that M 6 pee Take one ¢xa le i the 7 —syt most rimmer 6 tal Lege desper n the country in rose, on | I ee the strikes i! nd light doom, fm cisive a re pr be Are i Vloor wen i What was the answer? ha 1. A. NADEAU, DIRECTOR GENERAL NADEAU, Dr . 1 le at Ph ¥ ad al 4 moment visitors! Ag Director General of the AYP. When Just an Umpire at a Ball 4 Boss C, I 5 ver, I sh q “ Hially taken aba Exposition Game ° © f 7 ; ee 5 tet trib tors an M j ‘ edelphia w Ng t " — tf J f . : . Ye came from the astonished made general agent of the ating proprt You see, there was a municipal election ¢ ng int udel- | ed ve | dire oneral lepart und three at °, | one of i aye " nd & las. P. Me wh | “Well, | am that man whom you was put il) ohare ‘ a i phia withit week. A ite S | I rs ae Te < ria / Famous rity este! age i runs Philade!p' ate es, Was greatly alarmed © | sald m, t i 1, with ex jaws § that the h v- ahd ; feared that elect , aba aa Y iW © the an Monroe ‘ stury : rise an ike a ¢ n » his 7 ‘anoth 4d . stopped the strike All Khow Him tia birthibeas of @ renowned ind) ss. That's the point c It fs not as a bn - Ea 4 i qule hat Ira A, Nadeau he al na | Election day is Boss C. P.’s big stick. t you renen th , i+ tnidel,’ out a at ene of thelr ep f ba i you wv i i a —- iaeageataninds oe =< ; High- Class Trimmed Hats at $5.00 | | nacannipmapenmmmenane amo, wh ” gave n e in teally, and f It can be put down as an ab) Having started the legislature,/the home plate that meant viet an man id }empy of the excellent f ether elute ceriainty that if a person|Gov, Hay now has an Interesting | OF & ted score for the losing team?” | tho eit At first in 1890 he was it spoaition factory | | tinues the out th ce Se ee Geers 8 eee | eeeeroroeerenesecoseeree aint fi i 81 a wnar 18 A HAVANA CIGAR le tomorrow ling Spt. out. of te m. Dont sag physical suffering w ae = F $|ly he slid trom the ball and braced| What je a Havana cigs i overlook ortment { Pong Expert opinion as to the value of} If nothing else, the Gould trial) > THE DEATH OF pA mens a eee oe | ae ap thy Ld Aion ibe if the mucl Melbas, | York, Chinamen for hust ¢ has proven what Hares men and) ® S| had ne ‘ Staoer wade te Beate He Miltnote of thelr utility as y- | we may be when put on thelr C on the bo inast. The vane tobacco cannot be interes fh favor of their ut a = ay ci STEEPLE JA K : rope ¢ wan fall-jealled. And George : ey oe = — = hie lant « > : af. ; vat " anole ! a had studied 1 ot or fair, a WATCHES GROW TIRED. =| The me ‘tired’ wateh | BY H. H. HUDSON rhe next morning the porter atfCdban claar f vt 10 Oat Bae Cer “I suppose sald the watch.| seems to be eet condition,| The great Magstaff whic! « ole! kne i at the doer of once forth Uhat le of + throt | evived maker to a friend who had just | but It just won't work, The fact Is| above the skyscraper was bent like om oceupled by Btoeple Jack.aci@ere came from } taelf ring Bt. a Mely, Danded him bis wateh for re that long and faithfdl service hasia huge bow by the powerful gu wat fo response, They PUP, genuine Havana ' “by the “you do not know that wate thrown it slightly ¢ adjust} A curious crowd bad 5 ed In| broke ip the door, ‘They found him’ bacco grown, cured and rolled } assock Uke human | mes don't} ment in perhaps a ¢ nt} Ee ae dead in his bed. The phyaiee the dala MH Cuba; second, cign i consid y for the ¥ reason that they | places. Scraping and ¢ | cian Was summoned. The case at ‘ the at Lad tired out and peed resting. re adjusting a fine watch o firwt pusaled fh Then all be I firms } | “Bometimes a watch ia brought to! worst things that could be done It came clear. Nightmare, caused by Cuba, w . mi nection Pme which is al! right. Nothing! A month's rest will ad, cause vereating, he explained; and heart Havana x Pabout it ls out of order; and it is|the works slowly to readjust them failure, owing 10 the probable fact! ready made Ptatriy clean. Whea they become | selves, and at the end of that time. that aa the r laced aprit under from Bremer Pgalky and refuse to run, except by | after ear: ling, the wateh will the bed sud: y gave Way, Steeple a fits and staris, the heat thing to do|go as ¢ wily as ever,” —From |Jack was making a descent in his dene Wise tare: Isto Adora them aside for a good rest, | Tit-Bits | droar = = eer a. oe - ~ ey oe ‘RABBI BLAMES RICH _ MEN FOR POVERTY NEW YORK, June 25- thinks is the matter with the poor man | thinks, and he outlined his views in an unmistakable manner a) 2 BY RABI STEPHEN &. WISE. (Pastor New York Free Synagogue.) ‘call are two mp danguiyas Classes | worker who RABBI STEPHEN &. WISE. “| who have, It ta Hot the fault of the poor man that hia wages are low, despite what Chancellor Day of Syracuse Univer sity says, in the opinion of Rabbi Stephen 8. Wise of the Free Syna- @gogue. Chancellor Day sald the wage earner was facing poverty + Hike that in India ff he continued strikes and a tation. Rabbi Wise took occasion in a recent sermon to tell what he he It's the rich man, l¢ \— Balter The or Binge our = this, then why couldwe it char to ask Where ts the t be told outlay as will jasure a balance suf. fictent for the salary liet of the } what section of city's charter |i the hiding place for the power to apend the taxpayers’ money for a temporary arch to advertise the limit?” he LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE Ly court has decided that the charter | ter special trains to bring visitors Jot Seattle does not authorize. the here? | city to spend money on such 4 per If one then aeked, If a taxpayer manent thing as a canal, pray, In got so brazenly presumptuous as At such a point of Male aod Oectaental. in a democracy, the unemple | exposition? hard-worked exposition offictala” | ai. preayent who would labor and serve, And if the city can spend $7,000. Truly we are coming to have alagy '* Teaver’ lelanred, who neither will toll nor on euch gewgaws, why could It not very fatherly municipal govern serve. There are no neutrals in spend $14.900 for a speedy hi ment; and tf all fathers re ed eft goed Rueceser ti the warfare of humanity THERE WAS ANOTHER CHEER (named “A-Y-P, Extravagan or as mich cash from the children to) "4S" Checkbooks may pay bills, but} FROM BELOW. HE WOULD DO lone fitly named), to ahow all die ran the household they might be! It te possible for the t they do not discharge social obll-| GREATER THINGS, tingul@hed visitors the acenery of as lavish aw is our city in buying |to have « gations, the sound? And If the city could’ bowwows, 8 ROSS PARKER ‘nr rene In the days of hard and fast dis-| ee SN EEE EE tinction between God'y poor and the devil's poor, poverty was re garded as the crime or the mis fortune of the individual A truer insight enables us to un derstand that poverty is not a jerime of the individual, bat a symp ttom of a social dise ax some have put it. Today under the lustrial era the idle are not volun tarily idle. Today men can lay nothing by for a rainy day, because they! have not enough for the dry days nnilessness in old age has for ceased to improvide an improvide vitably the lot of th survives into old age and more Ine lucky to ach po | of China, a. have this pet this ar where they i This hon is only 17 inches high 4 years old, and it never y higher The little girl in the picture is because out are Pony breeders there have thou sands of years of experience be- hind tnem. They do not well those wonderful ponies they can avoid ft. This little girl's papa, an Englishman, pald over $1000 for it, and had to hide tt In |@ bag to get it out of the country in. | Be 2 is a view only of those |" but it is becoming more |» jing papers would tell of the daring climb of Steeple Jack The man on the flagstaff was a 4 fare) ar ae . "8 1 rude philosopher, He knew that caod Te Wt many would look upon him as a yan life wae The performer ee had obtained a permit to adjust the AS |roves on the mast, Some of the 9K & sporting men about town had made up & purse for his bene imper tals, and 4o nothing abo He was sattef ling a craving which had always ¢ listed In humanity, He was & | in a different costume: a apy jin the enemy's country; 4 detective | Pour ling up & desperate chamcter 1 ion tamer; a tight walker; @ \cirena performer; a miner carting a }load of dyna @ man shaking At th death | act did not appeal all Th were men crossin the quare who did not raise their « |They were busy with the problems lof everyday life. Thero were oth jers who only cast a quick glance at | daredevil and quickened thetr For them ded ther pleasure no: ortainment t up fre The their breath |peared from the faced the Then the hero irew from his pocks flag and would do great things He hung W foot, head down )=! Bouawt Tis Youn bean |ward, Then » his way far ONE FoR You }I| WHEN ARE YOU ther up the staff. He would ait on " J NG Yo Ley ME | the ball at the top of the pole, The r f. on Tey My NEW camera would show him po THANK a ition In the papers, Anothe ity | You |would talk about him. He had traveled from coast to const, and his nate was known in every town jin the land. As he gat on the ball he dreamed of the curious crowd which would surround him when he |reachéd the bagi \ Flo wotild take a week off at least, and attend the best pinces ~of amusement the choleest clga 1ough warmly clad the cold was ing its offect. His teeth chat His hands were becoming § Hid limbs trembled. The | however—strong er than the poople suspected, and | the hemp rope had withstood fhany and nae ha tered, numb staff was strong / | Kanaan ‘ uty Jo urnal tiped Distinctive 01 | Summer Apparel | Is here for you that please and prices, So eee ae ee “BES, hig | —in styles and qualities | wanted ge that ne en at ‘‘honest-value sib ¥ seit aka Liberal Credit wt I} vatetisint| if you wish. Pay as you please—as best Che he montis ve! suits YOUR convenience. ab i jr ft t “Everything that’s needed to i Sethian ee oust man complete, }. | an wy Eastern Outhitting Co, . 1332-34 Second Av. 209 Uni “Seattle’s Reliable Credit House” | | | rome Ren kest It ; | |

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