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Member of the United Pm lished dutty by The Star Pw ine Oo, WHAT WOMEN DARE TO WEAR f ble resorts in the east and in New th 1 ! York 1a ‘ | } } | for] est daring men ta arti a r | ’ | woma Asque eo It is observed, and not without a sense of pride, that the - w n of y have not followed the extremes of their} Where the longhorns feed on the | sun-cured grass, In the blaze of ” Jars a cloudlens sky In New York “they” are cutting ‘em low, behind and in} whore the cactus erawis and the front, and as tight as the skin of a new potato, and the waist-| sage brush spreads a plain of } alkali line has had an awful fall—the belt. is now worn at the kn lwhave the eray ‘wolf btowls and How do they wall We do not knew! makes his feast on the range 1 i th hat followed the “peck-a-| calf gone astray; We all remenber Ks | Where the coward coyote yelps by boo” invention. ‘That there is no noise from the east about the night and slinks from the face , hunt " theart Where the mountains frame the ple lessness of fathers, bre n cay Ser ueeT re tured land with « border Iine of It's no mere figure or spe to say that the mid-summer anow Z , j sa Where the chill of death from the | styles of the east are stunning. They are much more than ho likes to The combina there is such a thing) w that to Mere Modest Man aty is woman's sweetest charm. believe that mod tion of perilous low neckery, pernicious tight skirtery and braren large hippery, as worn on the eastern board walks and well, the brain the avenues of the metropolis this rer, is of man reels, for there is this psyc! ywical difference between man and woman: He analyzes fashions, getting to their real meaning; she dare not, ny shy wuld | Th ride inj of w results| Pastor Russell will be greatly ax © are & good many brethren In all seriousness, why anybody pay the Tickler when the same h who confidently expect 10 cents to are obtainable on the Madison at.| tonished some of these days care for a nickel? The man who stole six snakes and The the bdlaw Tecaile that same virtuous (ntention after the determination to place Gilt “pacnnled ‘wieentty toda’ for the sham battle accident! piow how much easy money there ts in (he wrestling game. Armory mishap, | i Even if the tariff ts vetoed, we'll Perhaps he fe anyhow! there ien't any mention of the t it, but anti-| "til have the Dingley schedules, #0 Baloon league in Mayor Rose's ea-| ‘PA Aldrich gets the purse, win timate of Beattie. joae or éraw mention of| Bob Hodge, somehow or other, can yut| not. forget that the people elected him shertff. For some reason the that Taft smile the reciprocal grins That it used to. THE EVERETT TRUES ENJOY A VACATION IN THE WOODS—NO. 6 “VouRT wos Giri wiTw SPonime Tig OUTING, ARE YOUN! 17't BEEF, Ghee, BEEF Aue TWh MEY Sek YOURE #1 SUCH A NORAY whl 37A0T OFF wirNourT YHE WAGON fails to bring WUST AS 1 Yrovenr’ ~ Twa GoY You <D TO HAUL THIS JUNK 70 IME STATION (36°F WERE YET, AWD — +! HiT \ UL WOLD onl! you'rk e m4 S aN } A 4 | WHEN A BOILED EGG IS ROTTEN, HOW OLD IS IT? (By United Press.) j which I believe t# rotten, 1 have WASHINGTON, D. C., July 24.—\had them served several times, | “Why and when is a rotten eg Therefore, | dnd thie sample to you is the issue formally laid before the|for a teat, 1 am not sequainted | department of justice with a view with the federal inepectors.” The to government prosecution In the! offending cafe was named | Northwest The egg, still unexposed, with! While Atty. Gen. Wickersham | the formal complaint, was referred was engrossed with the details of|to Asst. Atty 1, Fowler, who » of crusade t a} has ch pure food the corporation tax amendm couple of days ago, a logal phase of the} rushed Into the building with a} The egg Ix docketed No, 147,563, telegram from G. A. Neuendorf, of |“Subject, transmits a bolled egg Clark, 8. D., reading which he believes is rotten. It} U.|seems so, File.” ch official in the course of ite | ence through the depa ut wed ft, one indicting this on “1 this day send package by 8B. express for examination.” | That wae all and officials speeu- |r ated. Then the ekage came. | ind Within, carefully » according brief; “It le unfortunate the to invoice, was an egg of uncertain department did not receive the sam age, and with it was this complaint: | ple at its best. Don't blame the the ov | Tommy--What you doin’, mister? Entomologiat—Catching bugs, Towmy--You ought to call at vur house, | plexton THE FAMOUS TEXAS LONGHOANS—HARDLY 50 LEFT AND THEY ARE WILD. ENGINAL, Tex, July M—Loud laughter greeted Ched Reder's pro posal at the Hall ranch house on the Rio Grande that they should €o hunting for longhorne. “Loolbwhere, kid,” sald Mesabe Tom, who, after many years of ranch riding, had settled down to be stable boss for the ranch, “are you getting loco? Don't you know that the famous Texas steers is all gone ~~ plumb vanished from the @ of the earth and Texas? “Unless you mean them two that's been seon up the river two or three times?” he added. “Them's the animiles,” said Re der, calmly, “Tm going after ‘em, it | can get a bunch of boys to go| along.” ‘This is an account of a converaa- tion at the Hall ranch on the Rio Grande a fow days ago. It ended in a week's hunt the hardest in years, Ched ..eder and seven mon came back with thelr trophies all right, but with a heightened respect for the Texas steer, and for the cow punehers who used to herd them a quarter century ago. Reder and Bill Hoxie and lx oth- or men first struck the back trail along the Rio Grande near the Lar enza river, It was already late in the afternoon, Suddenly there was a awishing sound In the brush as though a) - great wind was rushing through the mesquite, Then 100 feet distant from the riders burst the two Texas steers, heads down, on the charge. So sudden was the movement that the cowboys didn’t have time | to get out of the way. It didn't oc) cur to anybody to try to rope them. | The great bulls, eyes gleaming, nos | / POINTED PARAGRAPHS. coneneen { Bat for love's blindness, no man} would ever admit that women were | angels, A man whose relations gush over! him seldom has cause to gush much over them. | After the cow jumped over the moon she probably meandered down | the milky wa | The chorus girl goe ren in the matter of clothes she wears on and off the stage. Malaria beging with a chill and ends with a fever; love begins} with a fever and ends with a chiil,| If your neighbors are unsatiafac: | tory it may be owing to the fact that you are an unsatisfactory neighbor. | A woman would gladly work 24 hours a day if she was sure it would give her a satisfactory com} If women and rivers could only | keep their mouths closed—but they can't, #0 there's no use in atirring up a fuss about it.—Chicago News REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR, Ground floor inves! have mighty deep them. The way to become able to afford to keep an automobile is never to do it A most awful disappointment when you kiss a man's sister In the dark is to have her turn out to be your own, A woman has such an (magination that if her head were as bald as ivory she could think it only ap peared so. The moat pride a mother has about the baby is that if It weighed | three pounds more and was an Inch and a half shorter it would} exactly fit some selentific theory, | nts seem to} lara under A Linguistic Problem. A German trave wife in Paris, when faints In a restaurant “O," gaid the husband know the French for logne’'! That always when we were at gende Blactter, or is with his the latter “It Lonly ‘enn de co. helped her home!"—Flle THE STAR-—SATURDAY, JULY 24, 1909 = REMNANTS OF LONGHORNS wot badly lamed, The neck was brok a{ One hora other didn't, His Dliseard’s breath falla with ating and blow Thore rides a man of the wild, wide woat, blest of the with a face of tan This settion it kage Reder erled, eur I'm going to oun and alr yoying the A simple man wre and heart to do and dare. got them steers, dead or allve, if it From “rope” and “quirt’ and sip: | takes all summer plig “gaff” and strangling) They went back to the ranch to hackamore get frewh horses and started again The untamed broncho learned hie at daylight This time the chase will and @ master burden bore lasted two days, Then along the Over the slough d the gophered Ambrosa river they rode into a © !, and in time of his) clearing Acrows it a half o awny patont need they sighted the two steers ing toward the far edge. In apite of their great Jong horns, the animals broke through the grass and brush beyond without a perceptible slack loning of spood It wan hard work following | chaparral thick in When he rides in the peril of hoof and horn, at the head of the night stampede,” The wan #0 nome leather of the riders chaps. But |they were determined to get the ntoors, regardless of damage to themselves or thelr cayuses, But them, So they made camp. In the morning the chase was re lwomed. The ground was wet from lan overnight rain, Opening off one | wie je of the river was a deep canyon with steep siden and a heavy growth of brush at the end, The rode in, A mile or 80 back the came on & deserted ranch bow and a windmill, Tying their horses jsome distance away jthe house and two of the climbed the windinill Sink to Ground Dead Bureka! There were the two great bulla only 200 yards away is raised and looking In on of the horses, They were ready to start at the lonst alarm e mon held a counc!! of war haps the bulla, hemmed in from ind vy the walle of the canyon wore also determining their plans for the last charge The men separated and advanced bulls saw Hill Hoxie and charged Every revolver barked again and again, but didn't check the advance. Hoxie, facing death, dropped bis gun and climbed a mesquite tree Othere of the hunters had narrow | eacapes from being gored to death {tris afoam, horas gieaming like two Tut the longhorn great projectiles. ” . times of the past, with the Indians and the buffalos—could not stand Riders Dismounted. before the white man's repeating | They went through the horsemen guns, With three of thelr enemies an though they were paper, Reder’s|in trees, one bull, then the other, horse, trying to turn, caus | wank to the ground, dead fairly tn the flank and thrown hear | Thotr horns measured 8 feet 3 ily to one side. Roeder went 18 feet|ang 7 feet 9 inches respectively in the alr and just missed the mad.| They were eagerly anapped up by a! dened steer’s hoofs. The other bull | retired stockman in Chicago, wh Ikewlse dismounted a rider. | paid $00 for them. Old cow men | Bo sudden and complete waa the| say that there are probably lens onslaught that no move was tad to stop the animals or to overtake | the wont where they once ruled as them. The two cowboys who had| kings. These are hiding in obseure been thrown Mmped to thetr feet.) and secluded Joc alities, ssanteetniianantstanensnaicanpeissasanesiagssatsibieti “ | ; B. & M. Tamale Grotto And Veetory, 1435 oe Av. | Gicago Cae one of our Sunday Dinners. Nothing like it in | 216 Spring St. Seattle. “Where They Lunch” ag aa RD “The Best Cooking. — Our prices are low. Thompson’s Cafe There is where the people go to eat and where they get satisfied, Thompson's business speaks for itself, 9 ; ; i Thompson’s Cafe and’ Bakery SECOND AV. AND MARION ST. Where the Welcome Arch Is. Try Busin served from ti to t coffee, milk or be nly Kegular meats at all hours Orders a speciality. After-theater * E ce te Bhort 1222 Second Av. our » Ladies’ Grill on Unt- affording all eon- n Cafe Fourth and Pike, Boulevard. America on the AWAY UP IN “G" service you always get when you eat at The American. Our dell clous and well cooked foods al ways strike that familiar note also, When you want a tempt ing meal that will awaken your slumbering appetite on a warm day try a dish of our dainty S Spring lamb, Spring brotlera, prime roast beef or toothsome steaks and chops at The Amert ean cafe Muslo Every Evening from 6:30 te 12:30, Including Sunday, INSIST ON A NOW VoRK nox UNCH and avold Inferior tmita Polivered at your piace of without extra cost; 100 and The Newport CAFE & GRILL FIRST AND MADIGON, © Ach, Ring up A 3618 of Main 18380. Prompt delivery assured, One trial, one teat. Goodbye to the rest 1 } | Main office, 219 Marton street. By wath, ont of olty—t year, 8% Pintered, at Office, an wecond-clase matter HAIR-RAISING WEEK'S HUNT IN TEXAS [places that it tore the toughened | night fell without thelr overtaking | they went to] ' carefully through the brush on oot. | They were with 100 yards when the | part of the! than 60 of the eteors still alive to) 1 month, a5e, Wash, menthe, @4 te STAR DUST Jon Wine Sarat Dh! world's mete wet five by witty armen’ with imine" Eastern Outfitting Co., Ine, | You,’ whe wuld, “1 noon twer y-three summers in 4 led, “a 4 think ft too Inte ult o apecta ‘ v7 Lite is y experience and not nen m neler nber you in *“ Yoo, he directed iis ox ators t { all (he loans he had nad Koston Transcript tottering ion't ouse last week. and he's dyed his [heir and whiskers Cleveland | Leader | Aw we act toward others we may others (© net toward He Won't you mise me when Tm far away! Bhe--No; IT alw tk f you as very close.—-Cornel] Widow The little deviis are always t while the big devil plang his m lof.—Manchester Union | | | | | In the 9 nce where the tree falieth | It lieth ble | Stamped What are you going for a wedding present I don't knoe plokle dia ant week More tm You sre the fi loved.” he sighed. 1 don't care about piled. “Mut am Tu are ever going to love ers Malf Hoilday irl yo Ally Biop Cortifientes of Charan Atern Par Tommy, you are not to play that Smith boy eny mor # like « bad boy Hopetet daddy. ire #0 good Little boy been in the reformatory « and each time bee | bie gved conduct | You | tent A Herete Hemedy. How did you bresk your. king? juired « taste for ex hat I couldn't afford a Orrote. Village HNgAUAA ECG AAAAAAUEEAEAOOAEUED AAU OAT GEEAOAU NEUE PORTAGE Primitive Wild People Living as They Live at Home “A Vital Issue in living Bronze” “Needs No Boostin ” RM “These amiable Savages are tascl nating.” —C. A, Haddon, Se. D, F. R. Cambridge University, Eng land. | a Sets the standard of class on the Pay Streak of the A-Y-P.E. ous i Today's Styles Today 4 At $23.50 and $25 WE ARE SHOWING ADVANCE FALL MODELs IN Women’s [ailored Suits | es a mH which the money, | And represent p ble value for und quality, be bought on in style | 1332-34 Second Av. 209 Union St, i “Seattle's Reliable Credit House” PRICE $125 The new Victrola, which bas been on the market days, has already proven a big favorite, judging from orders we have recelved, Its compactness, its tone the amplifying sounding board principle and the absence aff if which insures convenient handling, as well as the ff lf mechanism and cabinet throughout, marks it as one sellers in the Victor line. The cabinet is mahogany, while is nickel plated, with extra heavy triple springs, spiral 1Ginch records with one winding, and can be wound } It has an improved speed regulator and indicator whid) revolutions per minute of the turntable. The machina 15% Inches high, 17% inches wide, with a depth of Mf "The total weight ts 50 pounds. Shown in the filuat the Victrola is closed. The lower doors modify the soft, by opening or closing. As the only Western bers, we carry an immense Victor stock, and can give tion from a number of these machines. Easy terms if | | | 4 1406 SECOND AVENUE | Navy Yard R Steamers MH. H Kennedy, Athlon, Tourist and Mnland | DAILY TIME CARD. Schedule in BEiffeet Monday, June 16, 1900, Leave Seattlo—6:40 (except Gunday),| Time of 8 & HB iy OO, 11:50 a mm, 1:88, steamer om thie Coat 00, t | Thureday » m Leave 3 pm id “Balurday only 11:20 Extra Time 7 out for Seattio—T 10 Dremerton 18, 10516 a Bungay) 46, 6:43, SMoate stop ARE, Be niidren between dy 5 pm. Piessant Beach Phones. Ind | tare 736; Main 3101, 299% EVERETT AND ED Steamers CHY pa, Colman dook. in 5902. Ind 86 Made on Honor and Sold on Merit McPHAIL PIA Manufactured Since 1837. — oer How much better and quicker the COC ING can be done on A GAS RANGE . It saves Time, Labor and Expense Seattle Lighting Co. Both Phones Ex. 75. Cline Piano Co | | Kn a he The World's ———" Ore Priged Piano House. Best Piano 1406 First Avenue ee ee ee