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° YP PEER RRR Ree * ey and look * Lift up your q i # on the flolds, for they are * white already to harvest Use Veto|% And he that reapeth recely ® eth wages * * * and both he | * that soweth and he that reap j* oth may together ® John 4, 35-36. * ee | Mayor Doesn't Lawn Owners Will Fight F to Get Rid of Restriction. . *| . - *| * . tat what they claim to gonadleness of the clty hg requiring that they + the possle of thme allowed for fr : eked dusiness men are ia better to Mayor Miller to srming him that if he the Dil now before him, ithe counell passes (he ord! over his veto, they will the referendum Start Petit.on. tion with 3,000 names at would be sufficient fo bring of the referendum Pater recelved atate that] of the writers that would be red in the measure If the people ial be granted the opportuatty to a | BY J. V. KNIGHT, CHICAGO, Aug. 4—Roard of | ‘Trade mon and commerctal leaders | in Chicago, the greatest grain mar | ket in the world, unite tn doolaring | that the harvest of 1909 crops means | }a banner year for the farmer, The wheat crop, harvest of whieh already has started, will be largest, both from a standpoint of acreage and value, of any crop since the first grain was dropped in American soll From northern | Canada to Te and from the Al |loghentes to the Pacific slope, farm ore are busy with harvesters and thrashers garnering it, Seventy five millions of acres were sown in wheat this year Due to the plunges of James A Patten on the Hoard of Trade, a| great forelgn demand and the tn-| crease of the world’s population, the price of wheat tn thin market place has been upheld, It's @ bumper crop,” every grain man on LaSalle st, says, when he reads the morning bulletins In the Hoard of Trade building. Raliroads, elevator men, brokers, | millers and wholesalers of flour and | breadetuffs all are in tine waiting. A rush of harvest yellow flelde and the whirr of the! thrasher will be the signal for huge moves in the world of finance and commerce, and Chicago will be the center of it all, | The American farmer has ceased to be the homespun farmer, He's) now the bonansa farmer, Secretary | Geo, PF. Stone, of the Board of Trade, discussing a big wheat| raiser In Minnesota, said: “Yoa,) he's what we call a bonanza farmer, | or one of those fellows who clean up from $20,000 to $40,000 a year on thelr wheat crop. They're get-| ting to be so numerous now that we don't pay particular attention to them. | “The farmer of yesterday would think he was dreaming if he could | ‘eee the way these men carry on their business.” Passenger agents of western rall | roads apsert that there never were! #0 many party tekets sold for har veut field workers from the cast College students by the carioad are rushing to Kansas and the Dakotas From the University of Chicago alone 173 students have gone out THOUSANDS IN st the the } the issue men who are | are representative business ao city and claim that ' their health more than of water that might wasted if irrigation de used. Some of the men pave contracted numerous and coughs from coming In with the damp grese after qooped ap in an office during 7 Unofficially the tip has that the plan originated vibe CI of Commerce, whieh ~ bitterly opposed to the 7 dace {ta conception, and : everything in its power eas measure when the was deciding on {ts merits All Are Invited. of the chamber and club heartily up Miller in bis etand, and was freely expressed on when the bill passed the that either commercial Jet the matter rest Miller was out of his of and no informa- be secured as to whether Mi received any communica. taking the ie Cape and Suit Dress Sults for SILVER PLATING. 216 Uatow ot Rk GOODS. ce ule Vit tae AKERS. Ravesaugh, 1510 Fire. —<f (iy United Prem) PHILADELPHIA, Ang. 4.—He-| tween 20,000 and 25,000 people liv.) ing in a square mile of territory In) the northwestern part of Philadel: | phia will learn today that for two) months they have been used by the) eity government somewhat as the “poison squad” was used by Dr.) Wiley in his famous experiments. It was announced last night by) Chief Duniap of the bureau of water | that for the past 60 days all water furnished to that particular section | of the city has been “ozonated™ by a secret chemical process developed by the city’s experts, and that the) proof of its virtue Is found tn the) fact that there has not been a case) of typhoid fever tn that section Mg"Iy | since the experiment was begun. Chief Dunlap believes that the} new process, which he will not de) scribe, but over which he and the) other engineers of the water depart: | ment are jubilant, will have a tre mendous effect upon the fitration problem every where A shed bas been erected at the) ifa |intake of the Queen Lane reservalr and all the water that is pumped) from the river to the reservolr fs) oxonated ar oxidized by chemical * | process as it passes through the) shed. By oxidization all the animal) or Vegetable life Is destroyed In the | water and it goes into the reservoir free from harmful impurities. | ' TR Y1HIS1OR i YOUR COUGH | | Be Bots “sintag fy, || Hing House, 108 Benen | POSTAGE STAMPS, MP WengRt nnd wold fet wed a TT Mix two ounces of Glycerine with « half-ounee of Virgin Off of Pine compound pee and a half pint of |atralght W -¥" 4 ke well, ltake in doses of ® teaxpoonful over: tout hours, This ture posse the healing, he ful prop of the Pines, and will break a e in twenty-four hours and cure any cough that I# curable. th having this formula put up, be sure that ‘our druggist uses the genuine trgin Of of Pin ompound pure, repated and ¢ us anteed only by he Leach Chemleal Co. Cincinnatl, 0. BD CLOTHING. } We SAV YOU MONKY ON Tools and Hardware | Our Hegnlar | | No. 9 regular price $1.25 Apectal T-i. Quick Cutting Emery regular price 60e Palley Block Planes; 98¢ 31c Apecial Tc Oval beaded Mortiso Locks, 014 copper or dull brass finish regular price 6c Mpee Lack 4 § Front Door, Lacks to ma H 85 6 Our windgwa are always Clled with special priced gooda, Monette Hardware Co. 105 ¥efontaine Vinee, ‘Dhied Ave and Veater Way. lay \aN9 $9, fhe-simile ty pe. See 1S AND BUPPL) jeropa will yet conquer It | (ng Into the Board of Trade }60 days by the local inspectors for THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1909. WE SHALL COME REJOICING, BRINGING IN THE SHEAVES!” Experts here ealoulate the value of American cereals thin year aa hot lows than §%,000,000,000, Thin would 1908 of HE WAS GALLANT; AND TAXICAB WAS oan A Rain Over 222,000,000! Nearly $800,000,000 will change hande in Chicago when the wheat crop ls marketed, Compared to the time when the harvester wae firet Invented, these figures are stagger ing. Abraham Lineotn was 22 years old when the ftirat harvesting ma chine was made. Man depended then on the anotent seythe to gar ber his crop, The farmer then was the man with the hoe” and noth ing more. The change that has come over harvesting methods {na little more than Th years Ie greater than in all the preceding history of the world, Before the American farmer started methods that have reaulted in the bumper crop of 1909. he depended on the laws of nature alone to make him rich or poor Now manmade processes have poaxed the soll and rotation of She emerged from a certain Beat tle apartment store. yesterday, and while getting Into her waiting taxt cab dropped her handbag. A young man whose gallantry in exoeeeded only by hla, prominence and popu larity, sprang to recover it Hor thanks were so profuse and servo her so intense thal before either of them apparently realised the situation he was seated beside her and the cab moved down Sec ond av After a dignified protest at the jatranger's intrusion, the force |which was gradually reduoed to @ minimum by hile eloquence, she fia ally consented to allow him to re main, In the midst of thelr con | versation, which Increased in Inter eat ae it progressed, the girl sud SISTER OF MINISTER ROBS A SAILOR BOY (By United Press) Secretary Wilson's contention that the farmer is a great organizer is borne out by letters that are pour. Some bonanga” men use the telephone and telegraph. They arrange for care and sometimes specia: freight traina to deliver thelr wheat Into SAN FRANCISCO, Aug 4 the market at an advantageous|/ Carrie Patterson, the Iiyearold time, and conduct their big business) sistor of Rev, William Patterson, of with department store system, Spokane, Wash., was put on three In 1834 there was grown In this > country only 4 1-3 bushels of wheat |7®8r" Probation this morning by | Superior Judge Dunne, and sentence per capita, This year with leas than one-third of the people farm-| was indefinitely The ors, the per capita production of girl was accused of robbing « sailor by ent cay a mageitor Get reo The of $30 at a resort on Pacific st advance made in production i# just ‘The Rev. Petterson appeared and as notable and no more than the promised to take care of his sister advance of modern methods over ha wos remanded te bis shares ty the single plow and the seythe of the cnet sare aacialhe: pao Patterson was not aware of hin Thia advance hae given the coun: |aisier’s life in Ban Francisco until try Ite steel! mille, railways, and var li. received notification of the ied industries, It hae raleed the | charges againat b farmer from a place of ridicule and) When told that she was free to obscurity to the pinnacle of reepect | oo the girl went into hysterics, and fell weeping to the Noor. CONSUL COMES TODAY has made his children the masters | suapended of tra It haa furnished the mate rlat and the men for great schools and colleges, developed new and un- heardof means of saving the soll for the future, and has made the United 8! the chief bread-win- ner of the world, The Chinese consul general of San Francisco, Hau Ping Chen, will arrive in the city from Portland either tonight of tomorrow mornin, He is accompanied by bis wife an son and a full retinue of servants A stop will be made in Seattle long enough to visit the expoattion land for the local Chinese to prepare several banquets. Hau Ping Chen | will then proceed to Victoria, where he will establish a Chinese school A stiafiar school will be established the | in this elty by local Chinamen with jin @ short time, HI8 LICENSE SUSPENDED, Jobn B. Jackman, engineer of the wteamor Cyrene, one of the Ander son Steamboat company’s fleet whieh plies on Lake Washington, has had his license suspended for the boller burning of steamer, out WOMEN USE HAT PINS TO CHECK TRAIN RUSH SPOKANE, Aug. 4.—Determined; when « man tried to take advantage not to be trampled on by the heed: | of me, and I'll do it again.” said leas men who swarm the stations |one woman, as she brandished a and crowd into the coaches of every | shining gold pin in the rear coach train out of Coour d'Alene, the wom | of the regular train en landseekers and travelers bave| Her threats were heeded after a adopted the expedient of using the | few taunting and inqulting remarks hat pin to cheek the less thought | from the men in question. ful men. The situation grew almost] Other evidences of roughness are dangerous last night on the last)at hand with almost every train, train out of Cover d'Alene, when ajand advantage of the overcrowded number of min elimbed into the| conditions are being taken, Men overcrowded train just a few min-|are emoking in the coaches and loud utes prior to starting for Spokane.| talk and vicious remarks are not “Ivo used this hat pin before| rare occurrences, WOMEN’S COLLEGE WILL START A CROP OF WIVES jof the most successful educators in ithe West. The college is within easy reach of Denver, the Aurora cars running within three blocks of the instita tion. It may also be reached by Montview boulevard, and by reason of Its accessibility will attract many day scholars from Denver. The em |rollment for the opening Is unnaual jl large. INSTITUTION FOR HOMEMAK- ERS WILL OPEN IN DEN- VER NEXT MONTH, DENVER, Aug. 4—On Tuesday, September 7, the Colorado Women's college at Montclair will open for the school year. This {nstitution te peculiar in that it seeks through Its courses of study to educate towards the home, not away from it The idea of the faculty is to edu cate the students for the home, It fa belleved that most of the gradu ates will find places in the normal) relations of the family, and the} courses of study are #0 arranged aa to fit them for a better discharge of such duties, Emphasts Is placed on the home life and all the way through the alm js to exalt womanhood, wifehood atid motherhood. The courses In elude Hberal arta for general cub ture, fine arta, ineluding music, painting, home decorating, ete.; home arte or domestic science—all that pertains to the management and creature comforts of the home; higher home arts, which include pay chology and ite applications, such as child study and rational living. Certificates from a high school or a recognized preparatory school wil! admit to the college without ox- amination. Two degrecs are give bachelor of acl and bachelor arts, to those completing any of the | be fine arts courses. ligenoe in allowing the The faculty ja headed by Preal-| steamer Vashon of T dent J. P. Treat, A. M., who is one come overheated [ RETIRING FROM BUSINESS RIPLINGER FILES A NEW BOND TODAY John Riplinger’s attorney filed }two bonds of $10,000 éach in the county clerk's office this morning, appearance for by om © signed and wife to guarantee his trial on charges of larceny bezzlement, The bonds we by Julius Redelachelme and Henry Beck and wife, Accompanied by Will H hia attorney jwheriff's. office yesterday afternoon and surfendered himself Morris, WILL NOT RENEW HIS LICENSE. Clarence Wurnham was the sec ond marine engineer today to meet with the disapproval of the steam }boat inepectors., His license, which lhaw already expired, will not be re newed for a period of six months, use he was found guilty of neg boiler of the roma to be Every Pair of Shoes| Reduced OE CO., 707 First Av. TREEN SH ed of) a Tees WAS PRETTY; C LY. denly remembered an errand whe had neglected to perform. The « wae turned about and on ite arrival again at & large store she alighted to attend to her errand, loaving her admirer in the eab | He settled back in satisfied con the dainty figure | temptation of the store. The most cheerful thoughts, however, must eventually take acoount of time, and while he | walted the only thing getting action | out of the situation was the taxioab | register. After the lapse of half an hour the young man learned that the girl bad left the store through a side lexlt. The taxicab bill wan $11.60. |The young man ts well known and | the girl Ives on the first bill and lis engaged DR. ANNIE RUSSELL I NOT PROSECUTED Patrolman Foraker, who inet week arrested Dr, Annie Russell, her son H. &. Russell, Dr. Grane and D. Bek- hart, who were engaged in a free | for-all faht at the today requested City Attorney Eilts De Bruler to diamien the against them. They have been out that time tied with the request Foraker did not give any , | for hie action except that the p: had settiod the affair among t |aclves, When the crowd were wtod it much about the city, as they were | well known latter's home, oune oo wince ' caused corm 1S GIVEN THE LIMIT R. W. Delaney, who was prosecut ed on a vagrancy charge, was you terday sentenced by Justice Fred C. Brown to six months’ imprisonment whith is the severest sentence which the justice can inflict. It jcame out at the trial that Delaney | wad living off the money which his wife made by leading an immoral Ife, and the judge characterized the prisoner's offence as the worst jhe knew of. and wished that It was in fis power to send him to the pen ftendary TODAY'S TREASURY REPORT. (By United Pree) WASHINGTON, Aug 4 trengury report today shows cabpts, $2,184,986; $4941.57 The Re disbursements. TOO MUCH MONEY (Conctuded.) ee young man, who is just past his } 234 birthday, It has made of him ® weak, vapid youth, with no alm in life except to give rein to what | ever desires come uppermost Smith's face shown weakness, Ir fesolution looks forth from his light blue eyes, which cannot hold your gase for long at a time. Yot he is not viclous—just weak and unable to stand alone. It is perhape this very weakness that makes the girlwife cling to him. She visits him at the jail every day and says she will stick to him through everything All the Friends Gone. And Smith—he says she is the only friend he bas; that this trou ble has scared all his so-called friends away. Like vultures they have departed after the burial, They #ee no further chance of a | feast, ao they are perhaps even now |aeoking new prey. | "I never meant to do wrong this time, but I had always gotten out of scrapes somehow, and #o did not } count the coat,” Smith told me, “I got into trouble when I went to the university, but such” things are overlooked If you have money, and } #o—well, here | am and J will go to jail and wee If the lesson will not atick this time.” All of which fs very good for Smith, but what about the girl? She is only 19 and to very pretty—two things that will taltigate axainet her sticking to Smith during his “lesson hour.” She is golng to be the one to pay for the “Joy rides,” the worthless | draft, the blackened name, or I miss my gueas, She will pay for these | things In lonely hours, and in temp tations that will try her very soul, jand In the knowledge that she ts a felon's wife. There wouldn't be very many an jawers in this ense to the question | "Room it all pay?” ‘THIS MAYOR LIKES | Riplinger went to the! | Mayor Stevely, of London, On ltario, Is in the elty, calling upon his numerous Canadian friends and tak ing In the big fair, Mr, Stevely says that he has taken In all the big avorid’s fairs, and that the A Y-PR. does not have to take a back weat for any of them, He ts particularly well pleased with the Canadian exhibit and states that it in highly creditable. Mayor Stevely and Governor Hughes are old time tillieums, They initiated together last March in Syracuse Into the Mystiquekrewe of KA » No (whatever that ta), and w ymed each other with the high sign” when they met eneh other on the Pay Streak yesterday Victoria With a Princess | Princess Victoria leaves at 9:00 la. m. daily for Vancouver via Vic | toria, Th real modern steamship of the Pacific const, giving daylight viows of the Sound, Straits of Fuca, |the famous Active Pass, Gulf of Georgia, passing tn full view o: the salmon fishing fleet at the mouth of. the Fraser. Canadian Pacific Ry. 609 Fi avenue, CANADIAN EXHIBIT: AGE FIRE ON THE TIDE LATS. TODAY Stetson-Post Factory Is De-| stroyed and Other Prop- erty Damaged by a Big Blaze. Fire which started in the Stetson Appreciation of the opportunity to | crossing the sidewalk and entering | Post Sash and Door factory at Rall road ay. and Weller st, shortly be fore 6 o'clock this morning destroy ed machinery and other property valued at about $36,000 and gared surrounding prop: mated to be worth at least Prompt work by the fire boat Snoqualmie, with Acting Captain L. M. Bennefiel In charge, was largely responsible for the saving of val uable property As a result of the destruction of the sash and door factory, about 50 men will be idle for a short time. The factory will be reconstructed immediately Burned Fiercely for a Time. ‘The fire started near the Railroad ay. end of the structure. The fac tory le a building 400 feet long. In a very few minutes the blaze spread to the frame building occu pled by Campbell Hros., agents for the Union Engine works, of San Franciseo, Another frame building at the corner of Railroad ay. and Weller st, oceupled by the Seattle Marine Pipe company, was damaged slightly For a time it was feared that the coal and gravel bunkers of the Pa cifte Coast company were doomed but four monster streams from the ireboat Snoqualmie drove the blaze landward, where tons of wa fought it. The French bark Buffon, ioored to the Pacific coast bunker pler, was discharging 2,500 tons of bunk coal, Had it not been for the fireboat the bark must have been | doomed. The Losses. it was only after hard work for more than an hour that the ure was brought under control. Until 9 o'clock this morning the rulns were thoroughly soaked with water to prevent a recurrence of the biase. George E. bradley, secretary of of Stetson Post MM company, esti mated the lose to his company at $20,000, “Our patterns placed,” said Mr. Campbell. ‘T place thelr value at $25,000. As ly as I can estimate our pat valued at $10,000 were deo stroyed. We carry about $6,509 In surance.” J. F. Swanburg, president and manager of the Seattle Marine Pipo company, stated that his lows will reach $1,000, fully insured. BRYAN’S RELATIVES HERE, Charles W, Bryan, brother of W. J, Bry nd publisher of the Com moner, and T. 8. Allen, brotherin- law of the famous presidential can- didate, arrived in the elty this morn- ing with their wives, They are visiting at the home of L. O. Shra der, 263 25th ay cannot be re TAFT PLANS VACATION, WASHINGTON, D, C., Aug. 4 On the sasumption that congress will adjourn late Thursday night or Friday morning, President Taft is making bis plans to leave Washing- ton for Beverley late Friday after- noon, arriving at his summer home early Saturday morning. Philippine Tariff Bill, WASHINGTON, Aug. 4--The senate today adopted the confer ence report on the Philippine tariff bill, This measure has been adopt ed by the house and it now goes to President Taft AN ALASKA NEWSPAPER, Odd and curious newspape reach the local newspaper offices every now and then from outof theway corners of the earth, where no one would suapect newspaper existed. The latest is ja litte foursheet pamphlet called The Eskimo Bulletin, printed tn Cape Prince of Wales, Alaska, and jdated January, 1909. This sheet measu $ by 12 inches, but ft Is }full of interesting news. On the |front page there is an article head- ed “Three Schooners on the Sands of the Arctic Shore.” Another in. |headed “Five Days Alone on a De | serted Island Without Fire.” Up j!a & corner there Is a little poem, | Tribute to an Old Friend,” (us jtrating the eynical humor of men who are fighting hardships in a cold and barren country, A apec imen Christmas dinner at the Cape was told about on an inside page |The article reads; “First course, |coffee, biscuit, beans; second j cours cookles, doughnuts, prune sauce.” Under “Locals” appear Four polar bears have been killed here this year.” “Three births and two deaths is the record for our village during =the last five was held January 2 to 6. During this dance thousands of dollars’ worth of furs were exchanged for skins and money.” Here's a apect men of editorial comment; “Fourth jof July comes at Wales when a fel low gets a chance to see a white man, and three or four days of| that type come when he sees a white girl TIPPING SCHEME, “Could you lend me a sharp knife?” asked a customer in the cafe of a big hotel near the Grand Central station as he sipped “some thing long and cool.” The knife being forthcoming, the customer took a new two-dollar bill from his pocket, folded it carefully in the middle and cut {ft neatly in two, placing the halves In his wallet “You want to know why I did that, didn't you?’ he remarked to the mystified bartender, “Well, that's part of a litte scheme of mine, I'm xoing over pretty soon to put my wife on a train for Chicago. One half of that bill I'll give to my wife and the other half to the porter, If the colored man t# attentive and courteous throughout the trip, my wife will give him her half of the bill in Chicago, If he's slow and grumpy he gets only the plece I gave him, Of cour I lose my $2 either way, but the some satis faction In knowing that the servant real incentive to good ser New York Tribune. | ALASKA CH open Alaska a grounds, conducted mittee Clan Fraser Highlar grounds rt m Wagner m.-—-Popul wallan bullding Liberatt's t saving Or m m. Conce to | m.—Concert U. 8. Life Streak Concert i] 00 7:46 8:40 Wagner's | lAberatia New HKnglar m m Concert Dance, ing. Take exposition care on Third Washington, and thence by p SPURNED ACTRESS. ATTEMPTS TO DI (Conciuaed.) when he seized my arm and began jscuffilng with me. He tried to take the revolver away and the pistol was accidentally discharged Intended to Suicide. ‘I'm so glad he is unburt, for it was my life and not his that I wanted to take.” Continuing, the woman sald “Craig has admired me for a long time and I have, J admit, admired) jhim. His wife and I are distant cousins, but, as she te jealous, we have not been friendly | Craig told his wife in my pres ence that he loved me more than he did her, and this widened the breach between us. Hefore the final breach between Mrs, Craig and myself, however, I jtrled to act as peacemaker between | Wil and his wife, but was unsuc wful. Mra. Craig is a good deal | older than her husband and they | have not a bond of sympathy to} hold them. | Friendship Pure. | My friendship with Will han) lheen pure. | “Mrs. Craig has had her husband |shadowed by detectives for a long ltime, and they could find nothing wrong. | Mra. Castle ls wearing a hand some plaid gown, and in spite of her short stature is strikingly beau jUful. She was represented in jeourt by Frederick Dean, a friend! from whom she has sublet her magnificent apartments at the Col onlal studio bulliding. Before Craig was shot an he stood in the elevator door, Mra. Castle had been observed in the corridors for some time, pacing nervously jback and forth. Craig entered the hotel from Thir ty-fourth st, west of the main en trance. Mra. Castle placed her hand on his aleeve and the couple con versed In undertones. Volees Raised Angrily. Then, according to guests, the coupled walked on toward the ele vator, where Craig attempted to pull away. Mra Castle grabbed a firm hold to his arm and their volces raised angrily, The lawyer again wrenched himself free and started to enter the elevator when Mra. Castle ts reported to have sald “All right, then.” The next moment she had drawn 4 22-calibre revolver from her hand: | bag and fired The report brought many persons hurrying to the scene, They ar rived just in time to see Craig take the gun from the woman, who trying to alm it at her own heart. The man was unhurt*as the bul- let was swerved from its course and stopped by a fountain pen in Craig's pocket. Was Society Woman. House Detectives Kennedy and Curry rushed up and hurried Mrs. Castle to the private office, while communteation was established with the attorney's wife. From the first Mre. Castle declared that she did not want to kill Craig and she expressed much relief when in formed that the bullet had done no harm. In San Francisco Mra, Castle has had entree to the best society, and ahe is the niece of the late Mra. Monroe Salisbury, who for many years led the social set of San Franctaco. Hefore her marriage to Neville Castle, a San Jose lawyer, she was Miss Mary Scott. She “lived hap- plly with her husband until 1899, when she went on the stage, The couple then separated, and she eft for the Bast. | | | Prominent on Coast. SAN FRANCISCO, Ang. 3.—Mre.! Yeville Castle, who shot William D.) CURES ECZEMA QUCKLY New Discovery Has Revolutionized the Treatment of Skin Diseases, Nothing in the history of medicine has ever approached the success of the marvelous skin remedy known as poslam, which, It is safe to say, has cured more cases of eczema and) skin diseases than any remedy ever offered for t e ils, The success of poslam {ts not at all surprising when it is considered that even a very small quantity ap plied to the skin stops.tching im mediately and cures chronic cases in two weeks. © Very worst cases of eczema, as well as acne, herpes, tetter, piles, salt rheum, rash, crust ed humors, scaly scalp and ery form of itch, yleld to it readily Blemishes such as pimples, red nos es, muddy and inflamed skin disap pear almost Immediately when pos lam is applied, the complexion being cleared over night Every druggist keeps both the 50 cent size (for minor troubles) and} the $2 jar, and either of these may| be obtained in Seattle at | the Quaker Drug Co., as well as other reliable drug atores. But no one is even asked to pur chase poslam without first obtatn ing an experimental package which will be sent by mall, free of charge upon request, by the Kmergency Laboratories, 52 West Twenty-fitth street, New York City. | MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. THURSDAY’S A.-Y.-P, E. PROGRAM ILDREN'’S DAY. gate tour of oclation com mble at matr by Educational As d musielans arious parts of of Cascades Ha p Talk band, b Htereoptioon Views, ‘ ar and w Music pavillon foot of Pay exhibition and, Nome circle and, Musie pavilion id club, Washington State build ay. or any enable line to Lake steamer | craig in New York, le the daughter jot H. H. Seott, a prominent mere } chant of this city, and her marriage to Neville Castle in 1897 was a bril Nant soclety event, Her brother, Henry Scott, is the husband of a daughter of the late Rear Admiral | Sampson | Mra. Castle studied for the stage after her husband, who had prac ticed law, went to the Alaska gold | Melds to retrieve his fortune. She made her debut on January 16, 1900, playing with the Frawley com pany in “The Princess and the But- terfly” in New York and later went into vaudeville, ’ Neville Castie was last heard of » Nome several years ago | W. D, Craig is a son of W of Craig & Craig. city, He has been tn i Cratg lawyers, of this New York several yours j SON DEFENDS A JAILED TELLER LITTLE BOY WON'T SUBMIT TO CONVICTED PAPA BEING CALLED A THIEF. (By United Prem.) PITTSRUR Aug. 4-—-"He sald my father a thief and stole lots of poor people's money, and I gave him a good Heking,” defiantly de- clared year-old William Harvey to @ corner policeman today, who had caught him chastising Bernard Wilking, a neighbor, aged 9. The Wiikine boy went scampering off home with a badly bruised face Y * Harvey ts the son of former Paying Teller Thomas W, Harvey, who has served one year of his seven-year sentence in the peni- tentiary for having made false entries in the books of the Enter- | Prise National bank of Pittsburg. Harvey lost all he owned by the bank's fallure, and because of the impoverished condition of his family an effort is being made to secure his release, WOOED, WON, WED IN JUST SIXTY MINUTES (By United Press.) 4.—"Good morning. My name is Harry Mc Nair. Come on, Kid, let's get mar- b I've got you. Mine's Milly This up-to-date proposal after an acquaintance of an hour made the parties man and wife today, MeNatr, an actor, living at 2946 East av. St. Louis, met Miss Becker at « hotel today, The introduction and proposal were combined to save time. The train for St. Louls was about due to leave and McNair bas an ment there tonight. A hurried visit was made to the license clerk's of- fice and Wm. E, Bates, court com- missioner, spoke the words that made them one Mildred Becker is a farmer's daughter who came to the city trom Columbus, Wis, She is just out of her ‘teens and pretty as a picture. COUGHS UP THE CASH (Dy United Press.) ELIZABETH, N. J, Aug. 4— Celia MeGuire, attractive young woman, who gave her address as Mulberry #t, Newark, was picked up unconscious in the Staten Is- land ferryhouse, at Elizabeth, by a policeman and rushed to the Gen- eral hospital in an ambulance. When she had partly recovered she said she had been assaulted and robbed of a purse containing $5. She appeared to be under the in fluence of liquor or a drug. The physicians decided that an emetic would help her, and admin- latered = it The young woman coughed up five one-dollar bills, just as the doctors began to treat her, The young woman can’t ac- count for the presence of the cash in that particular location, You'll Like Tacoma Till You See _ Navy Yard City Then you will be satisfied that you have found a safe place to invest a few dollars. Every day we are taking many people on A Free Trip and showing them the Bremer. ton navy yard and Navy Yard City, which fs alongside and has one mile of water Jots. Opening Prices Until complete our new Navy Yard City dock only, are we going to sell large lots at $40 and up, on terms of $4 down and $2 monthly, City water in the streets and paid for. We are building many homes and selling them on payments like rent. Our sales and guides leave our office ten times daily and take the fast new palatial steamer H. B. Kennedy, leaving Colman dock, 50 minutes’ ride. — BREMERTON DEVELOPMENT COMPANY. ? See estate Do you want to buy a h The Star's classified real columns, 106 Cherry Street, Ground Floor, Call or write for maps and prices,