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

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Member of the United Press A dally by The Star Oe. Tt h bil the extent of 3.43 per cer laftized-Aldric of statistic Bef ¢ PAL was modified by the compromises secure d Talks About the Milk of by Pres aie Taft, the to’ umount of upward revision, as H - | uman Kindness and figured out by rament’s bureau of statistics, was 5.0) Th Who H It | per cent, The ction of duties on ore, coal and lumber, jose O FIAVE Bt, and the placing of hides and oil on the free list, reduces this] * = | percen AA ‘Give the devil his due sayn ercentage to \) A Timothy MeGrath, one of the beat} Phe oF mports affected by increa h GUEST own fight promotere and all is found to be $146,7.30,780, laround sporting men of San ran he value of imports affected by decreases in duties is|elaco, who ta making bis home for ; . . 4 brief apell in Seattle, “for the found to be $115,768 much-desptsed ‘sport a better The tariff act in its final form leaves unchanged 61.69) friend of hus anit that ts ee n and outs,’ than nine out per cent of the Dir Jules, It makes increases in| toy churchqoing people And Thm 21.40 per cent of these schedules, and decreases in 16.91 per | backs up his statement with the as ae yortion that when the penitentiary cent of these schedules Joors yawn and one of the inmates By w hted averages the increases, as applied to im | steps forth a tree man in the eyes a be og A , of the law, he tu to his sport ports, a nt to 24.73 per cent; the decreases amount to 5 and not to the per cent The te of the tariff sched ad valorem to fixed changes fron valuation resulting from new classification and the All these asing imports of a customs court rates, Pub- ptiah~ stal is 3.33 per cent revision upward by virtue merely specific —— esults in revision upward to These are the figures of the bureau regardless of the effect of rates and the increased reation will have the effect of raising to be higt MR. SKYGACK, FROM MARS te Visits the Earth as a Special Co: espondent and Makes Wire fess Observations in His Notebook ONE AFTER ANOTHER, HURLED FAI YO CO-O%8RATE A. 4s WITNESSED PECULIAR FORM OF ket Py PUNISHMENT ~~~ FARTH- BANGS, SPWERES a? LUCHLESS OFFENDER VV ~~ 2antn-aaing w cwanee | / or PROCEDURE SHOUTED KUSTNY TO SURGING THRONE 4237 THEY As. \ 7 IN LITTLE OLD NEW YORK | BY I!'ORMAN. NEW YORK, Aug. 10.—There | unconscious form into the ton- are women, and then again there | "¢aa a | Then the two women did some are other different women, par- THE SEATTLE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE ing friends for ald THE STAR—TURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1900. THE SINNING SPORT IS THE SINNER’S FRIEND, HE SAYS | Tim McGrath, the Sport, church, The exceptions, Tin avers are rare, | Not that the convict In many *» has hot Hied of ble | kno’ or again deca neral kno will “alta when friend will be there with the ‘good advice He's a Good Spender | sporting mar “ od fel ine ‘and what ta more th inter este of « place, he a pender, McGrath says, and MeG@rath ean lgive more interesting bite of bie tory on the bu itarian side of the TIM McGRATH ife than any one of bie Mo bh the sport, turn to. Then he thought of Thm!) They were filled full of shot whe and he ape avish hand; | seGrath, who knew him back in the he attempted to eseape once, #0 a he tight wad tm gets t POP | old days, He soon found that Me living tan't aay proposition, aft u The aport gets plenty of hard Grath was the man to give him ajer all, Then, too, Sontag fools that knocks, but his heart Dig | | ng hand he can do a lot of work with other that while he oan fight like the Sontag ae Floor Walker rooks now, from the experience h [deuce if the occasion demands, he, | : , has hed, and so he bas grown to lis always willing to help a fellow deGrat # the extrain rob- i, the jectures,” says Mot lainner. That's the unwritten law/ ber out thea and staked or ive arrange of the sport's life, and he # up dim, aud when later Tim opened UD 4 sories of talks tolt. That's why the man who falle|® dance hall on Pacifle street fe toes ran geh aad by the wayside always turns to a | Francteco, during the ¢ week will be f{lustrated with lantern sporting friend for succor Lye ed ne ng On the pay roll ae A iia, sing the different scenes Backing an Ex-Convict wetin peaition aid not sult. the | of the oatlaw’s lite Metirath is bucking George 8m! former deaperado, for, a )Tim Nothing in This Life ag, an ex-convict, in an attempt (Ol save, “He is retormed, all Fight nina arn a living, and he mod: naye Sets tenn tae Facome| Hontag’s lecture, says McGrath all the fine things about sports tm | «, hat the sort of life he led was‘ is how hollow and frulth ae xeneral, just to make the public ben and be didn't Intend to fat life of the outlaw is, How | te Hove that everything he ts doing for |j got him again, and he told me ‘ere Is to the outcome. The $16 the pardoned train robber in quite he would have to leave, My 000 Which was Bont hare of the jan ordinary occurrence with every ja @ aporting place, and is thsotten wealth, amounted to jus sport, but here are the facts, and pun under poilce regulations, but 20 cents « day when considered ir you can judge for yourself Sontag couldn't see it that way, te Hgbt of the 17 years he had to Sontag, the train robber, who ang he was so in earnest Wat’ i *°r¥e to.pay up the debt, This, and ihad a spectacular career an one of yever tried to pereuade I tact that he broke the heart of | the famous hold-ups, Evans and ‘pave him a hundred dollars to fie & | mather, are some of the Sontag,” was pardoned & year and & some pictures, and be is now gly. Mora! sidelights Hontag throws on | a criminal MeGrath te backing him, and has half ago by Gov. James A. Gillett of areer California, having served 17 tng a series of locturon on “The year® Moral Side of a Criminal Caréer ‘on a life sentence. backed him ever since the pardon | George Sontag loft the peniten } He Would Rather Work. was granted The governor par tary a reformed man In every way “He would rather « hundred doned the man, so why shoul and one wish such bighearted | 1?” says MeOrath there w aporte in But his career of crime bad left {te| times do a day's work In the har stigma upon him, and he soon found | vest field than talk to the public, himself a wanderer with so one to| but his legs won't stand the strain. ‘DAILY STAR'S MOVING PICTURES, > more the world. aiRaS sey — HEARD ON THE | see He ¢ame into the Ballard Beach car with a dignified air, surveyed the passengers with « calm. ferent gaze and seated himeeclf In the forward end of the smoking compartment, His seat companion. jthing that made the policemen busily engaged In reading a news take off their helmets in mute re- | paper, paid but little attention spect. Richly gowned, as they | j him until he remarked j | Were, on their way to their home| Pardon me, sir, but do you know thenlarly on Manhattan Island. For instance and to wit: A few) nights ago a big red touring car came tearing down Seventh ay. with four joy riders aboard, At 27th st it bit two men and knocked them galley-wost. Nothing unusual about this; it happens every day here, Various policemen had tried to stop the car before it hit the men, and others tried to stop it after it hit them, but they did not succeed. Nothing unusual about either; a cop is a frail thing com: pared to a large roaring automobile | going 60 miles an hour. Some day, of course, a cop will shoot some. body and thereby stop a car, and then it will turn out to be a per fon of wealth and political pull, aad the cop will catch fits. Well, anyway, this car went right along, and the four joy riders leaned out as various cops were passed, and hurled insulting re Marks at the policemen, telling them to call an ambulance, and| other such kind-hearted remarks. And all these passengers were Women—a sweet, lovely littie quar tet. The chauffeur was a man, or the semblance of one, at any rate, and he confined bimself to getting this | all the power he could out of bis! engine, to increase the dists tween himself and the two men he had left stunned and bleeding .n the roadway One of the men was In very bad shape, bleeding profusely and gasping for breath, It seemed that be ought to be gotten to a bospital | at the earliest possible Ambulances had to be called, tut none was in sight. Along came another big red touring car taining two men and two women The policeman in charge of Wounded men stopped the car and asked the driver, who was also the moment con owner, if he would not take the badly injured man to a hospital Sure he would. All four people got out of the car. helped the — The two men policemen to lift ~~ First Lion Second Lion the | in East Orange, N. J., after a gay evening in New York, they climbed at onee Into the tonneau, and, while one took the bleeding form of the Injured man in her arma jand laid his hoad on her shoulder, | the other tore strips of bandage from ber skirts and bound up his wounds as best she could. The man Was a young street car con- ductor, who bad been struck on bis the woman who held him murmured as she stroked bis fair hair back from his pale forehead: “Poor boy!" The men, with a policeman, got in the front seat and a fast ron was made to a hospital, where the }women turned their charge over to the doctors and the nurses. The surgeon who examined the conduc- for recovery e slight “If he does recover,” said the doctor, turning to the women in thetr dirtied, blood-stained even | way home from a long day's work, | He was very boyish looking, and) tor’s Injuries sald he had o frac-|!8 9, and hie brother Loule i 2 tured skull and that his chances | tt sounds like a German name, and It Is. ing gowns, who stood allently by, | he will owe bis life, in great meas ure, to the prompt relief you Have afforded. 1 congratulate you, both on your skill as emergency nurses and your highly developed humanity,” Reporters asked the women for their names, but they sald they did not want publicity for doing only what was their duty The party got into the automobile and fesumed {ts Interrupted trip to the Weat Twenty-third st. ferry. As for other women rode away laughing and jeering we Americans must remember them with shame before we ape - harshly of the Spanish senori who sit at the bull fight and cap their hands with glee as the rips out the entrails of the those horse. the | Must we not? EMPHATICALLY ANSWERED. Roosevelt heen through here yet? Don't you see ME here yet? sense ot} who | bulb] who I am? The seat companion reptied tn the! negative | "Pm the chief engineer of a] | heuckoo clock. I've already taught It to Iny } The seat companion glanced |eharply at the speaker and hastily moved to another end of the car | He doesn't know yet whether the speaker was a harmless bug or lab-j| loring under a “hangover | Here's a fish story told by a! Lake Union tad ] G 1 was fishin’ in the lake! tother day, Lots o° snags in dere and I had lost all me hooks but} ype If | lowt dat one it would be all in fer th’ fishin’ with me. Then |} had a bite—@ good one—cork | Went clear under, I yanked, Noth; in’ seemed ter come. Den I thinks, snagged agin,’ durn th’ luck, Last} These two little fellows are named Bill and Louie, Bill, the older, Their last name te Hohenzollern Both are sons of the crown hook.” Den th line moved, and I | prince of « many, and Bill will be king some day, and Loule will be |) ss 1 had ‘im. Got im out on B GTO MBs, Yen th’ bank. Carp that long. Had This picture raistug children hows the ideas that German royalty have about Some poor little princes have to wear toy swords | good hooks in Ais meet. if four and heavy soldiers’ unttorms. Bat not thono, ‘They get out in the [Yer don’ bellove it, here's th’) sand in the king's yard at Berlin and have @ grand ttme The Ger | mane have long been known as @ sensible people in raising children, | Do you want to buy a home? See and the photograph shows that the kaleer and his little gr The Star's classified real estate aren't a bit “stuck up.” columns. POINTED PARAGRAPHS, SSS Re eee | TODAY'S STYLES TODAY “the ha ne yale AetaNS fy Fall merchandise is starting to come in And An hate in usun rapidly now, and floors must be cleared of ithe lentor a man Jn, the-botier i Summer stock without delay. This fact is meal seaterts ‘aan totid tha ial responsible for the offering of ao Tee ene Remarkable Bargains little Insanity mixed with it - > — After & man gets to be a million aire he can afford ¢ umbrella Ovcasionally & man in so absent | minded that he pa as bill the day before it We wonder if the Lord loves a cheerful giver aa much as the cheerful giver loves himself | scarry a shabby in White Serge and Wash Suits, Pongee Coats, Summer Skirts, Silk and Lingerie # his due Dresses garded. You are welcome to avail yourself of our Liberal Credit Privilege and very low sale prices at the same time. cost being practically disre- it from 1 Father et hy Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. but ite « Year to ¢ long way hristmas! from Comic ¢ 1332-34 Second Av. 209 Union St. “Seattle's Reliable Credit House”’ “MOVE” tndif | hi ideas on from books STAR DUST Jou W ch Wie Sar payer s think Mine aking even 1 Tawkine ure Us thing they Blow jer ‘ ay down.—Tow 4 REFLECTIONS A BACHELOR A man can cards because t n the pack if a woman any other tolling him blame hts can ahe ean't A man thinks he has a good dis. t flatter a man way always ean by porition to whip the children with & strap instead of a club After a woman has yed for every be in the familly ahe begins bink about herself When the baby doesn't cry it's because he has a heavenly dispont tion, When he does, it's because suffering Htue angel ls would rather sing soprano than alto because it ls higher-toned The best mothers do not got their the child-raising subject | Nes 3 Bartell Drug Stores io.1—Old Store | No. 2—Main Store | No.3—New Store 610 Second Av. 506 Second Avenue Near Vester Way i il Hi i i Hi] Wednesday and Thursday Graves’ Tooth Powder, John Gosnell’s Cherry Tooth Paste; 50¢ jar. Woodbury's Dental Cream, 25¢ size. Thymol Tooth Paste, 25¢ Calox Tooth Powder, 25 Sanitary Tooth Brushes, 25c value Prophylactic Tooth Brushes : es BAILLARGEON’S August Clearance Sales | silk Dresses" $9 76 CLEANING Tomor- row UP THE SUIT ROO MESSALINE, RAJAH AND TAFFETA sILK DRESSES a ace ‘ap pes and figures, \ nd tight-fit 9 75 Tub wi most of th earer ‘lored, in skirts, but will fit Indian Heady women; both ed an tyles, Chea plaited, and ar t $2.25, lue Clea $5.00 Blankets and Bedding In Housefurnishing Department All This Week, for m Third Floor en, Wi and Children, A nity to Prepare All Our Regular ae Our Wanket and Bedding continues all this week Bh now and save from 15 to 0.9 Childre M per cent od Osttenl t's black or tag COTTON BLANKETS } - ‘ 1-4 full wine, grey or white, per | _°°* i ral i" tron pair o0¢ , oe near 114 full shee, grey or pe Box of 6 pare nea pair , 0 , . 124 extra size, wo 1" oar Boys pair £2.00 : . at Any prtege| : WOOL BLANKETS Box of 6 pairs a 114 Tan Blankets, extra Ne For boys ang i epecial $4.00 fanous triple Knee baad 114 Grey, tan, white and Cotton Sted plaids £5.00 oY en of 6 pale 5 i 10-4 All-wool for % beds hag ti oie $1.50 and $5.00 | ‘iso. Ben ol@ cull it4 Bxtra large, plaids, all _ o 9 Fen ~ ox | No. 815—Ladies' § S585 | Coton Howe BED SPREADS. | Box of 6 pairs 164 Crochet Spreads, for \% | No, 1232~Our beds 906 | 2he Btockin, al 114 Large atze Crochet, Mar | dlack with white feb sellles pattert $1.00 | 80x of 6 pairs 114 Satin-finish Spreads $2,990 | No. 1245—Ladies’ Lisp Indl i, ebe f Stockings, with cotton tal ndian Robes, wool, chotce pat | Boy ors peley terns, $5.00 and 86.50 Wool Bath Robe No. 779—-Our famous A ath er ea gat <_ | Cotton Hos, gif van $6.50 black with white feet, The sale of p white embroid. Box of 3 pairs Cholee at 506 Ladies’ pure silk gain everywhere at Box of 3 pairs “s’ Medium Wetght DRAPERY GOODS, inch Repp, complete color Mne, per yard noe “Lisie Thread Howe, inek § inch Monk's Cloth, per tan; our We bose ie yard G0¢ | Box of 6 pairs _..... $8 50-inch mercerized Repp, } ; : $1.00 and ane | Men's Hose by the’ ; Upholstery Tapestry in both Ort Good quality Mace G ental and floral effects, from per yard. $1.75 t $6.00 Gimps and Cords to match. Cream Madras, to all designs; a wide range, 25¢ to ...7he | i black or tan, Box of 6 pairs All biseck or black feet; tana, blues, Box of 6 pairs Droe Ing China, Scotch Motte } Full nd Old Swanees © Jarae # own in owF | popular Hand Rags | thon FOR THE TEETH the 50¢ size. tubes,.. Size > CREAMS, LOTIONS | AND POWDERS : | Hinds’ Honey and Almond Cream, 50¢ size .... Peroxide Violet Cerate, Woodbury’s Facial Cream, 25¢ siz: Dupont’s Almond Benzoin Lotion Wool Powder Puffs, 20: Pinaud's Flamenca Face Powder, OK far eovnees value. Cor, First Ave, and Pike 8t Near the Clty Market

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