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

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4 THE STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1909. BAILLARGEON’S tance oaty ay tow ve Poem: THE SEATTLE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE New Outings, Flannelettes and Velour, ne ron wo we amu 65 BUSHELS OF WHEAT! 10 THE ACRE STAR DUST Meme gy no Aa a tw 1¢ People uit Josh Wine Saree | auality at “ine and sof » find rdinary ae cen aa oa ae or a : _ A fow years ago #uch an achieve at... oe vith the army and That Is the Slogan in lowa, and It Is to Come by Ime j mont would be called wondortul on fa 1) ‘ 12) f : . 0 aah 4 virgin apil, Now » boing done t + h ninst £161 ed “the mob. proving Seed by Scientific Means—Story of the Ree |{i'#)" i! Now {tts hulng dor 156 and 14 it Me with the esol) markable Work Conducted at State Agricultural | 1 ollie farmer, with ong | 18¢ aca a 1 Bs Fae (a “ ker School overall atr ” and a hr ute decor \ @ and 1246 ig hs ‘ jon tha hamed Unele Sam's or | ‘ t } if liberty n, Washington, t ~ a Uncle Joe's, Iu as different from the the n plain “a eon tal i ai farmers In lowa nowada 4 eon ' Eee abies patriot \ 1 “mob” before | 1, and attacked BY J. V. KNIGHT satk the fesuitent wheat berrise|trom while. Go tuto the remotest glengie 1 t ! . ai ~ 4 of » and order DES MOI In,, Aug, 16,—"Bix-)| te wepara d caret village in the wheat country, and The Suit Department Offers | Linen Specials for Twetdey og : , . ; \ ven the micros comes into it's an even ehance you hear the Excellent va n I y of us sympathized with the Catalonian five bushels to the acre!” 18 (h6luge One hundred oka” hit henicuish of an cule alate die | . ; 14 ond Balanee jena hes “gan of the Western Grain Doal| grains are saved, 7 a6 an “7 “dc ae | sresees: S80 oy of Week inv of us felt ry en we heard at the ’ @ #Ave hese are plant | hee-bhaw of the me 1 Lue nt ) ‘ cached Dai i jon as a fe lt of the ed, ae in the rosaley proce 10 It ich work as Mesera Hell ‘ 5 Bye y had conquered ma wk {n gralnebreeding | & row, In 10 rows, Hence the and Crossley are carrying on that | m D Lir se a | shoo! we to wish { the suece of the insurge t} Greasiey, town's ther a bees seuss eal : , an wists tel —. 7 a or : wet Two and Th ' leached D q 1" i ‘ : : 4 gener rocess {# continued until |farmer ie backward—he haw to be o, Tom a good F of the army? Well, when it is realized that for a genera ank In the wheat world, This 4% the perfection of wheat grains for| coaxed to adopt means for his own| } Bly now where o10re; uM Spe pick © the co n people of Barcelona and vicinity have been ation Includes all the big wheat seed purposes has been reached. At welfare | a folding toot i at $12.50 bleashal ail ; ing fc a republ organizing for versal | Qualitl for ‘ 7 democracy, how should we feet wt under an independence ua the world ae li BRET ES RS ET Paul Jones, ) | poverty ie a bleasin f Corset Department } Corsets. tn et Have all t » invented girls may as well Hl home Atl who | arched from Bunker Hill through seven years of defeat | to final victory at Yorktown? The question seems to answer | | wh it, but he wan 5 models in batiet One ¢ to itself, | to the hands of the i] pecially good ¢ t in ti}, with a low bt , And yet many Americans found themselves unable to sym-| ; pathize with the Russian rebels, but cast the vote of their souls with the czar's troopers. ls fountains ly long below waist and traleht hip, with he | he! t porter has draw string The fact is that in most nations of the world today the | ‘ and trimmed in wide 1 armies represent the agencies by which the reform aspirat | I ; ss 82,00 y of the pec are crushed. So it was in Russia, So it has even 5 man can't blame his wif aver Shh ont tack 2 been in China. So it is in Spain, And it is the fear of ccauwe he lan't married, | BOF th for com 4 A , } \ Proes patinte embroidery apkins that represses the democracies of the world today Ve | poe gf ee pchnpe tA of the end of the armies of lay thro acrial na ation ; but (1 string tn bust. At * I | A medium bust, tong leng M the thing that stands in the way of disarmament is not hall so 4 | bis cad bask ie cout f tr bust ates much the fear of each other on the part of the governments of ¢ : + fates a CTI draw atring n na s | : ‘ F " men In this part of the country and! bal oiieee Fe , Ms ] attached; straight ef 20-1n the world as the fear of the people on the part of pr at its headquarters here there is] $1.50 f And so the effort is making everywhere to build up and) nothing but optimiam heard The | POINTED PARAGRAPHS f} A model for medium finn k Seilete at hostility. for the people on the part of the ares’ bumper wheat crop bas] I coutil, with medium bust ¢ eep up a feeling of hostility for the people on the pa . caused moat of this feeling, but] | Look within for happiness; trou |H long length below; garters, soldiery. Russia's Cossacks are a people apart, natural bravos | Secretary George A ee of the as-| | tes will come without being looked | a 1 trimmed with iyo ' sociation ia positive that every for ree £1.00 j and rough-riders, with no apparent national aspirations, the | farmer in Iowa can duplicate tho| A man tant necessarily attached A very excellent model for 1 Hessians of Russia.- ‘The real Russians who are a little indoctri-| work of Prof. Crossley | -THRESHING SCENE IN IOWA. ty a baby carriage because he fol) girls, with girdle top and long : " z ing wheat with a microscope! gpgaT RESULTS ARE OB lowe tt Hover hip, straight effect, has nated with the spirit of revolt are not to be trusted to shoo! i CRED FROM — SCIENTIFIC After ® woman has buried her ha eupporte and ao their fellow citizens Another stanch advocate of better | ggg DING. third busbs you can't tell ber|If trimmed; a ood batiste egies ee P 1) Wheat through “breeding” ts Ht Q.| ——— |much ebout men Pr $1.00 value. At The German soldiers are so large a part of the people, and) jor, secretary of the amall rala| 1.6. goernoe of the brooding, pol |_ When people wish a newly mar | so frequently drawn from the populace, that they must feel in| growers’ association iy a 907 len from other stelke ts mixed with ried couple happiness they don’ || . : : sor at Ames college oo method | 5. Hien on the parent stalks, #0) py y really expect It to come. 1] ure as the people feel, It is the army that is per Prof, Bell the pollen i “| Every member of the Western other tt quee oI large measure the people fee ) I used by Prof. Bell and which haa) is): “ittorent strains may be mixed Grit eaters’ association has been |, mother thinks it queer that her || daughter should care for the things |@ manently separated from the people, the professional soldier, | drawn attention from farmers alll sits the seed Wheat at the proper y sep peor f he never cared for herself over the country is nearly like the t of inquiry and re or even the militia that is drawn from a class, that is the danger | Grossiey work — ° a \nrve tha dota 0 be wieh each willl it’s difficult to convince @ wom-|ff i, “ 20 of an acre ts planted give the data to Becretary Wells on : : a || m wth. 5 army, in the hands of a governing} ‘Cent Gener” Plan. Finally 1-20 naar an that gambling is wrong so long | Our Art. Bection, on thira | c to national growth. Such an army, in the hands of a governing) + pati calle the method the| with the perfect weed his crop. This will be forwarded | ., ner husband keeps ahead of the) | floor, is showing @ full as | i fortment of Koyal are s rum | will be interested tn elient assortment ee setng . A . to Ames, and farmers whose crops . class, brings to bear on the righteous uprising all the tre-| cont gener” plan, from two French This te threshed separately andiary “backward” will pot ones game.—Chicago N iH mendous advantage of the terrific enginery of modern military — gd por pe ee on wee 4 “ send he Sos 7eAt, ona on how to tm thelr soll, REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR |IHl | ; ; ie to th sine '4 wheat! when double ¢ 7 \ and, incidentally, how to ratse their equipment, and is likely to turn back the tide of reform and} trom which tn a fow years thow| hoo i quantity ts plamted bank balances. , Experience teaches what a lot|i : - = Y e ently leands of acres of bonanza crops enslave the people permanently pesca spring. This grain ie the ao-| When an sere finally & planted The principle Messrs. Crossley More ** must go through without on ed seed, and Beil use is as old as learning anything Therefore, a free people shauld not tolerate a standing cestor of billions of other grains. |and crown from the » | oA wureed Gin t ‘a pretty safe wager that the of Virgil, who tolla in tt he The reason a man wat to TS TS | Ineubated, nursed along, fed with |it te @ pretty { aye nO” ley a girt Is he wouldn't If he knew army, Sesert as an inevitable ne , : fertilizer, the grain finally becomes | yteld will come close to the ideal | the ancients saved the best sof) ; And if an army is necessary, it should take in every man 4 bearing wheat-stalk and from this | 65-busbel standard |grain for planting purposes what was best for them. in the nation if possible, that it may not have ideals alien to oF | sos0: * FR ocr pte ier Gh gp | different from the ideals of the common people, With the whole | people in the army, the good as well as the evil desires of the) i masses will have a chance to grow. Democracies need demo- | cratic armies—or none. i time easity. pushing a lawn mower, but it ean! . ° Christian Gelence Cures. | make 4 happier family than writing)) This Victor SAN FRANCISCO, 4 — | boetry N FRANCISCO, Aug. . 16 There's something rather attrac:|| talking machine, exactly Dick” Jose, the famous contra | tre about the idea of purgatory!) Ike picture, and a aplen- tenor, whose sweet voloe has de when a man fs in the middle of a|| did instru 17 50 lighted theatre goers for many Charity falr, ment, for $ ® HEARD ON THE - as = ~ A woman dates everything trom | EASY PAYMENTS IF | STREETS 2 ST A Rainier Heights woman who | last week when stranded in Seattle, | years, announced today that he has her honeymoon; a man from the DESIRED has a son on one of the amateur; “Say, mister,” said the boy, ae-| been cured of cancer of the tongue time he was initiated into a secret je basoball teams, had never|CoMlns & man walking screw! by Christian Belonce, Ne ; | — » | Pioneer square, “is this any good? i soon a baseball game until this sem) He held out a $20 bill for ex) *\ son, Now she is an ardent fan—jamination, The man paused and | A Ct ig i | 8 Sousa and his band, Pryor’s {though perhaps not wholly on. “iron at ng 915 tor ta he aad] A ee band, the U. S. Marine band, all the fine points of the came. |iq payee Q || the Royal Marine band of Italy—in fact, the greatest military bands in the world play for you on the Victor. Tetrazini, Caruso, Gadski, Sembrich and all the other world-famous singers sing for you on the Victor. Order a Victor at once if you have nonel She attended her first game Ban "Then (ll keep it myself,” sald) |day at Woodland park, not because | the youns a. eat | like = * vyt Continued, as the man start - cared a rap for the play, but walk on, “Just a minute! Do you! | because her young hopeful, who |*| vow that fellow over there—that | | 6 feet 1 and woighs 180, was to (ake oidish man, with @ sort of stoop to | |part. Her daughter, who knows «| his shoulders, — Late ’ ent | the entrance to the utaal few things about the game, w Ol allding? Not. Well, he’s the man | aiong. | who gave it to me,” | In the third inning, seeking (6) ‘Then he told his story, whieh, fn make a grandstand play before| brief, was thir | the family, the boy took a long lead| Steanded, In search of the price off second, hoping to steal third. [of a meal and bed, the young man “He's going to steal a base,” | had neked help of the old fellow | whispered the girl tonsely to her) whom he encountered on Pioneer| | mother. square. He was asked to tell his! “Why, no," answered mater, in-/ story, When It was told, hia hearer dignant at the imputation that her! reached into bis pocket and ex-| son would steal anything. “He surely | tracted a handful of bills, They| won't do that.” | were ones and twos, and he started The daughter was too Inter ito put them back. jin the play to answer, for her “Just 60 cents of a quarter,”| ‘brother was just then streaking it) pleaded the young man. “Just | for third |enough for something to eat.” | “He's done it! He's done it!” Without a word the old man |shouted the girl, pounding mother | reached into his other pocket and lon the shoulder, as ehr brother pulled out a different roll, He slid head first into third, ‘He's| stripped off a $20 bili and passed | [stolen third.” it over. | “No he hasn't,” retorted mother,| “Keep it,” he said when he saw jas tho dust cleared away. “I told| the young fellow’s surprise, “I was} lyou he wouldn't. Can't you see it's|up against it once myself. A rela still there?” tive died not long ago and ma | - me rich. 1 can't spend my income. IN LITTLE OLD NEW YORK BY | ‘ORMAN. ‘ g thropiat who dispenses cheer and|find to be deserving, like you | aac er kindliness, and—what ia more to| The bill was cashed as 0. K. at) - = “ | the point among men with empty |the nearest restaurant NEW YORK, Aug. 16.—Can Ai rte ® porterhot stomachs—cash, to those deerving| , ar imagine a more surprised widow| ‘lum, some vegetables, a frutt)o¢ his ministrations, and who ive woman the eredifirhe de pos oe Micka, the suftragette cried, “and than one who married a man sho| "Id. and a couple of desserts.| spends hie entire thme secking| whore would men bers sarnod | 10 two bottles of imported beer. | cases worthy of his help, Stich, at! f she got all the ¢ thought was poor, and who learned) ‘The waltor brought It all, in due Pag tage gape | all, In due |jeast, is indicated by the following | a few days after her husband’s| sequence and the young man got story of a young boy who found ald , death that he was worth $150,001 | through It very nicely. The waltor You hardly can. presented the bill, which was $8.10. | That wae the lot of Mra, Robert} “Tut, tut,” sald the young man.| MR. M. Powers, who until less than aj “I didn’t know how hungry 1 was.| JELLYFISH month ago was Kitty Howe of| Bring me another steak—a chatoan Geachiyn, « iinet | briand, with mushrooms, and a big On July 16, Dr, Andrew J. Dow-| one, pleaso—and some German| a aes or, wealthy and childless physician| fried potatoes, an endive salad, a We OR, tere of Brooklyn, was drowned. Hel portion of Camembert, some water Wo? VOTE FOR SCROGCS — left $1,000,000 to be divided| melon, and have it good and cold,| (“49 4 CRoow Ard kveRrBoby equally among five nephews and| and another bottle of heor | tAwows 17! HE'S NOT FIT nieces and his secretary. Robert} Waiter Quite Job, FOR WCE OF Powers was one of the nephews.| The walter brought It and the ANY Kind { As soon au he learned of his good| young ma k his time putting it fortune, Powers eloped with Miss|away, Then he picked up the menu Howe, and they were married again aa though looking f Find’s She's Heiress. | thing more which looked goor , But Powers did not teil his} him, This was too much for the wite of his good fortune. Perhaps| waiter, who summoned the fiead| he wanted to surprise her. Por-| waiter, Amy Lang haps he we inthe Every Prominent Building at the A.-Y.-P, Exposition, Except One, Equipped With Pianos from Eilers, .4 CHEHALIS COUNTY BUILDING We sell Vietors at $10 and up to $260, Cash or credit. Ask us for particulars, aT SE ET DT a VSS S- ‘The home of relinble pianos and talking machiaes, Ni LAL 1406 Second Ave, Credit That Satisfies —that has no red tape about it ; —that makes unlimited allowance for sickness or loss of employment i —= ee | | Se ee ZS a a SSS THE CHEHALIS COUNTY COMMIS. SION SELECTED A MAGNIFICENT KIMBALL Every prominent building, with one excep tion, at the Exposition is equipped with pianos from the House of Pilers. Sixteen different committees composed of the brainiest men and women in the West unanimously decided in favor of Eilers. What does this prove? What does it all mean? Oc AO A A A A” steak, me Ait she . rear paid cash This is the Credit we offer you fo make the buying of your summer outht easy. i Why not take advantage of it? Tt means that a s Music House you not only choose from the largest assortment of the world’s best pianos but that prices are indis- putably lower than elsewhere It means that this is a different kind of piano establishment and because of this fact that the attitude of the piano buying public toward it is of a different kind It means that the “Eilers Way” of “Small Profits and Quick Sales” and strictly One Price — } aoe is the only right method, Eastern Outfitting Co., 1332-34 Second Av. 209 Union St. —— Cat att The head wait To sum up, it means , . to nee how much) er presented the bill, which now P, means in dealing with the ZZ Ss ate caved for him wit knowing amounted to $1945. ‘The man y Seen i wor ig taye ae i gyrase oe ‘ Ksaeite’s Pilichly ugh CE 6 cat ye yt bape ithin al with the appetite glanced at it satisfaction which goes with the knowledge i few days after the slopement P eoléaat eid bach edge ert waa ide 4. Wie bride tt ne oe y i of having secured the greatest intrinsic value erov s bride tim aven't any mor ¢ maid ny doll < . idly we his family and con-| “and I don't care in the I onas for every dollar investec foaned the clandestine marriage.| you do with me. That was one ) ° \ Thon she found she was an heiress.) square meal, and I needed tt’ see A apecial policeman arrested the 3 The Tale of an Appetite, | young man. When booked at the z He was decently dressed and} station, he anid his name was Her- | well groomed. He gat down at «| man Schmidt, and he wae a waiter! table in Pabst's restaurant and r mut of a job, Asked by the desk] his eye down the bill of fare with) Heutenant how long he had pow the afr of a man who knows how to! sessed the wonderful appetite, he order « dinner, Ho told the waiter| answered: “Iver since 1 waa born to fetch him a dry Martini, some| He was held sor trial on the charge Mttie necks, soup, crab meat, an| of defrauding a hotel keeper Successors to D, & JOHNSTON CO. ee ee ee For Ladies Message and Cooling Ro: We Sollett Ye . — TOURIST BATH a <2 Oe” MT a SS Eilers Music Building Third and Uniwersity SL ew a ee >

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