The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 1, 1909, Page 4

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THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER |, 1909, ' ' cisco, The mayor was convicted of ext va b i boss of the city, a man who ruled t big political partic I and held every + busir and : ; " wry i A whole board of supervi nife ) ‘ | i and blackmail Many the t prt ‘ were ; indicted, and the courts are even now try t y the) { head « all th treet railway lit | ; In nnection with " ndal almost} ; every ¢ known to criminology has been perpetrated—dyna / miting, assa nation, k apir < \ bernation, murder ' eas assa ry tit mi s of people throughout the| { i land h d the idea that the dig, beautiful city om the t Pacific coast is without law, justice or public conscience ‘ And now a greater trial than all others is on. The people ji of San Francisco are on trial, Are they honest? Do they favor t impartial justice? Have they a conscience? ; The man who hunted down the grafters, who has dared! } to a ler indictment the wealthiest, most powerful} 4 scou he city, who has for three years been trying to « and social show ey, political pull, financial standdis influence cannot save a scoundrel from American justice, and} who was shot through the head in the court room for his efforts,} is Assistant District Attorney Francis J. Heney | A campaign is on. The republicans have nominated rae district attorney a young lawyer who dares not state where he BY PHIL SIMMS Heney. } . RHEIMS, Aug. 31.—The four ple stands. The democrats have Francis J Either the grafters will escape or a republican city will elect 4) os with thin Paatgtinges pero. democratic district attorney. good {dea of the aeroplane sty! Before the nation the people of San Francisco are on trial. as seen here during Aviation Week, | - jf and the week before, when the pre Are they guilty or not guilty of Ruef, Schmitz, Calhoun and all Uminary tests were fully as intor that miserable scandal? esting as during the main event. | | There is the monoplane, the bi " bane 60 be st | Plane. the triplane and the aero ‘The precipitate progress of the|to divvy on a 60 and 40 per cont! DNS with vertical wings garbage question in Seattle may basis. | Im reality there are but two pat furnish some data to the scientist | terns of flying machines—the mono- here studying the glacial drifts. | A 62-hour train schedule from | Plane hg Mo — The trt Nein plane Is little w jChicago to Seattle ought to be 8)” Of these two forms, it is hard to} Tt isn't altogether a boost for great benefit to the people of Chi | aay prosperity that the train robber in cago. the wild and woolly cast only got a load of Lincoln pennies. nominated NO 1—VERTICAL AEROPLAN | PLANE. WO. 3—-WRIGHT BROT | NO, 4—TRIPLANE, Kheims 10kilometer course during the week. In the Coupe Internationale event whieh is the better, Kach basi there w ecven movoplanes en done some Wonderful things. | tered: agatnat 12 biplanes. — | Louts Bleriot, the famed Channel| Now that flying is @ compara The officiala of realty concerns |cTOSr. Is the designer of the mone ltively casy matter and the aero- evidently do not seriqusly plan on | PAR® Shown fm the picture. The | planes themselves ate more or leas atly | Latham apparatas, which almont did trastworthy, it is the engine which giving themselves the worst of it the feat whieh Blertot accomplished | is getting most attention now from is only slightly different tn form. | the folks whe fly Forest fires continue to violate the rules of conservation, despite ‘ > 19 | Santos-Dument, the Brazilian, has are yt. nchot- Private Banker” Smith manages a There four general . sy! the temporary lull in the Pt co vate, ’ “9 a dah es & monoplane of bis own design, but Blerict uses an Anzant nitty of Ballinger controversy. 10 keep on the go all the tim | it, too, ie Hike the others, while the three cylinders, one cylinder’ tiding vertical and the other twWo at either wide at an angle of 45 degrees Trom it. There iw bat one o the driving crank, ail three pti be- ing connect oh thin. The Wright brothers use a four cylindkend en | gine mot unlike those in use ay auto: | POINTED PARAGRAPHS, | Even an artist may not he able jto draw a matetmbalal priv. | The weather man doesn't seem \ to care anything for popularity | People will laugh at your «flly | Jokes as lon. your money tala. | A. strl's love for candy dooan't | mecessarily indieate a sweet dispo- | sition, 0 many bow} A Paying teller may not be super eer | stitious, but he must be an expert Fh in signs | We feel earry for the wife of « fete who takes a gloomy view of | married life.Chicago News |"R. B P.” monoplane is likewise The Smiths are some, numerically | siméflar. The Voisin people, makers of the | tfiplane shown tn the {Mustration, [es = | also make the biplane with the ver | teal sides. The other biplane is the EVERE ] | familiar one of the Wright brothers, Get-rieh-quick prisoners who put up bail should at least be compelled ' speaking, and then some. Whee Sayer | | | t thetr os the shoehorn What do you want} FURNI Sex ck half-way in ber rn 4 can't get it on oF off. Chicago Record-Herald S&S A AVE. BE Beat a woman wit youll make gold. —I miner and said the lovelorn youth way to find out m thinks of ye her Wisdom in the » money In the hand nd le bette han 2.65 € Pra \h a ms has been reached a The limit Malsance buster, bas earned the pen-| Luring viciously at short, very alty of fame, but he kicks at the| back cigar, while his beady eyes penalty. He just won't stand for it.| snapped ominously, “nearly all Stand for what? the fool inquiries are by old mar Being besieged by a horde-of in-| Ted folks who onght to know the etal, people have great it thelr generosity His time {s too valuable. “The next time any human jelly fish wants to know what to do in any plain case,” said Everett Trne - “If I am to be lugged in to show | the whole dod-gasted » We don't | for breakfast country domestic how to run its} hurt | affairs 1 re serve the right to do it at long dis-| folly and wisdom come upor “let him untwine himself from a tance,” af jerman penny and drop it into the hands| So there! see of the nearest newsboy and get «| Watch for Everett True’s Corre-| 41. amorions ro Welle: paper containing my Answers to | spondence College. \fevreign tities don't Geserve any has been the object of, 9 ETN RE ES ale =| eredit wh ects the de: | "Ghe—They.don’t get any: they pay who directs the dost}nie ca Philadelphia Telegraph plan. We have Give Over lon't yor wash your Come and. sel t your me it dirty so's to stop the girla from kissing me.” BY | ORMAN. you Poor Kale,” Bte. Mra, Hector—T feel so well I'm « « sure [must be il) the ent even tfo © be © start the I saw the maddest man I ever platform the bell rang t tart th Hector—Then feel fil, Maria. and hope to see, a few mornings ago, local, and the guard slammed the | then youll be sure poure welt door opening on the express plat the 96th st. subway station Tr “= & form. The man turned to retreat Athen Wine, There you enter upon the local and the guard slammed the other | ,2Uz4 ane c: ante. John, whet train platform from the ticket gate, door, at the same time ringing bis ¥ the forgetful ttle k bis medicine « to the express platform © go downstairs, thro up another stairy th the local go-ahead bell h Away went the local, with the man cooped up on the platform, Jumping up and down and shaking DESERVED NO SYMPATHY. to get to the ex- his fists and evidently saying all| ‘There was an uproar and @ pale er, is to walt sorts of things to the guard. The|chap was observed to be running | ts a local comes along and walk local had to stop at Ninety-irst/for his life. Behind him in a cloud throug! 1 one door of a street, Wighty-sixth street and |of dust came the determined crowd, | and © other door. ‘Trains al- Seventy-ninth street before reach Poor fellow!” . said the stranger ways « few minutes, and the ing the next express station, Sev-|“l hope they don't catch him.” doors opened onto both plat- enty-second, by which time the ex You do, eh?” commented the man forms press had pulled into the Grand/on the corner. “Do you know who A local tanding in the sta Central station at Forty-second | he is? tion an express was Just draw- street | “N-no. Some assassin?” ing | a his man ran through the Of course that a Worse than that.” pet gate, evidently in a great! pretty mean eltizen 7" Mirebug?” Tiurry. He ¢ould have made the | pretty fair type of the men in the Worse still express by running down the employ of the public service cor Great Caesar! Who is he?” stairs but instead he poration here. Just why these Why, he’s the mutt that started chose the local traty through the men go as far out of their way as| the expression ‘Oh, you kid! they do to incommode and aggra-| don't you think hanging, vato people is hard to determine, | too good for him?” Now, would be , a car and seven of these negotiated the; jbr M.A.GOTTSTEIN TURE CORtp, Hint of the Many Low Price Specials Offered This Week The silly season is geting so it . STRONG (4 SPECIALS ets all the year around. Dallas News | - $1.25 Cotton Comforts, covered with good | Why, "Man where's all thet arade silkoline in light and dark pat- | Standard OF b or peerens On 9 RE aes terns; filled with pure white, one. an’ started de fire wid it."Clere Piece cotton and closely tied with land Plain Dealer zephyr yarn. Special Se silkoline in very good patterns. Filled the Anguished. They'll find every- said lite Rolle, “what with pure white one-piece cott and ” ts appendiettia? stitched extra heavy. Size 68x74. Spe- a ttle Star’s| thing worth while covered. We cour ewered the cynical “ ~ cide Sigs an amen eaeaasnsy “Punny thing,” he continued, | parent. “wppendicit something cia ® $1.85 $4.00 Light Gray Blankets, a good heavy quality with pink or blue borders. Spe- $4.00 Wool Blankets in blue and white or pink and white plaids. $2.00 Feather Pillows, covered with good German tick sanitary feathers; a pair " from thelr own ¢x-|-—New York Prees. terviewers, sightseers and curios-|Serience. Yor that reason? am oo Se bores jing to call my plan the Everett) pronmsn’-Dur ae Sait inte wine He has slammed the lid upon! True Home and Fireside Corre ssen on the breakfast table? levees. No more levees. Nix. | spondence College. |. Did your wife re —_— | Me Che Sate Duy, September 6 | To enable the man who needs credit to get it without having one or moe objectionable features attached to it me and since of this houne In our system of Gistributed payments we never heard of one quite so fair concerned and cannot conceive of a fairer ane. Gottetetn about the payments. $7 Oak Rocker mobiles while the ot. BP.” mono. plane gete ite name from its engine, t HOven-eylindered one ranged equally distant other, around an are f 180 degreen, The Antoinette monoplane has an Antoinette elabtcylinder motor four to a side and set on an angle Nowadays nearly all the trouble in acroplaning ts cau by the mo tora, golng wrong > engines been rum for days without ping, never miasing an explo sion engine Then why does the aeroplane vo often misfire after a few ——BLERIOT'S MONO. & wNO. & BIPLANE AEROPLANE, " minutes ranning? ‘The thing ts very «imple. accord ing ‘o Louis Blertot, who said “The sutemobdile engine rum with a heavy fiywheel whieh bal- ances it, It also goes at a moderate rate, ordinarily, occasionally run- ning very fast, then slowing down | and resting. i The aeroplane engine has no bal- ance wheel. it no solid base. It) a off at full speed and runs like lightning without anything to check the great strain always upon it lke a steam engine without fy wheel or governors. Consequently, even with the best of workmanship and the finest of materials, the sero- plane engine shakes itself to bite mighty quickly unless very simply made. And that must be the key- note of aero engines: Simplicity.” REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR. Lots more people would want te) live in the suburbs if it was tm-/ proper to do it ij The chief objection to being a/ |good eittxen ts how darned un- popular it makes you. A great mistake for married peo- ple to make is to think they could jnot have done any worse. About the heavtest expense to the woman who goes shopping ts for car fare and Juncheon. When « boy sees a stern light In mother’s @ye he can face it ly unions be fears tt means the bathtub—-New York Press. hi PIKE & & PINE. ,of 46 degrees from the vertical | voor, BAILLARGEON’S | Saal Fast Express Shipments of the Popular One-Piece Dresses STOCK WELL ASSORTED AGAIN—3 SPLENDID STYLES Princess of Chiffon Panama, with the plain top and kilted skirt the left side with large jet buttons, high pointed collar, tig! with pin tucks and fancy sateen pipings. Colors, na and French Serge Princess, with kilted flounce and | front r g knee; fancy sleeve and panel trimmed with [1 heavy fish net, with serge bands; jet nail-head fastener RE are (RROD. is ose eee? ‘ ye re One-Piece Dress of Prunella Cloth, has the plaited flounce braided; yoke made of tucked net and heavy black lace silk lined and is shown in the new fall shades. Price ‘ $33.75. Another express shipment just opened of those tremendously popular J topped Dresses, the reigning craze now in the East. Cloth or satin flounces, plain or braided tops; white, gray, navy and black. Priced at- $25.00, $32.50, $35.00 and to $45.00 _ BEDDING WEEK THIS, And quantities of nice ew specials for tes! ndsomely a The } New, Knox Ladies’ merchand mor . 114 good weight Cotton Biar ‘ extra Inrge wool-finishad! Tailored Hats | 3.03.7 IAG eats tear oO elal, por pair $1.00 very special Are Here | 12-4 extra large mixed wool and 124 all-woe a Pies ae cotton white Blankets, $4.50 ity; spe Distinctive in Style and | 11.4 alt-wool, gray, tan, white or 11-4 wor Appearance — High-Class pinids; special 85.00 Tailored Hats that every Comforters—Closing Prices on Summer Weights good dresser recognizes at 70x80 best Silkoline Covers; one Coveres Sa once—the exclusively Knox single sheet of pure white tone. The early trade has cotton; at $1.25, $1.50, 12x40 # ioe Covers set in strong, and our corps $1.55. values at 25 72x80 tient Wool-Filled Silkoline at of designers and trimmers » $3.75 are well pushed to keep | Spreads ahead. New styles and pat- % or full-size Crochet Spreads; 11-4 good, large size, soft fing terns are arriving daily and free from starch big ish ..... $1.25 go in stock at once. We in 11-4 big nize satin fintsh Marseilles ......0-2..04000+ * vite your early inspection. st gears School Clothes for Boys | Our Juvenile Department addresses you in no uncertain New Hammered Brass thin wook. Ail manner of smart furnishings, caps and hata, for in Our Basement Section, | sized boys; high grade, but not.high priced. Jardinioren, ern Dishes, | Serviceable Suite Jn good col- | Swesters, $4, $1.25, Oil Trays, Vasex, Flower Contors, | potter quailty Suits, $4.00, | Waist 506, 65¢, 75¢, $8, Stein Beta, ete, ete $5.00 and \ $1.25. 200 hammered brane Sinch | Mendistered | Sully 85.50, | Ties. 25¢. 35¢. 506. Fern Dishes; mtroductery | Caps, 506, Ge. Hats $1.25 Pants, knickerbocker Bae $1, Miele. i. Zeta nats $1.25 | to $2.50. ’ -25 0 $2.25. Closed Sept. 6th] Seattle Day at the: Seattle Day at the ON, E: | “We'll Be There.” “We'll Be There,™ Royal Wiltons, Axminsters and Ortental sonlinnyiee ee Toe tem ae | Rugs are piling up in our Rug Section. The 20 and 22-inch Switches; $5.56 end $6.66 | ny good: . ‘and | beautiful now colorings and styles will interest aA and, f vc cal @wtichest be ant br ts . 53.58 and | and satisfy you. | 95.30 Putts at Madam Paul 1323 Third Ay. DOWNING. HOPKING @ HYPR, tee. (Ratabitebed 1593) BROKERS Stocks, Gratis and Provisions. Both Phones 270. Private Wires, 204-205-306 Alaske Bids. ALBERT NANSEN, Jewsien Gur charges are SCHUCHARD OPTICAL CO, 1207 Seeond ve. E d ‘atton Comfarts, covered with best & pair $2.65 Speetal. $2.75 fitied’ with guaranteed 81.45 » study by the man have such a rehandise and then seo Mr. He wilfbe pleased eo will ARR AAO TAMER NI for $3.95 Extra large and well constructed rocker, exactly like cut Comfortable covered Seat, with Spanish leather Finished in golden oak or in Early En glish. A particular ly good rocker, that will give lasting sat isfaction Regular price $7.00. Special for this week, $3.95. | { is offered, without reserve, at the same low figures, including cluster and | ; bouquet sets of plain and curled feathers. tiful, long, silky willows. $3.75 Plumes selling at $4.50 Plumes selling at $6.50 Plumes selling at $8.00 Plumes selling at $9.00 Willow Plume at | | ) | The Biggest and Best in Seattle’s Hi Began Today at Stone-Fisher’s F Plain and Willow Plumes—Black, White and Fall Colors—Willow Plumes Up From $6.50—Plain Plumes Up From $2.50 : This $15,000 stock came to us from the largest and best known plumg manufacturer in the country. Because we took the entire line, leaving no od@ lots or shades, he sold them to us at a surprisingly low figure. It now becomes the good fortune of Seattle women, for the entire sto Plumes of every size and description, from plain curled feathers to beat Black, white and all the new fall shades are here Lengths from 12 to 29 inches. An Unequaled Opportunity—Beginning Today, Ending Saturday See the Window Displays—The Plumes Are Priced $10.00 Willow Plume at $12.00 Willow Plume at . $15.00 Willow Plume at .. $16.00 Willow Plume at $25.00 Willow Plume at .. $30.00 Willow Plume at .. $7.508 .. $10. $12.50 ‘$18.00 $20.0 $4.50 : i COLORS—Black, white, gray, greens, amethyst, bronze, browns and tans, champagne, wistaria, new blues, etc.; also shaded effects Cluny and Drawn Work at Half Price In this special sale of Fancy Goods a dealer's stock is being disposed of at 50¢ on the dollar. Values to 25c selling at 10¢. | Values to 75c selling at 25¢. And so on through the entire line. Come tomorrow Three Washington Stores

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