The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 3, 1909, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

HER WEIGHT OF WOE ° — Did you note the specifications in Mrs. Thaw's complaint treated by @fficials of the Mat that her son was being hars teawgn asylum 4 cannot give my son the white she says Thee heve also denied hig: the right to p eggs and orange juice y on the piano. They lock him in his cell at 8 o'clock. He was denied a by a friend, I cannot take my basket luscious frait brot son's mail to him any Thre pathy has been aln bey’s life or liberty was at stake White longer e eating Thaw matter public sym h the whole naus t exclusively confined to the moth€r whose t what was sure t be coming to him sooner or later, Harry Thaw was useless to save as a distrib human had onl¥ passing sympathy as the victim of horrible court pro cedure. The Widow White was largely reg rather than the loser bY the removal of a husband who, from domestic standpoint, was a rank calamity. But there has beer a whole lot of public sympathy for the old mother who, thre many long, bitter months, ha money, her time and her tears fought for her boy with her Hasn't this sympathy, as is often the case, been misplaced’ Isn't the responsibility for this whole matter rightly to be ter of coacentrated wealth, Evelyn ded as the gainer} tantr’ain'S "weer vase: THE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE:?:; BY AGNES LAURA POLLOCK Chapter t A roaring train end ite fight from the West ip the Pennsylvania allroad station in Jersey City, and half a thousand passengers stream tunnel entrance In the throng I noticed a yeung girl, at frat wight I thought her no more than 14, who was plainly alone and a stranger She tugged a pitiful little brow bag, and, though following the rowd ,with considerable selfpos session, ahe became confused at the ferries. 1 had been watting in the station {hoping to meet ohe of the hundreds of girls who wore flocking to New a} York to get stage work, and In the little girl in white before me 1 ree ognized the type and my oppor | tunity } “Wl you please tell me how to set to Broadway?” she asked ive @ very long and in places broad street,” said I, and ‘ed to escort her, Woe en new tunnel, and in three placed ‘way back on the one who had the bringing up of the | minutes had been hurtled nearly @ boy? Isn't it all a valuable object legson on the responsibility of motherhood and the importance of home environment? If she raises a boy on orange juice, piano playing, lusciot fruits and late hours, can any mother expect to produce a mar who will stand up under any sort of adversity? Ease, luxury affluence mean ultimate impotence, in nations, men, all animat things. Adam would have proved it as surely as has Harry Thaw, had not the Creator been magnificently merciful The grand compensation to the poor and struggling is that lake water, not orange juice; washboards, not pianos; potatoes, not luscious fruits; late hours at labor, not jate hours in bed produce strength of character, mental and physical power t overcome. All the developments and especially Mrs. Thaw’s public utterances must have reduced the great tide of public sympathy to a mere ripple of regret that Mrs. Thaw was a weak mother to her children. The “show me” disposition of; The only Maw in the morning the Royal Geographical society! papers’ scoop on the dis points to the belief that it was in-| the North Pole waa that th corporated under the laws of Mie ing papers printed it first. sourt. —_— nt from the Smith ‘The striking firemen at the in-| reunion y ay was W. W., late Cinerator are quite positive they /of 216 Cherry st. Vanconver, and haven't any money to burn the city jail. IN LITTLE OLD NEW YORK ci Deemer even Notably abs st Samuel Weinbock sat dozing in| jars of pickled walnuts. The anto- Ris delicatessen store at $36 First! mobile was all busted to amash, and av. dreaming happy dreams. | could not be moved. Neither could Around him were nice cold cheese the store be locked up, with a huge @ukes, frankfurters, sardines, pick-| green car sticking in the front of It led walnuts, dill pickles, sauerkraut,) So Samuel sadly settled Rimself liverwurst, eels in jelly—all such for a wately till morning, aud start Rice things to eat. ed to figure up how much damages Trade had been brisk, and there he would ask from the touring car Was a goodly sum tm the till. It company for the eels, and the Was nearly midnight, and soon Sam- cheese, and the walnuts, and the uel would close np and rest from his other things. labors of selling nice cold cheese Such is life fo goad frankfurters, sardines, pick . walnuts, dill pickles, sauerkraut, Makes Sufferin, liverwurst, eels in jelly and other) an oven vagal espe dite thinan to eat ing paper came out with | |@ scare head, not long ago, con The Storm Breaks. cerning some fire or flood or other lamity, and readin, Gre Then came a terrible awakening. Po . sete y se ist ype angela ertcnreg Popular Suffering Anxious read and « horrid rumbling sound, then When any kind of two flaming eyes glared in at the “net Any kind o door of the delicatessen store, the “my, ve, Popular. frontof the store fell in on him, and |tgined thet, hie headin at® the alr was full of nice cold cheese ving 2 great city. uffering had cakes, frankfurters, sardines, pick |"#"t, meaning suffering among the | populace, but he won't try that walnuts, saue e t led ts, sauerkraut, liverwurst, Pela again eels in jelly and human beings Samuel cried aloud, and covered . seen,” sald Ed Wilkingon, “aine Bis czes for & space. When helicase ‘that almost broke in’ when I gained courage to have a look at as making up th forr tings, he discovered that = large | Cleveland paper many pears ago. green touring car, belonging to the | p..7., was at 1 New York Transportation company | * h Accra ondldrynnedien abd loaded with 40 dead game | Gade ‘wrote, “Grent Iiacte eraPh sports on their way from from a| Sweers Gitte: | ov ria ngentys prize fight, had bumped into a pile | Sueers State’ 1 held it up, and ot paving blocks, oat its brake and |’ What in dleglety Jink i / a Exile sin a ale as igre * |“didatic storm?”’ I asked him juin, Ruin, Ruin. | Why, @ storm that cuts up di Several of the sports were badly | do he answered. | wrote a new damaged, but nothing to compare head that was not as unique with the eels and frankfurters Bs heciginal, but it saved our jo ae OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE WHAT 27! GO Yo CHURCH ON A HOT PAY LIKE THIS? WOT IN A MILLION YEARS, MRS. TRUE! NOY in A Mitton YEARS! and bs. It was the funniest [ have! mile under the bed of the great trom Hut before we had reached B way my little friend had confided ithat she had come to go on the tage,” that she had never been tn the elty before, that she knew no me, and that she didn't know just what she would do.* Would she ome with mo and might I ausist her? Indeed she would and I might, jand, belleve me, what had been became genuine Interest Tt was in the forenoon, and we proceeded to a certain rather fa }mous ct theatrical boarding Soubret Safe Harbor.” My friend gave me her name as tythe Ral uurse, and she did not reveal her true name), and I } possessed just $1 {she had full permission from her father and stepmother, living In St.| Louis m thi me to New York to go She was 17 (this, I tched at joast a year), been taught to dar | by “my chum, who fe with a vaude-| ville troup,” and she had “acted a | little” for a man who booked for | moving picture shows. | Aw we red the boarding house we met a little chorus girl who! tved there, and had an engagement | witha company rehearsing. She said she would share her room with Edythe, $2 a week each. Edythe thought this too much, bat when | the andl with frowsy hatr and hard m aid, “from four to welve jand she | bh CHERRY TREES- FAIRBANKS--- r, inquiring | | | wim rO with oxygen and salt solution Chas, Warren Fairbanks went blossoms, you know, and the cherry joke had an elaborate funeral Hudson river and into the city | rad | rank curtosity upon my part now house in 29th at, sometimes called | Had Little Money. | ome (ansumed, of! that she! She said that! | WASHINGTON, Sept. 2.—Who sald the Fairbanks joke is dead? | Its demise was formally certified to-last | press humorist», after {ts life had been preserve THE STAR—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, to accopt her new friend’) offer We wat down in the atiiffy bed room to tall ft over, Our more ox pertenced uaintance threw light into many dark pyces. its a cinch,” quoth she. “The town's full of bums and hawbeens, and a pret ed out to the ferry slips and they cy tittle girl the you ought to be found quick She advised againat cortain managers cont them in bitter terms, and spoke well of others. “You'll have to sign one of them contract things,” she said, “but read it before you do. You're Hable to stung for $18 bit, and a girl can't,do it, 1 $20, and thom $2 qount. If you ¢ dance and sing, you better get next to a musical comedy — re nm pany Girt Not Afraid Edythe approved all this, ‘THe little girl, hardly out of short skirts, was unafraid, This was her romanoer 1 think she wae r prised that she wae not to m EDYTHE ARRIVES AT A CHEAP BOARDING HOUSE AND T week Edythe wae glad) MEETS A CHORUS GIRL WHO “PUTS HER WISE.” HA! HAL Hi ring by the rican rough the winter to Japan, the land of cherry It looked like the last word in cheery wheeses. But now look who's he Ozaki to P ident Taft to plant tn the Potomac at Washington. Can you visited Toklo, probably admired the orchards, and the mayor tim ing that Cha to live, planne ¥ would son the presen In any event, when the trees Fairbanks park A dispatch from Tokio says Mayor f that lovely city has offered new park on the b 1 as a delicate y trees as a gift nks of the get away from it? FF man lon or other go back to Wash pliment are pianted they'll have a call in Nee of suede pumps spoiled by water hysteria for two girls, a bad scare for two others, and the fight of| their lives fpr three bold young mep | That was the cont ot a moonlight boat ride on Lake Union last week by seven Seattle picknickers, who had {t all figured out that the ride wasn't to cost a sou. Night had fallen when the pick nickers, three young men and four girls, strolled down to the beach near Latona. One of the girls spied the shape of two boats tied jup at a landing. Oh, let's take a boat ride,” she cried | No boatman was in sight. On of the young men examined the nings. "They're not locked,” he an nounced, gleefully. “Come on, We'li| Just borrow ‘em for a dittle rid The crowd piled in. It seemed} real romantic. The lake was| smooth, and the moon cast Just al faint silver sheen on the waters. Then a girl screamed, “My feet| are getting w | She put her hand to the bottom of one of the boats It's full of water,” she erted A match was struck, Examina tlon showed it wasn’t full, but was filling fast. The party headed back for shore, rowing desperately, The sound boat followed in the wake of | the leaky one, to be ready for res cue, if needed As they neared the shore a dark form loomed up on the bank ahead. “Come on in,” a volee cried “It's all right. They're. my HEARD ON THE STREETS Three pairs of trousers and four| didn't have ‘em locked be dresses ruined with paint, two pairs | Just painted ‘em inaide, a | got ‘em all calked up yet. Pdidn’t cipant in Sunday evening #ervices One Sunday events over a rat Wh a | think anybody'd want 2 A Queen Anne family has a maid who ts a member of the & ation Army and a regular parti fow weeks ago she was late in leav ing for the meeting. Her mistress. who has come to take much Inter. oat In her work, remarked the fact Yes,” sald the girl with a sigh she was out of breath with hurty ing—"I'm afraid I will, And Its all because of my vanity! It'll be a lesson to me to guard against it hereafter You gee,” she continued in ex planation, “l had my hair done up 1 1 got all ready but my hat, I found my Salvation Army bonnet wouldn't fit over the rat. I had to stop to take It out and now I'll be late. Pvery morning when a certain East Union tripper, bound down town, passes between 17th and 18th avenues, a little, bob-tailed, ragged | ur greets the car with gladsome park and follows it the rest of the way down to Madison and 14th as tight as he can run Nobody knows to whom the dog belongs But he's the ery day. By the time the car reaches | Madison st. he is all tuckered out. | He jumps on the rear platform and | rests up while the car 1s waiting, his red tongue dripping. But as soon as the motorman clangs his bell, the pup leaps to the street again and barks his parting, then trots back home. such as Frohman and f 4h) kriow she had dre confident of ultimate 1 saw. dy the She was a little aw abe had seen, and alone tramped Brondway after ext day | d by the sights She told me can I describe what we saw in the next three days! of every age Hefore the de from early morn ranks of tired. would rush tn. strapper and again to be received gency ix in need of peo | an outer office girle too thin or too fat When this happened to Edythe Requirements of Girts. body and quick »| toward himself. —Polltah of good show ma e fact that man: was always | something wrong. Jany room tn a flat her fanciful of New York's wicked avenue “You are standing on it and she replied how quickly would devour you | Thaws and Whites from one to the an absurd innocent unafraid and still) becoming very (Miss Pollock's story will be con: tinued in tomorrow's Star.) REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR. eap of @ man's a man learns how to support for his rete Even people who won't tell « will dress up the mother couldn't recognise It a woman who wants to wear 4 gown till it's in rags it's 4 sign somebody told her how young she looks in it A girl's idea of something awfully » Is to seo what she ix a man out in the yard by moon- light when she is pretty sure It is a Sea a a Boys’ Day at t Baillargeon’ 8 Saturday Our Boys’ Department ready to outfit every boy in Seattle, comp from Stockings to Hats. Never before have we shown such an assort smart, snappy Boys’ Toggery. If your boy is not clothed as you would f i to have him, bring him here tomorrow, where the styles and qualities arg questionable and the prices most reasonable, Every boy wants a g school suit for next Tuesday. Schoo! Suits, $3.45 and $5.00 | Boys’ Suits, $6.50 | $12.00, Boys’ Suits, 6 Boys’ Suits, erbocker Pants, in hest grade fabrics; and pat- }¢ds, tweeds and serges;| new shades and_patt terns; serviceable fabrics | natty suits, in blues, gra superior stock and hand-ta® for school As lored ‘igs Sizes 6-17, in pure worst season's sh and bre Second Day of Our Great Sale of Children’s and Wash Dresses in Lingerie and Tailored Styles All children’s qualities at $1.25 to $1.75 go at All children’s qualities go at All children’s qualities at $5 75 to $8.75 go at All Misses’ Dre s, $4.50 to $5.75 qualities, go at All Misses’ Dres es, $6.75 to $7. 50 qual ities, go at .... pus Last of the Ladies Spring and Summer Cahneas Tomorrou onged and m shades ; just a few 2 and 3-piece styles; und qualities repr nted that ve been $35.00 to $ POIOS sik ces nbs EEE bites vas obs'o wks a obese ase aaekae anne Coats and Jackets—Ottoman satin ar ee sea son's goods; regular ), a ice... 040 Shepherd's Chee ks, in fnil-length ‘coats, wi and cuffs nart garthents for early fall; regular price Saturday s price. Cotton one and two-piece Suits and Dresses, odd sizes son's goods; formé prices $5.00 to $25.00. Saturday's prices ........0.cecee0 sence ... 83.00 to $10.0 Closed September 6th—Seattle Day at the Exposition “WE WILL BE THERE” ——— rh | pie Ladies! ur | Tailored Hats Are Here, Secono Ave & Sem no hg Special Prices on | Children’s Hostery and Underwear * Tomorrow | i Josh Wine Snyer er—"Can be do aand sculp Your satisfaction is the thing that is studied in’ the Three Bartell Stores. Yes, he fellows at the bes Every one has his Swift—"Jone to be very £ SAL Ear ATICA— 1 25 bottle wor” Budget WELCH’S GRATE JUICE— Quarts NABOTH’S GRAPE —* ing car trip.-New York Press. das—"My new skirt, which I 1 had lost! And I find tt tn our box | Mald—"How fortunate; | madame QTE. eee k ee eeeeee ser eeeeegeeegeeeeeceerees iow DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS— , Give orders and do ne, more amd }f Ge BOK LOF....4+..e+-sesseseeenenenes eollesypaug srormver eat weer | HOLMES’ WILD ROSE TALCUM— 1 [Tee ae a nae |] Pall WPOURE BOE... sscsneresssssvecusssesasucns ‘ tenniagcheel JERGEN'S TALCUM— ‘ Misery loves company, but any more than happiness de Chicago News Three le cans for. PARAFFINE— Per pound What sort of a ¢ Well, he's one who thinks that anything mes 1 joke, if it isn't on him." and Leader CUDAHY’S EXTRACT OF BEEF— 45e jar OX BRAND EXTRACT OF BEEF— Self is the first object of charity Latin Why are you mad at her® I mot her on the car today and} she sald: ‘Oh, let me pay your } fare!’ and J sald; ‘on mustn't!" | oll AEEELTLELLE TEETER und whe didn't.”—Houste vurn | BUG KILLER— Pint bottle When the wortd of women turn down those foolish bh nd make a bonfire of th ere man wilt] find a match.—Piotida Times-Union TANGLEFOOT FLY PAnen— 1 uble sheets “When are you going to marry your apher? you Know I was e® waged to her? notice that you now her as your ‘amanuensta, land I CURLING ON | HEATERS— 1 Up from Theory and ¥ Mr. Gobble So Heve in the survival o No; Ithink that at our n ing the fittest will be among the ab sentoes,”—Seraps. 3 Bartell oc Sto No. pd Store | No. 2—Main Store | Noy iieeNew ond Ave, Cor. Tat and Near Yesler Way 610 Second Avenue Near Gtty Mi Very Obligtos. | Tramp—I overworked my leg by being too anxious to oblige. | Lady—Oblige who? | Tramp-—The policeman—by mov- ing on every time he asked gout | Scraps.

Other pages from this issue: