The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 6, 1909, Page 10

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‘ ieshaieneiiaeennnaiininine:. sei rHE STAK OCTOBER 6, 1909. WEDNESDAY, 10 mpar f the att DEATH OBS ae ‘cs ANOTHER AMLAOA Fis ee = HME THM Beat True for Each Other | ‘ sient E (By United Breas) aes ee ee ‘ LABEAU, &. D., Oct. 6 } 1 cei A ote @ prominent official of the Mine | ute “7 LEAVE. CABINer Volted vont ON, Oct eath jy aon Recent ! War Dekh? lay In offi conten he cabinet of KI 808 Ia at Pray [RRR RRR RAR NOTICE AFFINITY GONE mse END take WORLD 10 BE STARTLED BY h DISCOVERY = + x teeeeeeex ERE ERR RRR | A bce | ere Overton te 1 t wv © < Ty © non, AEROPL ANES (SELES | age Aden gpedse i. ee qi neapolis & Bt. Paul railroad is ast | fected, will de s me b / ~~ ae authority for the statement that Life Prol Pl t }that wear ntestine i es A H afe Proprietor Who Had ‘Aged Newsboy Is Left |! naaie, are the road will be extended from .ife Prolonging Plant to jij) pio , nating f OTEL. Pp And the ") Labeau to the Pacific coast, | Be Expl d ; ir ‘ i Wife Arrested for Elop- Alone After Half a Cen-|« vo" Da] This official yesterday started | Soon Be Explained to i) ie joi : cy w 1 rs to Imapect the route, which ie | ~ be ing Pays Her Fine and He 98 tury of Love and Com- \« ; 1 and ine man] being surveyed through the | World by Great Pro-) Great Discovery te 1 the . “ (My United : ’ Hut despair had not permanent! Cheyenne reservation. Con. | f fF; | fire the| defend ute made c ( Yet o ‘ { nd tho| & essor of France. | for Stops Divorce Suit. NEW YORK, ( 6.—Lou panionship. vode in the Trial and the! fiemation of this rumor was | | wt thing cst “ atrent yea Nixon, once head of Tammany Hall next day woe wa in he . hal found in the inetructions to con: j - - | took na and : iat a a La f America’s foreme Out tu Wrement tn: hie Cramal ee ee cena S00 SOON Ah). nee we aeeey west as | BY PHIL 8IMS, udded the t ie aay Rm mengg gE ee ; |constructors, does not t ee Fremont, rugal place among the newsboys possible before the winter | staff Correspondent of the United | which © J fichelle’s Grotto, at First a and . soy : little home Dad" Murphy, the The hearth In thetr Httle he me weather interrupts. Proce. ‘The m w “perry st. who recently ha ris |the aeroplane will eve n . ~~ Gall The fond old : Sed Vite and her affinity at 1 af. | fa in modern warfare tooped old newsboy, sits alone af na ppg alee ine annual meeting of the PATUS, Oct. 6.—1 have Juat come | milk n eoney Ong = He is convinced that an. alreraft | casing through diramed eyes 'Y| stockholders wae held yester Ba gg Nagle mar f an Innkeeper, ter they had elop Bellingham night when his 4. work was f » th 1 ' : lay with w a complaint for |offers no danger to the latest war jat the ad pipe clasped |" ' faded ol4 carpet slip day, but they have not made an p sed over by Prot. Mile ed only the bacilli which destr ia divorce instituted against Mrs, | sbiy in his fronted by the |°Y* it buside the stove, his} cficial statement concerning | jor. it iv the Past institute |the harmful germs taken with WARSHIPS OFF 79 bh He believes that the time Is not greatest tragedy that enters man fils and his supper eooked.| “ehh _prane © Metchnikoft working | [00d ~ R ‘ id her’ fine of $200/far distant when an electric gun | lif pipe an on the greatest of all his diss f Me tehnikoff to| HONO Sich wen esetened. against ber} Will | vented, which will fire Dad's true and loving old They Fought Well COUNT TOLSTO! FERBLE “9 a oc ag Sag lace Bagg 7 ent eee tikes silingham with K.j& thunderbolt that will shock tc dead And “Dad” and his wife together! 97, PETERSHURG, Oct. 6.—The has htc clentnaline jin” ‘tie ‘ ' when tried in Bellingham with E Moga yt lafiuence Of puts ' : B. DeRoy, an old sweetheart, on a/death every man that happens to t an old feeble woman, gone d bravely on the wo ‘health of ¢ nt Leo Tolsitol large intestines, to which the pro-|cede w « the greatest p ever) of eon DeRoy was sen-|De in its path lant resting place, but old | ¥8* & vg beyond them. Hand| exciting apprehension. He fessor attributes the majority of /Offered to mankind, proved futile , barre one year in. thé bes Dad's" heart, that has bravely {8 ba hey sat when. nikhUsltwice after his return to Yasnaya human tile i He seid i “ v | < ch life's three {|shadows grew tong, two bent and) Polyana from hie trip to Moscow Walt and see. 1 think that 1 £ Neither Schelle nor his attorneys GETS A HARD FALL sorrows, | quavering old lovers, ne fone fainting spell lasted 10 min To Startle World on will be able to ane ‘ ft hind, an the arene pe ape tie then = hee came to ond last night.Jutes. The f author, afte 1 ounced recently that/definite results, and have regarding ne; his inst hold or But to an en n axed author, after sev t was announced ¢ ’ hat | defir res Nh al stowaways ) na cieeek aa | oday he site Calmly and peacefully, ike theleral hours’ rest, was able to under.| Met off has perfected his dim | reason to believe that they wi teamer Lasrtine, re pnd of t ar while the ood woman she was, Mra. Murph ake & short promenade cove which soon would startle the|all that I now hope for for San Franelseo, ppy past flit before (sald her last “Good bye, John _ lips, went to her God had been reached te Old and Alone. And poor old “Dad” alts alone] “i x. Sorrow, the ot which noliaay. Th is out. The Jittle} F eR a ian man knows ped him. To-|things that made wp his home are ; eRo and rs. Sehelle eloped M4 fay he con v left —_———- ~ — — B to Bellingham the night of July 16/verely bruised Jam a Lag I a if and lived together in room | Was not hurt aly ight < " ‘ flat in the Pac apartments for om te out 8 ae weetn | Seere y were | REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR? , DK POINTED PARAGRAPHS. | found by her husband People will nearly always te r home i Popularity sometimes coats more | The Bchelice met married IM/truth when they can make just sat an it is worth j ii Tacoma in March, 1908 ee bs aotag it human desolation fit for You can never tell what @ wom | } ‘ est lesson ters brush. Old and a an thinks by what she says } } tite is eet you never must go on for a few remaining The worst thing about appear} } | JAKES FELT IN IDAHO. word wach of enythins Save. Whlen bn’ Sut etty te Ge jaunts ts trying © beep Gian ee | THE IRISH TAILOR i Generally '& man who side her who loved him for over) A m beat friends are apt to | : | witty is about as suc ul at a half a century be he doesn’t meet often / JE } (By United Press) p. | eatertaining, you axa nail in your) For three years “Da ulating enables & man to : BPOKANE, Oct. 6—Severe earth: | shoe papers on the $ of money by not doing : quake shocks were felt throughout| ‘The average man ma to think (until his “Thank | om i Tadao shortly before 8 o'clock last/ the best way tc 4 in the to thousands Women are leas dangerous than | night. The greatest of excitement | world is to hol: her fellow man in the he men; they usually talk before they evailed, according to early morn \ k ‘ Dad z ahaa | 4 i fae advices rm beset la wc fA | Ihave been a tailor all my life. I have been only in one large city in this country and that aces is ° i ® r SALT LAKE, Oct. 6 eal WHERE ROOSEVELT WRITES IN AFRICA. INSISTS THAT N. P. city is New York. I have made, cut and fitted clothes for all the swell dressers. shocks were felt in Idaho last | a & night, according to the government Observatory here. The exact time @f the disturbance is given as 7:40| @clock. The movenient was north | and south, and besides Idaho sec- tions in Northern Utah were also disturbed. He RRRERERRARR ARERR FASTS AND MAKES GAIN, AVALON, Cal., Oct. 6--Af ter liv for 16 days diet, without wa’ John Brinkley announced today that he had gained etght pounds during his fasting period. Brinkley, who is known here ® as “Chicken John,” undertook ® his fast to prove the nutritive ® value of the fruit of the fig & treo, * MERE ERE REE ee! NAME NEW MODERATOR Rey. Dr mig L Hutchinson, pastor @f the Emmanuel church in Ta- oma, was elected moderator of the | synod of Washington of the Pres-| dyterian church, succeeding Rev. M. A. Matthews, pastor of the First church of this,city | Of the two hundred churches Fepresented in the synod of this} state, about fifty of the pastors were present yesterday. The meet ing of the synod continues today and tomorrow. Octogenarian Editor Dead. PARIS, Ky., Oct. 6.--F. L. Me-| Chesney, aged 80, at one time editor and Washington correspondent of | the Louisville Courier, editor of the Western Citizen and war editor of | the Educator, is dead here of heart @iscase | Seeteeeeee PeTeeeTiteteeiits on the porch of the latter's bungalow near Nairobi, Africa. When the colonel writes or wants a rest and home com. forts, he goes to MoMillan’s house, a beautiful pi spot. ’ ‘ * COPYRIGHT, 1909, BY NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. Col. Roosevelt and Wm. N. McMillan, the St. Louis millionair British East e in a garden it wi onary ving Ewing at Oo, and fon r to cover the ¢ | bridges and -grade sary by the company’s plans for the line wi diac two wee saved at a s hence. sidered one rew web re at hia home. He Vadaver we n for hia ce e and his m8 yen! (Lee FAMOUS HEBREW DEAD. ¥ YORK, Oct. 6 amen REIMBURSE CITY FOR. | LOSS OF A STREET) at the pro open Leaky travel drivén av Halated that to pay at hy’s argu ynctiman had been die | Thomeon said plans M be fu meeting the world’s ix dead years was prominently | taries on th wing &€./ Palk Vad-} { | i | | | ] My experience is ONE PRICE, and at that price you can make a suit or overcoat to suit and — please your trade. I never cut or made a suit or overcoat for less than $50, and I never will I want the kind of people that know what good clothes are. You can’t make a suit for less and give entire satisfaction. | have worked for the nobles and I have worked for the 400. Now I am in Seattle to work for you all—and I am an expert at my business and a tailor in every sense of the word. I am world-wide for style and fit. I can suit you when all others fail. I have never cuta | suit or overcoat for less than $50, and I am not going to start now and sell them any less. My : tailors are A No. 1 workmen. My cutters and fitters are the finest money can get. I carry the finest of cloth. If you never saw fine goods you will have a chance now to see them at nis O'Brien's new home. I have been in London, Paris, New York, Boston, and now in Seattle stay. I have a long lease on the building, so you can see we are here to stay. Watch us day af day and we will show you. DENNIS O’BRIEN THE IRISH TAILOR KNOWS HIS BUSINESS 1016 SECOND AVE, { 5000 Umbrellas for Men, Women and Children at Close to Half Let it p offer ! Here, a manufacturer's stock of Fine able The just when the rainy we're on 1s opening, las at about half price. Umbre GREATEST UMBRELLA | == SALE | At soc lastead of $1 A “ACSI. 10 Instead of $1.50 instead of thousand, six hundred and fifty The price was so low that we took them all, and as a result we can offer quite the best Umbrella values Seattle has seen in many a day. The main aisle will be filled with them—every table is piled high—and there will be plenty of salespeople to help. Sale starts tomorrow. This word of the principal Umbrellas, or gunmetal or A $1.55 vith natural wor handl er patent frame 00 sorts, men’: Men’ lorn 28-inch eo: Instead of EXTRA teed . t pS nese 2 = Men's atid Women's ( piealtnh. haute Five hundred Children’s | frame ¢ protector; tight roll- | with colored silk covers, others’ fast black Umbrellas at 29¢ apiece! vi be poi a h i of silver, | silk twill, patent 1 taal hand SE COND AVE &UNIVERSITY 6 81 ‘aye egy THE TONE FISHER G. bas SEATTLE

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