The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 29, 1909, Page 4

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a i Member of the Wntted ™ Mahed datly by ing Co, The Star ° The Country Boy and the Harsh City There is a world of pat! n the story of this country boy, and it is a story t every y boy fighting the unequal hould and unsuceessiul t large city § read. Rudolpl eacher, has been sen Northwest Will Have to tenced in Chicago to serve a nths’ prison term for steal Feed Whole ing a val alise which he afterwards sold for $1.25 | Soon, Says Railroad Legally, the sentence was a just and rightful one, It may Magnate in Remarkable detér other hungry men. and from taking things belong Magazine Article. ing to peop! t ! lt probably always will have] three squa als a day i‘ Looking 40 This is R ? ’ 1 his own words; “TI had years into the a little me h for work that T nev | j fut Jan, J My funds ra inished until only a few nickels lay be bul, the famous ‘ee ! | railroad butlder, | tween me and starvation e la those I spent for a cup forsces the} of coffee. Then for 48 hours I had not a bit to eat. T could United t#ates in no longer stand the 4 1 pang f hunger. I stole a valise habited by close I would have stolen anything Onto 260,000,000 ; | wople “To all country boys, who dream of gaining wealth and Ma ts ool " ” hero will be} fame in a great city, I say, stay away. vastly - changed We do not believe it’s any use to advise ambitious country conditions, he ” } says, and he de boys to “stay away. As long as country boys are raised on elares that the the farm they will crowd to the large cities. time ts ripe now M f these b It get into the Rudolph Juul class— ee ee any of these boys will ge ito the F t a the new order There must be & national econ. no work and no money class 1t two roads be fore them, starvation or theft. aa Country) | 2 > omy quite dif The dreams of wealth and fa It is now too ferent from the} late for these boys of shattered dreams to “stay away.” peonee te J. J. HILL, conditions and the big work of the , people hink that it’s better to go back to the old I 1 get clear down to the| bottom of the Rudolph Juul class system Go back to the and Build | up new ambitions and dream new dreams. Go back to a waiting mother’s arms. she wants you to come heme. Don't make her wait until you Don’t you unfed and homeless fellows t ye before yc by which the prospoctive winter plowing the wood pile. adequately provided for tt must be a system which will prevent the dangers of poverty and misery that “are apt to accompany a crowded civilization.” She needs you and have paid the penalty for your first crime. Writing for the December P penalty ; World's Work, the railroad mag nate reviews the romantic and golden development of the Amork ‘The explanation of those Glavis} The Peary-Cook controversy has {Peg sake poey Ld affidavits indicates that the Cun-|broken out again. This particular|@petion of the country’ hee ‘heen ningham case should be tried be-jone, you will remember, involved | converted from a wilderness into have) has revolutionized some industries mastered natural | and created others greatly increased population will be | consin fore the Soctety for Peychical Re- | the discovery of the North Pole, an “imperial area constituting one | search, instead of the land office. | of the largest, most compact and | a j most productive resources of the | Im the interest of conservation | whole human race.” He says it has Secretary Ballinger’s annual re-|of natural resoufces, how thie] nn oe fineness imenigre-| port at least adds new explanatory | stopping this wasteful rain until) o¢ the world's eed it i ‘ian to his already long list of coe al in that line. ‘The police and the highway rob- bers are both continuing their re- Spective vocations without inter. =a Pan 5 ang fering with one another. The great need of Nicaragua is ja sane Fourth every day in the Obtaining goods under false pre-| Ye9r- tenses for art’s sake may be a sure way of getting local color, but it isn’t refined. homes to an army of workers who the lawns need it next July? — began with little or no capital. It Some Tacoma men are said to be learning to fly in “a secret place.” Seft place would be better. President Zelaya will soon have a chance to tell it to the marines. | Washington, D. C., Nov. 26, | 08. Dear Ded: An altogether official statement from the White House anent the Ballinger-Pinchot affair, has it that the president “hopes the whole thing Wilt lapse from public Interest.” Gifford Pinchot bas not threat ened to resign. He has. not isened any ultimatum, he is simply going on sawing wood in the same back yard and will continue to do so un til he gets his walking papers dt rect from the bom I predict that it will be many months before Samuel Gompers and his friends go to jail. There is still no. A clay pigeon iss yust a imitation | the long legal road td travel from {the district court to the dectsion I subbose, a mud turtle iss simbly a mock turtle al- | of the United States supreme court The defense of Gompers is based upon the constitutional right of free ee ee RS — SS 2\apeech. The United States supreme! NEW GOV. GEN. re court is snpposed to be the teibanal | constituted for the special purps FOR CANADA} of Interpreting and insuring the eon | stitutional guarantees. Whether it JOSH WISE SAYS: be by habeas corpus, certiorar! or other quidity of the law books, the case must go before the justices, jand this right be affirmed or ex plicitly denied To my surprise I found a lobby tet for the Wool association in Bow ton—lobbying for the subsidy bill. What interest could a wool associa | ton have in @ ship subsidy’? Finally |1 discovered. A line of ships be- tween Boston and Argentine would supply the raw material at less cost than they can buy from our went- ern sheep men. A tariff for the manufacture of the wool and then a subsidy for the ebhips to bring the raw material to the manufac. turer! get the government a baked sweet ge! son won't leave home.” Man run nia threw a train in Pensy potato with Olga (alt account of her ¢ But w excitement Nora's mant ladder Oh, n Mother was hi Judg ing it LORD PENTLAND. LONDON, The . next big appointment of the British government will be a new governor general of Cana At present the is Lord Pen made a Might aw well do tf New Nov. 29 uring off early, t What ht nd extinguist i f iling the ng the oil trust, these | anifold benef d, who until he wa Studious Youth 8. pa, who was was John secretary for Scotland. He of the most popular men in Grea " Britain. He full of tact ar : ve the Re charm, never interferes and kno igi cai when to keep quiet Lord Pentland is 49 age. in the person of L: Gordon, eldest danghter Aberdeen, son and a daug pee Sincla years of Little ¢ He married a charming wife Marjorte and has ‘wo chil REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR | ha t The reason a mother her| Yonu daughter's decorum te pr sometimes she t isn’t What a girl likes about Orne back exerci figure | is If gshe % . ine robabl in a riding { 1 re #o many of thinks that tf ung men few » revolution em when a man's liver gets |‘? out of order from staying out late |" he can think it's his wife because sh him rh What a woman can never under- | little is stand about finances is why th bank always wants to balance her accoutt when Me never any balance, --New York F football holiday or less, killed in up for an who is not content th content with nothing Mm wake topped Mr wakes Pawpaw nly good yon tidal wave treet fair, thing up ie about at it " that has All right middle of the up in the | railroad | $60,000,000. Don't you suppose we could | to give us each] Bourne expects to go over to the every office A PERPLEXING QUESTION but I'd n ight when I don't make | powtage stamp we purchase’ -EGONOMY 1S NATION'S. GREATEST ISSUE, WILL SHOW 260,000,000 PEOPLE Baie =< FORTY-EIGHT YEAR6 OF RAILROAD PROGRESS IN THE NORTHWEST. AND FIRGT ENGINE ON THE GREAT NORTHERN, COMPARED WITH MOTIVE “WM, CROOK NO. 1900, THE MAMMOTH NEW ENGINE, WHICH 18 ABOUT SEVEN TIMES It has opened opportunity for the {nerease of future concerns the creation of a/ wealth and for human progress. The population of Hiinots, Wis lowa, Minnesota and the Dakotas increased from 1,365,152 to 11,594,516 in 50 yoars, prior to 1900 Kansas and Nebraska bad 2,686,795 | people at the last census, while Montana, Idaho, Washington and oO m bad 1,236,740 more. Mr Hil says Without, therefore. including those other states of the intepidr basin generally reckoned « part gf the Northwest, these 12 commen wealths contained in 1900 more than 15,000,060 inbabitants. Thet population Was practicaliy multi plied by 12 In the last half of the last century. . Today they have mil lious more people than they jhad 10 yoars ago, This growth hag bo paraliel Hill goes on recounting the ma: velous development in 50 years of the Northwest as shown by statis os Any how, why not start to lobby for it? Seven years after the the ree our arid weet, one Thos. from Montana, concelved interest in the subject. in anence, a lovely junket was pro vided at the public cost during the recent summer and fall months | Senatdér Tom has been Viewing trri-| gation lands from the windows of rivate car, and these are his con: | natons That the reclamation area should not be extended.” Now, | if the water trust and the power trust which have been building reclamation works, will organize a junket and come to a conclusion like that of Senator Tom, it will be quite certain that the Morgan and the Roekefeller interests are not at work to become the water lords of the nation | conse. Will Franklin G. Lane be reap pointed? “His term as a member of the Interstate commerce com mission will presently expire. Mr Lane is one of thé commissioners not subjéct to the Influence of the He does his work with! the idea that he is put where he is| to serve the people. His regeenes | ip California and he lacks the in-| dorsement of the Southern Pacific | ratlroad, and it is understood that President Taft does not intend a reappoint Mr. Lane. Senator Bourne of Oregon—-hold ing down a new job created for him | by Senator Aldrich—the job of hon | orary auditor of the expenses of | the United States—has discovered how the government may be saved | Some time when he vt too busy playing golf, ne of the committee on apy = = Don't make #0 much nolse, Frank, or baby will | like to know, then, why any he noise | printions and tell hix we i chairman of the committee on ap | have | No doubt Jim will be glad to hear | Hut all he get ces one grand jag ¥ of oltyet ye % FOR FORTY YEA OAD J, J. NO. 1, THE LOCO. HEAVY A® NO. 1, tlea—a brief history which glitters with golden rewards garnered from the aplendid soll of the countr fa He declares that the ratlroads the Northwest and added its he wealth of 900, ractically lands aré about all ove iron and coal supplies igns of exhaustion before have paswed. Tho fe rate of inc will be great! forests are going rapidly; ply of mineral of} flows to th of the-earth try our public} pied will speaking made immense resources to the nation and the natural capital of the world HIM recounts the disasters whoch befell ratiroad men who attempted to build into the wilderness until he, with three aesocintes, obtained control of the straggling, bankre nes, only 285 miles of track in 1871, and prosecuted the develop show oY, at the x produc reduced present tion, whieh p will compel 493,000,000 passengers and nearly wity aix billion tone of freight In 1908. attention before we have reached Hin aye The primary busi the middle of this century news of the Northwest hitherto has Te a realization of our postion, | been the mastery of natural con ‘and espectally to a jealous care of ditions. Ite nest contribution | our land resources, both as to quan-| should be to the economic and 80 tiry and quality, to a mode of cul race, We national trom celal evolution of th must determ economy quite tivation that yield per acre stead of impairing come withe a bi © upon a different and restore, in fertility, t delay. There} exe or in poll the muat ie no temue, ties, oret to Rep. of the district be in that compares in or In power with this The © summed up curacy and force by i Bhaler in there An the p resentative Jas A. Tawney famous Winona, Mian Under Jim's administration with proprt the late Prof nm the the appropriations largest bisher ever mad from Jonathan, Sincerely “ . RATH. | to accom The en of peapie ope and enerk aree prop Kreat prot after a! ; » erush at THE GRINGO id BE BY GONZALES MANANA. Wan day he come to Nic On boat for get by aperity of « ‘tarees nm from as ere rag nan Thies in the problem of the na tion, exactly stated; special sense, the North weet As Dees Gringo named McManus and it is, Pret’ soon, dees Gringo, wat he do While fall of aguadiente? here the noblest He join weet enemigos who frulte of prosperity have been} rs Attack our presidente Kathered, so here must be evolved GET YOUR HAT CLE ode to prene them from} You bat, dere be some red hot fight ny. Leadership implies respon-| ethers? (Guerro eas Inferno); sibility > Our tropas barefoot mix eet right Nowhere else can be Seusie more Cc HA An’ wheep de whole concern. mes ‘ energy or more ° ore | io adibberd. don ai thdaas ita with great lssues Then ws wil) |g 1021 Third Ave. Hats cleaned while you wait, Det foreien Sunarriele come, not through mere boasting, | or through the accretion of wealth We say But he ‘Of heem we soon be rid, amile, an’ émoke perfecto. works of science and ons of natural law as all the all the revel: Dat Gringo we put front of wall We shoot heem at de Morro have been identified with our com We teonk dat be de end of all mon life; by infinite patience, in set does not, to our sorrow finite stady of facts as they are, infinite search for the right adap. Now, wat I want you tal me, please, tation of means to enda, Infinite Why Gringo named McManus devotion to the glory and per Have warsheeps breeng os to our/tulty of our institutions and infinite { knees love for man as he should and yet For slipup on bananas? imay be.” We have a splendid lored Skirts for all pi if yoursell the Edison Phonograph You cannot judge the Edison by hearing other kinds. The Edison is the sound- reproducing machine at its best. It is not a talking machine. It is a Phonograph reproducing every sound faithfully--the song exactly the v the singer sang it; the opera exactly the way the orchestra played it; the two-step exactly the way the band rendered it. That is the Phonograph as Mr. Edison makes it—the object of his constant, daily care. When he says he wants to see an Edison Phonograph in every home, he means your home. Do you not want one there? Do you not need this amusement maker for your own sake, for your children and for your guests? Hear one today. Hear all the others too and compare, Only in this way can you know that what we say is true, aw Edison Phonographs -« « Edison Siandard Records « Falsou Amberal Records {twice an tong) » E aon’ tind Oper a Kecordd » = 78 $12.80 to $125.00 a8 These ago Kalegudeatere fear the Edison Pho: Ambeth) Records, Or trowt us NATIONAL PHONOGRAPM COMPANY 75 Lakeside Avenue, Orange, N. J, the nearest and verywhere, Go graph, play both Kd Get complete catalogs TALKING MACHINE HEADQUARTERS ited@)) Sueceasor to 1D 8. Johnston Co, Eilers Music Bidg., 3rd & University. present when our population shall approach three times what it wae Our 0 yours Our} our sup | our} will at once multiply | tmportane © | jook for our future has rare ae.) 6 Patterns of 45 Filet X | $ jock a ts . 4 ends | designs, in Araby { git apt oF The soll of the coun Pp : riced « ial a . 285 mi is being impoverished by care-| pecial at . 7, ne J less treatment. In some of the! Cretonnes and Ticking for ment of the Hill system of today, | richest portions of the country ita} fanc y work, in a wide range | ¢ prising last year 6,743 miles of tivity has deteriorated fully | ef desi - inten track under operation, carrying /50 per cent. These are facta to} kr vant aes it ina problem of the nd the magnification of industries, -——————_, BAILLARGEON’) One-Piece Dresses--Rare Opportunity $13. 75 and ‘$27. 50 clvesigil offen 1m 4 One, a { as th 1 Behn ii -/ Jackel ah Sade Jong, clase and butte 1 Ot Lon of self, piped with black; collar ar trimen which forme a lining for the ke The other is a left ¢ i vel fr toning straight from « t van mal buttor h a kilted f i “6 di res des strictly tailored. Both at na wide cloths and colors Regular values $35 to $45 ed at. 2 The second Jot at these greatly reduced prices aim light, medium and dark . the Princess a and epibros Moyen designs ; plain tailoris trimmi eccciad Millinery | Flannelette K { 1 One-Third to One-Half Less Persian de ] Than Usual th Persian real The balance of the Paris and | made in loose effeéte i New York models marked at te: i #bout one-half their real value A ‘re welght style, ag i} qualities represented range ted from, each oe $25.00 to $19 These are representative Ladies Hats from the beet masters of | tad i r adies’ Swe Europe. Cholee Breast Hate a etteaanee with birds of paradise (rim 30 inches ming; Fur models, elaborate prsing at may, white, adorned with flower Gold sone es ae Hats with ostrich plumes, and | Ladies’ Extra Wy, dozens of others equ pe ) inches leer | tractive whit red and gray, at a "e Our red We will sai Buy an Oriental Rug for ¢ atmas make them additionally attractive Dra peries | inch genu- color, S5e Cretonnes, per yard-—~ 15¢ to $1.00 Ticking, per 254 an 6 0 $5.00 Cur Cas th Compote “Domestic Rugs ] Priced Especially Low. 2 x54 Axmins ter at $2.50 36x72 Axminste at $3.75 27x54 French Wiltons at «SOO | Creet saa She Cut ese =e PODDETS .., 2008 sannaern 36x63 French at ®) SECOND Avt & Spina Sr “Baillargeon’ 's for | Linen Handkerchiefs shionable colors plaited or yoke effects. Also a full line of extra large women, from 304i up. Prices $10.00 up. $2.00 HeatherbloomP Buy on the modern way—the the way thousands find mosté Buy way factory. No extra charge the service. Try this easy 9a the holiday buying. | Eastern | Outfitting Co., I | 1332-34 2d Ave. 209 Union “« Seattle’s Reliable Credit a qa avoid et Fra tee aie without extra © CAFE & GRILL Ring wo A to ee FIRST AND MADISON. oc j ton 0 19 Marl PARSE CONTR Estimates Furnished ee ee

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