The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 27, 1910, Page 10

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10 THIS MOTHER AND HE SUFFER FROM | MUSTY CORNMEAL ying photograph is that of M the) Cunningham and her f of Ethel, La, all of whon uffering from pella the dread which at pre is incurabi The ¢ mate Orlea brood The a rity hospital, New the mother and her treatment they gaid they believed they were suf fering from “poison oak,” a skin eruption caused by coming in con tact with an irritating, polsonous ivy. Diagnosis quickly showed the GIVE RECITAL FOR SUFFRAGE A reading of “The Merchant of Venice” by Miss Mary L. Hussey of Boston, will be given at 9:15 this evening at Miss Roberts’ stu dio, 200 Arcade Annex, for the ben efit of the woman suffrage cam paign fund. A S0-cent collection will be taken It is desired to have 100 people in order to raise $50 this evening Miss Hussey donates her services. Miss Roberts donates her studio Miss Harla M: Sloan's Mandolin Orchestra donates the music. The ram wil} not be by ama at by the very highest on professional talent. A will follow. WRECKING A 22- STORY BUILDING (By United Press) NEW YORK, May 27.—The Gillinder building, 22 stories high, built of ! and con- crete, capable of standing 100 years more, is being torn down by wreckers, to make way for a 32 story building. 4 The building is the largest in = tthe world ever deliberately wrecked to make way for a bigger one. Bankers and brok- ers stop every morning to watch the curious sight. The building is located at Wall and Nassau. The Bankers’ Trust company recently obtained the Property and two smaller lots, and decided on a larger struc- ture. TODAY IN HISTORY May 27, 1679, the British par Mainent passed the habeas cor pus act It is still In force in Seattle, being applied: for act ="<= Mament, ever, which is recognized in locality. It is a very useful for those who need it, but as one has to go to jail to enjoy it, most folks prefer to look upon it as a Mere legal technicality rather than Qs an active reminiscence of their Own persona! history. this BROKERS Walls & Lewis Co. NEW YORK STOCK GRAIN AND PROVISIONS ° Private Wires ‘Three rownd trips daily. Leave Se m, 12 mm, Beattie at Bm Leave B 2:16 p.m and 7 leave Kyerett at 7 m. 16 p werett at 16 pom 46 a m Colman dock subject to Main 2993 MEALS SERVED. Dye for Nothing Any shade you please. Select your own. On all willow work for 20 days only. It will cost you nothing to dye—on willow work Ina. 134 Eye Comfort There is a er comfort to the e feetly t world of in @ per fitted pair of glassex The lenses should ‘ adapted te y rements and sh frames or mountings th at com fortably upon the nose ur in we nT AS Ive ComroRrT FRAMES AS WELL IN THE LENSES, are uncom aAjusted b in. us. Bring yours R WHOLE BROOD NCURABLE PELLAGRA GAVE DREAD DISEASE TO THIS FAMILY to be pellagra | mother said the family were stricken ill several months ago, following the eating of 1m ty corn} and ¢t the skin eruption appe Recently the Loulals Medical Society went on record as favoring giving publicity to the fact that pellagra exists in Lopts jana as well as in other states, not} only of the South, but in all sec | tions of this country meal, ata few Ww When that oft mentioned trav eler trom the Antipodes leaves off} * at the rulns of St and stands on the relicg of the Bade bridge. ing the jungle waste that once was | proud city of St Louts, the} |chances are that be will be there | seeking further information of | those two heroes of the 19th cen tury antiquity, the James boys of | Missouri This week at the Seattle theatre the “James Boys” are on the boards nd packed houses are eagerly ap plauding their god-like virtu On this stage the “James Boys” are lit Ue less than saipts, and are em |phatically models of honesty, bray: | ery, and filial, conjugal and parental affection. In addition they are well armed martyrs of neighborhood matice, not above taking an occa sional drink or holding four aces. James, true to tradition. | wears a beard, not the flowing, un restrained adornment of the tron tier, but the carefully tended Van | Dyke: also he wears the loosely | fitting silk ehirt and the string tle jot the Latin Quarter. Frank, as | becomes his secondary importance, | ts the figure of a blonde remiitance | man, with the pink complexion that goes with superlative innocence. | Jeane, of course, wears the patent leather boots, the mattier hat, and | has one extra revolver. All in all! they are as fine a pair of heroic heroes as ever called upon heaven to witness an oath of vengeance or risked everything in the interests of “mother.” Only 30 Years Ago. It is only 30 years or so since the James boys, the Youngers rest came to the end of t rauding career. One of the James | brothers is alive, engaged In prosaic odd jobs for a livelihood Cole 26 years Paul's | covered gar moss overlook: | Jease how) law | jehroniclers of “Dick Turpin. jand | but im | through the ages from mouth to ear, ee GETS PAID FOR 30 YEAR-OLD BOARD BILL ae eee ee * * * * * . * * « a * * * « * * * * SCHOOL KIDS TO HAVE BIG TIME r hundred seh the t rehing and forming ther Mure songs and giving t) pla yates! cultute k natration, in Seattle Louts Lepper, director of training, by tw aptains and 16 bey and gir! tenants, elected by the chtidren There will be tugs of war, Jumping contests and games, and 26 and 60 yard dashes also, and #tars tn oaliath flax Joining salutes singing the pi partment 4 at by June the will bigwost ever given be in charge of physica ansiated feu in prison, is still in and about Lees Summit, Mo. Jews James’ son, after a career of milder brigandage as a pawnbroker in Kansas City now a petty lawyer, and the man who broke up the gang at North field, Minn., in Grand Forks, N. D. In aplte of the proximity of their deeds to present times and the ev! dence of living witnesses, there has grown around these outiaws a tan aie of legends and lore that would do credit to the romancers who sang “Robin Hood,” and the later i the truth were known, it is probable that more has been written about the James boys than any two per history. They ‘an youth set on a towering p | of dime novels each succecding year adds to their fame, each surreptitious chap ter ot thelr “lives” adds another coat of gilt to thelr characters, and each dramatization brightens the nimbus around each outlaw head Victime of Fate. Already popular opinion holds the James boys as victims of fate, hay ing no alternative fn life but bank robbery, and little by little the grand larceny features of their ca reers are betng forgotten, while In terest centers around their purely domestic affairs. The James boys will probably have no place tn formal histery, at most a paragraph dealing with the conditions in the border statts fol- lowing the Clyfl war, which pro duced Quantrell and bis followers, the history that descends the history that goes down tn ro- mance, they will play « herote part 0 needa only to go to the Seattle theatre this week to be sure of this If 30 years can smooth off all the ruffianism, { 30 years can cast a golden glow of romantic bravery on practicing medicine | THE STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 27, | Whal THE WHALE | | This sperm what ever found in the G wa red alive in the capt near Arthu Tex by Capt, Plimmer, a Port Arthur pilot, The whale, which selentiety fromthe University of aid |was between 600 and | old, HT captur Plimmer found the leviathan }towed it into port with four hawners The length of the Pass flat Texas 1,500 years d wevernl days after it | and big mon jbut work. Even pleasure seekers | have to do a jot of hustling in order to obtain it | if one rapine. des their murders and eration can distort erime into patient virtue, what will} succeeding generations do to the} |reputation of the James boys? Achillea, Hector and Agamemnon were probably consummate rascals and hardy freebooters In their day ‘but finding a poet to sing of them thelr deeds have furnished culture to millions of school boys and « life work for countless classical ante. Place in History Will it be thus with the James Boys of Missouri? Will the North field raid take its Hterary place alongside of the siege of Troy? Are the dime novel historians and the melodrama dramatiate contriving to that end? Are they laying (the foundations for a myth for sore @» ture civilization in Abysinnia [to ponder over, to stir the imaginat{6n of nome Thibet prep school boyyte | romantic regret for the “good Bla days,” when men rode stragge animale called horses and carried primitive firearms slung about their bodies? | It ts strange the deeds that Unger | longest in men's memory. ee good and noble, the self sacrificing | and honorable find a dusty tmuipr. tality in the forgotten archives jof | bookworms; the bold, predatory and unlawful are ever fresh. The winnowing process of Ume can#ot blow them away. They grow and grow, embellished by every toni and pen until at Inst they are Set) tn deathless Hterature { It sounds absurd just now, but} lke ag not the names of the James | boys will outlive those of Washing ton and Grant, and Bob Ford will have traitorous fame long after! Benedict Arnold ts forgotten. If thie strikes you as absurd, go to the Seattle and listen to the ap plause that greets every utterance | of the refined, cultured and seru |pulousty honest Jesse James. “THE EXCLUSIVE STYLE SHOP” 714-716 Second Avenue A Decided Reduction on Misses’and Children’s COATS Four Lots Specially Priced at $3.95, $4.95, $5.50 and $12.50 Sizes 3 to 14 Years For Saturday we have repriced practically our en ire stock of Misses’ and Children’s Coats and placed them in four great lots at a decided price concession. These Coats range from 3 to 14 year sizes and are of unques- tioned value even at their original prices, This sale offers an excellent op portunity to make a good saving ona splendid quality coat. At $3.95 Children’s Coats originally worth up to At $4.95—Children’s Coats originally sold-up to $6.50. At $5.50—Children *s Coats that sold up to $8. 50. At $12.50—Misses’ Coats in 12 and 14 year sizes, originally $15,00 to $20.00. e, Centuries Old, Caught incGulf of Mexico ing rh will carry the country on trains the re clally used | There ten’t much in this old world GIRLS RUN THE ator girls” have diepiaced two men in the lifts college girle at the University of Chicago to the 1910, ———— Saturday Specials Prices That Only the Quaker Can Make ‘ We Are Agents for ie Smithsonian WITCH HAZEL Truss Best and Most Effective JUST AFTER BEING PULLED ASHORE JAYNE'S TONIC VERMIFUGE size for PURE GLYCERINE 25e for PURE 25e for CHLORIDE OF LIME DENATURED OR WOOD ALCOHOL bottle for CALIFORNIA 8YRUP for was 63 feet 6 inche 43 feet of of nches | 6 Inehe Has, Tex, expert em Imed the us of embalming fluid 1Co about Full Boz Pat ROGE WATER—Full Boz van of D em carcass gallon Southern Pacific Ralirc 20 the embalmed body one of the exhibit d maintains, Two Mnwtructed flat cars will be oF for PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE $1.00 bottle for ELEVATORS NOW (My United Press) CHICAGO, May 27,-~"Elev BELLADON NA POROUS PLASTERS— whieh oarry Green and Foster dormitories for women. above the first elevator operators. were old and sedate, cording to gossip “they saw too many tories and then gossiped. Elevator Men's Union officials No man has been permitted floor except Try Our Pike Street Store. You'll Find the Service Unexcelied. These men but ac in the dormi The things” aay the girls must join. The genuine 60¢ bottle bottle Full pound can for Full quart FIG6—The NATURE'S REMEDY TABLETS—The $1.00 box WILLIAMS’ BARBERS’ BAR BHAVING BOAP Fe COMPOUND~—-The Tuberculosis Exhibit MAMMOTH RINK, MAY eqil LIN TIGER OIL neuralgia and MOTHERS’ FRIEND HYOME! r $1.00 ar BAPOLIO—The 10¢ WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE ular 50 Per pint bottle; regular 2 HUNYAD! WATER KILMER’S SWAMP ROOT reguia ve reguiar ve 4¢ ite size 2he 50c POBLAM—The famous box for QUAKER SPECIAL INGE—Guaranteed for 7 Swe 59e Get Ready for the GARFIELD TEA—The JO-JUNE 5 e packag Help Along a tor Worthy Movement. THE QUAKER SEL FOR LESS FIRST AVE- Tw years ja E QUAKER DRUGG 6 PIKE ST oT art bottle; m Me Ive © 50c bottle for. ttle tor 2QUART FOUNTAIN regular $1.00 fop, head Thirty Dozen Genuine Imported _ Panama Hats, . . . $6.00 Qualities $10.00 and $15.00 Grades W Had E bought thirty dozen raw Panama * Hats through the port of New York. them blocked and bleached as well as the finest experts could make them. Trimmed them with the best silk |] Gave them the highest priced | bands. cork sweats. each year. | eee Made them throughout for } the highest priced retail trade. | Styles and beauty will surprise you. The comfortable and durable Panamas more and more popular Now, as a leader, to make men talk enthusiastically over ] our new store: $10.00 and $15.00 Panama Hats, while they last, ... $6.00 ] We Specialize on Men’s Suits at $25.00} We planned, on opening our new store, to give the best possible prices for $25.00. We bought the richest fabrics, the finest of linings and the best of tailoring. In fact, we crowded $5.00 more value in this | suit than has ever been given in the city before at the price. The } suits come in the new rough effects in shades of gray and tan. $25.00 Every garment carefully fitted. Kensington Suits: $20.00 | | Suits that give the man from twenty-five to forty years of age well-dressed, clean-cut style | and distinction. Perfect-fitting collars, shaped to the shoulders as they should be | Business Suits: $15.00 For business wear, where the service is hard and quality and good appearance essential. Fancy Shirts: $1.50 | These Shirts are in the new, clean- | cut patterns that are now in such de mand. Launder and wear splendidly. College Suits: $20.00 One big department devoted to styles de signed for young men of athletic a Hats: $3.00 Hats are shipped to us by expr days. The styles are always earlier than can be} ; found elsewhere. : Boys’ School Suits: Visit our Boys’ Department. It will surprise you for beauty and size. W.B.HUTGHENSONCO. Secord Avenue at Union Street Diagonally Across From Old Store ge. ss every few. 4

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