The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 2, 1910, Page 6

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arg PO AGC NOL IE kU Sl WE EA PIE NOONE i” ia q - i 4 a i Press. Published Publishing Co, of United The Star Member Daily by “Visionaries?” Those Milwaukee “visionaries” have another scheme Freight drays, brewery wagons and other delivery wagons are accountable for st of the wear on paved streets, Where the traffic is heavy the best of pavement lasts but a few years. In Milwaukee the life of the pavement where such traffic is con gested is about five years. The city customarily pays for it paving work with twenty-year bonds When the new socialistic administration t the reir it faced that in this regard city government there common sense to see aukee was the proverbial snail that crept up a foot every day and slipped back two feet every ni The result of this idy was the laying of a plan for “Milwaukee system” for relieving traffic congestion, prolong ing the e of st®@et paving and giv the people better deliver service servic street car tracks. Most of the v to be after ight and before dawn rhe city e « and run them ov the existing tracks to v inicip: freight stations to be established in various { the « Thus all the heavy tra will be € m the ¢ pavements to steel rails and the stre b Mr \ drays and delivery wagons save those for local delivery They may indeed be “visionarte t Milwa « ists, but if so they don’t exhibit the ventional sy The things they plan and do seem strat akin to hard hor sense Doct d Morphine A so-called “morphine fiend” has appealed to the medical pro fession to “stop convérting sick persons into hopeless mental and physi losing 1 w Su al a . < than passing notice Tt is w m every r.of the medical profes sion everywhere ev sted In human wel fare. sort vas mptor wd which they Jifferent to treat pr ly s of regulagly licensed phy sicians who in their on little other medicine than morphine in its various thease are not in good standing with the honor their profession. But the fact that y an exist roach to all And, y. ration of th ve drug {s not confi among physicians of low standing and loose morals, Leading physicians are prone to resort promptly to this ready method of relieving pain The and it ther ignoran sults, is more ' Tt is less cru than to perman nd moral sibility Every case of morphine habit traceable to a doctor is a re Proach to the medical profession. § for thelr own wt cians are bound to a reme for the evil It ts a matter that societies exerciate mntrol over the medi. cal profession cannot consider too serious! Everett True’s Vacation = SEAT'S TAKEN, BO. BY NORMAN 1 ad. lin: NEW YORK, Sept If a one of this nation’s many stage an struck girls could have dropped | succ going out fato the outer offices of New ean » York's producing day to day during she would ha things about the life that are not half as allu picture that the footligh These office Wwouzen and ¢ are crowded They with | little diffe are ly all good-looking the k e da eas ot nature employme art—and are all a ha ne of three expensively, dres n rful pe Patiently tand) waiting “gotten up stand outer office or Mr. Jone cide, if he is time to see y a morning. They may two hours, three h may not send a bo “shoo av A fort ing ho mornir finally land her carriage or her manne that i and 1 All she ha that the aa it come a inch er as th tress, after # mur, morning after n of office Others there i job, Something hose liv volee or her | of y nin part,|few just g to hopelof the bull. None as soon | walt in line—but the put her | ity, all told to do now f won't boards how hits the wok but a little like THE STAR-—FRI “Stage Life Is Killing,” S ion, Aged 9 tage Life Is Killing, Says Marion, Aged 9, STROLLER'S COLUMN | Hitching “His” T anil Winki Niece | liching 1s rousers InKIng at. Niece nn ne puts the blame for : ae mes WG " | anything wrong on himself,” #aid| Josh Wise Bays: samples of nearly every mi Saat A member of the local detective| “Saw little Bud Horsbiock steatin’ but none in sufficient sbundanee M in Haagen: 51h a cy ‘ f » force yesterday, “when there is any |# tide on th’ back end of a brewery be of commercial vatue, " ' «aang opening 9 Q chance to blame someone el@, and|waagin. An’ his mar pres'dent o’ niece, Bernice Petker, 9, the “Raby t here is a story to prove it jth’ W. C. T. U.t When all th nt Of ty Dolls,” doing a akit this week at 1 was aboard a Sound steamer re oO the Pantages, are the realest dolls | Koing to Port Angeles last week, | HICKORY GROVE WHISPERINGS | The coward you ever saw They're about od when @ man came rushing out of| Mr and Mra. Cyrus Cornway brave live : . one of the staterooms yelling to|Churched at Musselshell Springs Dr. Bows much lke the sawdustatuffed, | beat the cars that his partner was | yesterday be openandshuteyes dolls little girls | missing and was probably over-| Jud Blowsom has traded for a| Beet sugar produced in the Um play with ax a candy lamb is like a board. The two bad n drinking |New horse he got down to Wilburs ed States increased to 1,025 00qam tive ‘monkey, ‘1 haven’t wet vehow| jUberally before and after getting | Cornere pounds in 191u ered trom the realism of my "th aboard and were three sheets in| Miss Seble Thomas ts now writ redid Bo the wind when they turned in, he|ing the Hickory Grove locals for Enlightened. M frankly admitted, When be woke Most Anything aid e Onter When Marion came swaggerin | ie z ad, Saale: aebae seeus. dreanll up his partner was gone, though| Kev. T. J, Milbur, pastor of the | le f the window aa ns a boy for her part, and regarded his clothes were still in the room |-—-—— —_ ne with the ‘sangtrold of dead And not trace of him could be} A FORTUNATE FEATURE game on y cue. pe . ewspar other ely nenk had been search newspa men, politicians and : : preachers, who live and labor for io vain. Well, it did certainly the public ¢ : Blase alr of *k as though his partner had th mall theatrical “man” was mne overboard. But just » few quite too much for me and she minutes before we got to Port An e to her jseles we heard an awful commo Stage kittie bb ead: tion In one of the staterooms ¥ her. case ubd’ pat where a man was evidently turn » on a box “and winked Giving her trousers cravat, she a hiteh, ad justing her pulled out | her watoh and said You'll ox babe? io you suppoue the missing jcuse me if I go down and watch the ~ oo ject. | ew m” and touching This is a fine best you got me ther hat sb iied out of “the on. They not only rob you of your reasing That ended the Ip money and valuables, but they view with Marion. She went be even take your duds so you can't low , waiting ch them.” And you eouldn't “ee him belleve he had strayed | Little Marton, it happens, is Ber wrong room after he had nice» aunt, and Marion's mother at for a drink of water, as who is Bert grandmother, tray he anid | bed f she was big et walt, id What, marry you? echoed the moth “ ; aie. ot’ he frigid-hearted maid. “Well, | guess lived n boy. Bhe hate not. Why, I wouldn't ry you dolls, 5 and she won't if you had ten times the ym | play with x ays ahe'd like to fathor bas a“boy beea t an do 80 ‘Ob, w rejoined the young any things ¢ man in the case, “you have nothing While Marion discussed the kil} MARION FIELOMAN AND BERNICE PETKER on me in that respect. IT I half eas” of atage life, Bernice sat on hat amount of money I wouldn't of an old family friend “leven know you.” 4 that she lived ont | scattered about, plastered on every: | > nid, “because girls are eile The lion and the Ia ratehed | unanimous endorsement of sena sicer. There aren't any good boys, | each other's k everyone | torial candidates j that’s eineh. Of course, Mr was happy--so very happy A vote for Burke is # vote for Brown is nice”—giving him a hug And then, what? The next forn | Potnd tor | running exp ? but he's a mum; there aren't any ing half of the democrats sharpen-| A vote for Wilson is a yote for “Not a joesn't run.” jnice boye” Bernice is the “eter. ed their knives and went out in| Poindexter. } oo - - — ne minine They make an odd eaten et th thee half, who, by A vote for Poindexter ts a vote | tickory Grove M. B. church, {s ar | smok why do they put thosp 1¢ way, were bent upon perform: | for Poindexter. . 8 1 sé F begs ~ Whi n the wings for ing in like manner upon the first) So what the ‘oll’s the use? ranging for his Sunday school pic- | bulldogs in the baggage car th } nic to be held this time at Back ‘On account of their gri hetr ernice's sash ca half. Bryan and anti-Bryan demo- |nic t vat f ta ier, untied. Aunt Marion flew into a crate mixed up five minutes after San niis ar lee cnc oleae ee og hed ethene rege and pounded “his” cane gn ithe “harmony” dinner dishes had will play at the same time |then the train rolled om! ‘ }the floor. “I hate that dress,” «he been wiped and placed away. Cow More tomorrow §.T. | Ht = stormed at her mother. “Take tt boy Mayor James C. Dahiman, of — | ah the Gans joff of her; I won't go on the #tage Omaha, jamped into the guberna The people of this country ate| “But,” protested the Englishmam | with > Pats alg yo Bi e} Saat setaieign: ‘ame ‘tag suneea 7,800,000,000 pounds of sugar last “you have no family trees in your She got red tn the face and successive whacks at the incum your. j country.” 5 throw « mannger's fit. In her an bent, Gov. Shallenberger, who en True rejoined the gor she ch - ce, grad- tertained the idea that one good West Point Military Academy Am but we have bed the sash and unt it. Ber-| term deserved another was founded in 1802. Inice flew at. the yc man,” | At the primaries Dahiman land. - ' chased “him” across the stage and ed a half dozen votes or so ahead “Dis paper,” said Dusty Hiker, | detrimenta ; allenberger, and the latter im. wants to know why all de cities is | . she hissed at her 12 mediately asked for a recount of no overcrowded when dere is so Would Regret It. auntie the Dabiman districts, Dabiman jmuch work in the country.” Gunner—Some magazine write Then they went out on the atage} came dDack with a request that the 1,” responded Tireden Thirs- nds that Pullman car porters ong. No audience Shallenberger strongholds be re ty, “ain't dat de reason? spots and should be shewe od what a ily counted also. 7 no quarte uken place behind Students of the political situa An English mineralogist says that; Guyer—H'm! Let bim tr } JAMES C, DAHLMAN. tion In Nebraska believe that the Santo Domingo is a geological curi-|travel without showing eal wasn't that real acting?| Along in July sometime the Ne warfare in the ranks of the| Judge—You threw pepper in this esity shop, containing scattered | quarter is” off the stage and mad} braska L ats gether at nocratic party may result in a then yor " a SRRELIEN Wea — f to scratch each oth@r's| Kearney and held a genuine “har-| republican victory. weket r sa ey they did a love nt in &| mony” dinner—-at least, it was ad — abt A BOAST PUNCTURED way that would make Romeo and|vertised as a “genulne” affair.) The number of cattle in Brazil i his Sable—I am valuable for my fur Juliet lonesome. | Great big.goba of harmony were! exceeds 25,000,000. The Monkey—I hear differently—1 hear it is valuable without you, Greatest Stock of Boys’ Apparel Occupies Entire Second Floor The Boys’ Clothing Department has been making such a splendid showing that we have been obliged to transfer the Young Men's Clothing Department downstairs to the main floor, and devote the entire second floor to boys exclusively. Better, bigger and more attractive than ever before are our Fall assortments of Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats, Hats, Caps and Fur- nishings for boys 214 to 17 years old. School Suits for Boys 7to17 $4.00 and $5.00 of own chev all ams reinforce good lin and Ly ty at $4.00 and $5.00 double BOYS’ SACK SUI ree-butt the finest suits made Pr $4.00 to $12.50 BOYS’ SAILOR SUITS—Ag to 10; plain col f laid } t ’ n plaic ch $3.50 ing ck and , $12.50 to 16, in t Pring BOYS’ NORFOLK erges; in n, gray a 1 c alues from $4.00 to $10.00 BOYS’ RUSSIAN BLOUSE SUITS—A ge th | h sailor ¢ SPECIAL * and Girls’ Tams at Less Than Half r $2.00, 1 DO¢ ; reg ar $1.00, now ‘or 25¢. cial J. REDELSHEIMER & CO. First and Columbia STRONGEST OVERCOAT HOUS Girls’ Coats—Size DAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1910, AND MAGAZINE PAGE # By Mail, out of city months, § month, 25e Ente 1 at 60; 1 Genttle, , as necond-clasn matter, ing everything topsy-turvy. Finally he stuck bin head out and called for |the captain. The captain did not |respend, but his partner did, end final Windup of Downey-Walkup Stock 10 Days More enty of Nice Merchandise Left | Must Go—Half Price and Less 914 FIRST AVENUE 914 SPECIAL

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