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4 THE STAR—SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 1913. THE SEATTLE SI AR pace pe aha eae eels oa. 4 aie - ; | RRR OF THR ¥ iT LHAGUN OF NEWSPAPERS A GRIPPING STORY | . Tr La Daly Seat Tall lensed wire mewe sefvice o . e6 99 ILLUSTRATED BY POSE BY O. HENRY | BY PAULINE FREDERICK | —_— parentage oon aang atlas sieahesienhdiainliapesiiipiennitiegtomena ——— a rit AGOOD INVES (Copyright by Doubleday, Page & Co.) | jactors and actrenser go after the curtain of the playhouse hy i - — No, bumptious reader, this story is not a continuation of the | upon them for {he lant time? : 28 flog Elsto series, But if your Elsie had lived over here in our big city | “Bure,” waid Elele, “Into vaudeville. But do you thi . . - ink tt A Law Unto Himself there might have been a chapter in her books not very different pera ee ene re make Sve sens to live on by sowing? * Especially for the vagrant feet of youth th f 2 - “The flesh-pota of Prypt exclaimed the reve ~ gall it about time Judge John E. Humphries was made! nattan besot “with pitfall and with cae. But tee pare BeBe Juplifting his hands. “1 beseech you, my child to t 7a ava to understand that he is not the law unto himself? the young have made themselves acquainted with the snares of the | place of iniquity.” m this el . reek De- wicked, and most of the dangerous p is 6©are patrolled by their fut what will I do for a living?” asked Kiste I don’t v Seattle has enjoyed the judge for many weeks agents. And this will tell you how they guided my Elste safely sew for thin musical comedy, if {t's us rank ws you say tt ta; bate clining to take seriously the words of wisdom that have through all peril to the goal that she was seeking. | Kot to have & job.” fallen from the judicial lips, we have looked on complacently Baie o father had been 4 cutter for Fox & Otter, cloaks and turs, le oat pepe will alter said the solemn wz vote ‘ dena , , on lower Broadway fe was an old man, with a limping 4 ree Bible class every Bunday afternoon tn the ba and have not complained of the seeming er “ bow os Sa chauffeur ran him down one day when livelier game was, peri |store next to the church, Peace be with you with which we are prone to surround—rightly or ongty They took the old man home, where be lay on his bed a year and | Elsie went on her way. She wan soon tn y the men who interpret our laws, then died, leaving $2.50 in cash and a letter from Mr. Otter offering | where factories abound. On the Is yw CO! nore serious phase of the Hum-~|to do anything he could to help bis faithful old employs. The old | “Posey & Trimmer, Artificial Flowers.” But there now comes a m s ph ies question cutter regarded this letter as a valuable legacy to bis daughter, and fee tes canvas bearing the ri ries : ‘ie . sited ihe put tt into her hands with pride as the shears of the dread jlearn trade. Good wages from r flighe wee Yesterday, prefacing his decision with criticism of City | Gleanor and Repairer snipped off his thread of life. | Elate started toward the door, near which were ¢ thered ts toms officials and the announcement that it was up to him to That was the landlord's cue; and forth he came and aid his part |some 20 or 40 girls. One big girl with w black stra t down ¢ = 7 D siraw hat down , see that peace was maintained in Seattle, the {dee forever |in the great eviction scene, ‘There was no snowstorm ready for her eyes stepped in front of her. bi» strained certain persons from speaking at the corner of Elste to steal out into, drawing her little red woolen shawi about | Say, you'se,” sald the girl, “are you'se goin’ in there after a restrained certain per vith her shoulders, but she went out, regardiess. And as for the red fob?” ‘ Pike st. and Westlake boulevard, and then, wit ope any | Shawl. Hisie’s fall tan coat was cheap, but 1< had tho atyle and fit |" Yes,” said Elsie; “I must have work.” Cr formal petition from anyone to do so, forever restrained any) o¢ the best at Fox & Otter's, And her lucky stars had given her “Now don't it,” said the gir I'm chairman of our seab e fr ine socialist papers upon the corner in question. | good looks, and eyes as blue and innocent as the new shade of note mittee, There's 400 of us girls locked out just because we Gemaam eee one from selling socialist par pe , j une we demandes No one will suffer seriously because of this restraining paper, and she had $1 left of the $2.60. And the letter from Mr, Otter, 60 cents & week raine in wages, and ice water, and for the ft Ba ler Tt isn't that. It’s the absolute absurdity of the | Keep your eye on tho letter from Mr, Otter to shave off bis mustache. You're too nice a looking girl to be ean order s: ’ And so we find Hlsio starting out to seek her fortun One Wouldn't you please help us along by t to find a job hdl Lay judge's finding trouble about the letter from Mr, Otter was that ft did not bear the or would you'se rather have your face pushed in?” Pa Who knows but that some day we may find upon Our now address of tho firm, which had moved @ month before, But Il try somewhe said § » superior bench one with no more balance than Judge Hum-|Fiste thought she could find it, She had heard that policemen, when ; She walked aimless ward on Bre ay, and there her h - Supers ; ‘ ea cannot politely addressed, or thumbscrewed by an investigation committee, leaped to see the sign, * Otter,” stretching entirely across phries who will ordain that the city’s daily papers will give up information and addresses, So sho boarded a downtown front of # tall building ee the | tts be sold upon the streets ae h car at One Hundred and Seventy-eeventh st. and rode south to Forty} She hurried into the store and sent in to Mr. Otter bys yartl There would be just as much law and logic in such & second. | her name and the letter he had written her her. She was clerk aber decision as there is in this learned judge's finding against A kin@-faced, sunburned young man went past Elsie into the) directly into his private office show, stil che sodialiate | Grand Central station, That was Hank Rosa, of the Sunflower Ranch, | Mr. Otter arose from his desk as leis entered and took Yo a Sasi’ : lin Idaho, on his way home from a visit to the Kast, Hank's heart was hands with a hearty smile of welcome. H s 8 silghth {stac We are willing that the judge should talk as much as Wo o™G Ong sunflower Ranch was @ lonesome place, lacking the han of nearly middle age, well dressed, radiating. 11 aan he pleases, but we submit that the public is wnat to some | presence of a woman. He had hoped to find one during his visit who “Well, well, and so this is F # little daughter! Your father ecti rom judicial rulings that will make the superior | would odngenially share his prosperity and home, but the girls of was one of our most efficient and valu He le Seg gc F senty an i Srution heaped with ridicule, [Gotham had not pleased his fancy, But, as he sed in, he noted, Well, well. I hope we have not forgotte ‘ul ptbees lam P = s y with a jumping of his pulses, the eweet, Ingenuous face of Elsie and sure there {s a vacancy now among our models. Oh, it ts easy wore | O “, her pose of doubt and loneliness. With true and honest western nothing eash YONKERS, N. Y. woman of property advertised for “a decent man i . i e a tor f Qovsand: “One man only answered, showing that there's been a impulse he aaid'to himself that here was his mate, He. ceu)d love Bes | Elsie Gtood Before the Full-Length Mirror With Pink Cheeke = Mi. Otter struck a hell, A’ fing Tinw king’ nme in. — lift. In public consclence since Tammany went to prosecuting he knew; and he would surroun fort, and Quick Breath, Her Eyes Shone Like Faint Stars, She Was Miss Hawkins,” said Mr. Otter, “bring for Miss Beatty to ty great ae eet b eeeea rele cherish her so carefully, that she would be happy. ‘ auth, Ala: Oka Wie Benutirel” }on one of those Russian sable coats and—let's see—one of those lates ome we * Backed by his never-before-question onesty of purpose, he ap-| ‘ model black tulle hate with white tips.” ‘proached the girl and removed his hat fo had but time to eum (Posed by Pauline Frederick and by William Shea and Zena Keefe stood before the full-length mirror with pink cheeks sag . Jup his handsome, frank face with one shy look of modest admira | of the Vitagraph company.) quick breath. Her eyes shone like faint stars. She wi Ha ’ e was beautiful, The Overworked Farmer’s Wife ix'sven's bury op buried imaeif spon tho ranchman, yetsed him e PN oe eh ye , : Hone collar and backed him against the wall. Two blocks away a|@ccept work of any kind without permission of our association you I wish I could stop this story here. Confound {t! Confound st HAT Mississippi college professor who figured that the) purgiar was coming out of an apartment house with « bag of allver will be arrested by one of our agents.” I will. No; it's got to run it out. I didn't make ft up. I'm fast jp f ’s wife on an average old-fashioned farm, in the| ware on his shoulder; but that Is neither here nor there. Kut what am I to do?” asked fe. “I have no home or money. peating it yo farmer : 2 “Carry on yer mashin’ tricks right before me eyes, will y 1 must do something. Why am I not allowed to accept this kind I'd like to throw bouquets at the wise cop, and the lady whe me performance of a day’s cooking and scrubbing, lifts a ton Of| shouted the cop. “T'll teach yex to peak to ladies on me beat that | lady's offer é rescues Girls from Jobs, and the sky pilot who objects to costumes fe [4 2 vrater, thereby losing early her girlish complexion and figure, | ye're not acquainted with. Come along | 1 do not know,” said Miss Ticklebaum. “That is the affair of! stage people (there are others), and all the thousands of good people I = nquestionably laid his finger on a sore spot in country life iste turned away with a sigh as the ranchman was dragged |Our committee on the Abolishmment of Employers, It ts my duty’ who are at work protecting young people from the pitfalls of Me unquestionably laid his ting ma h ey in q{away. She had lked the effect of bis ieht blue eyes against his timply to see that you do not get work, You will give me your|great city; and then wind up by pointing out how they #auiman as What makes the matter worse is that he pro’ S Im 3 | tanned complexion. She walked southward, thinking herself already | bame and address and report to our secretary every Thursday. We means of Elste reaching her father's benefactor and her kind fried as bulletin recently issued by Uncle Sam, that an outlay of $250/in"the district where her father used to work, and hoping to find have 600 girls on the waiting list who will in time be allowed to accept and resever from poverty. This would make 2 fine Elsie story of t\ 99 02 on a scientific pumping plant would save all this waste Of|some one who could direct her to the firm of Fox & Otter. ponitions as vacancies occur on our roll of Qualified Employers, which OLD SORT. I'd like to do this; but there's just a word or two tp wi human energy and beauty. Just a measly $250. The revenue| Rut did she want to find Mr, Otter? She had toherited much of/now comprises 27 names. There is prayer, music and lemonade in follow po b Sy , f he the old cutter's independence. How much better tt would be tf she|our chapel the third Bunday of every month While Elste was admiring herself in the mirror, Mr. Otter west Ii of a Rockefeller for the fraction of an hour. could find work and support herself without calling on him for aid! Klale burried away after thanking Miss Ticklebaum for her timely to the telephone booth and called up some number. Don't ask me 9) 27 Why doesn’t the man of the house get an extra. hump Elsie caw a sign “Employment Agency” and went in. Many|warning and advice. After all, It seemed that she must try to find what it was on himself and produce this simple labor-saver, this insurer | giriy were sitting against the wall in chairs. Several well-dressed Mr. Otter “Oscar,” said he, “I want you to reserve the same table of beauty’s pristine bloom? }Iadies were looking them over, One white haired, kind-faced old Near Fourteenth st. Fisie saw a placard tacked on the side of for me this evening. . . . What? Why, the one in the Weill hat’: kward question to answer. We} lady tn rustling black silk hurried up to Eiste. a doorway that read Fifty girls, neat sewers, wanted immediately Moorish room to the left of the shrubbery. . . . Yes; » ell, now, that's an aw q " . “My dear,” sho said in a aweet, gentle votce, “are you looking | on theatrical costumes. Good pay.” two. | Yes, the usual brand; and the ‘85 Johannis don’t believe that a man on a farm is less chivalrous, less)». 4 position and appearance so much, I want « he Was about to enter, when a solemn man, dressed all tn black, burger with the ronst. If {t fen't the right temperature Tl affectionate, than ,the same type of biped inhabiting a city. | young woman who will be half maid and half companion to me, You) laid tis Hand on her arm: break your neck. No; not her. . ._ No fie But it has sometimes seemed to us that on the farm the/wiil have a good home and I will pay you $30 a month 4 “My 4 np oe he said, “I entreat you not to enter that dressing: ‘ A saw one-s pescherian, Osett, 20 i i whi wife values Before Elsie could stammer forth her gratified acceptance, a) room of the devil. M Tired and tiresome reader, 1 will conclude, If you with man quickly forgets those little Ser ciee pei h *lyoung woman with cold glasses on ber bony nose and ber hands tn Goodness me!” exclaimed Elste, with some impatience. “The paraphrase of a few words that you will remember ware wilt ot so highly; that his hard work; the close attention he must) io i cxet pockets seized her arm and drew hor aside devil seem to have a cinch on all the business in New York. What's him—by him of Gad’s Hill give to a thousand little details; the economy he is obliged} “Tam Miss Ticklebaum.” sald she, “of the Association for the) wrong about the place? ‘4 Lost, Your Excellency. Lost, Association and Societies, Lom to exercise in all things, are apt to throw him into a routine of | Prevention ot Jobs ng Put Up on Working Girls Looking for Joke : te ‘a here, eae the solemn man, ‘that the regalia of Satan— Right Reverends and Wrong Reverends of every order. ' Lost, Re | Ahi irit of romance has a lesser part. | We prevented 47 girls from securing pow tions lant wee! am bere|in other words, the costumes worn on the stage—are manufactured. formers and Lawmakers, born with heavenly compassion in you which the spir f Ps Heware of any one who offers you a job. How do| The stage is the road to ruin and destruction. Would you fmperil hearts, but with the reverence of money in your souls. And lost thy j Ades in you read that magazine story not long ago of the} to protect you. that this woman does not want to make you work as a your soul by lending the work of your hands to !ts support? Do you around us every day. adayail who, obiape mney iar tag P = fervor ie the | you know tet coal mine or murder you to get your teeth? If you| know, my dear girl, what the theatre leads to? Do you_know where (THE END.) | ioneymoon, had promised wife to bui er a new home = = — = = tained He ENO) ee as soon as prosperity permitted; but who, when, years after- Tie ward, through her industry and self denial quite as much wilds and os as through his, money had been accumulated in the bank, Slama, Jabs, Boosts an iby drew it out and spent it on a fine new barn? * i We doubt if the story is an example of even a small ma- Most Anything it jority of farmers. Still, we hope that that small majority will AFTER ALL MY | | ” think again about the pumping plant. Improbable Stories. PLEADINGS WITH YOu ABOUT \¢ — coro OC RSE dbs 8 Lindberg, 601 Henrietta st. best contr ination soles er SS aee aeaaTeY | A gontieman whose tamtly had) | (LEAVING CIGAR STUBS LYING AROUND enn 4| sy optuton? of the ereatest tm-|{ar prise is to be Seataal MRE. VICE PRESIDENT MARSHALL prociaims that husbands! neen in the country for six weeks, THE HOUSE I've THIS Vivian Burnett, living at 8322 s bela With is don’t mention things that go wrong In the household, but notice them. /(1 opening his mail one August GATHERED sil too. Mamkioa” wen the | ee ef today is wheels. ith! If your contribution ts a drawing ff The lady has had experience with only one husband. Still, there are| morning, came upon ® Kas Dill, WHOS DUSTRANFUL! Mth Ave ter at dollar cash prine |* Very few exceptions, wheels are|remember to do your work #9) i} husbands who notice, but do not speak, like gentlemen, and cowards. | which, being of the same sito as for the best argument on the br ced ty mechanisms,” Mary Lee, regular drawing paper and wih [ies when his family was at Page world’s greatest invention. While| . pertenfrertteen a caused him to remark angrily, the there are not a great many boys “The o SA cannot be > printing pr was the! sidered it ts fi q Murphy Is the Issue, Not Sulzer | 0: » cr ae te es aoe eee eree ae ing |Steatest invention, What would | srnaues other” impasse HE case of Gov. Sulzer is on its way to trial, but the tag weed Maly in cooking, of Uiher matal goose were the gravest gets vor the newspapers?” | columns. i | issue is Murphy jwhich none had been _ bend of inventions, her argument is — . é The stories should by ‘e 2. this family’s departure, the cook) fairly reasonable and the letter) « he | over 150 words and must ‘The alphabet was the greatest neatly. Remember to write oa The Murphy system is a conspiracy to loot and pillage,| made tolerable in spots by individual kindness. having been given a vaéation and| the gentleman taking his meals fn} well written The contest, which was featured by close competition, closed Friday invention in my estimation,” Flor ence Baes, 4703 Sist av. S. one side of the sheet of paper. poetry should not contain over that it ivi iti Fy _|downtown restaurants _ It reflects more vividly than any other political institu-|Piacing his hat and coat upon | afternoon at 3 o'clock. Uncle Jack| +1 ¢nink the t invention | tes and {t is preferred tion left in our country the malign marriage between crooked pimsoif, the gentleman hurried to was flooded with letters from| op todtt te tape Ruth Purring.| be comic. Photographs siast politics and unscrupulous business. It is a standing chal-|the gas office, where he exhibited | |boys and girls sending in their\toa Sutan "9"! clear and larger than stamp ‘ lenge to American democracy. the bill to a clerk and in lond lideas of the world’s greatest in- ’ “a size. }tones told him what was, as the |vention. Florence Baes, 4703 3ist|@ —@| The contest is open to all boy Sulzer’s offense to Tammany wasn’t in speculating or in trying to make way with money not his own; it was in trying, however weakly, to serve the plain folks directly and not as a Tammany tool. The new freedom is mocked and humiliated by Murphy.| His challenge to the progressive spirit of the time is insolent. | It slaps the manhood of the Empire State boldly in the face. Sulzer is only an incident. The real issue is Murphy The clerk, a most) courteous young man, Hatened at tentively and, the gentleman's) story being finished, said, “Str, beyond all doubt there has been a mistake, and we will rectify it at once, Leave the bill with me that there may be an Investigation fix ing the blame, and that we may saying is, what ay, south, and Lois Neff, R. F. D. No, 6, Box 145, Seattle, sent in let- tera worthy of second choice. wat ° THIS ONE WINS, | ini le- : The letter which follows won the Cirele’s prize offer for the best sug- | gestion of the greatest invention of @) Ruth Purrington, Sultan, Wash. eee “WANTS A CARD. Dear Uncle Jack: Although have competed in several contests I have never received a membership card. Will you please send me one? “THANKS THE CIRCL and girl readers of The Star. tributions will not be after 3 o'clock next Friday noon. If a boy or girl living is city wins the dollar it will them at The Star prize is mailed to out of town ners. q Address contest and other and what he typifies, the invisible government which impu-| mane pecten guilty ot | today: Pea chien: : " _Q|to Uncle Jack in care of The a mocks government of, by and for the people. ltarther to call, as we will notify |_ My Dear Uncle Jack: I am| Dear Uncle Jack: You have no office. | me day this issue must be met. Why not now? you when our investigation {s/ | writing on the argument on the idea how you gladdened the heart te ae londed. I regret the error very greatest {nvention that was ever|of my daughter Bessie in choosing IF THOSE 100 assassins catch up with Dr. Sun Yat Sen, there'll be) much, and trust that you will ac-| made. Tho girl that said that/her as the judge in the contest and Odeon Theatre one doctor trimmed to suit the popular taste in China. lcept this apology, which I tender steel, fron, tin and other metal/also of the kind remarks said in 7 lon behalf of the company.” goods wore the greatest inventions | your good paper which we have “The Clown's Reveage” | | is the one that I agree with, and|taken for nearly twelve years. In ‘Two Parts, am | MIDDLE WEST report that hens won't lay because of the Intense heat is another Wall street Ile. Hens won't lay because eggs have gone to 40 cents, that’s all. We're boarding 30 hens, and we know. THAT TWO-POUND Smith baby, born at Huntington, Ind. Is so the patron left 4 humor, | . Hearing which, the gas office in goo .- © fie! For shame! Thou Spanish dame that sets aflame How which I also think is right. What would we do for stoves, engines, ears, machinery, cooking utensils, and farming implements’? Indeed, we would be {n an uncomfortably Bessie says, “Mamma, do not fail to tell Uncle Jack I will be sixteen Sept. 22nd and I am too honorable to try to be prominent in the con- tests when over the age limit. I “Heart Throbe,” In Two Reels. “Professor Bean's Removal? First Ave. Bet. Pike and Uste® email that Its mother’s finger ring can be ell over Ite hand. Indi-| i ster. oalldarn sod fH caged nepaoet eg flirtingly situated position without them. I/do hate to drop out.” Thanking . 4 askance and flaunting dance? think {t is the most marvelous {n-| you very much in her behalf, and Ng bd Is this a high-roller coast, eh? | vention that any one could ever|the interest you took inh ALBANY Paint (From a newly published think of. I think many of the| writings, SARAH M. DAY, 6 Circleites will agree with me on/ ist, N. W. . this point. Vivian Burnett, 8322 a cr | é Dry reading — A prohibition ith N. W. NOUR CONTERT | 4 | akg eee gern CTI —$|* Uncle Jack has decided on & Alban u hale WERE JUDGES RIGHT? | nele Jack has decided on y A carrier pigeon flew from in novel contest for his many nieces 4 Texas to Indiana in 26° hours. be you do not agree with the|and nephews. Next week, instead e - What's the sense in flying if) Star Circle judges in their selection |of Uncle Jack naming the contest, Dentists “a you're to land in Indiana? of the winning letters tn the|he ts going to allow the boys and | “world’s greatest invention” con-|girls to select their own subjects|wr sTAND BACK or ove welt i is © te Westness Mere? _ | Gome Of our courts hold that “sett-|,. 4 Chicnge judge has decided it} test. A few Mnes have been taken|for the weekly competition, This| Por 15 YEARS. GU a Editor The Sar: As your paper| ing tickets” 1s not transacting bus!-|'%,%" instit to call @ woman en! from the 5 next best letters, will enable all the Circleites to SIGNED BY UB a | is always interested. in questions|ness. The Southern Pacific does|°!4 malt. The dispatehes bod | ‘ “ jcompete with an equal chance, —— oo which affect the rights of the|not explain and the learned courts|*J Dut we suppose the Judge was “The wireless “telograph is the| Either a drawing, short story, | citizen, I take the Mberty of calling|do not say what “selling tickets” is referring to @ married woman. a greatest invention because it saves| poetry or a photograph may be | your attention to the application of|if {t 1s not transacting business, I . so many lives on the water,” Hat-lsent to the Circle Club, For the the law to & great corporation as|have appealed to the attorney|, Asked which wife wae dearest se Our Precise Arti What Has Become of— compared with the application of|general and the public service | Mm Nat erating ~~. vat ‘aed & |GAVE KIN T ; that same law to « private citizen. | commission, and have recelved from | oo ieee aay Tow Wee tel aire | SKIN TO SAVE oti GF Momibeten” & as | thocs no oalintontery Tons | LIFE OF HIS CHILD 0 D. Hnger’s Colas mire! ra oot fn good doorjamb,—Mra. T. D, Le or ays ‘a , 0 * , perhaps you, a a —- _ | pny bo eevee Rae touney| iin layman, or some of your| {¢ ie, of course, perfectly proper INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 22.—Con-| FRESNO, Aug. 28.—Russoll Pit-| the fottowing prices wit Oe ore Ghats Whe Galboration trancncte| eeeent Testers can Answer tor a governor to take ® vacation ductors and motormon on interur.|Rer, a Raisin City farmer, has giv-| eur offices untit Beptembel OM oy Bostnade tr wary county where the| nave, Twaetions satiatactorily: But why ts tt that he never took ban trolley lines started walking |@0 144 square inches of skin to| Come in, today dant Diosg chan vem) I) torporation has an office for the| lst: If selling tickets is not|}one until he began working for out here today. Traffic 1s ham-/S4ve the life of his ten-year-old son, A prises advertise our . ‘ Tercetitie of busines.” transacting business, what ix tt?|the people? nt pered, and, as the atrike spreads, |Who was frightfully burned three | Sey of Teeth, Guaran 4 | On page 4 of the Southern Pacific hie? an office where tickets a complete tie-up is threatened | weeks ago by the explosion of an Fit, now ....ss0° ' Co.'s bulletin of June, 1912, 1s the | 2'@ #014 1s not transacting business,| Sign \n a downtown restaurant: The men demand -better pay. joi can. Doctors now believe the , : ' following: what is it? , “Wanted—Woman to Cook - — | lad will recover. Solid Gold or Porcelain | “Principal Agencies: 2nd: If the.Southern Pacific Co.|. Why send missionaries to the | SE aan SoM f “Beattie, Wash. Dist. Frt. & Pa * not twaassetiag business here are | cannibals? HANGS ONTO ROPE | WITNESS MISSING Crown ...+++++ | Agt—720 2nd Ave.; C. G. Ch im, | they here for any good purpose and . Bg rat en Avec. & Snishelm.| should, they not be, excuded’ trom | $600 A MONTH FOR & for Peeters | scmncasn” aan Ou ot Soe Hill, our state as undesirables, ° TH , | S34 eeewnre : | AND, Aug. 28,—It was| Bridge Work ..+++++*** ttle—Trav. Frt. Agt, R. B.| past record ts SMEMIOR no 20 wha MO ERS’ PENSIONS : (SIE Pele ase ae jah Beer oar Phen coda er the 7 75¢ : . ag (or pment gel Hoag seit Accordthg to the estimate sub re John F. Johnson held fast to a/authorities have been searching | Solid Gold Fillings. «+ : We are in receipt of letter! Furthe: mitted by Judge Frater to the coun - e Old Fash rope, after falling from the launch /from the const to the Mississippi! og; 50¢ uP | celpt of a er| Further, Mr. Editor, does not the|ty commissioners, it will cost the . elle ; “ - PPL) Silver Fillings ..+++* of from the general counsel of the| recognition of such “tommy rot” as | c 5, ‘ | cyclist: who had the nervel |S°out at Pler 1, and yelled for help. river for Miss Ethel Newcombe, 9 Goctharn Pacitio stating thst said| this by oar courts bring them intolot mothers’ pensions ‘To date, with| ofan aviator ond the sme [cnt {24 ,fatrolmen Crandall witness against Rémand H.C. Vou] ATbany CubRate Tima company {is not transacting busl-|contempt by those persons wh 36 yetislions aranted, 460 pen | ‘i : [ome Ce. nae, Klein, to come to trial for a second | © rior Peoples Bank is aes th the state of Washington |God tins gifted with “horse sense"? Sear aeth a aeoath 8 erpeed fie | capacily for spraviling ? « Tho exposure was almost fatal. [time on September on a charge of| *™ Eo ng and Pike im |) and has no offices for the trans- Very respectfully over 100 applications yet to be LOST HLS FOOTING AND ap tak Tauren Jonnban wee Teport. having pean Jewels from hef val-| Take Blevator OF soe Oe roe || Wd ad Sahinees in tela otate, : ; My, yer 0 | : n ss oe ed at the City hospital to be out of! ued at $8,500. In the first trial the|ouR prices WILL SUR! * | » GA, REYNOLDS, | heard, ‘ DROPPED SEVERAL STORIE Dance at Dreamiand tonight,—Adyv, | danger. jury disagreed. ‘ Be Bun WORK WILL PLEASS TOR