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4 THE STAR—TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1913. ° MEMBER OF (THE SORIPTS NORTHWI#T LRAGUR OF NEWSPAPERS Telegraph Ne Service of the United Press Association, Entered at the pestoffice, Seattle, Wash. an second clase matter, Published by The Star Publishing Company every evening except Samday Anemia wt] be found a DAILY HEALTHOGRAM J perwons of all ageus at among achool children, A protetd diet ts required to overcome It. Red meat once a day, also eggs, milk, butter and cream sh be given Fish, poultry sd wheat, potatoes, beans and fresh tables are also allowed ‘An Editorial for School Children PHONES “"wicting with all eps {Bill Alburn, Star Correspondent, Pays First Visit to Geysers at Yellowstone By Bill Alburn | The Adventures of Johnny Mouse. ITTLE school children, you are the things really’ worth po cbewieielt ret) ee 7 while in life. Mother may have a million hous S EVERETT, You ELLOWSTONE PARK, Sept | fie ‘OVE , |2.—! won't monkey any more with cares. Daddy may have his nose to the grindstone in office UGHT To HAVE Mre. Yellowstone's geysers shop or store. Bu 1. IT IS JUST YOU who are} [SEEN THE BUNCH she The first day visit in the : 5 icuT—° / park | walked from the Fountain the real care, the r interest, the real delight peta sg Ma [hotel over the Lower Geyser Basin ton’t know how impo t ot only to you E ENT WN where there's a hill, all steaming You don’t know how importan not only to your To MIKE'S PLACE” 7 2 seb poled ici lle ie rnin realize that it is ing away in cream and liver colors home, but to the whole v 1 a que ag the present bending of your thought an s that determines wm! the world’s future. od up t You are like the 1 glory seed. Place oon send up a tiny as if reaching for that seed in good soil and it w vine that seems to wave aroun upon which to ¢ pward i e it a support, a st a trellis and how i se7, ward and t and blossoms. ; : ‘ ut give it no training and it weaves upon itself, i ler " | becomes stunted and an unlovely mass of tangles i t The vine was made to grow upward, with it flower faces] va, rn a ¢ th looking at the sky and perfuming the air You, too, m : dren, WERE MADE TO GROW UPW ARD, to }! cinta things above, not on the groun {, and send forth fine odors m in good examples and good deeds. 3 cue tourta And going to school is the first criss Fae toe e : | Gets Off With Apology and the ‘iar BRAGGING. To ME ABOUT WHAT A GAY DOS — You arett! and by will come other crises—labor, parentage death of loved ones, with the capacity to do and suffer, which the years bring But your first life crisis is going to school. AND MOTH ER AND DADDY KNOW IT, although they may not be } saying much about it. Will you help teacher to help you climb up toward the] |} sky? Will you hang back and grow along the ground, like} i the untrained morning glory? | This is your crisis. School is not a task or punishment or an obligation. | IT IS OPPORTUNITY. If you hold back and grow along @ guests ti : there was nothing the ground flat in ignorane, your companions will walk on In an Un seared ¢ ph Pypesned 4 b ed hot nH and tn 4 in later years. | nat of sl ia =e & mad volcano. wing and ™ poe . | 5 hing : r the nelg pos) Haas a i = a NG aE ne a atie Bt aa ig The nn badlgi f ypc Echo of the Barbers’ Strike—Burglars entered ho Pelham and stole a razor, leaving un } OUR OWN George Cotterili Is now somewhat in the John Lind class. While the | + has been appointed by the president to put Gen. Try Soda on “Old Fal saic, N. J., man's idea of a joy ride was to steal an Erie raliroad When he got ne the Huerta out of b s, Cotterill will be the president's representative Jr fo put the grand crimp into Gen. Barleycorn at the International com if prope! bimeelf at top ference at Milan. a Bayonne, N. Y., fireman threw a cat In the bay; the cat was play their ag wet and ott nd bass in ber mouth. Lieut 1 he says that he will now keep pussie es long A Word to Thomas A. Edison ae ae es ° nt it oe _ — =i — |? DISON speaks words of light and learning when he yi / CU Ie p | states in his article for The Star that the great problem | 4 f 2 Lf, ex of this age is not so much work for the masses, as play : - Recreation, as he says is Re-CREATION. Work un-| 4 ESS SRS SS RI fy . ereates, the body and soul. Play re-CREATES both—|} ~ i ii health, normal play. ee RUSTY SPANGLE arpe S, ugs an raperies But Edison dropped one remark which, of course, was | only incidental but which we want to discuss with him. He} | says that the problem of better conditions for the poor lies| in CHEAPER CONSTRUCTION. - | From such a thinker as Edison, this must mean cheaper | construction, not only of houses, but of all things that people} | Improbable Stories Jatill to be found in Tacoma, At Less Than Wholesale Prices 25% TO 50% BELOW THE REGULAR RETAIL PRICES BUT THE PAST HUNDRED’ YEARS HAS BEEN Judge John &. i stim Bg WISE WOMAN ane “sll HOWARD D. THOMAS CO. CATCHES. NO_EVE - eine THE GREATEST ERA OF CHEAPENING THESE jgwyer tricute Deathlike went to the sant THINGS WE HAVE EVER SEEN. ed as the judge t AND THIS CHEAPENING HAS DONE NOT THE fae ern ag milinery,—La | SLIGHTEST GOOD IN LIGHTENING THE LABORS OF *aith tt male rae a | Located at Fifth Ave. and Virginia St. THE MASSES. NOT AN OUNCE OF THE BURDEN, “Phat fable, gen a golly lig > 908 ed those | The largest wholesale carpet and rug house in the Northwest offers a large and choice assortment of fine an drink oF leave it rugs, carpets and draperies at prices which will astonish the prospective buyer. Each season the Eastern fac- NOT A POUND OF THE PRESSURE ON THE "8s! with wisdom WORKERS, HAS BEEN TAKEN OFF BY OUR Marshall sald Marshall said th PROGRESS. " The stress is greater than ever. Moreover, if Edison’s sellers. We want to close out these drop patterns quickly and although in our twelve years of business in Seattle we have never before sold any goods at retail, we now offer them AT WHOLESALE PRICES AND IN SOME : tories represented by us drop some patterns to make room for new ones, These patterns are, as a rule, our best INSTANCES LESS THAN WHOLESALE. dreams all come true, if the people were housed in Edison's y fails it S B ‘ concrete houses, poured into moulds at a tenth of the of the ale. egins Tomorrow [W dne d ] M ° b d present price of houses, it would do no good tal ly pearls | $ F e ; s ay orning, Septem er 3r ists vcald Se ah Migh’ ab. over. a fall from my sphine-tike lips sa Naronmany man bee been sent | _ Our salesmen will have on hand our Catalog giving the retail, or catalog price, and by com- Only land-owners would benefit. ae [ward of merit or punishment by | paring same with the sale price you can quickly see the great saving effected by purchasing these So long as the masses can be exploited, so long as their| It is reported now that ial ae goods. For instance, we shall sell: wages are fixed by their standard of living, just so long the a tits te con to her man Whatever became of the old-fash Edisonian improvements will benefit their exploiters only Doo gy nol pal a ti en am, 0 FOR ep HIGH GRADE AXMINSTER Extirpate Monopoly—and then the fruits of all these} A de Bins . 2 RUGS Smith Wool WOOL TAPESTRY RUGS 4 cor g di There lan't the slightest possibil-} Some of the congressmen obvi Sis gt O04 snd 9x12 fe . Sizes 814x104 feet and 9x12 ‘atalog discoveries will flow to the masses. |ity of Harry Thaw escaping le wat Gh Aiac anees Sizes 814x10% and 9x12 feet. Catalog be sista a: t 3 x12, Catalog And they will flower out in recreation for the people. | C* oa ge a never let man | cur n as they do about price $25.00—SALE PRICE...$15.95 Velvet price § ALE PRICE ....$9.85 with as much money as he has get | ma AXMINSTER RUGS 7 24 Doc Bryan m Will Edison not lend a hand in the extirpation of Monopoly? |aw He has the ear of the world. Will he not speak? | owen” | Jof the old-f NOW SCIENTISTS announce that they were mistaken In stating | that ‘took’ ¢ that the stable fly bear: rms of infantile paralysi: We underste ‘This must be good c! rr for dad, who has been chasing flies ‘round | ~~~ 4 g price $250--SALE PRICE > rs in Virginia indi vinsaaves ees and ‘round the barn, the past thre: monthe. ; - — - ~ Catalog price $1.15 Best Short Stories of the Day a Sa per yard SALE] { FANCY BUNGALOW NETS _ Catalog price $3.50 PRICE ....79¢ In white or Arabe. Catalog price 35¢ per yard—SALE PRICE ..... 22% gt | SCOTCH BODY BRUSSELS | RUGS Carpets d out on an In a lare variety of patterns; 27x54-inch, f Chautau lecttire engag led to speak Size 9x12 feet. Catal SALE PRICE *g price $15.00 $9.00 In room, hall and stair patterns MANAGEMENT OF Cincinnati's fresh air farm announces that children of strikers need not apply for assistance, Sixty inches wide A demonstration of “managed” philanthropy. o 1 feel myself t - —- MINUS NOTHING. oe it ie lane ae es a BALZ PRICE ............. S08 WE NOTE that Willie Hearst stly proud” some more. After @ @/ St. Louts Times bik 17 years of unremitting toll, he hi given Frisco municipal ownership “It 1s bad enough to be a young : “i 7. 3 @ 500 PAIRS SCOTCH NET LACE FANCY CURTAIN NETS of etreet rallways, a8 sapeclally reported to his own pa ae Ianvaalh licsuihy, « souue lncvatiar a oneua lt - CURTAINS White or Arabe, 36 inches wide. Cat- re’s a ha-ha coming to aihoun, If there's any left In Pat.| eacher—their work {# worth|¢ ABATING THE NUISANCE. In white or cream. Catalog price $4.00 ‘Rey »S alog price 18¢ per yard—SALE PRICE — ‘ — > > oo ' « , LONDON PUBLISHER announces that he Ie to issue a book by|Y°ry very little—but how much) To make sure the youngster was oasis tel tas Sa ies $2.50 } Sues ° ay causes iit Ls a Evelyn Thaw, making public her full life. There would be a piece of Worse It Is to be a young sculptor, not di fishing law : > Hterature that even the express companies would gag on handling, and Whose work worth minus | the game warden took his string of ee E —. It couldn’t possibly get by our new pos' r general. nothing, whose work, instead of pos a f the water and found only apc - — € tt a des y ! catfish, eh ond suckers o| he o reating ¥ lestroys It atfis n 1 suckers on t Don’t buy Rugs, Car- Our large fiveataen w feet further down the » found a large black bass on a string = welghed h a stone and asked the| you have seen for your- at he was doing with the » | boy "he's self the fine bargains we vg jen offer. We have only a poraind ft a Din a limited amount of this The speaker was Charles Grafly, | the sculptor of Philadelphia He |continued with a smile “Wh t you have your! ¢ 1 out of that block of » young sculptor asked ANOTHER STEP in progressivism by China! She's gone to Jalling| her legisiators. | ts or Draperies until if e - brick store occupies the intersection of Fifth Ave. and Virginia Street. Less than five minutes walk THERE ARE nine pebbles on the courthouse beach today. tatue cary mart EVIDENTLY ASSISTANT DISTRICT ATTORNEY SULLIVAN be- Neves In the sort of direct action that made John L. famous. there until I got through fishing National Food Magazine stock. It will sell quick- from any retail center, The Best Food-Drink Lunch at Fountaing such as Pike and Second, Pike and Third, Fourth and Westlake, Public Market or Westlake Market ly, so be on hand early tomorrow morning. Sale In Editor's ends when stock is ex- hausted. None of these advertised goods shipped ¢ : A MOVABLE FEAST. | Mail A westerner attending a Rhode ambake for the first time 5 Regarding Judge Humphries. Je of Seattle. ORIGINAL HOR | K p S ot quite #0 comfortable as he had | junction ba served on Judge Hum GENUINE L gor, hare eh alt Senator to much? ‘People ae red of hi , aware that he was a i ee or (the game did in Indiana, The comparison é malted grain, in 6 know when te atop he makes between people and an eee terditend or i she Ca y ned 1 9 ge ee oe AaaIL feeponiad stor, | malls shows Sothien Ge. ae Blocks East of Two Blocks North and Teeth aotpldins thane borty, _ Keep it on your sideboard at home “'\" 5 eee my rule is thin—i A TAXPAYER Moore Theatre West of Westlake Market ent apeeif st.the start « nonsense, We don't care what he | Mevigrates uring meters ad the aged. “A quick Linch cetoared im a minute {55 jicion frow "the. table GH) Dhuce ae Oreaininad GeMhk aay, LOCATION—FIFTH AVENUE AND VIRGINIA STREET << | f |