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ES PLACED ON ICY STREETS » firm foothold on the = toy b 1 Quapoeed women lio Me vm stera are very atateful, end of them fatal, would result te the street, | thetr horses, They auggest that edt abow bia ktad aot be accepted as an ex wafertunate I ample in all other parts of the elty . . | the amendment of charters of cities of the firet class eo that the pension | plan may be adopted is] Sergeant DP. D, MePhea, of the! apokane pollee force, Was In Seattle for several days advising with} Detective Sergeant Chartes Ten-/ } nant in reward to the pension mat- ter We are going to ask the heats lature to pase a law so that cittes — es wilt be he in the} ; . he first class may amend thelr Taptist Friday night} ‘ “ag a scheme | CMarter to adopt the pollee penate ‘sideration | #4.” sald Sergeant MePhee, “W montha, but} ¥&Pt Penslons for pollee after they at bane! Nothing | 88 years of age and have served been dono as yet. An} ** yeare on the force, early next week & Hpecia! committee for the new edt FUND FOR SUITS fe to be estadtished dy Wappensiein tor the whom law- T0 CONSIDER IDAHO CASE (Scripps Telegraph Service.) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. Jan. 16 tt te announced that the miners deh agains! t from time to time, femates wilt meet tonight to consider #38 from F. W. Raker, | the onses of Moyer, Haywood and Hartware company, | Pettibone, now tn jail in Maho ite the chief today to be ‘charged with the murder of ex-Gov gees fit for the aid of Steunendberg, The convention was fi@etermined bim upon ]enthused at the announcement, sald Chief Wap- officers have had | see in em as our Ri good con- bie to start FIVE KILLED IN EXPLOSION {Serippe Telegraph Service.) MORRISTOWN, Pa. Jan. 16 Five trainsmen were killed in an explosion of 4 locomotive boller at Ridgepert today. Low water wae the cause, Engineer Manck mm cuwlously escaped. He refusce discuss the explosion, fund te tr advica “eZ this letter Mr fulate you upon the your men and the in which the de- Being conducted under LOWE IN SEATTLE. tt Yukoner, Robert Horse, te tm the enthusiastic over the by the southern see- @ territory, particutarty tn mines sround White theo mys Yukon part before her in the Mr. Lowe will prob- pext governor of the to orernee 8 GIVEN STELLE'S WIDOW. The United Statee Immigration Service Beneficial association has delivered to the widew of W. Ik Ee- telie the sum of $407 as life insur- ance Mr. Estelle was formerty In apector-in-charge of the tmmigra- tion service of thin district. The beneficial uasoctation ts composed of the members of the immigration \ service, and om the death of a mem | ber every one i assesned #1, + TURE AMIT PENSIONS. Gepartments of Spo- | Beattie have dropped the the legislature for a police system. which the appointment of po- im all cithes of te the governor, and legisiatere to permit | eaatannans INTEND TO OPEN ALASKA The Hubbard-Elliott Copper Min jing and Developtag company of Chi jeago haa, ready for shipment to {Dryer Bay, Alaska, a complete out hitt for a S00-ton-perday copper min ing outfit, The material is to be ahipped on the steamers Jeanie and Portland on their next tripe. Th company tntends installing a plant on Knight island tn Prince William MINE. |, Dut many are coming ntage of the big reduc and coal stoves, now Lendon's, 1111 Second parlor wood stoves, oF: | sound fm nickel, cast top and arade, special at/ 18 YOUR MONEY WORKING grade goes at $8.98, For your best Interests and are) atade delivered at)you satisfied with the income?! $15.56 coal stoves, fully) Members of the German Sovings, Blast Resolute Unt-| Bufiding and Loan Association are Special at 94160. all delighted with the returns made Hot Bladt Reso by this concern last year. Small These Resolute | expenses, conservative investments ate fuel than other/and managed by experienced men saliefietory | makes this a good place to invest Den. fresco while these your capital. Chas Oxner, seer ¥. 416 Bailey bidg. ove ES. Seon eenenneipe An extra pair of Warm Blank- ets won't come amiss these cold nights. Here are some—big fluf- fy fellows, full of coziness and comfort—priced low enough to be deserving of the adjective: “bargain.” $3.65 Instead of $4.50—Extra i heavy wool mixed Blankets, light tan color with fancy bor- der. Size 64x74 in $3.80 Instead of $5.00—~Tan or gray wool Blankets, have fan- cy border; weight 5 pounds; measure 65x75 in. $1.55 Instead of $2.25—Cotton Blankets, white with fancy border; splendid weight; ex- ceptional value; full 11-4 size : This Morris Chair Made of solid oak in red and golden exactly as iflus- square true tock Mission The feversible cush rer | og) with covered —— Velour in i al Attractive de a nes THE 8F [A DAILY LETTER FROM JAIL ¥. STAR WEDNESDAY. AN. 1 we TO HIS LITTLE INVALID WIFE A PATHETIC CHAPTER IN TH WOOD, OF THE W © LIFE OF SECRETARY HAY- TERN F EDERATION OF LABOR, WHO IS CHARGED WITH COMPLICITY IN THE MURDER OF EX-GOV- ERNOR STEUNENBERG, OF | DAHO—CARRIED HER IN HId ARMS IN HER DAILY OUTINGS FOR FREGH AIR, ttle Star Special Service. NVER, Jan. O—There ts a chapter In the life of William D. Haywood, leader of the Western Federation of Miners and acous acconplice in the assassination former Gov, Steunenberg, of Idaho, now in jatl at Hole, Idaho, await {ng trial, not generally known, The story this chapter tells places the | one accused and ¢ red as an anarchiat in the true leht of faith ful and home-Joving father and hue band. Ta & modest Hitle cottage in this} city patiently site an Invalid wife, and two young daughters, awaiting the time they hope for when how band and father shall return to @reet them. It was this home Hay wood left the day in February, 1905, when he was arrested adn rushed away to Idaho spectal train goodby by He bade his family that eventful morning and has not seon them since. Mrs. Haywood has been an tnval fd eight years. She wax thrown from a horse on her parents’ ranch in Nevada when 18 yours of age. She sustained an injury to the apine, but recovered, After marr mo, a A remult of this injury, paralyals affected her lower body In all these eight years she haw been unable to stand and has lived most of the time in an invalld’s chair, The comfort of herself and wughters is looked after by the miners’ federation Mrs, Haywood was born tn Steu benville, O, the daughter of Mr. and Mra, W. H. Minor, members of prominent Methodist families, Her parents moved to Nevada, where the father still hae a large cattle ranch at Winnemucca, and in which state he has held important politic al positions Haywood met Miss Minor when her father secretary of state of Nevada and he was a young and atrugiing mining prospector Sho says his honest and big heart i waye drew her to him. They were marrie 4 and set out for the THE MOUNTAINGIDE HOME WHERE HAYWOOD SOUGHT TO BRING BACK HIG WIFE’ HEALTH. EAST INDIAN WARRIORS AS A “YELLOW PERIL” IN FAR EAST STALWART BROWN MEN FROM PUNJAB POUR INTO GRIT- 18H COLUMBIA VIA THE PA- CIFIC—JOURNALIST OF THEIR RACE DEFENDS THE INVA- SION AS A WHOLESOME ONE —PREDICTS THE NEWCOM- ERS WILL PROVE VALUABLE CITIZENS. BY GAINT N. SING, EAST INDI- AN JOURNALIST. Service.) ow of the mineral and Materlal wealth of the/ richest and most thinly settled arcu of Canada? Attempta have been persiaientiy made to ascribe this the amgressive but sccret advertie- ing done by the transportation « panies and by large corporations thie country, The writer re toured every country In the far « wherefrom these bnat te arrive directly into British Columbia, and he ts in a position to contradiet thie statement Rome @ischarged soldiers learned from thelr Buropesn mifitary offi+ cere that, the proepects of nettiers in the Canadian wost were very al+ turing. Letters from this advance guard) brought thelr — relations, friends and acquatntances to Britian Cotumbta. Their Numbers, According to the beat figures avaliable, the number of the Kast | indian tmmigrants now im British smbia is ewe than 2.560 nety~ | nine per cent of these men are the Punjab or the contiguous prov @ of the northwest frontier v.] enty per cent of the tn | m two neighborin | Four hundred immigrants who re+ cently came to Vancouver, B.C, by! the Canadian Pacific ratiway steam. | ship Tartar were all from ten vil- wen of these two districts, and al- most every one of them either had | relations of friends in the province | or w pcompanying those whose relatives of friends were already in British Columbia. The ciannish | tendencies of there tmmigrants mast not be lost sight of in this connection. Classes ond Re \ In the Punjab and northwest) frontier provinces the tnatitutions! Of caste and creed are freer than in the other parts of India, The tmmt rants her Sikhs or Moham- medans, with « few Hindoos. Sikh- jam, Mohammedaniam and Hindu- iam are three distinct Indian relt fons. Quite @ large percentage of these men have held positions tn the army and constabulary; and an other large section having worked as “watch men” In the far eastern | countries, Virility and Elasticity. All of these men are supple ana] strong, tall and muscular, eplendid looking and husky. They come from those @atricte of the Punjab which are cold in winter and have @ regular rainy season in addition. Besides, they belong to those races of India who possess marvelous “vi- rility;” who have fought for the British empire in the trying sum-~ ‘seb bsaodaeanese A NEW “VEL British Cole ane, who, Vancouver and i by Bast tev cannot be ker Be of India, coming inte the threaten to be » inewe tn Up tn Briti« that agitation inet political issue in tee th A# & spokesman for this ¢ much travele * * . *. . * * *. * * * . * . . * * *. * *. * . CREAR EERE mers of Somaliland and the rigorous colds of China and | Thibet, They have a wonderful limated. faculty of getting ac Will Not Cheapen Labor, The average workingman = in British Columbia has been duped by wrong staternents and led to oppose people who not only belong to the same race, but are of the same origin. If the laboriter in America claim to be consistent, their attitude toward the Indian tmmi- grants ought to be Con ear with aympathy and not malice India over 60,900,000 people live In | Thene mon) never-ending famine, from the Punjab who are now here in Etritieh Columbia have worked at starvation wages and thelr bitter experience in life has engendered the most implacable hatred for cheapening rates of labor, Almost every day papers in British Colum bia print news that these #o-called Hindus refuse to work at low rates and demand the wages of the so enlled white man. Under these cir cumstances the labor people injure their own cause by cireuiating un GREEN B. MORRIS IS OUT OF LUCK BY FRED J. HEWITT le Gtar Special Service.) FRAD ICISCO, Jan. i some of the coming sfrom American Pacif te mbia, however their numbers are so great them has Wiedine bitter and they are « At home they work fo? 30 cents « day, and there ace to white labe 08 Of: ortentais, Raint and cultured young @inet been found by this newspaper and he has written « quite logical explanation of thelr presence upog th ontinent, and couples with i an appeal for s “square deal! ie hie opinion the H Sikhe and Mohammedans who are goming to Britteh Columbia form ne economic menace, which If Geubdtiess correct as long as thelr nu re are no larger than ba ae they are. Other re- porta, which, however, may be pasSldad, Indicate that Vancou- Vor is becoming overrun with these aliens, ‘Meat Prices Mae. WAYWooD AND HEAR ACCUSED HUBS! rieh mineral felis ot Tdahe, “At Sliver City, Haywood established a wt ite home, He continued work a# prospector and miner and prospered moderately Hix ability ae a leader of men was recognized and he was soon at the head of the miners’ labor un fon, Then he felt that he needed more education for the work befo him and hie wife, better schools began to him what she ber self had learned, when the blow to her health came. Mrs. Haywood tells that when the husband came home from bis toll AND, a dafly letter to the wife. a Haywood is continuing his studies, and the books he most closely usee are law books and text books af history and literature Mra. Haywood will not be able to attend the trial of her husband arly In the new year, and her daughters must be with tend her, So her husband her to at must .|tace court and accusers alone the “horrid horse, wtablemate, the win Judge Morrow, the ner, and Btrathmeath, Buburb Jun » win ¢ Charm each day he attended to the work| plon a# a 2-year-old and Americar of the home and cared for the then! Derby winner at 3, which took little tots. Thin done he would| dewn $17,062 in stakes and purses take his wife in his powerful arme| #4 won tn all 68 races and-—-well and walk about the mountainside ;on¢ could go on and on with Green with her, carrying her all the time, | #'* @reat horses that «tartied the for frewh air, hoping thereby that | Mast her health might be restored, The} Me Imported Star Ruby from wife was assured of her daily out-| Hpatand, and in Caltfe nrg ne the ombrero ing through the efforts of the and faithful husband After dark, night school of the community ‘This routine continued th yoare until the family moved to this city, | im 1991, where Haywood came t take the seeretaryship of the min ere ration, lh the jail cell in Idaho comes =~ eee ceRahaReaaae LOW PERIL.” ~ mbla have of recent years been the Bn of them h pow t out, Many are also pomst states, where they & few. goarn a N Indian journatint Sing, « has * * * * * *. . * * * * * + * * * * *. * * . * * * ‘Tors on Juet and malicious statements as to the worthlessness of these tmii- a Despite Opposition. Without in any manner dis- counting the oppe n of a fection pf British Columbians, in the ew timation of the writer of there lines there le no dang of the immigrants proving them ea failure, It ts merely @ question of time when given fair square play, they | wilt extablieh a nan for themselves in British Columbia, as they have Gone in other countries. The ratl ’ da, the fruit ranch farms, | inilisyete., offer work to the tmrmt | grants which they will soon prove tovthe! world they can do efficiently wottah or child in the United Stat Beatwar a pion pal old forty~r er in California That Please et Third of beet ‘orter House of Boot and ot R who has the remotest Idea of what | & hagpe race Is who has not heard of Greely & Morris Hg..wan born tn Minstasipp! «0 many years ago that he himeeit HWE Thrgotten the exact date ind |” Thornton stakes in 1894. linywood attended a ° 1 $30,000 fer him and won the alifornia and Buffalo Derbles. He developed Gold Rose, a sensational me ner at Ascot Park and New Orleans. Rut new all he has te a rakieh lot of selling platers at Emeryviil His associates on the turf hope | that Morris will get together an _lother formidable string before he pute over his final winner. There i# not @ lover of the thor oughbred in Amerten who does not CHIEF OF POLICE STRUCTIONS TO 166UE6 MEDICINE CONTAINING GC Chief of Police day issued an order stores to stop the sale of medicines which contain opium, ¢o » or morphine, out a physician's prescription “It is in the use of these m cines,” said the chief, “that * acquire the drug he in an ordinance covering , and I whall enforee it.” to all dru etthe with vy's Catarrh Cure, contains a good percentage of cx caine, and for which the dr way they bave had an immenne mand since the drug crusade By this last order, Chief Wappen. | SALE OF DOPE PATE MEDICINE STOPPED ° IN ont THE DRUG) The work BTORES TO STOP BELLING) under CAINE, OPIUM OR MORPHINE Wappenstein to patent Relate police started the | ¢ sale of drugs in the city has been a tremendous ng owing to the number of 1 ends and dives, and wheth it the evil has been stamped ine to be seen. At lonst, ' won dealt vere blow, and né ition of incurable “dop y be expected at any time imber of prominent phys when interviewed this morn chief's last order, gave approval | r}etan hing on the jthelr hearty ITAURI IN PORT. The German steamer Itaurt of the | Kosmos line arrived in port this “laftornoon at 1:30 from Hamburg |with a general cargo. The mani *\ fest shows that she brought ore *\from Valparaiso for Tacoma, and wine, glass, Naxx and general mer andise for Seattle Captain Knudson reports that the trip was uneventful and that no bad weather ein ha ew de " rtein has, in a@ few days, put an ¢f- | way encountered on the trip around fectual cheek, if not stop, to the Hore Tea and coffee are quite as im portant as some important foods» Sehilling’s Best Women’s Tailored Suits fer excellent values at all times with bim luck in the sundown of his brilliant life. ‘LICENSED TO WED owing today Wychoft-McKay-—Lather J. Wy hoff, Beattie, to Jane Lee MeKay siailags Hoennes | Keattle Kilnefetter-Taylor — George M Kitnefeiter, 22, Green Lake, to Min nie N. Taylor, 18, Riverton. Wike-Glasc Norman a Wike, Seattle, to Gertrude I. Glas cock, Beattio. Mortell-Glascock—Thomaa Jamen Mortell, Jr, Beattie, to Josephine H Ciancock, Seattle Blaine-Atwood Blaine. Frederick H 34, Beattle, to Luella At tie. y~—Napoleon to Mary Moon wngguest-—Herbert B Seattle, to Anne L. Young . Seattle Record of Births. lowing births were regi» day The f tered to Dayle—At $16 Minor av, N., Jas wary 5, to wife of Charles C. Davis. @ daughter Bnow—At 1276 16th av, N, Jan wary 13, to wife of A. G. Snow, a fon. McDonaldAt 1348 Weller at January 18, to wife.of J. R. Me Donald, a son. Record of Deaths. Deaths were registered today as lows Rangva—Marta Rangva, 16, Jan Kerre 19, Jan Seattle ¢ hospital RRR RHE AE 4 THE FRONT ; tee eae eetnd Steamer Californian left this morning for Tacoma, where she will complete loading her cargo. Steamer Rainier arrived this af ternoon from San Francisco with a cargo of genera! merchandise. She will load lumber for San Francisco on her return trip. Steamer Saratoga, of the North western Steamship company, left this afternoon at 1 o'clock for Val dea and Seward with a large list of passengers and a cargo of general freight. A number of the passen gers are booked through to Fair oe Your grocer returns your money if you don’t like Schbilling’s B tea and coffee. Boys’ Clothing have placed on ryeia! male. Smt | Department Everything reduced, ineluding Bpectal prices are | boys’ and children’s hata, caps | and furnishings. | 81240 814.60 | Also spectal prices on youths’ 816-40 819.80 high-grade clothing. savings are very im- Mra. A. D. Kenting, importer | ,, and designer of millinery, is now | POTtant. It will certainly pay ated on the second floor of | YOu to visit thie department be- store, j pnt purchasing where. J. REDELSHEIMER. & CO. Too busy to write you can save money by Everything in the Store Reduced in Price for This Week Only Reduced banks. ———— 20¢c Western Cap Manties ibe. at a r He ‘has raced on every track of importance in Amert He has won miil in pursen | ang wagers. What is more, he has OTUA rid of it all, just about MMhas been a jockey, a trainer e-driver and an owner rr. boy he was a sensational Mer ot “quarter horser jn the trotting game he was a Hiant driver * ® gambler he has always cut a mpectacular flmure There was Gold Bug, a hero of the late 70's, that cleared up every | thing in the South and Middle Went. It was Green B. Morria, if you remember, who owned him Then, there wan Apollo, with Derby at Lou Drake f the Spinnings. e Time By the Forelock Before your valuable pepere are lost by fire or burglary place them in the safe deposit vaults of Wm. D Perkins & ©o,, bankers, in the Alas ka building. Boxes $4.00 per year “| ehould think lil of any man who did not wish to leave hie chil dren a little better oft materially than him self.” Theodore Roosevelt In tence, who cquiring it is A compe the man and who auce ope ac count today Bf SHORPGCK, tree 1 P HARTMAN. \-Pree ALEX MYRRS. LY. & BMITHL. Cashion tention to them. fille $5.75. Screen with Weatherec background of green bu special price $15.00. Screens with Oak fram in all colors—regular pric Sereens with Oak fra denim—regular price $5.5 Regular $18.50 9x12 $12.95. Regular 50 ox12 V Above prices for Wedn McCarthy’s TaKing Inventory This Week Regular $9.50 Weathered Oak Screen, with hand- colored burnt wood panels, for $4.75. Handsome Screen with Weathered Oak frame and with green burlap—regular $10.00 Screen for —_——— 2—RUG SPECIALS=2 big ads. All the same, doing your trading here. Prices on SCREE This is a new line of Screens which we are selling for less than the regular price in order to call your at- 1 Oak frame, latticed over a rlap—regular price $22.50— and filled with silkoline special price O5¢. mes and filled with green special price $3.75. 1€s8 ¢ $1.50 o Tapestry Brussels Rugs for Ivet R elvet I for $19.00. nxesday and Thursday only. ugs ] | | | | |