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cae # yf VOL. 9. NO, 136. caet might Which will make | ee ee Management Causes Conductor to Tell <**""**"** fs . . ARING, ‘* * Bugge to Cross Trestle—She Is Struck + * * Clearings * . : | Maimed By Second Car. it Balances 114,707.78 © - * management and jselves, With her foot eauwht be | Clenringn today § ei8,ser.00'e of the oper. |OWeon the tes Mina Bagge wat! ® Balances ., 7 eee oe Goattio |WAADIC to move atid the heavy cat) y arvana u of te mea lerashed over her leg. Porttand. * Fewaited. ia ae Stop Flow of Blood. Yearingn today. ..§ 688,098.00 ® *. * * nearly resulted in a p being Killed and with her brot Ly & party of friends, | to Ballard. The car S the south end of the trestle. ing to & the bursting of a and the passengers é by the conductor Se would have to walk across ra to another oar, or to Seattle and would over the Ballard 4 | Across Trestle. yy of the vweik across the p and her broth first to f : r the condw tly ahead of the a Ballard Reach car, Seattle, started across from the other side at of speed. Mr. Bugge who were walking and were forced to dark | LAST EDITION Bugge 4 cripple for /gers on the car manaked to stop passengers | of girl, made every | Miract the attention of |ductor T. 8. Shirley were arrested ‘the trestic to saye them- [but released without being booked “SAY THAT MRS.: ° WAL 1S CRIPPLED BY . _ STREET CAR ACCIDENT rv ! wan * *. * wc Tearing up an umbrella passen- bl Balances 82,697.00 * the flow of blood and the Injured oe ee ee | woman Was taken back to Hallard, where Dr. 8. Emery found it necessary to amputate the leg just below the knee, Later she was re moved to the Seattle General how pital, where she is reported to be resting easy today Pr ogers on the car which ran over the Woman state that there wero no lights on the trestle and that ROB SALOON AT O'BRIEN Burgiars last night robbed a aa loon at O'Brien on the interurban it was so dark It was necessary to|!ine owned by James Hogan and send to one of the mills for a lan |t0ok everything of vatue tt c¢ tern before light could be seeured | talned After leaving Hogan's © the burglara attempted to enter another saloon nearby, but were frightened away by the bark ing of a dog A telephe to enable those who were working over the Injured woman to see in thelr efforta to stop the flow of blood. Told to Walk Across. acoount of the rob- bery was received by Sheriff Smith Despite the statement given out /inig morning and Deputy Sheriff by Superintendent Kempster, (™ | Loighton waa sent to Investigate, mediately following the ident. | ‘The exact loss as a result of the that no blame could be attached to | the employes of the company, a} gumber of the passengers stated this morning that they were fn structed to walk across the trestle to transfer. Motorman J. A. Willard and Com robbery is not known, but @ od siderable amount of ih wae ta | ken, well as the choicest liquors and cigars in stock The burglars gained entrance by boring a hole through the door and then twisting off the lock from the | Inatde. ee ee F ee and taken to police headquarters MAN AND WIFE DIE. (By United Preas) ANGE! * LOS ELES, Nov. 26 ® After 64 years of married life, } ® Stephen Strange and his wife ® died within four hours of each ‘ * other at thelr Redondo home United Press.) of the letters, Dr, Barton testified! w Sunday. At 12 o'clock Mra. GTON, Nov. 25.-Dr, | that the absorption of septic poleon | ® Strange died suddenly of heart this city, the first | affects particularly the mental com-|® failure and at 4 o'clock Mr, the defense in the trial dition of those predisposed to im) ® Strange died of physteal ox Bradiey, was called | sanity, In the evidence of the de) ® haustion due to old age. He ® when the case was PBeering on insanity, fe fall and ending with the 35 years old,” road struck a severe blo confining her to bed B wecks and who suffered ches antil she was 17 Her grandfather on the the maternal side also for Insanity. ping the defendant the fofluence relationa and of jieg criminal opera. defendant and her Bappiness to despair appeared hopeful 7 the courtroom, aM traces of suffering Teading of the hypo scraps of paper defendant's room in betel. were read to the as follows from Annie mother PPeposed installation of bil Rome of the local Young Christian Ava on, at Madison, bas aroused on of the Baptist min oiie city, and they have ap the war club the talkedof pleasure the installation of Of the cue ae unbefitting Organizat! such as C A. the Baptist At the reg night held this at Me Baptist ehurcis 1 unan rporation w fesldents as Purpose of , County f« oat vice Washing: when has the © first board m BY. Cot! 5 ® J. Biliott, w Thaar Li M White, ©. L. Parish. 8 im and A KR. Ste aft ready f * capita 4 divide De eh. No 4 et - but When there a etings = wi) 1 & reduction DN QUESTION IS ition to Mewented ary Me inevance of the morning and the task | the septic poisoning with which the |» to him the 15,000 word defendant was affected as a result |» i question was at once of the operations performed upon question was a full sum: her by Brown events brought out inthe prosecution fought beginning with the | duction of Barton's statement, but the | were overruled. |that his experience had proved to eusume the case Of Ai nim that frequent criminal opers- . “who, at the age of | (netical question was then read. was insane at times.) These |' be wrong.” Adams, | Preserve | said that Mra. Bradley was on of the reading | ity ISTERS DON'T WART WE GAMES AT Y.M.C.A tables in the magnifi- j p STILL UNSETTLED rary yas CLOSE CALL fonse great strees was placed upon! ® was 76 years of age, while his # wife was 73. * eee ee eee eer rere The attorneys for . . the latro SAY! NOW THIS IS GOING SOME (By United Press.) WALLA WALLA, Wash, Nov, 25 The detendant turned seariet and pr Riese the hung her head when parts of the| Walla Meat aud Gold Storage com. question recalled the sordid de-|nany entered into a suicide compact tails of her life. Experts Evans and and smothered themscives to death Hit! of the state, took notes while | in the corrals west of this city. Two the question was being read. they | nousand head had been broaght ta being unfamiliar with the teeth | trom the range preparatory to feed: mony. ling and slaughtering before mid The reading of the question was /night the whole flock stampeded to Continuing, Dr. Barton testified tions caused insanity. The hypo that part of the only two-thirds finished when court |one corner of the corral where 165 adjourned at 12:30 o'clock. When the afternoon session was opened the reading of the question | was resumed with Dr. Barton on the stand. At its conclusion, the | witness’ answer to the question (By United Prees.) was: “Assuming the facts as stat-| NEW YORK, Nov. 25.-—-Andrew ed, the patient did not understand | Carnegie ts three score and ten to- the nature of her act. She could | day and messages of congratulation not distinguish right from wrong, | from all parte of the world are be and she was incapable of control | {ng received by the steel king Mr ling her act, even if she knew It| Carnegie, who is enjoying excellent jhealth, is spending the day quietly On crossexaminatnon Dr. Barton gakeeeakeaeeeene suffer ing from puerperal or toxic insap jof them died. IE 1S 70 TODAY ALASKA GOLD COMING. (By United Press.) VALDEZ, Alaska, Nov. 25.— Dan Kennedy, the freighter, has arrived with $1,200,000 in dust from Fairbanks, of which $750,000 was shipped by the Fairbanks Banking company. and the remainder by the First ® National bank. An armed & guard accompanied the treas # * a eeeeeeee eeeeeeeeeteneeene imously to go on record as against any such move on the part of the M. C. A. and to take the mat ter_up with the ot organization Many Christian workers, who are now lending their strength to the upbuilding of the Y. M. ©. A, will withdraw ff billiards and pool are tolerated there,” said Rev. Jas Cairns, when seen after the meet: | ing this morning. “This I know to be a fact | The Baptist ministers also voted are. The gold is consigned to Seattle. directors the > ee ONE ON THE MINISTER (By United Press.) PORTLAND, Ore. nv While preaching on the subject The Pressing Need in Amert the residence of Pastor W. H to ask the prosecuting attorney to) Hoppe of this city was entered last close the theaters on Sunday, 44 | night and looted of solid «liverware. provided by the state law This ie the fourth time in fou - =\yeara that Rev. Hoppe's residence RUBY WESTBERG DIES. = been sacked by burglars. The full share of sorrows has Westberg, widow of the man who was killed Se aber 11 last, by a street car on Second ay., and who arrived last night from San Bernar-| dino, Cal, with the body of her lit ie daughter, Ruby Westberg, a vic tim of tubereulosia, death having overtaken her in that city 0 vember 19 TO ARRESTS (By United Press.) BERLIN, Nov. 26.—-A quantity of explosives sufficient to blow up hait of Bertin. home of Herr Kerefin, 9 Socialist | member of the efty council. Kerefin BANK OFFICIALS and three Russians were arrested | PORTLAND MILLS SHUT DOWN, UNDER ARREST (By United Press.) PORTLAND, Nov The (By United Press.) ern & Western Lumber Milling NEW YORK, Nov, 26.——James J.| company, the Leadbetter Lumber assistant casbier of the | company and the Inman & Paulsen sterborough bank, James W. Daley,| Lumber company closed down tem the paying teller of the same instl | porartly last week for repatr At tution, and Alfred Burrows, of 4| the same time a large nur mining company, were arrested to- | logging camps in the vicinity day in connection with the charge | Helens also. ste work «ing a $2,900 check on which | result 6,000 unemployed lumbermen ids were withdrawn from the In-|and mill employes are in Portland this week, looking for work it not known just whe mille will r exume work - | BUILDINGS TO BE BURNED. KRASNO YARK, R t has been learné at Se Sanitary Inspector Lampman of . why ene od & the board of he th Chief at Chita Ya, A switeh |H. W. Bringhurst t vv t mistake t wa several building at f n time to prevent the |Summit av. and He ' ' hi h | will be ed CA UME f th t t cars anilary charac r was found today in the| THE SEATTLE STAR - SEATTLE, WASH.,, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1907, CRAZY OVER MURDER a (By United Press.) BUTTER CRENK, Cal, Nov, 26. It te now feared that Blanche Ker foot, the girl who is believed va | to murd@r his former chum, Frank Bollows, Wil lose her mind, Byer jalnce she ggve her deposition to jAvsietant Dfstriet Attorney Phil | |Carey whe has been hysterical and any reference to Kleinschmidt or Nellowa drives her frantic. Bhe fs PICKING RIEL to puncture the direct primary law pasved by the last legislature, whieb i* @ part of the Ankeny cam: paign, the direct primary opponer elaim to have found the real “joke | in the bill at last. It was noticeable during the legislature that all of | the old time Ankeny supporters tn the senate were opposed to the pai |ame ef the primary taw, but feared | tO make their opposition public and | many attempts were made to have) the bill passed in such ahape an to} be worthless, but true advec of | the measure watehed every mov and attempts to bloek the law were defeated, Picking Flawe. | Falling to defeat the law in the| logisiature, and recoguizing the tn- | possibility of reelecting Ankeny / wader the direct primary system, Persistent campaign has been made | to find flaws in the law. The latest | ts the claim that section $0, which requires candidates for offiee to file awort itemized statements of thetr! election expenses ts defective, The portion of the section referred to in the printed bill reads as follows: | very candidate for nomination | * * o * * * *. * * * * * * a! i Jerry Derrigan, an engineer, w | killed and two men were injured tn @n Accident which ccourred about ‘@elock this morning at Maple Val. | i ley, while the members of a com struction crew were engaged th pelring & washout on the line the Columbia & Puget Sound raft remd A heavy stay chain, fastened to a derrick suddenly wwinging through ing the derrick, which erashed onto and overturned two care standing) od stktpfive bead on the track, Insthntly killing Der (it hae een decided that no inquest about the person to the Walla rigan, and injuring David Watkins, wi be necessary, By United Press.) | BAN ANCISCO, Nov, 25-—/ Swept from the deck of the steam- ship President by « huge wave into / | the stormy sea and drowned was | ing to their home tn Cailfornia after | the fate of three litte girls. The | visiting with the family of W. Cran |have driven Harrq G, Kleinschmidt | eve of her marriage to him t brok Dis FLAWS IN » if no une, really, of |® the word ‘worst, but wo will | ® foel the effects of the money |® weare for some time The Peenteeaes = = ‘uty l& pi J 2 t » nM Following ont # perstatent plan j under the terms of this act, or any|% Panic was the rewult of many ENGINEER AND TWO HURT CHILDREN SWEPT | TO WATERY GRAVES constantly under the care of a doo tor and ne one but her elatives is permitied to see her. Miss Kerfoot claims that Klein webinidt tried to poison ger on the the The Hel Town Masschinidt {0 6 fesious |X TRAN RRA R AH RD rae | to have murdered Bel | » lows dno night last woek All werd) students at the Califér nia tnprergity. - | | THE | JOHN D, SAYS THE WORST 16 NOW OVER. (By United Pr * * * »* *. NEW YORK, Nov, 25.--John * * - * D. Rockefeller, in discussing the financial situation, says that the worst Is over amendment thereto, shall, not leer than ten days after the day of hold * ing the election at which he tw a), to a bead at one tim 1 hay ho criticlam to make of Presi dent Roosevelt. He was actu SSeS ESE SRR RS candidate,” ete i ap ve or ¥e words “not less than ten|* ated by the best motives. days” are heralded as the real joker | in the bill, AR tk An Apparent Error. This is on ite face an apparent error, either in copying or typo graphically. It should, of course, ‘ead “not more than ten days.” The thoroughly argued, both in committee and on the floor of the senate, and the intent of the legislature was plain. Candidates STEAMERS IN A COLLISION (By United Press.) foF office under elections held since| PORTLAND, Ore, Nov. 26.--The ‘the jaw became effective have com-| Standard Ol] steamer Ascunsion, plied with this section as it was in-|from San Francisco, crashed into tended to be passed by the legisla | the little river steamer T. D. Jones ture, filing statements of expenses | last night sixty miles west of here within ten days from the day of|in the Columbia river and nearly the holding of the election junk her, Bight of the Jones’ crew The pection of the primary law climbed on board the Ascunsion. ¥ prohibits publishers of |The three remaining stayed on ne Ts from accepting payment) board the sinking vessel and from? cnudidates for office, except! beached it in the low water near for \patd = advertisement which | shore. om be #o labeled, was opposed | —_— by Pome of the newspapers tha The Asctunsion was enroute to Se have since taken a delight in try-jattle at the time with a cargo of oll ing fo puncture the law for this port. KILLED FIENDISH MURDER (By United Press.) REDDI Nov. 26.—As fiendish a murder as was ever com | mitted in Shasta county was uncov Jered at dusk last evening when Car jroll Glazier, who had been hunting in the outskirts of Redding, found the bedy of .a man who had been in charge of the train, beaten upon the head with a club Andrews, bridge carpen- until hin skull was crushed, and sad'ts i 2 | tee. The two latter are not seri/then a bandherebief bad been |in front of Swift's pharmacy, at twheted abo hile neck with a «tick in the manner of @ garrote, The body had been left by the camp fire bedy of the dead man has brought to the city and now ONE CENT THE WEATHER FORECAST—RAIN NIGHT AND TUESDA®. ro. MILK TRUST ROBS PUBLIC . ~ OF $300,000 A YEAR Combine’s Raise. of Twe Cents ‘ Quart Adds That Sum to Profits of the Members of the Combine. in effect by the n the neighborhood the people of Seat- in prices in milk put of this ar torted fr Through the raise }milk combine on October 1 of $300,000 annually jtle at the most conser can be ¢ ative estimate | This is the amount of additional profit which the mil dealers can divide as the result of their criminal conspiracy, unless the law steps in and forces the resumption of free com petition in the milk busine The larger port from the pockets of the poor pe $300,000 on of thi be drawn directly How Profit Is Secured. The estimate of $300,000 additional profit is arrived at as | follow | Estimating conservatively there e 40,000 families in | Seattle, each family being a milk cor The daily amount of milk consumed r 6 from one pint according to the size of the family fi one quart per day to each family is a conservative estimate of the k consumption. On | this basis, the family consumption wil regate 40,000 quarts per day | } Over $5,000 a Week. ‘The raise in price is 2 cents per quart when sold by the quart, and approximately 444 cents per quart when sold by the pint. Figuring 2 cents per quart on a daily consumption of 40,000 quarts and the extortion figures $800 per day, $5,000 per week, and $291,200 per year Additional profit in the sale of milk at wholesale, together with the additional profit on the sale Ik by the pint, easily, brings the total in the neighborhood of $300,000. Not only does the increased price take this amount of money annually from the people of Seattle, but it decreases he consumption of a food rich in the qualities which sustain health and strength ae ie JOE GOT HIS TURKEY AND IT GOST ONLY $75 Joe's challenge to chase each other ‘around the block for the glory of gnawing on the drumsticks. Somewh near the first quarter Joe stub his toe, and to make up time attempted to cut through in front of the drug store. A lady Over the high hurdles, in the shape of weighing scales that stand Second ay, and Pike st, and jump- ing through the hoops, which hap- pened to be the largest piate-glase Ww. ‘* e | ” Wee taken to Providence hospital, | burned from the scalp. Young Gia. | horseman of the city, did a steeple Ae a ee ro Where tt.ds thought that he has sus |sier ran to town, half a mile, and °D8*¢ urday night for the love ver and caromed off, doing taineg a broken rib Watkins, informed the officers. The body Of ® turkey that not only proved dive thtough the window, diverting, bat extremely ex- amid a merry noise of jingling gave Way, | whoad iniuries are confined to a was found tn a secluded nook 300 **T the alr, overturn:| badly wrenched back, was nent to yards from the railroad and a mile Pensive bin whort on Beacon Hill Wentigation by the coroner, | After | north of the depot The find nothing ai would lead {to identification, The man was | dressed tn a new suit of clothes, He | was about 45 years old, slightly bald and wore & heavy brown mustache |The hands are not calloured, indi cating that he was not « working man (By United Press.) | BERLIN, Nov. 26. —Theodore coroner co Sehotte children wore recent arri- vals from Australia. Pioesie Burkman, with her moth- ev, Mre A. M. Kroyer, was return President reached here yesterday |@ali, at 671 Washington st, thie | Bertram, the celebrated opera sing | troas Seattle and the officers re jeity, Mie. Kroyer waa a sister of |@f, Committed suicide at Bayreuth jported the ead tragedy | little girls were Ritta Gchotte. aged [to A, Burkman, in this city. 12, Ada Schotte, aged 4, and Flossie became the wife of Mr. Kroy: | Buckman, aged 13 | The children were playing on the! deck last Friday afternoon while the | | Steamer was passing Graye Harbor, | At dinner time they could not be found. Then it was remembered that during the afternoon a huge wave struck the steamship and the sire were supposed to have been washed overboard. They evidently | | made ne outery as the jlookouts heard no calls for assistance, The PAPERS SERVED ON SAYS LABORERS WILL SOON B | Papers tn ® sult which will prob-, | ably be filed in the local courts to compel payment of umpald salaries” due to laborers on the Alaska Home railway, at Valder, have been serv} jed upon Henry D. Reynolds, pro-| moter of this andsother Alaska ltranspertation schemes, and the sult is now being held up pending & promise of the promoter te square the accounts. The papers were served upon Mr, Reynolds in Bow ton, according to Information whieh today reached Moncreiff Cameron, the attorney who is handling the cases. | In & letter recetved from Ernest J. Sanderson, the attorney wh made the service, Mr. Reynolds te -— a | . NEW YORK STOCK MARKET (By United Press.) NEW YORK, Nov. 25.—The open: | ing on stocks was slightly lower, | There was very poor showing of {commission house orders, especially for Monday morning, and the pro fessionals immediately took the short side. A formidable drive was centered on Missourt Pacific and this tasue lost 6 points Throughout the day a number of organized at tacks were made to extend the area of weakness, but the general lat held fairly stiff, losing from 1 to point After 1 o'clock the volume of trading decreased and the close was dull and practically at the low | (By Uni PRINCETO Nod rhe Nov condition ex-President who is suffering from hie old intest 1 today eland ah attac al trow Big Time for Haywood. YORK Nov a6. Labor inging & reception in The three [Mr, Crandall and was first married | He had been despondent since the |*ult for divorce in the superior | voree Later | death of his wife, who was drowned jon February 21 last in the wreck of the steamer Berlin off the Hook of tionally reised in Seattio and has a| Holland. Theodore Bertram’s most host of friends and acquaintances | *tccersful roles were Wagnerian here, fand he made his greatest repute “Fineste 414 not want to go back | on as Wotan. on the steamship,” said Mr. Cran- : dall, the uncle, in speaking today of the tragedy. “She seemed afraid something would happen. The gil} her mother to return on the traim, but for some reason passage was booked on the President.” ‘The heartbroken mother was p AGED WALKER ON HIS LAST LAP - (By United Press.) SOUTH BEND, Ind. Nov. 25.— | Raward Weston, the pedestrian lreached this city at 10:46 this morn ing. He leaves this afternoon on an ee PAID the last stretch of bis long walk j from Portiand, Me. to Chicago. uoted an saying that the »' The aged walker expects to beat Sapenten 4 rag § A position to pay tie old record by 66 hours pod yal Accounts within the | CRUISERS SIGHTED. The papers have been drawn up ted | tn the proposed suit, which ts to be| ee cee | WASHINGTON, Nov, 26.—The oe cae 5 gy cruisers Tennessee and Washing Reynolds, Willlam Eagan, and ali |‘, the advance guard of the bat partios unknown to the plaintiffs,|e#hip fleet, arrived off Punta who have subseribed for stock in| ATema®, Straits of Magellan, yes the Alaxke Home ratiway and have |'®'¢4y | More Trouble Is Brewing. CHICAGO, Nov Stuyvesant Fish's attorney denies Harahan's charges against the former prest dent of the Alton road. Legal ac tion against Harahan and others for libel is hinted at not paid in their subseriptions. The suits, which will be handled | by Attorney Cameron, are brought in the pame of Harry J. Ames, one of the laborers to whom all the acconyts have been assigned. The todiyidual claime average from §60 to bio. 25 ESC ve au ih, Se Westnet cget: FRENCH TROOPS SHELL VILLAGE too, of Miners, acquitted of the ation af ex-Governor Steunenberg of | thie we chagge of complicity in the assassin Waho. (By United Pre: ; Seca ORAN, Algeria, Nov, 26.—An . Arab village in the vicinity of Port | bo ae teense ee * | said has been shelled by French * STORM WARNING. | troops, 30 of the rebellious tribes * % {men being killed and a large num * theast storm warnings # | ber injured. The inhabitants are Rafe displayed. Storms ap- x | Meelng # preaching the Washington * & coast will cause high south & EAST MUST PAY UP # east winds, shifting to south. & # west this afternoon and to: # ———— * Aight * (By United Pre: * *| WASHINGTON, Nov, 25.—Sena RHA REAR AA RH tor Kittridge of South Dakota dis cussing the financial situation, sald |"Lt the east pays the west what it jenst has our crops and live stock | a oe and will not give ue a cent. What we really need is a more elastic (By United Press.) currency CHICAGO, Nov, 26.—In the John Ry Walsh trial today, sup) 1 sign DECISION HELD UP ere of notes for millions of dollar testined that they were unaware) SAN FRANCISCO, N that the “securities” existed until Judge Dunne this morning post they were notified by the govern: |poned for two weoks the rendering ment. They charged that Walsh of a decision on the motion to quash { their names without authority, |the indictment against W. I. Bro ames Were signed to notes |beck, accused of bribery in the for $92,000 each. | Parkside franchise case He was up and away, close ywed by a policeman and a drug clerk, who were not entered h men, and arrived in the got the turkey and it only glass joo was running a foot race and ly { the turkey was the prize. William Stack had won the bird at « raffle in & saloon on First and Pine, but being @ real gamester, had accepted D NOT LIVE INTHE CELLAR, SO SHE ASKS FOR A DIVORCE she only had 60 cents in change and the c! s she was wearing Judge Albertson this morning is- Mrs. Jessie White, wife of W. W./sued an order directing White to pay his wife $15 a week for her liv. ing expenses, $50 suit money and As & result she has filed | $100 attorney's fees pending the dt- n <== Because she refused to live in the cellar as her husband directed her, White, claims she was ejected from | her home. | Mrs. White in her complaint re- court. In her complaint Mrs. White | 0 inge her husband is a long: jalieges that at the time she As |snoreman and his wages average forced to leaye the family domicile | $35 a week. ———— — JURY FAILS TO AGRE IN THE ADAMS CASE a (By United Py ) {the same time the Tyler murder RATHDRUM, Idaho, Noy. . 25.— | occurred |The jury in the case of Steve| It is understood that Adams is Adams, charged with the murder/not to be taken to Colorado at of Fred Tyler, being unable to ar-| present hat the state will not rive at a verdict, was discharged oppose efforts to get ball for yesterday afternoon at 5:45 o'clock | Adams in the Tyler case. Darrow afte being out since 8:30 o'clock will later make an application for Saturday night ball for his client, but will hurry The jury stood eight for acquit-|to Boise for the Pettibone case. tal and four for conviction | Hawley, chief counsel for the Clarence Darrow, chief counsel state, declared the disagreement for Adams, tried to obtain conces-|of the jury will have no effect sions of bail for Adams and of im upon the prosecution of the Tyler }munity from arrest by Colorado|case again nor will it lessen |muthorities until the Tyler case efforts of the state to prosecute 8 disposed of. No promise waslother cases wherein Western Fed- given him. Sheriff Bailey, of Sho-/eration o Miners’ officiais and shone county, is here with a war-| prominent members are defe jrant for the arrest of Adams on|Mr. Hawley is disappointed the charge of murdering Ed Bonle | verdict Darrow says the defense n same place and at al t expected an acquittal [a eae _ — NEW CERTIFICATES been ee The case of A. M. Aldrich under was today continued in the criminal - —— department of the superior court un- (By United Press.) ul Jan. 6. Aldrich is acc d of WASHINGTON, D. ©., Nov. 25.—|having made away with a sum of The treasury department today re. MRE? gutrust at a warns ceived gratifying reports im | provement tn the financial situa TO BE MADE PRECINCTS tion. The treasury certificates, tt | was announced, will be ready in a |few days, The presses will turn| The tory at out 400,000 certificates datly. No | Rave & be Jofficial notice will be taken of the |n48 ¢ ’ bow charge of Chairman Fowler of the! Dunia b aed |house currency com » that the | Nintl welftlh department's relief me are legal. The financial committee con:|™"ijQ WoRK FOR EXCHIEFS™ |ferred today with the president a | jdid Senator Hansbrough, tho latte (By United Press discussing with the chief executiv \N FRANCISCO, Nx his bill providing for a government | Corporal Jerry Dinan, ex f of ed for duty a n bank ing. He found awaiting h , CONTRACTOR INSANE ae ie eles ie | A well known contractor in this |°? 0" apsgrens A jon 4 ait 4 @ result of the graft city for the past 22 years, James | investigation baor wed D0: ur t av eed uy rem el ‘ WILL TAKE UP CONTRACTS. Jinsane by an insanity commissio: Fr Wd @belaiba clka strech in Judge Albertson department of city council? will to the superior court, and will be de i er the payment f reet tained in the a m at Fort Steila in West Seattle out of coom, where the unfortunate ma the fund, carrying out con: relatives think he will eventually be|tracts made by the town of West | red to reason Seattle, ‘nid ——