The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 4, 1909, Page 10

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10 THE STAR—MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 19v¥. ~ ~— — : Saad ° in Colorado by his recent boost of] tion tax may be made & Co, tn the Downs block, ran] ° contagious, yet there was an un- ‘ of ie i }down with his Automobile yeator defined something which seemed to | Aldrich further legislation « I ” ated thelr cog day, Herbert Cottle, fr, the S-year hold them back, They seemed to At his Denver meeting 12,000 character , old son of ie pert Cottle, an em fear he did not know their cause.| people waved ilage and cheered His other suggentior that |; deine | Be lectric com though rich, had been on| Taft for five minutes when he en-| the at t “re, clearly in attle Roosevelt states themne i $201 Third av. W | the plains and mingled with the | tered the platform, but his failure swollen fortunes 1 fl ‘aaa they Were sient happened at the cor |masses, and he never forgot It.)to tackle reclamation and conser-|thelr borders and p ‘ rather than of, remont av. and 60th at } Taft, bo in affiuence, reared in| vation was a disappointment to venting muttmillior ‘ ci Mi t was ed laet night that) the lap of luxury, has shown that | his audience. handing down thetr riche ir hie bo the 1 the boy was badly hurt, and that] |he recognizes the needs of the rich,| ‘Taft's vinit haw started # factional mass ant dread of at he may be confined to his bed for| } iow the poor are afraid he falls to|row in his party. The dominant an he death of Mp: several days Appreciate their cause faction wae shut out in the naming - The lad was playing near Wood Editors of Independent Newepapers in Four States | There were cheers for the presi-|of a reception committee by the NO ENTHUSIASM FROM . { "a mason | i - land park apd ran from behind a Agree in Saying That Swing-Around- the-Circle Is. [acnt, there was admiration for his faction led by Evans, Denver's trac MINNESOTA FOLKS | * tal buggy in front of Struve's car be apparent good nature, but that was tion boss. The regulars claim that ce . ta © Minn low fore the latter could step, Somewhat Frosty. lall, When Roosevelt waa here Taft snubbed the Evans outfit at 4 van le Pepi | ST, PAUL, Minn., Oct oon ; tte ele in a Fit of Delerium Tre-| 11 ts claimed by the boy's parente ¥ . ple followed him up the street. " the state line by refusing to let c airs , that the machine was traveling at) cheered Taft as he passed ithem hitch their private car onto | thuslasin was awake ‘ 7 'n bonog mens, George Purdee «4 faster rate of spood than the law le Taft's Bwing through the west a success? 4 LEROY SANDERS, |his train, ‘The “leading citizens’ of | dent Tatt In Minneno ' oe Cun allows, aud they threaten to -bring He's getting lote of cheers and dinners and things, but ie he mak Editor Tacoma Times. | the committee had to crowd into the Mon to laud Congremems « at Leaped to anstant Death ing good with the people? brary car of the presidential wpe the mome Past We in the Street. T t Re It'e f can’ | " " and thus rebuke Minnesota's t he comparison of his trip with Roosevelt's famous trip can't heip |NOT LIKE ROOSEVELT lal B. LEY at o ” pac ger pareve seen hae eee | | | | being drawn Raltor The Denver Kxprens, | #enators : The Star has secured expressions from editors of newspapers in Is SPOKANE'S WORD who stood for a downward revist t . ut of or a deape te r " v n different towne which the president has visited on thie point n the anda areacogiy ¢ | Read them, They are significant of the “feeling of the west.” BPOKANE, Oot ‘ The popular 'CHILLY WEATHER UNIQUE RELIC way tb Aner a fellow patient, Georg seooncaail rs oy oe Geenital ange IN THE YARDS A" GLAD TO |the rights of property, Roosevelt, sect Fait te Seokean “an pat coat | IN IOWA FOR HIM AT THE EXPOSITION sano id tate ; 2 if not by the people, was of the | compart with that which greet night. He was dead when picked | ‘ii im parison a & a 8. < re niet ting Ip & few. seconde later, the fall of SEE HIM, BUT ple; Taft Is neither ed ex-Preaident Roosevelt on bis|,, 228 MOINES, Iu, Oct. 4—Prei * © ne tour stories having broken nearly : : __All_ this the people well know. |jast vistt here, five years ago, The | 4° pnt Taft's attack on the “insur-| First Piano Brought to Territory of ! as t ped raise | svery bone in his body Private Citizen Roosevelt could | The facts may never shape them-| Taft reception, when mei ranured pte #” stirred up lowa and affected Washington Exhibited by State iyin pa Scsterday woreing Purdie, who j come to Seattle today or next year, | selvex into words, but the clear) with that of Roosevelt, pales to the | ns * reception he , Histories! Goeiety : plying to one had te ty, the verge of deiirlum | FOUR HURT WHEN MILWAU-/flanked by no soCret service men, | keen eye of Instinct seen them all, | degree of enthusiasm manifested at Senators Dolliver and Cummins | khbor, tremens, attempted to dash his KEE SWITCH ENGINE HITS | ueseeee by no military alde and the inevitable conclusion 1#/@ Sunday school picnic as contrast. |4%¢ both expected to reply, and : gy ee # : ree brains out in a cell at the city Jail C. & P. §. PASSENGER. simply in the role of Theodore | drawn ed with the outburst that greets «| fom every part of the state Invite xbibite of the ¢ Historical one da th I ' IK owevelt, and be accorded a re Y President Taft was| victorious home team in a cham-| “008 have come to both men to Ine exhibits of the Stat chan ad h the sum z lception alonguide of which that Seattle with gracious af-| pionship game of baseball make speeches Boctety at the exposition stands &) dos 0. He took tie i Four persons were Injured when | Just given to President Taft would fabiitty, and that te why Roosevelt The blare of a brass band was Taft absolutely avoided the tariff | unique retic me gpd ‘a eines 0: , ts bet ween "etre € St. Paul| Pale Into lukewarm insignificance. | was taken to the heart like a friend | not necessary to tell where Roose. |? bie ech here, and his remarks 'to the territory of ‘es hand . ot be felt bis day Z ve P ’ » r ».| Although time has mellowed and " ly @ &| Seattle was glad to see President | of the family | 3 Syed on the railway commission were re : r ded, velt was speaking-—the acclaim of | Coq indifferently, He was race hed th “wood e and ¢ er for bie He was taken to the City b al for treatment. Shortly after 6 yelock last night Purdle jumped from his bed an@ started for a win.) a Chicago, Milwaukee Jow. Suspecting that Purdie was/switch train and a Columbia X . at about to do away with himself, J.) Puget Sound passenger and freight — gee ir a sores | SPATTLE STAR the people was sufficient announce: | puree inalilarenty oe patie broken | met in head-on collision Just south | to have within the gates the chic: “ "a . rived, but the crowds that ‘ on a ; abies eplinte grabbed Pergie, but |ot the city lin sotartey & ment of that seers. Tee Roose saw bim were comparatively small, |! #till if a thing ¢ uty and “ man who aT hbed Purdie, but/of the city mits yesterday morn. | executive of the nattc Iwaye the 20 > 7 > A arm in splints, grabbed Purdie, but of th eect? Ot tne dent on’ the | TACOMA CHEERED —__| eception was spontaneous out-|009 seemed curious rather than en | and toe the would-be suicide broke loose | Ing . burst of the people . oO “ ' and opened the window, Just as} Those injured were: A. Andrew, | street will draw to the curb whe) PRESIDENT, NOT MAN) ie went, from Coeur d'Alene park | nents W. G. HALE els joy, the @ Purdie started to jump Sullivan|%0 years old, of Newcastle, right|@ver can possibly get there. A | dieses ban aidviaeel thé aahabl elk Sditor the Des Moines — i pel again grabbed Purdie by the legs|arm fractured; Mrs. E. Dickson,/ President is a rare person, one TACOMA, Oct. 4—<A dren, to the general mass meeting, 2 . co. litte ae sence a 9 ‘on | elgh fi 4 the common In 4 6 nea of up rifle ent, it i but was unable to drag him back | colored, ears old, 1439 Jackson | elghty million, and the common 1 | cured {aces areeted President Tafi| "here be discussed the heavier ONLY SMALL CROWDS , pyres into the ward with one arm. Purdie | st., head and face cut; Mra, Annie/stincts of pa a tenes ‘ wes ‘ - pped from the wharf to | questions of the day, Roosevelt was ngs, the hy struck the pavement on the Jef-| Cooper, colored, 48 years old, 1820] plause, cheers and polite doffing of 1) ov ; cheere: . e | SAW TAFT IN hymn st fereon st side of the” municipal | 24th av, head and face cut; Christ|bate and the enthusiastic impu-| ‘he Union club, and from the Union | messes and hailed tis the peegie’s OMAHA various events for whieh, tt ide of munlely BaP emma og Pe snl Shewte “Hallo. Bill club to the Armory. There ‘was | president i {t was so often | : building a few feet from Police | Lindestedt, 25 years old, of New-/dence that shouts “Hello, enthustaem—yes, great enthumlasm.| The crowds turned out to seo| OMAHA, Oct. 4.—President Taft its work, do a Captain Claude Bannick’s office. | castle | This for the most part was the BAe Rb MN , mente bo ansechae in Mebrac! i Capt Bannick and City Prosecuting} None of elther train crew was in mme accorded President Taft Peg egg ie » bpd oben Phi ers wagt arg Head be dren er Tuahs be teat gone girder By and moulding influences st Attorney Ralph Pierce, hearing the | jured, as both engineers and fire-| For the president of the United | cognieed the deference due sn they go to see a circus parade. Taft | business men of the city. The peo: attracts much attents es pon h thud, ran out to find Purdie’s body| men leaped from their cabs after| States there was munictpal cor at chlat teeulatveda was cheered, of course, but the | ble of Nebraska generally are antl-| visitors who climb the winding The eres Gre Dieting. shutting off the power. The in-|diality, but that Intimate effusive:|""Was tt the man or Was it the |choers were subdued in volume and| Aldrich, and they want tariff re: wood stairs of the Forestry build-| wiqow Within the past three months two | jured were taken to Providence | ness was noticeably lacking. Pres president that Tacoma cheered?| abort in duration ~ | vision. There are no insurgent |ing to see the old-time collection. | jyres fol aie a Pe poalle ge a haga ho aiaas’ hel ident Taft worked hard to please: | When Roosevelt. ca hope | able difference about the two prost-| leaders in the state, and no future Almost every one who plays st8| iounuq | rom the unguarded windows of the| According to Engineer Burdick | not one salutation escaped his rec:| aed the Sin ae Samticl Visite wae the large ‘torn. | plans have been iald en tis Coe old INeirama One City hospital. On the night of July|and Fireman Nolan, in charge of|ognition; never did the «mile ted. bt qu —, ie people om . a ed . are x ure | The presides. went through Ne Th 4 Ma ee Draven that ‘adie who b § James Dale jumped through | the switch train, they were outside | waver, but there was that elusive He eee tin ce men che sive. and the arpctiecl aheteee oc] elke Ot BIBht, BR6 the oduatry | post of the music learner, to clanal-| “IeeTCun’ Of MAREE ml ie e way aide o! ne ‘d ta, e ” D St0C be . oe . d '° ne obne e' instantly killed passenger train. in the ernsh iecseagn i ce for the people, “He te pres | arrangements were wholly ignored aegis to him. His visit to| which the old piano responds. It) game exposition in which iti Rrhaa Dele leaped to his deeth| nich followed the witch engine} With Byte py cong: Bhege but he f# a man. he | by the workingmen, who looked up- ener aa arenes no enthusiasm. | has doubtless more than once been | hibited ax a « Dr. F. 8. Bourne, chief medical in-| was partially demolished, but the |‘ ms oot beter ena che a gon for ® square deal.” was the| on the affair as a rich men's cele-| f - ir a ema abet at the sta- called upon for popular little | ent of the p: spector, made vigorous efforts to| passenger train engine proceeded wun watts auenired enthie ea Ea Beak tie. cemaye| protien, ON. Che, Coenen OF the |e iar gg lh bs howmtg bd bene pry beyeoctitinr ge Speen Eee wale have the Ciey hospital windows pro to the station under its own power. |{,ym evening clothes, ailk osan ane Heng, Rode the very foot of old ew « oo lo labor was at the | ™ ness of Omabe a araatinn nate Mong oe : Or hee Ng canbe pre Mt sm = sae aareban teak Wie : : : | head of the procesmon ity with age, although it may lew years if any Attention was paid to his rec.| ENGLAND GETS TURKISH LOAN Sl the sartorial trappings that good | All the courtesies due to the of-| BENSYL BMYTHE marked contrast to the display of | somewhat changed, this old plano PBoconicey dees owner r ommendations. Purdie’s death (my Pree) taste decrees, but with the great fice were heaped on Taft, but thefe) Editor Spokane Press, |[¢thusiaam when Rooseevit was last js always responsive to the strang:| piano on the site of the NUeMam would not have oceurred had the| CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 4--A es se cxteasadite tea — was @ reserve as if the people were etter ae re shins bg Sato er’s touch with the best that fs!ing house. The original city authorities Leeded the chief! group of British financiers, repre | '°* . . nan, not certain yet | POT CRS URES OWS within it t ‘aedical inspector's advice. iad by Str Ernest Cassel wae the and not the office. Both Roosevelt and Taft are of {NOT LIKE TEDDY'S See It was from the Bost ; me cher co ¢ by see ee a - Ottoman bank syndicate, have ac There can be little question but | that open, free nature that makes! TRIP TO COLORADO \SAYS STATES CAN Jonas Chickering that t summon the later “ | cepted the government's conditions | that to the masses of the people them approachable in the language) Instrument started on the long trip, honor her husband's § RUN DOWN RY j |for the projected Turkish loan of President Taft t alten, amile he|of the masses. “Grin, show your!’ DENVER, Oct. 4—The demon TAX BIG FORTUNES which took tt around Cape Horn his good works. Such $2. ),000 ever so warmly. Do the best he | teeth,” seid a gamin when Teddy ‘stration for Taft here war not and landed it in 1#53 at Steilacoom, ! no monument. To reverse 3 may, there in always that air of|came, and the man who had been|as hearty or enthu' that (By United Presa) Wash., brought to furnish and add of the immortal poot—The goad) oP FDING AUTOMOBILE Ghélera Cleese Restaurant horny: ension and tolerance. Roose a cowboy before he was president which Roosevelt got on bis last visit; DENVER, Oct. 4.--President Taft | distinction to the house of Rev. De man does lives after him) ois! vi Aine P elt ie by birth an aristocrat, by in-| appreciated the salutation and cof-\to Colorado. People who recall the | concluded his Denver speech on the | vore, a pioneer clergyman of the merely fancy that suggests 3 ST. PETERSB\ RG, Oct. 4.—-The | clination a democrat. Taft descend. | plied Hello, BIN,” yelled a man; reception Teddy got when he re-| corporation tax with two hints that | territory. In those days of overland monument was left in the f fashionable Medvid restaurant and | ed from one or two generations of | last night, and tt wae all right turned to Denver from his bunting are expected to atir up Wall street. travel it meant a great deal to own pioneer ich he Frederick Kar! Struve, a real es the St. Anne German sthool have | moderately succensfu ators, in Hut the people were not sure wf)trip in the Rockies aay Taft's greet-; One is that the information|a piano west of the Rocky moun-| new elvi tion sae tate — - prominence and, the been closed on account of cholera |inherently aristocratic and by |the man who stood before them, jing was chilly. Taft fe not unpopu-| which the government collects by| tains. It took just such a man as and light toll-crowned Ih partner in the firm of John Davia at Medvi [training religiously devout before! His smile was joyful, his laugh waelar, but he certainly made no friends] its agente in gathering the corpora-|Rev. Devore to bring one more than of the early settlers? laid ite finger on the keys, | some ) de. ‘ fsraté OF | Ye ESTABLISHED (87 /" “The protest reproduced herewith is self- iy | oe ye explanatory. The immediate effect of the com- | Ges, . ; X y munication was that on Monday last, A. S. Kerry, 4 Vice-President of the Exposition, and Col. H. E. SE EE DPE Ale a caer ei Oe Dosch, Director of Exhibits and Privileges at Henry E. Dosch, Director of Exhibits, i nei peat d Cae RS I a the Fair, personally visited the exhibit of the Dear Sir:— BT dee Ae’ cecices against: Ghaleenesd eb. badbeies Monarch Malleable Range and summarily ordered the — exhibitors to advertise receipt of awards that your juries did not make. Such advertisements are being published, with removal of the self-awarded banner claiming the the wilful intention to mislead the buying public. The one Highest Award for ranges, regardless of kind, was Highest Award for Malleable Ranges awarded to us; yet we are confronted with advertisements announcing that others have received the HIGHEST AWARD and, then, in small type, they announce that their HIGHEST AWARD is This of fi j y a onaspecialclassof ranges. There wasno award for any special cial act clear ly demonst1 ates the class; competition on ranges was open to all, and no compet- M “ itor should be allowed to create a special class for himself exclusive right of the Estate of hi D. Beckwith to use and then publish offioial looking statements that he had won in such « class. the term Highest Award, they having received the | Such advertising indicates a contemptible lack of sportsmanship, business honesty and respect for the decision three Grand Prizes—for Round Oak Ranges, for Round of the Jury of Awards, so we believe that your sense of justice will cause you to take prompt action in the matter. Oak Heating Stoves and for Round Oak Furnaces Very respectfully submitted, Estate of P. D. Beckwith, Ino. blhiiart®. FREDERICK & NELSON _ POPPLE & KNOWLES | exclusive Seattle agents for the Grand-Prize-Winning Heating : Are the exclusive Seattle agents for the Grand-Prize- ° _ Stoves and Ranges, on PETE __Winning Furnaces “soarons”| ESTATE OF P. D. BECKWITH, INC., DOWAGIAC, MICHIGAN [*issasice~ By C. E. BURTON

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