The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 9, 1909, Page 7

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mis Is a Genuine Price Sale ‘All Must Go $10 Cash Per Month ear to branch of Petawood ay. Sunday — ‘ay Co., Inc. DELAMA TER. ce Bank Dailding. CITY REAL ESTATE, Continued. Do You Want a Homestead? We oA this mon fh > ik and wee wil & Mackwout ° PORTON ITY HRRR TOUR oO a TOR IRV) Soxtee suitable apart high Anne corner oan yew schoo! ‘Queen sii} | hile ta a om | maker at phToe cash money halt JOSEPH BR THOMAR & Ratrance to Lawman Main aire INC. Bide, Ind, 2499. 5-Room New Cottage Nicely located, on Queen Anne hil (North Queen Anne car), fot Baise 4700.00 cash, balance $20.00 month. Prige atu and assessments pay This property t# being sold below market price Owner going te Oaitferuia, ono KH WRIGHT @ co, 60? Marion Midge. 2, 2626 GEO A. VIRTUR CO. $200 waeh, balance 115 per month, for 6 cash and balunee mmonthiy bape Deautifl Queen Anne Hi heme. cash, bejance monthiy, burs three sand T-raom house near big schodi, Wert Seattle. GRORGR A. VIRFUR Co, Boston GREAT HIG BARGAIN. cottage, connected with sewer, 160, bearing Eruit tress and ber- Areets paved, cement walk, sam, ; city water in aed wald. For quick 1.200. Phone Mallard i864, 4D Acre tracts meer Pauntiorsy Park $490) pear platted grow re selling for # Mound fine snap, lneeatiqate. CO. Qual York lock. 9x CHOICE Fine Mi -aere tracts, prire trem $258 to cash Gad $8 per month; $960; terme 825 ere Un WicHOEA. Yer Ceutral Bid For sale. ture; swell home at a bargain. Street ay. Take Green Lake oar Mix-reom cottage and furnt Ts46 ex he oft jot, $1. sane od 393 Fitth &. me ‘waremers * FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS. ae SASH AKD DOOR HARDAT Crass panei deers fur wtaining aha Do you want to buy a home? See The Star's classified real estate columna, Whe CHTOAGO MEN 1400 Wondertul val Hor-made Un PARLOMS Butta, and Trow Line of Men's Cape and Suit Dress Suite for Te 4 datry cows, also twe- your Cows comin, Biiwanwer, On 4h cherry, Youngstown ek ARCHITECTS. onan tate ay ts feockeoa, ‘18 Rite bigs ATTORNEYS AT Law, nanedmemenasninrtitadnnaceemmamninine Pe Rg ag and 31 Union bork, TI) Pinet ay Corsi Towweend. 306 alter vag. al injuries, collections W. B SUHinger, Habe, Washington S cmgts, 588 People's Hank Hidg BANKS. rr] CANADIAN, MANIC ‘oF com. Canada ALL ener w Head branches Nanking” tustuese tetareet showed mi sowed on Savings ang time deposits Bicycles. ieiasiblin man metntaoadinuiniiongs to Spinning’s for bleyule suena BOOKS AND STATIONERY, ae eee P.O Book Store, 1351% Third ov CHIROPODISTS. Northere Rank Widg. Phone Mats (236 CLAIRVOYANTS. Mire. Forey Grau, sunt vetinbie, me. dium Lucky charma given 2454 INE STAR—SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1909, FLEMENT Georgetown's worst clement spent, If necessary, in the fight le against annexation to Seattle, GEORGETOWN WORST dB WILL FIGHT Dive Keepers and Politicians Will Lose Their Graft Unless Annexation Is Defeated, and They Pre- pare to Spend Money and Beat Clean Campaign. is wetting ready for a terrific bat Ae much a $10,000 wit be Divekeepers, saloonkeepem, men who fear the law, an@ most local politicians and office holders—all men who will be driven out of business In case of annexation--are preparing the Tues of battle. As ts so often the case when the worst element of any town finds an enlightened public sentiment aroused against it, and an election close at hand, Georgeto behind a “good citizen.” wn's “worst half ts going te hide PLUNGES TO HIS DEAT FROM A WINDOW (Concluded.) rn |the hospital windows. it was planned to have screens merely to | protect the patients from flier. To that end an ordinance was in troduced in the elty counell by Counciiman Goddard on J 28. On the same day the ordinance was referred to the buildings and grounds committee, The members of that committee were Counetl men Goddard, Hines, Conway and Way, In that commit tee the ordinance was killed. It was not until James Dale Plunged through a window that Comminsioner of Health Crichton of protecting irresponsible patients at the city hospital, The advisabtt- ity of putting guarding iron bars on the windows was discussed fully, The matter dragged until George Purdie leaped to death— the second victim of unprotected ‘The good citizen selected is Auburn Slocum, merchant, well re- | Windows, The discussion was again spected in the city. ‘The saloon element don't want Slocam par. | resumed, ticularly, but they are getting afraid of the cara. The argument is made to George town's better element that Slocum will close up the dives, compel bet ter police protection, clean up the city, in short. A different story clreulates through Georgetown'’s underwortd, “it's Slocum or annexation,” tw that word. “We'd better elect this fellow and take our chances that he'll treat the gang right.” If, later in the campaign, “the feels strong enough to run one of ite members or someone they can manage, for the mayor alty, Stocum will be dumped—with- out ceremony But so far he looks Ike the one beat bet for the ringsters, Everywhere ‘the part that The Star has played in exposing vio- fous and erinsinal conditions in the | * “olty within a city”—-conditions whose expowure has added to the sentiment for annexation, is ac knowledged to be most powerful. Hurts Their Business. Members of the “gang” compli ment The Star by condemning it in most unqualified terms. Some of them choke up when they speak Small wonder. It has hurt thetr nefarious trade Should Georgetown lose tts right at the primaries on Nov. 9 to gov ern iteelf many be gone forever. Georgetown rant has a con tract for feeding city prisoners. He anexation would take i from him. L. M Hamilton, one of the [wealthiest real estate mon t the town, ts making a hard fight for a county commissionersbip. Tf the antiannexationiste lose, tie cam- | palgn will have been made tn vain, : Tries to Keep Open. Bince The Star exposed the dis. graceful sceves in these qlaces Roxy Reber sought to keep hin | place open under the guine of ines Several membershtp tickets were sold at $5 each. It t* common re age Pcctyyer mg dbenyss FA, pot is i open, while the other dens | Tel RSs “Tied SF | finds this quite profitable, but an-/have boon closed. s CABINET MAKERS. DETROIT TAKES THE = = ee stein, and Schmidt put out, Miler to And when, early thie morning, Thomas Goad crashed to death on the cement sidewalk, Commissioner of Health Crichton and bis corps of physicians talked tron bare again. “I am willing to shoulder the re-| sponsibility,” anid Dr. Crichton, “1 never made application for protec tion of city hospital windows. were asked for, but they never authorized by the city il. Lf the city councl! will not pince proper protection on those indows I will pay for them out of 1 can se re permission from the proper authorities, “There are two sides to this mat- [ In a little rough board bungalow that was their new home, on the edge of Hillman City, the wife of “Tom” Goad sits and moans for the husband that will never come . For Thomas Goad, member of the police department, driver of the auto patrol, walked from the fourth story window at the Emerg- financial naps! port in Georgetown that some city/ency hospital last night In a de now enjoyed by the politicians will! offigials have a financial trterest | lirium of typhold fever and he was For instance, a)tm Reber's roadhouse. ‘This woull!|dead when attendants picked him up. “Take the poor boy's clothes down. Don't jet them hang there,’ vobbed the wife, as sympathetic neighbors stood about her in her awful grief. She couldn't bear to Armatrong, | and Dr. Rourns faced the problem | Fy) leer of guarding patients. The total | lack of padded cells in the city jall u8 the task of caring Jonts an well as per |sons afflicted with delirium tre mens, Tt is absolutely impossible to watch every patient. You can never tell when a patient is about | to attempt suicide “As long ae the city hospital win dows are not barred we may expect4 & repetition of the tragedy this morning,” said Dr. Bourns. “If the windows are barred there will be no more deaths by route. If the windows are not barred deaths are bound to fol low. One of the main objections against tron bare is the effect it |bas upon patients, Sick persons | placed upon the hospital windows it has a tendency to depréss them.” “But don't you think a human life in of more: consequenge than human emotions?” Dr. Bourns was asked “Ocertalnly,” was the reply. “It seems that the only sure pro tection is to equip the windows with tron bars.” Archttects from the office of Su perintendent of Buildings F. W. Grant were busfly engaged in measuring window space at the city oapital this morning. It was announced that they were mens. uring the windows to immediately install tron bars or grating. There is no disposition on the part of the hospital management to reflect discredit on any nurse or orderly for dereliction of duty. Sev eral thoughtless persons have called the hospital by phone since George Purdie was dashed to death and talked roughly to them. “If | those windows are not properly and promptly barred we will quit in a | body,” said one of the nurses this | morning. TOM GOAD’S DEATH PUTS AN END 10 BEAUTIFUL ROMANCE OF REAL LIFE : The night clerk at the police sta ition, who is a friend of the G and their nearest neighbor, the first to reach poor Tom | Goad as he lay dead on the pave- |ment at the Emergency hospital, | and to this friend was given the sad duty of breaking the news to the wife. He waited till morning, it was too awful to tell her in the middie of the night; she could only suffer. So the clerk and another neighbor told her as gently as they | could about 8 o'clock in the morn jing, just before The Star represen- tative visited the home. Her “Tom” Was Gone. this} are sensitive and if tron bars are | Z GARBOLIG AGIO. “1S ENDING. OF FAMILY FUSS |Wife Takes Her Life and | Coroner Is Left to Find | It Out for Himself. | Following « quarrel with ber bus- band, Mra. Charles Hibber, 40 years | old, drank carbolic acid at her resi- dence, 402 wrondway, shortly befare 5 o'clock yesterday afiernoon. Mrs, Hibber died at 2 o'clock this morn- ing. The body was removed to Butter- worth & Sons No report that the case was.one of suicide was made to Dr. J, C. Snyder. It was only after the body was examined at the morgue that acid burns about the mouth | were noticed Upon investigation | Dr. Snyder Jearned that the woman had swallowed the deadly potion with suicidal intent. Her husband, Charles Hibber, is proprietor of the Junction saloon, Second av. and ler way. From other sources it was learned that the couple en. gaged In a slight quarrel yesterday afternoon, and the suicide followed. MEET INA REAR “ENO GOLLISIO (Conciuded.) near death when e rear end col- lision between outbound Walling- and ureen Lake cars oc- shortly after 8 o'clock this morning on the Westlake boulevard or trestle. Both cars had trailers. In the Wallingford car was almost 100 pleasure seekers en route to the exposition. The majority of them were children. The Wallingford, which was in the lead, had stopped at the cross- ing at Ward #t., and had just start- ed when the accident occurred. The Green Lake car was following at full speed. According to the pas- sengers, the motorman of the car was looking out over the lake and did not see the car in front of thm. Care Smashed Up. Before he had time to put on the brakes, his car crashed into the one ahead. The crash was ve | Abetein, No runs, no bits, no errors. The poor wife had dropped down The tra ¥. Ward carpenters amt see hie clothes hanging in their ao- monthiy. Prices “Stem of tate car and at ‘Bud tee Mr Torte. WHITE co. TAL BLOCK. Main 1549. Lot in Park cort—mast sell PERRY INV. CO, Bak Bag dnd. 4949. 10 Down er Month BM Siler, Batch ot S8P jine and set eatll cheated "ana ah bor hood m0 American Bank Didg near Hos ready Price SITS0. Tracie, Room o% Thik = ~4t Good bugay for ale cheap: 16% Went. lake wert For sale—Cine $199 Lacore piane bond foe $12, Z-28, The Star. at Yor wale er trade. 110% piano bond: $10 i Phone Ind feel 1 for mie cheap; 392. Ben & Garren, 08? and tr ue abe aioe Gee tor tems —. feraished rocme lent ree teh newly Inquire £12 Ninth ay sale, phone « forstvure for 2. tt f you fb Queen Anne 1662 A bE ot exchange Know can whet you EXCHANGE. ery at tor ant SEATTLE RB. Suite & 1 EXCHANRE FOMt MILK COWS, equity of 9! in property wal- 3.090; mbes . 91.208, run fing five youre at € per cont. Cat be paid on or before maturity. Will trade am Addrwee 664 Keaftie, Wath " LUMBER Would exchange tumber ond bets or acecage or TOF « CG CMITTEXDEN, of Lamber Bach tir good north O11 FOR SALE—WOOD AND COAL. “ patent vaion ‘Peat ‘Anne 2 WANTED TO BUY—FURNITUF bats ols Anteater — The Eagle Furniture Company Corner of Pike et. anf Sixth ya the highest cash price hand furnitere and all goede Main 3481 at Must Sell howe on Lara bot Kast BPA mist be wold "7 # BLACK Woop. Batidine SAYS thd. fully furnished Aistriet, ‘1.000 we 90: Side Heights for 3409 op, sary terms from Pioneer ted. Ta) , wet off at Oh ground Wem it aquar W et your weed furnite call ap opr exch ana tment bug for eash or tred ing Moerally. Buy your furaiturg y dapactmnent—ou save a deal. The Hankin Co., Bx. Department. EMONT FUP. ond-hand good dex Porn, 1619 iat. M. 2382; Ind. 6030 o 4 an advanta, desires Highest prices pald 1987, ex . Ce., cabinetmakera, furniture stare and office fixteres 95 Usiew at —tt DENTISTS. now gti cut iar shout the DVERS AND CLEANERS. eterreets rear 119 Columbia, Mame GOLD AND SILVER PLATING ‘MP. MUGHER, 216 Uston ot. HAIR GOoos “Ete Mil on mle Gb Onion HAT MAKERS. WES Hate Kavancuah, ivi Foret ar FR anne Daou rene de enna LUMOCER. stock. Pee viet ay a 'Miats foe, 33) CL eed years present jccatton. SP TIGANS. STRESS {idee eigen Whebesaraber “Co ind OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS. eta hace tintenaiey Members Nathenal, Hints aod County c &, a intent im, 663 xeranore tke ide and Pike Phone PAINTERS. perperhanging. 102” seneca at "Phone LE PATENT ATTORNEYS. ee act trate “mar Sesttle =€26- Painting. dacoret Paroting 1468 Co, ke, te emt ¥ rears in od "ont atior- Wore ter book Aiton! ‘Colman and service. eatt | ~ PATTERNS ANC MODELS. tn | 14 People's Drown, #hGomina!. ienneom, 384-G A Dr. Dalton, skin Gineanea block. tour reage enna: 456 Arcade Dr. Tucker, Tote tad, 4616.48 PHOTOGRAPHERS’ SUPPLIES. 1 Cherry ttt Anderson Supply € Pacific Samp Ca ——Postage stamp eal lecttons | bought sold. Wostington Wie, 708 First av. Open ne bought and eld. Bobwede, SHOWCASES. 0 Co, ft eT sn a18 Wires. “ted, PRINTERS. << and Print pisces seattle Hath rhene" Heller Printing Mouse, 166 Seneca SECOND-HAND CLOTHING. oe prices fot second-hand yea Pike We pay higher indlew and. men tare, ete. Koue, “MONEY TO LOAN. CITY AND WED PEOPLY Women keeping haves, and others thelr own noten, without security; chun, eat rates, asinat payments, Offions in 6 principal « D. i. Tolman, 43 Kiplor Hock, Keoond Av. buy imortea Washington, 1 Hank Buiid My own money to tracts auywhere in wnway, 605 American vrs Roach, Moom 7 » LOANS—813 Mebinorn Bid) Jacobson tor tt ya tut Lar Moving & Bt Main #46, Ind TRANSFER COMPATII |b iiey, wanwter, Vernon Rxprean, ‘furotim (ve phone, “Bal Place, “TAILORS. “Leonard fudd, P. Nelson, Contr ‘tide, [TYPEWRITERS AND SUPPLI®, pA tet niece nok Rare ots rake acifie ‘Ty l writer & Bupply Co, 922 N. ¥. Block, plause. SECOND BALL GAME ESRI en 2m, ERE doubled to right, scoring Byrne: ‘Clarke sacrificed, Moriarity to T. Jones, Leach taking third; Wagner fanned. Miller doubled to teft, Leach scoring Schmidt muffed Abatet: high foul, after which Abstetn fanned. Two runs, two hits, one error, 4 Second Inning. Detroit—-Crawiord fanned. Dele- hanty went cut, Wagner to Absteln. Moriarity singled, Clarke stopped the ball but fell. T. Jones singled to left and Schmidt doubled te cen- ter, Moriarity and Jones scaring: ‘The crowd in the Detrolt bleachers went wild with enthusiasm Dono- van fanued. Two rans, three hits, no errors. Pittsburg — Wilson weat out, Donovan to T. Jones; Gibson walk- ed; Camnits fouled to Mi Gtbaon stole second. being high. Byrne runs, no Nits, no errors. Third Inning. Detroit--D. Jones wan safe on Byrne's tow throw of his roller. Bush stagled to left. Oobb was per- mitted to walk. Crawford fied to Clarke. Delehanty singled to cen- ter, scoring D. Jones and Bush tieting ant} Willis relteved Camuits, who Was! Deiehanty. Mb taken from the box by Manager Clarke. Cobb, who was on third, then set the crowd wild by stealing home. Mortarity walked, T. Jones forced Delehanty at third, Willis to Byrne, Schmidt Mied to Clarke. Three runs, two hits, one error Pittsburg-—Leach doubled to left; Clarke fied to Crawford; Wagner fouled to Schniidt and Miller fanned. No rims, no bits, no errors. Fourth taning. Detroit—Donovan out, Byrne to Abstein; D. Jones out same way; Bush fanned. No runs, no hits, no errors. Pitteburs -—Abstein singled to deft. Schmidt caught Wilson's foul; Gib-’ son flied to D. Jonen; Willis lined to Delehanty: No rums, mo hits, no errors, Fifth Inning. Detroit-—-Cobb was put owt by Abstein unassisted. Crawford sent a twobagger pust Byrne and Dele- hanty walked; Moriarity fied to Abrtein; T. Jones was given a free pass, filling the bases. With the crowd at fever heat with exctte- ment, Big Schmidt sent a single imto left, scoring both Crawford and Delehanty. T. Jones was put out trying to. reach third, Leach to | Byrne. Two runs, two hits, no errors. Pittsburg—Byrne flied to Craw- ford; Leach went out, Moriarity to T. Jones; Clarke was out, Donovan to T.'Jones, No’ runs, no hits, no errors, Sixth Inning. Detroft—Donovan went out, Miller to Abstein; D. Jones flied to Leach; Bush walked, but was put out trying to steal second, Gibson to Wagner. No runs, no hits, no errors. Pittsburg-—-Wagner was safe on movan's poor throw to first. Miler went out, Bush to T. Jones, Wagner going to wegond. Abstein fannmd; Hans tried to steal third but was ught when Morilarity made a bean tiful stop of Schmidt's high throw No runs, no hits, ne errors. Seventh Inning. Detroit—Cobb singled past Wag ner; Crawford went out, Wagner to Abstein, and Cobb was caught try ing to reach third, Abstein to Byrne. The double play was a beautiful ex hibition of baseball skill and was given a tremendous roar of ap- Delehanty fanned, No runs, no hits, no errors, Pittsburg — Delehanty fumbled | Wilson's tap; a fast double play by Detroit eliminated Wilson and Git. son. The play was made, Bush to ‘T. Jones went out, Wagner to Ab customed place. “No; 1 don't want | to see him now, the shape he ts In.” | She ts robbed of even the comfort Sd tof looking on iis dear face, for Pittsburg-—Byrne fied to Dele- hantyy Leach went out, to , . Clarke Qied to Delehanty. No runs, no hits, no errors. Ninth inning. Detroft— Donovan went out, Wilts 1D. Jones popped to Rush Tew to Leach, No there was no railing around the window when the delirious man stepped out and all that was left of gay Tom Goad wai heap on the pavement below, Were Buying a Home. ‘They were Jost getting settled tn their new home, Tom and hin wife, and each additional payment made ft that much theirs. In sur- u* primitive as in a huddled bl in a chair at a table, with her un- finished work about her, and sobbed and moaned, too stunned to think or plan. All she knew was that Tom, her Tom, was killed, and no one on earth could give him back to her. “Ach, Gott, this hurts me terri- said the wife of the neighbor- hood grocer, of whom The Star re- porter asked the way to the Goad home. “Tom was a good man; everybody Hked him and he and his wife seemed so hoppy together. When he went to his work in the }elty she walked with him a way and 4; Mifer went|Ploneer days, they had chosen a/ they always went past here arm to T. Jowen, Wagner Abstein = fanned to Crawford, No runs, e ° D. Jo Crawford, cf . oe! Cee neue Zw] ecocimesuck S| eemwuneeoF 8! wsweSemwed S| awimroower Si museae wl eeesusess* ul esas Pittebure e 2 Summary By Bone- ye Kite—Leack, Crawtort. Bac Tifice hite—Bush and (ark Stolen bases —Gihsen, Cobb, Wageer, Lett on bases—Detroit, 4; Pittsberg 2. Desbic plays Abstcin te B@pene, Bush to T. Jones Hite—Oit Gan nite, 7 im 34% innings. Rune—Oft Camnitz, 4 in 3% innings. ERA ODD ACCIDENT AND THREE ARE KILLED... CANAL DOVER, O., Oct. 9.— |® John Gerber, aged 37; William |* Lang, age 28, and David | Harry, aged 22, were crushed * to death while repairing an en- | * gine at the blast furnace of the }® Pennsytvania Iron & Goal Co. |% The engine accidentally start- * od and they were cangit be- & tween the piston and the cylin. i ® der head. * * Ste eeeeeeteeeeeee eee eee area “HROTHER 10 THE OX" GLEARED OF GRIME Leaving the sheriff's office as \stolidly as he would have gone to ‘the gallows, John Jaset, the man |whom Thomas R. Horner, bis at ‘torney, said was a Hving example of The Man With the Hoe,” was freed |trom the awful cha yesterday in the su allowed to go his way The motion to throw the ease out of court was made by the provecut- ing attorney # office. The whole proceeding of the trial soomed utterly uninteresting to Jaget, and when his lawyer told him he could go home he briefly granted an affirmative reply and deft, jor court and « a. “Have you ever been engaged be- tore?’ “or eo Thave, Would you like & recommendation from my lust beau!—Allg Sloper’s Half Holiday, e against him!) pretty spot for thelr little bunga- low. Together they had planned how they would add to fit as the years went by and how they would improve the yard. Already a rustic flower bed with ft« rock border 1 | #howed that this was “home” to the | ocoupants of the house. Together they had planned how they might save from Tom's wages to hurry the payments on the house and tot | #0 It would be realty theirs. SEATTLE LOST TERRITORY B INFAR. RATES Shippers Tell How They Are Made to Suffer by Unjust Tariffs to the East. Five prominent business men of Seattle and Tacoma, each in a dit- ferent line of business, testified be- fore the Interstate Commerce Com- mission this morning, that discrim- inative eastern freight rates had Umited their territory to the Cotum- hia river on the Great Northern, and Walla Walla and Pendleton on the Northern Pacific 410. KR & Furthermore, that there had been practically no freight rate reduc- tions to the east from Seattle and ‘Tacoma in the last 12 years and that all growth in their business was Airectly due to purely local growth in population and the development of Alaska, ‘That they had not shar- od in the prosperity and growth of tern Washington and Idaho in the least. Give One Instance. That St. Paul jobbers can buy dried fruits in Calffornia, ship them to Minnesota and back again to Montana and Idaho common points. SPROLALS FOR MONDAY. Salmon, Ge 1b; amelie, & Ibe, for Hi eo Ib; | sn MEAT,—Spring ob Gomentic duck, ; hens, vl | | \» rf 1c don; Batter tn arm.” | But for neighbors, the wife ts all alone. There are no children, and ‘she hasn't « relative in all Washtng- ton state. A cousin of her hus |bands has been sent word of the tragedy, and he fs the only friend |to come to her in her sorrow and @esolation, She's ali alone in the ‘tittle home that was to be theirs, and Tom will not come home any i more. and sell them cheaper than Seattle and Tacoma jobbers can in shipping them direct, was the testimony af. |S. A. Nourse, of “the Coast Grocery company of Ta George Boule, of the Western Hardware and Metal company, tes- fied that the eastern limit of the territory, on an equal basis with eastern competitors, was Trin- Wad on the Great Northern and | Kendrick on the Northern Pacific |" ‘That the syrup trust, the Corn | Products company, owned by the Standard ON company, can sell cheaper than they can east of the mony of BE. F. Baxter, of the Pacific Const Syrup company. Mr. Baxter said tis company had attempted five. times since 1904 to secure more fa- vorable freight rates, with no suc- cose. Rates on tron, | Mr. Frink, ef the Washington Iron Works, threw some Tight on the subject of freight rates on iron antl teel. The Washington Iron Werks |uses raw material which must be | shipped from the east and ts a com- petitor of the steel trust. | To show how the railroads ais- jerfminate in ‘favor of the trust, they grant an 80-cent rate on structural steel in shipments of 99.000 tons, while on raw material the rate ts $1.80 in 20,000 ton ots. To secure an 80-cent rate, the local firm must order in 60,000 ton lots Mr. Frink further stated that only five per cent of their business was east of the mountains on account of such conditions. | A decision ts noon on the Ast of Portland, counsel for the shippers, will finish by 2:30 this | afternoon and the ratiroads hope to wind their side up befere adjourn | ment tonight pected this after- case. I. N Ibe Bwiss, Qox.; primost 2: Impert ibe, for 46 VEGETAT }90c. awee } lve. for fancy pearl Yh.; Moat cheese, #0 S60 1b; brick cheose, tatoos, 6 Ibe, for taptoca Oe ; Bohemian canned Jey pisw Nh, 154 j kauer keeaut 1; welntes, feet pint; botled We" quart; ths. for dines, 16 efor 3b 7 ail piok: 106 Th, is, Me; plenic ham, domestic’ sardines, 6 cans 8, 60¢ gallon; laundry Be; gon’ prunes , 106 Ray 100 Ib, wack. potat tbh fine Cascade mountains, was the testi-] *) sale }) produce anarket affords at reason able prices. beard several blocks from the scene of the accident. Nearly all the windows in both care were broken, and the impact sent the two cars ahead and off the cross- ing. By some fortunate turn of chance, the cars all stayed on the tracks, or they wonld have vcurned over and fallen into the lake, which is very deep at this point. Had this happened not one of the passengers would have been saved. The impact of the car was 80 great as to drive the front of the trailer ahead into the leading car. it took over an hour to repair them #0 as to take them te the Fremont car barns. Thrown From Seats. The passengers of the exposition car were thrown out of their seats, but the principal injuries sustained Were from the flying glass. Several of the chfidren, who were hurt, were so frightened that they left the scene of the accident without giving their names. Others refused to do #0. Much difficulty was experienced by the car crews in transferring the childrén from the wrecked cars to those going into the city because of the fact that the accident happened on the trestle. Many of the children who were hurt went on to the exposition, as they said they @idn’t want to lose a chance ef winning the prizes given out there today. Superintendent Kempster holds F. F. Ingersoll, the motorman on the Green Lake car, entirely regpons- ible for the accident. He was dis- charged soon after the cars reach- ed the barns. The Wallingford ay, car was in charge of Motorman J. F. MeCiel- lan and Conductor Chas. E. Armen- trout, and Motorman F. F. Ingersoll and Conductor B. Van Houton were on the other one Both of the cars were carrying trippers. MORE BODIES FOUND IN THE ROSLYN MINE My Cnitea Press ROSLYN. Oct. 9.—Rescuers in the mine of the Northwestern dm- provement company teday aiscover- ed the bodies of Tom Marsayolin and Phillip Porartch, trackmen. Only two.more bodies remain in the mine and these will probably not be reached for several days, as it is thought they He at the bottom of the shaft e Tommy !* ell, 1 ought ad takes me in his study and strops me three or four times a day pmic Cuts, Farmers, Attention! Free«stalls under roof are yours ‘for the asking at the new Westlake Market. The only condition exacted frem prospective occupants of these stalls is that they shall offer for the best the vegetable and The time bas arrived for you agd the Seattle consumer jlo get together for your mutual ad vantage By reducing your sell market will expect you to make corresponding reduc- tions in your prices to tie public Address all communications to the Westlake Market |PINE ST., FIFTH, SIXTH AND WESTLAKE AVS. iz cost the

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