The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 16, 1909, Page 1

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ty Dealer, Will Fight Duwamish Valley e in Courts. this attempt to advance passenger rates on the Se- rurban road if it costs me $100,000, etrated on from 18,000 to 20,000 people im the valleys to the south of the city in the last of promises made to me personally by Jacob nce of witnesses, and also made by Mr. Furth to gettiors and men with business interests in Seattic Wine of the Interurban.—C, D. Hillman, the at state Millman, real ostate op- was active settling Valley, this morning bis attor: Fred. “was at work on the a action suit, to be iguperior court this af PMomiay, asking that Mr Be Facet 8 jound Electr ENT INVADES. MEXIGD company be restrained from putting into or continuing tn effect the new schedule of 2 nts a mile. This naw rate Is to be fect at midnight tonight Mr. Burch stated at noon today that if possible would arrange his case so as to secure a tempor (Continued on Page Seven.) - AN OFFICIAL A LIAR VERQUE, N. M., Oct. 16.—Politicians are in a fever over Incident at the banquet given by the business men of Al je to President Taft, when the latter shook his fist in the Attorney General A. B. Fall and told him in polite he falsified when he said the republican national con- Chicago had been “forced to make a bargain with New e@scape the dangers of Gompers’ anarchistic platform.” Fall, at the conclusion of a statehood speech, intimated R might not fulfill his promise because the territory had deceived. was never any chance of the passage of what Mr. Gom- ted of the republican convention,” exclaimed Mr. Taft. day and the celebration which began early this morning when the Mexican president reached Juarez, will not close until Mr. Taft re- turns this evening from the ban quet given in his honor by Presi dent Diag and is escorted to railroad station for the resumption of his transcontinental Journey. President Diaz, looking more like an emperor than the people's choice of a republic, surrounded by |. Tex. Oct. 16.—Prest-b [the United States, and irfo Diaz of Mexico ged expressions of while the bands e (Wo great repub echoes across the ident Taft ar k this morning. ineas blocks of ae the adobe acrown the with American entwined. An/self wearing a uniform gorgeous good will is with the precious metal and glitter jing orders, was met at the Ameri can approach to the toternational | bridge by Seeyeary of War Dick (Continued o on oe Seven.) Meet. Douses of the art stoned for the | ZUM GALL Te adence of th to dictate to the court what penalty should se law lave meat dealers in on them is only equaled by their indifferenct Patrons’ health. It is not at all astonishing that a deliberat ‘or the sake tam the lives of tt unity, the One to of a few cents, should have justice mise with 1 both show clearly wingly and wilfully wilfully ex They that clear the be and nancial profit and convincing The they law wa: had not issue d yet fines should Brown, the bench and vith all the vigor Laon defen wer s men of the ¢ on the sa oe; “ ¢ chary ¢ legal basi assault and other gr as before larceny, than to ater the bar ir offense was tice decreed rich, intelligent, prominent ther respectability you like they should do if the phatically denied by Justice ¢ it clearly known that before hat affords the loophole h circumstances as these. at the law defendants should be made a tion and they should be made e users of freezum have bet- ! Justice ar does not believe. e meted to them as they de fear or {a t Mthe meantime, all honor to Justice Brown. put in ef.| j record by @ score of 8 to 0, PITTSBURG WINS THE WORLD GHAMPIONGHIP. Played in the Snow— Pirates Hit Wild Bill Donovan and Mullin Hard, and Pitcher Who Was Sent Back to Minors. Blanked the Tigers. (Dy United Pree.) DETROIT, Oct, 16.—The Pittsburg Pirates are the champion baseball team of the world, By shutting out the Detroit Tigers in the decisive game in the most closely contested world’s seri the Pirates upheld the supremacy of t | saddest day of “Wild Bill” Donove the | & blaze of officers in gold lace, him- | it was a cold day for Detroit in more than one sense, It was the He had been put in by Man | ager Jennings life, the twirler of the! deciding game for Detroit, but he let tix men walk and struck Byrne with | tehed ball, and in gene pieces. The hero of this great series of championship baseball is “Babe” Adams, the new recruit in the big | league, whe actually pitched Pitts. burg to victory in three of the four! games which the Pirates won, Detroit made six hits today off Adams, but they were so widely scattered that they netted nothing. This marvelous record places Adams in the front rank of the world’s twirlers. The Pittsburg fans who came here! this morning are wild with delight. | The home fans are deep in gloom. They had held high hopes up to the| last, and before the game were giv- ing odds on their team. / The game was played under bad conditions, snow falling part of the time. This made it herd for the men to keep up to their mark, but) [there could be no excuses offered) | for the shutout which was adminis: | tered to the Tigers. The Pirates) simply outplayed the home team to- day. 't wan @ great finish of the series for the Pirates, and Manager | Clarke ven full credit, even by! the local fans, .“Babe” Adame, who) won three out of the four Pittsburg | ‘MEAT GAGES PSE Brown Says the Business Men Accused of Crime Must Stand! Trial in Open Court. | went to Offering to compromtse a criminal ease, 21 meat dealers charged with using “Freezum,” a preservative to brighten up stale and decaying meat, in violation of the pure food law, appeared tn Justice Fred C. Brown's court yesterday afternoon Their attorneys secured a private conference with the justice and| agreed to plead guilty if the court| would be easy with them The 21 defendants agreed to down” if they were not excess of $25 apiece. Justice Brown indignantly re fused any such compromise. He in sisted on trying the cases in open court and sald the punishment, if the men were convicted, would not be less than a $100 fine. On the plea that they could not justice in Justice Brown's a change of venue to Juatice Carroll's court was granted. The trial will be called next Tuesday rnoon at 1:20 o'clock This ie a list of the men agreed to plead guilty if the let off eas James Henry (four markets), ® Western av., 81 Columbia st. and public market, Pike place C, A. Sonvighaus, 503 Yesler wa L. Marshall, 318 Twelfth av Otto Parthier, 228 N. Broadway C. Weber & N. Broadway V. Sontag, 2030 Madison st J. A. Stavig 28 Madison st Fred Letasier, 2705 Madison st Joueph Kleiner Pike st John Lewis, public. market George Helbock, public market H. Parkinson, public mark L. C. Troughte Big White ket, public market; also stall 200, public market Henry Pietsch, Rainier Meat com pany, public market William Evans (Carastens Packing company), Band Box market, 1100 First av E. W. Kirk, 713 Second ay. Charles Feht (National Meat com pany), 204 Second ay. 8, “He fined in secure court wer Medal for Wagner. H, Wagner, organizer and di rector of Wagner's A-Y-P band which has made such a hit at t Seattle exposition, his guard and completely routed yesterday, when his players ‘and the home fans, too. in| man, | was all right | the shoulder }16 | from sign | companied was taken off| pre- | ented him with a gold medal STA SEATTLE, WASH,, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909, SCHELLE'S GROTTO-AN APPRECIATION In none of the dives of Seattle does vice flaunt so un- jabashed and unrestrained as in Schelle's Grotto, First Av. and Cherry st. Vistories, is the idol of the visitors | Tonight he holds the moat enviable position in tha baseball world. The Mneup for today’s game was as follows Detroit— D, Jones, if Bueb, #8 Cobb, rt. Crawford, ef. Delehanty, 2b. Mortarity, 3b, T. Jones, 1b. Schmidt, c Adama, p. Donovan, p. Tom Jones, the Tiger first base who was badly hurt Thursday Pittaburg— Byrne, 3b Leach, ef. Clarke, If Wagner, ss Miller, 2b Hyatt, ib. Wilson, rf. Gibson, e. In the heart of the business district, under glaring lights, | flush in the unseeing eye of the police, degeneracy and sin here | have their full fling and scarlet women and unashamed men nightly carouse without hindrance. within the compass of a few square feet, one may witness in the course of a night the vicious, sickening drama of life at its low-| jest. Finery and rags, beauty and brutishness, laughter and , tears come and go as night creeps on. The maudlin sot, the ps4 costed Gee bs ae ye hysterical girl and the blatant orchestra unite in a dismal} fact that he was suffering from | cadence or reckless chorus and they drink, drink, drink. a pociranp tic Mong =n is as | Down the uninviting stairway they come alone, by twos, | vail on him to remain from the | threes and in crowds; boys in their teens in the first exhilara- GAaNe, Dus: Jones Centered thet he |tion of debauch, their more hardened brothers of longer experi-| jence and the blear-eyed sensual derelicts, the dregs of a big | | city. | And their first glance is at the row of women who sit await- ing their coming. They come to the “cafe,” licensed to sell A eat Genatinn, tines Me th liquor, but drinking is only incidental and preliminary. They Moriarity, Byrne and Moriarity | Come to buy drinks, but the real commodity offered for sale in| collided, and both apparently were | Schelle’s Grotto is women’s souls, badly hurt. Physicians were called from the stand. Byrne was uncon: | It is the public market place of vice, licensed by the city to | scious and was carried off the field. | sel) liquor, and its greater, deadlier traffic winked at and con- Mortarity arose, declaring that he! would continue in the game, domed by the officers of the law. Leach went to third for Pittsburg One does not have to be a finicky moralist to revolt at! the sight of these girls and women who barter and sell their | bodies and souls in Schelle’s Grotto. | Here, in this cellar area Firat Inning. Donovan bit Byrne on Nobody covered nec ond on Leach's sacrifice, and a forced out was prevented, Leach out, Donovan to T. Jones. Byrne Pittsburg Hyatt hit to , and Abstein was called into the game and took | up bie old station at the first or ner, Clarke walked. Clarke stole second Physicians attending Byrne reported that he ha sprained ankle, Wagner walk Miller foreed Wagner, Bush to Delehanty No runs, no hits, no | errors. Miller was the only man charged with a time at the bat in Pittsburg’s half of the first inning Detroit——Davy Jones fou | Leach ‘Alamos bit uae ie nel despair, Bravely she sips her beer while she fawns before} back. Cobb flied to Clarke. Bush /the waiter for sufferance. She must get a “live one’ out stealing second, Gibson to Mil | ler. No runs, no hits, no errors. | Spend his money in Schelle’s or she must get out and make} Second Inning. room for a more successful unfortunate. The light of expectancy Pitteburg—Abstein waiked and/ flares up in her glassy eyes as a wandering roisterer lurches por Pay d. Wilson bunted | toward her table, only to die down dull as he passes on to a more alluring sister. She is sinking fast to the morgue and the pau- | women in their twenties, hags in their thirties, as they sit of- The young girl with the hectic cheek and hacking cough} ing the bases, making Donovan's | fourth free pass to first. Hyatt goes to perdition in order that Schelle’s till may be filled. There |= ovan, wilder than ever, seemed to ih ae lose his control altogether. He let, *f¢ hundreds of them. They fill the tables in the “Grotto one bit, no errors Detroit—-Crawford went out to} Schelle’s Grotto is running wide open every night. The doubled to | Mayor has known of it, the police have seen it time without __ Continued on Page Seven.) safely, Sohmidt tried yainly to per’s field, but Schelle’s Grotto will grow richer before she dies. went to center Meld, Abstein scor- Clarke walk, and, as the bases every night. As fast as one pays the wages of sin and goes to Abstein, unassisted, Delehanty Delehanty going to third. | number. wet Abstein at third. Gibson pop- | ped to Bush. Adams walked, fill To this extent she will not have lived and suffered in vain. ing on the throwin. Lanch wen And she is not the only little sister of misery whose soul given four balls and walked. Don- were full, Wilson waa, home Wagner flied to Cobb! runs, her grave, another steps into her place, to keep the stream of nickels and dimes flowing into Schelle’s coffers. walked. Moriarity right, Moriarity was limping from hie ‘ A Fy : : collision, and O'Leary ran for him. | But no one ever interferes with Schelle’s Grotto, his shrine of adlome. se TORTI TOTTORI RTO tk BY R. W. MADISON. (Staff Correspondent of the United | Press.) NARDIN Boy in a ee ee ee ee Near the spot where they found the body of little Mary Nita, or Isoleta, as she was known among her people, were strange hieroglyphics marked on a limestone formation with a piece of harder stone. .Se- gundo Chino and Jack Hyde, two of our trailers, interpreted them as follows: “My heart is gone. | soon will be dead.” It was thought that the heart broken and wearied girl traced this final message the night before she was killed by her ruthless abductor. Cal, Oct. Indian With his only artridge he sent a pullet hix heart, and felt life- lose in the granite fortress where he made his last desperate stand againat Sheriff Ralph: last SAN BE Billie murderer remaining ¢ crashing Int poase week The Indian's body mated on a hastily construct funeral pyre made by the officers who had run him to his death on the sands of the great Colorado desert, the home of his forefathers. wan ee es Posses Combine. yesterday the under Sheriff Ralphs arrived triking distance of the mur- s jair, A line of scout t and the fortress OOO OR Early combined ete the wan Mike en- \ loniface and th naping of his { Banning trip across line was drawn 1 © covered granite red by the deputies met with jan trailer the the Gradually rt | more }tuous < ert sec tion | shot that ended | c is windings and that had been the doublings on his trails carried him of the long five days’ m Bullion mountain, where he “i ed after brutally murdering, the who was the innocent BILLIE BOY the first crime and the quent man hunt, into Bear and return His endurance native driven to through fear, and his jagainst overwhelming jonly abandoned when, his water | and food almost gone, he used his remaining cartridge to end it all The actual hunt for the murderer Shots and a daring In ed within a hundred yard no rep approa turned to the p Man ipitately back ing with te hand pointing to the whieh Bile his head in Deputy Ben I thre the cause subse nd with on valley pile of gr ed the officers as elted under frolad: the white man, The de the Plute was badl »mposed revecouer, ac- | ently had feen officers, then ere pe to:the FON.) weebee where the emt ee - ite the f the perado's body He api ad nearly a laws was that of the desperation game fight odds was other death | above warily Fugitive Found Dead. bare foot and leg of the fu- sitive protruded through a rift in rocks. Decrevecouer directed 4 let from his Winchester at the crept - leading from the ond murder occurred howe that the fugitive ran 50 cies yh 's the cactus strewn | began at Whitewater, where, afte ) mountain without Pbeating and clubbing the 14-year pyr ag Bullion mountain .| old girl he had abducted over 160 foot; there was no mote behind th During tag < = “panes he. sndee Sie lite rock ptle, and with a shout the four| think, a rea nat & ure officers vaulted into the nook that|of further had sheltered the Indian for many| the ;fugitive. His spirit broken, days and rolled his lifele Jand doubtless suffering agontes lithe author, suffered a at the open jof physical torture after his won-ltack of heart trouble | the si the deputies | ™! zation of the futility | | resistance came upon | Hall Caine Seriously tl. | LONDON, Oct. 16. Hall Caine, | # body into evere ast One of the Indian's feet was bare,|der compelling race across the | Hig condition today is such as and beside tolen Win- | sands, preyed upon by hanger and | oq. mush. aasiaty, chester. It apparent that he} thirst, he accomplished the end) e had removed his shoo, and placing|that 50 determined men of the ALPHA, Ils, Oct, 16.—The vault » muzzle of the gun against his|desert and the ranges had sworn|of the Exchange bank was dyna , had pressed the trigger with| to accomplish when they set out i by robbers early today, who| to| him lay ni! was his toe, ending the life that already | his trail five days ago. secured $2,300 and escaped criminal | will sec One does not need a ten-| nd Patrol der heart in order to pity them, girls in their teens, young! ¢ b month | fering their fresh, fast-fading or vanished charms to any bidder. | | wayn three wa is smiling bravely in her misery. Smile she must, though her} tna: it “ y | heart be aching and her soul in the depths of the blackest | the sers “ug * who will | Harle: ey his propo: | more to put future. Hurley no satisfaction if he is don. Hurley here busily | seems |that no one |week her hand | Georglevitch Leuchtenbersg, tion He's 28, handsome titled highness night; | London say That Miss perial Georg whate | be _[ee saw much of M WHY PAY POLIC FOR PROTEC TION? CAFE PROPRIETOR THINKS IT fo NECESOARY AND TRIES IT He Is Arrested and This Produces Inquiries as to Why Women Are Allowed to Frequent Other Cafes in an Unlawful Manner Without Molestation by the Police. Are of peri If ‘This ylaint, charg A. Hurl irst ond avs anc AS when a filed Cherry; HERE IS THE POLICE STORY OF ane AFFAIR. Saturday, September poi H Steen w girls to b around at that there is $5 a week for you for each g works.” 1 proj The next day Hu an J. H If you right ls to work next week $50 a week for y You can ‘split told Ste Landon I will put That wil or $2 it three a cell at produced bail To Captain of Police D. ed the patrolmar to how easy ‘ * the blood money vidently meant to “square” nt on the beat, Sergeant Wilkes » Steen and Landon if they accepted | .;, tie re would be still | ~ it for them, as he intended ore girls to work in the By “split ‘a little That the up a wide without Why did to at re that they offer? Did the no arre en or are being made American Cafe, the Cafe, the Newport Oafe. bia Cafe, field of speculat Accordl ley make hi ad he to would fall in fact ¢ Steen and Landon say they gave “You boys se % ‘right, “Go see Wilkes and tell me * Hurley urged him yourself,” said Lan Hurley did, the police say. | cates are being “trouble Sergeant Wilkes promptly placea | “2{°% _8'e_Deins “troubled under arrest, and he was _ (Continued en Page © act as a prod to NOTHING BUT DUKE OR PRINCE e Grotto, t of Hurle tion ta [ zirl that he city jail until in the F. Wik lard Hurley admitted that he show- pick up y opens ion goes 8 propo suppose with his sts have in the nhaeuser the Colum- Hurley? Did the fact that none of these by the wey FOR PRETTY MARJORIE GOULD MISS MARJORIE GOULD, 16.—Soelet is chattir YORK, Oct and in London about Marjorie Goul It to be a forégone conclusion but a nobleman need ring of nd French tit ed up with roy exactly thoug royal himself called anything higher He's 31. He was with of at Marienbad, motored through the oined them in Engla as if two not n h to bother Geo father, there joseph, brothe , who recently marr ita Stewart, H ganza house which ri Portugal, He isn't as ric other two, but he’s 1 peror France! and the emperor of Miss Gould, than Tho Grand Duke Alexander the Romanowski rei from Miss a cousin of the and military, be called “your Some society Lon czar, rich He's en imperial folk in puld would called “your im highness, Mrs. Alexander evitech == Romanowski,” er Romanowski's wife alled. There's willing to be would Joseph also favo! the duke of Alb: 88 Gould while abroad this summer. He English mix s not an't be duke.” Goulds h them d later weren't Mar- 9 Pran- Mig- An- he Bra- Aw wooing HEL CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHT BY ROUNDS IN THE NIGHT PINK EDITION OF THE STAR

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