The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 26, 1909, Page 7

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| GENTAAL INJUNCTION 1S litererbeliiil to “Find Re-| TO WAR ci and Ss Salvador ee a Jto Start Things) cou RH a Week, and the |" {hs morning denied the © D. Hillman for a Will Follow. action: ¥ —_—— yoyo Commissioner Lind temporary the Puget straining jeotrie company from rais ie yeted Freee) « their rates, on the ground that/ Get, 26.-—It te re was not within the court's between NiO} province to do so. lor will be de He and said tt came within the juris @ week, and will re four or five Con dietion of the state rattroad com 3 4 before the/ mission and made the statement ie Re re cou es that; that the commission was the only become involved » where relief, if any, could be war are Salvador, Nic-| secured. Costa Rica and; T court a made the state mont that in order for an individual stated today that Ze-|to get an injunction he would have General Alfaro,| to show that he has been personally fe have invaded Sal-/damaged or that he witl suffer an the president of| irreparable loxs tf the injunction is Miter enemy of the|not granted et dent of Nic.) Fredertck R. Burch, attorney for His probable that he) Mr. Hillman, said that the residents to ald those of Sal-|of the White River vattey would at r pry to assist Provis-jonce take the matter to the state of Nicar-| railroad commission and demand a st Zelaya to| hearing. Costa Rica) é oth of which are ‘at present, are likely to be. ip the clash, because of their “It matters not.” said Mr “which side won this little prelim inary suit for an injunction, as the matter will have to be fought out before the state raflroad ¢ Bureh, eith mmtsaton Sa be codangered, and theirjanyway. It only pats the burden ae Le yee by} ef proof on the shoulders of the eh several] people, while if we had secured the injunction the pe |Beon the defenda Senator Pavthamue of Sumner yesterday filed formal protest with |the state rafiread | Ove pia. PETES ETELTTIST TTT ple would have He VHRLLE TO WED Poe s—an i* is to be formally “oot aang that | FEUD CANCELS POLicy. rd, the) ST. LOUIS, Oct. 26—Mayor ot A, D. Shepard, of this!» Roy C. Woods, of Wellston, William P. eigre |@ St. Louls. county, today re- Artillery, U. 5. 4 cetved notice from an {nsur- fe im Seattle visiting)» ance company that it had Rawin ©. Long. the! + canceled his $5,000 policy, No Capt. Long. U. 8.! 4 explanation is given, was 8 favorite last winter!» Woods believes the Presideo hops and aged to was caused by two wihirs of the army set. Miss political feud shootings Wellston. Seen teeenseneseseaee in His life is insured for $40,000, and his will pro- vides that if he dies at the band of an assassin, “Joseph W. Folk, former governor of Missourt, shall recetve $1,000 and 6 other lawyers $500 each to prosecute his slayers, and * that the officers arresting his slayer shall receive $2,500." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 7 * * *) * * * *. + eo eee ee ‘ENDS TROUBLE Mra. Henderson With the baby, she children scream the house, found ditten by « a faint cry from the ae she enw the CLOTHES AND THEN bil into 8 well and drown DIES. be rescued. Hasten- Bee mee, Henderese) st casea in his best salt of {the two older children in dy from the effects of the/| clothes, N. Ichabach!, a Japanese cannery hand, recently from Alas- ka, leaped from a second story win Nentes destroy bair ond) gow at the rear of the Fremont eee a, dcazt | Howse, 706 Sixth av, S.. sustaining 5, Mgt ees and | niuries to his head and back which druggists und bac |resuited in his death at the City hospital shortly after 8 o'clock this morning Patrolman A. N. Mayou, who in. vestigated the apparent suicide, was unable to learn what impelled the act. A sealed letter addressed to |K. Ishikawa, Yokohama, Japan, was found in the Orientals pocket Whether the letter explains death ia a matter which Coroner : Aue Mise tr PAMLOM i Unealied-for tale atort Snyder is unable to fathom. The letter was mailed today | ‘The fact that the Japanese was dressed in recently — purchased ugh inexpens poliee to believe clothing of tasty ive make, leads t that Ichibachi was deapondent be cause of some love affair, A gold wateb, $75 in gold and a few dol jars in silver were found im the} man's pockets. . wt SET BOMB FAILS ANE MODELS. TO DO ITS WORK'* (hy United Pree) LAWTON, Okla., Oct. 26.--An in NG nas removes |fernal machine was found yesterday Exchange Horm |in the office of County Attorney J. ___| A. Fain, whe recently received an uri-jalleged “black hand” letter threat anes ‘ening him with assassination on or jbefore October 25. T machine 7| Was intended to explode by the tg jnation of a match as the office door |was opened. F. B. Swank cretary to Congressman arris, was the first person to enter __.|the office but the bomb fafled to explode == FIFTEEN GIRLS YELL = WEN HOLO-UP TRIED, 7 United Pree.) SAN LORENZO, Cal., Oct. 26 la search is being made for two highwaymen who attempted to hold -lup 15 girls employed at the Califor Central Canneries late at night n the young women were walk to their homes along Jouthern Pacific tracks When the hold up men from behind some trees and leveled their revolvers at the girls, they dered them to keep quiet, on the penalty of death. g, the victims all began to scream nd in terror turned and fled back half a mile away second attempt made » employes | 16 yours ts abtomin: RS’ SUPPLIES. me Sievir Co. 111 Cherry wt — former Moves, 106 Reneca AND CLOTHING to the cannery This is the ‘ob the fem IN HONOR OF HALLOOK, The Northwestern Graduate asso: lation of Theta Delta Chi will give n Informal smoker at the Olympus te, Thursday, October 28th, at 20 p. m., in honor of James Hal wecretary of th of the fra k, graduate national organization ity. tern lief From the Railway) commission at| BY HGH JUMP While caring for) JAPANESE BUYS NEW SUIT or| the; jumped | Instead of obey-| 5 DENIED BUT si MAY FIGHT ON COMPANY GROWING Arrange a Good Schedule for Automobiles Com- peting With Electric | Trains, petition | The firet regular schedule on which automobiles will run between | Poster and reotown for the no jee of suburbanites who have boy Otted the Int rhan electric rall way will become effective tomor |row morning | Thin much was definitely decided pon at a meoting held in Riverton last night, when a committ was appointed to confer with the three #ight-seeing cars operating through the suburba. An agr nt as toa ‘ogular was reached ‘Tho first two cars will leave Fos. schedule THE STAR—TUESDAY, MADE HERSELF A STAR IN A NIGHT ter, the southern terminus of the line, at 6:40 a arriving at orgetown at 6:10 o'clock, Another car will leave Foster at 6:10 a m. The schedule has been ar nged so | that the people living in the suburbs will have a service that will be just jas efficient as that given by the | Interurban, raftway The round-trip fare between For- |ter and Georgetown and tnterme- diate points will be 16 cents. At |Georgetown the passengers will |board electric oars for Seattle. | Hence, by buying ttekets from the | Seattio Bleetric company, people Iv- jing an far south as Foster can make the round trip for 23 cents, auto FAVOR UP-TOWN SITE FOR NEW COURT HOUSE In building a new county court house, the growth of Seattle in the pest towards the north and the dis- Unmet probability of a continued ex pansion in that direction, should be taken into consideration, was the gist of the report of the special committee of the Chamber of Com- merce, appointed to consider a lo- cation for the proposed new King county building, made today The report favors a site much farther north than the present one and a building of such excellence that it might inst 100 years if nec ewsary. The committees also fa vored the employing of a national authority who would disinterested- ly select the best site. : GRUESOME. EXHIBITS WA OAMAGE SUT An electric Mght globe with a parched piece of skin still stuck to the glass, and severa) photographs of a terribly mutilated and burned) |hand, were introduecd as evidence this morning In the case of Anna BK. Abrams against the city | Abrams in suing the city for $50,000 |for the death of her husband, W. | Abrama, on the night of March 2. 1908, from an electric shock re descent lamp in their home, 4741 Thackery place F. G. Simpson, an electrical ex- pert, was on the stand for over an hour this morning, and testified }that, in his belief, Abram's death wag caused by the negligence of the city. The case is being tried before Judge Rend! 4. ‘MAN KISSES WIFE AND THEN VANISHES What has become of Hugh Em- bry, a recent arrival from Okla | home? To the police Mra. Embry said today that her husband kissed her goodby last Saturday morning, say- ing that he was going down town to attend to a matter of business. Since that time nothing has been seen of him. In the First National bank Embry deposited $500 when he reached Seattle October 20. The jmoney ts still in the bank. Mrs. Embry ts stopping at 2419 First av. }She can assign no reason for the disappearance of her husband. FTI KO tt tek i* BANK CLEARINGS. * Seattle. * Clearings today. . #* Balances * Tacoma. ® Clearings today. . .$1,210,560.00 | ® Balances 89,906.00 * Portland. |% Clearings today... $1,29 | ® Balances 184, \* A ee ed $2,226,844.88 249,485.58 9.00 bh tne hn Ba Bo Stine Sn see Scott | ‘TAFT UP EARLY BUT OTHERS KEPT IN BED (Hy United Press.) CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo., Oct. 26. President Taft landed here at 6 | o'clock this morning and spoke the Normal achool, The sun rose tee as the president started speak ing. Of the 32 governors who are making the trip down the Missts: aippl with President Taft, arose early enough to hear the president sp at Cape Girardeau. They were Governor Hadley of Mis- at |souri and Governor Hay gf Wash ington. : CAIRO, IIL, Oct. 26.—The Olean lder, having on board Presidbnt Taft, governors of 32 states and many congressmen, arrived here at| noon and after a one-hour stop pro- leeeded to Hickman, Tomorrow morning the party will arrive at | Memphis ARBITRATORS TO MEAT. The board of arbitratiqw appotnt ed to settle the differences between ‘so Seattle, Renton & Southern rail |way and the Seattle Electric com- | pany, growing out of the desire of} the former to use a certain stretch of tracks owned by the latter road, will meet this afternoon, Mra.| ceived which turning on an inean-} | only two} Nan Brennan can be a star wh proven that it's In her. The other night when Maud Lambert, one of the Shubert shows in New ager was accosted by Mies Brennan, who was only just a pretty chorus girl. “Give me a try at it, not a litte bit more. So that's how Nan Brennan worked her way out of the chorus, She'll have a big part soon in th earns: susneuimmmmnsnane WHAT WOULD you say? Star’s Querry About John Ganton’s Reply to His Son Brings Hosts of An- swers and Some Nice WHAT WOULD You say? Last week The Star asked this Question. All week The Star read ors have been busy answering. Jobn Ganton, principal character in a play of that name now appear. Ing at the Alhambra, is a big, dom. | tnoering, rough, packing house king | His son, carefully educated, a gen tleman and social favorii plays jthe stock market—with the asual lresult. He goes broke for $115,000 whieh he doesn't have. He tolls the story to hie father, And Jobn |Ganton said— INDIANA FIREMAN HOUSES WITH HIS PENKNIFE | piest in town, | California Astronomer Trailing Ter restial Truant That Has Been Missing 36 Years. BERK EY, Cal, Oct. 26.-—Last, strayed or stolen—a star; probably masquerading under an assumed name. Reward to finder. | A. J. Champreaux, professor of astronomy at the University of Cal ffornia, is after the reward, the leap and gown of the doctor of phil- | osophy | Champreaux has set himself to find a star that has been lost for 36 years, To the layman his job |looks pretty much Ike trailing a needle in a couple of haystacks. but the professor is sure he®will| succeed. He expects to turn the | trick with paper and penoll Acthra is the name of the heav-| enly truant, It is one of the 800 stars called asteroids by the as |tronomers, The tiny asteroid was | discovered a long time ago and then forgotten, In 1873 when some one happened to remember It, tele scopes were trained on the heavens but the search was fruitless, The little st#® was swallowed up in the | broad celestion expanse. Champreaux believes that the star has been found and gften an lother name, and he proposes to lcompute the orbit of many of the asteroids and find which one has| been masquerading with the orbit rightfully belonging to Aethra, Then he will tear off the mask and restore the abashed Aethra to} plence, NAN BRENNAN. ” she begged She'd been using her brains while «il And that night the audience praised the star, just as usual, if ‘The Star buetness office. | Fireman Jas. Ross of Evansville, Ind, is also a carpenter. He hasn't time to bulld real houses while on duty, so he builds toy houses that are complete, even to lace curtains in the windows, “It (By United Presa) takes Just as long for me to build a little house with my penknife | ONOLIILI, Oct. 26—-Fifty sup- as it does to bufld a big house,” he says. His children are the hap- posed lepers out of the first hun. because vsti have toy houses that “WOULD UNMASK ‘ STAR OCTOBER 26, 1909. GLAVIS COMES HERE WEY ER WILL FOR A BRIEF state Interior ¥ Ke r the 4 in Seattle troh W D last night. Mr, Glavis #pent ut a few hours in Beat | the 11:30 train for California. * He Butcher of Cuban IIl- seal be absent for a week, after Selected to Succeed Gen-| ""!"" he will return ty tine to pr . Jwent any evidence the government eral Who Superintended |... af ene: ee os Ferrer’s Murder. land hearing Whether or not the former chief soil of the division and the man who un (Hy United Press.) jearthed most of the evidence against | MADRID, Oct. 26.—General Wey: | URningham will be anked to testit ler will succeed Ge al Santiago] "" of many unsettled 4 n as captain general of Barcelona "whe dene the investigation. The official announcement of his}, 7h® date for the hearing has not appointment to the position was) /°°" set, The government officials made today hive been here two weekn, but John Under the direction of Santiago, |" Y, attorney for Cunningham the recent disturbances in Baree-|™ - lona were put down and the popu ta crushed, Hundreds were exe) cuted in Fortress Mont Juich for] rioting or for baving alleged sym-| pathies for those against the gov ernment. While he was in com mand of the Barcelona district, | pe | Prof, Francisco Ferrer was taken) into custody, tried and shot Weyler, it is expected, will com plete the work begun by Santiago, | to the end that the government may against the/ matoes 200 box: eabbage Be hi Baid- | | ory 2 the. TEA blend bbe ; Jorsey 1 COFYER—LIipton Walter Baker cocoa 2 % ny emerge triumphant |'win apples $1, box radicals and their efforts to bring BUTTER—lows better § se 41; Seattse| "St on & revolution. creamery 4 ibe feer W “lane be taking his own by both rtles t Cunningham's the hearing uk DROWNED AND MYSTERY 10 SOLVE tipulations to the ” cannot ath of Peter Simp. on, whowe body was found tn the Duwamish river, near Riverton, this morning, was due to an acetdent, foul play or suicide is a question hat confronts Coroner Snyder negle, lived In @ shack in Riv- n and worked nearby for a stone mpany, When he fatled to report for work this morning a search for him was started, with the result that his body was found tn the river. No facts concerning the man’s relatives an be lear ¥ chops i Ibs sb TIGER ALMOST STOLE HEARST PARTY EMBLEM Court Stops o Temiey From Using Indepen- dence League Column of City Election Ballots. on the time comes. Bhe has in York, was “The in, Midnight Sons,” the stage man- “1 know the was chorusing whole part.” ena Pull Cream pound » Shubert forcea sindicemeramaes Jowa Butter, Stall 9, 2 Ibs. Gr Washington Creamery But Well, thats what The ed ita readers. Star ask (By United Press) NEW YORK, Oct. 26—Jus fi heese, Fancy astern © re amery Butter, Stall 11 Strictly fresh Local Ranch Eggs, Stall 4, ‘dozen 45¢ for TESBEN uider al ut Ibe Ib. ing 4 for ned. pan tea d6e; “91 All kinds ery reilah 166 ney 18 ‘ jamb mn 6 to 7 ih bi carp @ Ibe 10¢ fish 206 WESTLAKE PUBLIC MARKET STRICTLY SANITARY. Specate.” Butter, Eggs and Cheese Stalls 103-104, per 20¢ 2 Ibe. 65¢ » 65¢ ranteed best Ranch Eggs, Stall 118, dozen. 45¢ ter, Stall 12 pound. .40¢ ee EVERY DAY I8 VEGETABLE DAY. One hundred farmers in clean inside FREE STALLS. You will al- There were all kinds of answers.) tice Gerard this afternoon de- ways find bargains here. Taxi delivery, 10 ordinary Many of them had the old man! cided that Tammany could not packages for 10 cents. throwing his son out with curses] use the independence league and profane advice. Others had| column of the ballot in the city the-old man forgiving his #o0n,| election, and ordered that col- WESTLAKE PUBLIC MARKET starting him out again, All had] umn be left blank. hin greatly excited about it Justice Gerard is today hearing Hut what John Ganton reaily Nanenth an 40 saatnae sald) arguments as to whether Tammany was Hall should be allowed to place the WELL, I'LL GAY THIS MUCH lindependence league emblem on the FOR YOU. YOU'RE NO PIKER, /ticket headed by Justice Gaynor, ANYWAY, Gaynor Is the Tammany nominee |— Some of the writers came pretty | ¢,, mayor of New York city, close to the right answer. The} phe printers in the meantime three coming closest to the spirit | ha of th play were Mrs. E.G. Lobr-|any ballots, and they declare that| man, 1612 Torry av.; Miss Clari| inion, they are allowed to start Buford and Miss LaVerne Burton, | work immediately that they will be 5409 Greenwood ay. They will Ket! unable to print enough to go,around, rents to the show, good any night! and that m voters will be com- this week. Mrs. Lohrman gets &| petied to go ballotiess on Tuesday full box, Miss Buford get four)" Hearst's attack on Otto F. Ban- seats, and little Miss Burton, who/nard has split the republicans and| fs only pine years old. will get twolthe civil alliance, and Tammany is seate. The tickets can be had at/iuniant, declaring that whenever) there have been three candidates in| been enjoined from printing LT, - ~ the field, Tammany has always! won BUILDS TOY Hearst claims that he will get all the votes that he received be-| fore and an additional 100,000. Tammany offers even money that| Hearst will run ‘third, and that he will not poll over 100,000 votes WILL SELL STAMPS FOR GONSUMPTIVES. Souvenir stamps to the number of 100,000 have been ordered by the! Seattle Red Cross society and when |S | they arrive in Seattie will be plac-| as ed on sale at one cent each. The| SS money raised is to go towards the |= fund being raised to fight tubercu-| lonia. ‘ot all the money will be kept} here, however, because according to the rules of the organization, one third must be sent to the headquar. ters at Washington The stamps will be placed an sa at all leading stores down town and | at the grocery and drug stores in} the residence district SUPPOSED LEPERS WELL s" NCNM money cannot buy | dred examined by physicians at the s=t/{aland of Molokal have been decla’ ed nonleprous, and probably will be} freed. The re-examination of these unfortunates was made under a/ resolution passed by the last legis make up the leper settlement TRIALS OF HAMILTON (By United Press.) OLYMPIA, Oct. 26.—Trials of | former Adjt. Gen, Hamilton have! been set for November 23 and 24.) The embezzlement charge will be taken up first and the forgery case will follow when the other is disposed of. Hamilton, in charge of the sheriff, spent most of yesterday at the capitol buliding in the office | of the auditor and attorney general checking up the vouchers of his for- mer office in preparing his defense. THAW'S HOPES ARE SHATTERED AGAIN (By United Press.) ALBANY, N. Y., Oct. 26.—Harry | K. Thaw, slayer of Stanford White, | the New York architect, must re- main in Matteawan asylum for the criminally Insane. His appeal from the recent deci sion at White Plains, which him back to Matteawan, wae di this afternoon by the court of ap- peals. Thaw most probably will take his case to a higher court. build and fit. suit, Furnishings The Men's Furnishings | | ly Department is bristling with bargains in things in men’s wear. The most extensive line carried in the city, and all. popular priced, A. J CHAMPREAUX, PROF. He has been promised the covet- ed degree if he succeeds, lature, and the astounding results| of the first five score cases has = caused hope run high in the| COMPARE THIS GA hearts of the 875 outcasts that priced offerings in Seattle | ter RMENT Style, Westlake and Pine; Fifth and Sixth Aves. su Mm UUUUUEAUOOUEEOGASUOAUESUOEGN UOUGEAANAOEESEAUAATTAATY A. BRIDGE & a Th Clothiers on the Coast. Here’s a Cravenette That Sells at $15 with the higher quality, honest- All go in at the price mentioned, $15.00, A. Bridge Special $15 Suits Are still the leaders with men and young fellows who desire their full money’s worth in a popular priced Shoes There vici and wear are metal, patents for win Men’s Shoes, gun in button or lace, and an im- menise showing of the W. Douglas Shoes at $3 $3.50. A. Bridge & Co. Largest Clothiers on the Coast Vest and Yesler—TWO ENTRANCES—first and Yesler NNN ULLAL Lo HAAHAASS> iii (( { (iti tt tt th

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