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G a tion—Dunn ny bos "A. Chill of the Swedish woman mting the Swedish % The second time sh WP Mey cut down her food allowance her bed and gave it to anoth ‘told to the consul. m Alki Foint tamfly, who belp-( PM nurses and phys: ans a elved: That do pe! we, the ‘our bod e charges. MADE MH meeting of the Mad aig, November 17, at § « Sfie dub will meet in the Me SM Pike sts. The fy affairs, and has an ext club ta the way dress- and operations are on at the County ‘in defiance of and surgeons rarely ever gowns while dressing wounds. they do, the gowns are hung la nail in the dressing room, and exposed to millions of there. ING THE DAY'S Hurses bathe hands in Ly Wlution. They don’t scrub with green soap or bathe min & carbolic acid. Nurses do Waintect hands before opera Mabsorbent cotton used is not prior to using. it comes Poll and is placed in a Wh the “dress om.” Witte needs some for a Pulls off a handful Ad the bacteria w Mt the room have free this of bold was operate foom while 1 Of germ « 4 = 2 2 Ing from the furne Anaesthetic, )TBALL Mrs. Danielson had to leave the Find Out Why Sick Countrywoman Was Thrown | Out of Institution Because She Would not Work Women Can See the Show —Madrona Improvement Club Will Also Demand Quotes Deadly Parallel ‘Against Hospital Management. wil investigate the alleged ill treatment of Mrs. Han-| at the hands of nurses at the county hospital | theatre party and {ts quests will be to look into a similar case about two years ago. heard of late that inmates are badly treated at and the institution should be investigated. ) Danielson is a subject of Sweden, and as the local of her country I will look into the matter | erg, Swedish consul at Seattle. reatment accorded Mrs. King county hospital government in Seattle, Hannah Consul A will start Danielson has been at the hospital twice, and both times on for internal trouble. While the woman was stil! hardly strong enough to drag herself | (ransact It, will be given ‘@ mop was put in her hand and she was put to work. * the begged off on account of her condition, she was jeered|on Wednesday, Thursday and Fri Both times following the opera ¢ was there she refused outright. She still held out, and they took er patient. This is the story Mrs. hospital, and found refuge with ber lay her case before Consul Commissioners of King County: to the stories of intuman treatment and criminal neglect of |"Ptodate vaudeville matinee / t the County Hospital, as published the institute an imme rs of ‘ona Improve diate and search tONA IMPROVEMENT CLUB. Mt@ove resolutions will be presented by Attorney H. B. Buchanan | Afternoon of enjoy a Improvemen on W club, on 22rd av., between kes a ed membership me tive interest In city THE DEADLY “PARALLEL BY ARTHUR W. L. DUNN. The following “Dont’s” are taken from Dr. Hunter Robb’s “Aseptic Surgical Technique” on the duct of nurses and sur- geons before and during operations and dressings: Don’t attend operation or dress a wound without hospital sult on Suits should be strictly sterile Don't fail to disinfect hands and arms before and after dressing Scrub hands and arms thoroughly with hot water and soap. Scrub again for 10 minutes with tincture of green soap and sterile brush. Bathe in alcohol, then scrub members again in 2 per cent wounds. alcohol, Don't fall to have dressings strictly sterile before using. AB SORBENT COTTON SHOULD BE CUT INTO SMALL SIZES AND STEAMED BEFORE USING. AFTER DRYING, IT SHOULD BE SEALED UP IN A BOX. GAUZE SHOULD BE PREPARED IN SAME WAY. GAUZE OR COT. TON ONCE EXPOSED 1S DAN GEROUS TO USE. Don't from remove gauze or cotton receptacles without forceps Don't prepare jodoform gauze with out and rubber sterile scissors gloves is sterile. ‘t use bandages that are not Bandages should be steam. ed, then packed in germ-proof recep tacles until wanted. DON'T OPERATE WHERE OTHER PATIENTS WILL BE IBLIGED TO INHALE FUMES FROM THE ANAESTHETIC, Don't fail to boll tubes before and after using. Failure to do this is criminal neglect con- = THE SEATTLE > TAF STAR TO GIVE. ~ TEN TIGKETS TO THEATRE at the Majestic at the Expense of This News- | paper. The Star next week will give a |fifty women of Seattle There is an exceptional bill an nounced at the Majestic theatre! and The Star bas purchased fifty of the best seats In the house for Friday's matinee. Beginning Monday morning, ten) lof these seats will be given away jevery day up to and including Fri day The first ten women having busi ness with The Star on Monday and | who call at the new Star branch office No. 1 at 1419 Third ay. to! one of | these | It will be the same on Tuesday, day rankly, we wish to show that our new business offices are placed jexactly in t art of the city,| | where it te easy for you to rea ‘them, and also to demonstrate the shopping woman, the busin |¥oman and the working woma jas well as the leisurely woman, | ean find rest and recreation and the time to take them, at a lively, | j 80 you women of Seattle, bring | your want ads to The Star branch | j office No. 1, at 1419 Third av if you are on , to call you surely will Pn one of the tickets to Friday's ix | matinee in the “Theatre Ben 1 and The Star wilt t Read the ad on page 8 today | Balances 1 00 » tadadndatadntndatada ede « * * BANK CLEARINGS * ‘* * * Seattle. * ® Clearings today . |® Balances 568,419.91 & * Tacoma * i* today. .$ 981,054.00 * * T8A21.00 & * Portland. * *® Clearings today. .$1,294,104.00 # * * * * * TERRE ee) creature apart from the rest of doubtful when viewed as with the brute is only and the actions of his slayers. passion, but the dances and songs soul and make us shudder. before, ordinary men and women. forgotten. rise to such a height of murd believe that they can return tc THE MADNESS AT CAIRO BY T. J. DILLON, That man was molded to his ft a member of a pubtful out of r There is only one explanation of that incident-—a whole city « homi mad, an Instant reversion to the stone age, in which the veneer of ten thousand of n is stripped off, and man, made in the image of stands 5 d in his pristine savagery, with a fiendish lust for torture. The killing of the negro, James, in itself was a comparatively small matter, small when considered with the manner of his death There is yet enough of the brute in all of us to understand the killing of a fellow man in the heat of A righteous death dealing wrath is a human frailty, but gleeful gloating over murder, that stops not when life is extinct, but follows the body to ashes and dust, must ever be incomprehensible to a sane mind. And yet these people of Cairc in Seattle. They, too, no dout atrocities In the Co have cor to church, pray, love their families human beings, In that seething sand there must have been some h which s eagerly pulled a etch, th hands must h ne suffering brow; they must ndship sometime. And yet we rope, hysterically happy over the They joined hands with thetr Bacchinals around a blazing pyre. And these men and women will now take up their life where they left off to become brutes for a little time may go mad, a few more see strange sights in the dark hours of the night, but for the most part they will all be as they were with perhaps a few faint, unpleasant memories, and soon it will be If it is hard to understarid ho Both facts remain, however, indisputable, another example of the fearful and wonderful workings of the human mind. ED SEATTLE, JUDGE GILLIAM ISSUES THE -HO M ITION , WASH., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1909 eee ee eee a ee RAND JURY IS CALLED FO MEDISH CONSUL WILL WWESTIGATE HOSPITAL CARRYING OUT TEDDY'S POLICIES GRESS WILL BE THE & Oe * * * FOOTBALL, * * * * * *® Harvard 0, Dartmouth 0. * * Final. * # Harvard 12, Dartmouth 3. * * First Half * # Princeton 0, Yale § + * First Half. * * Michigan 12, Pennsylvania 6. * * Final * ® Michigan 22, Pennsylvania 6 ® * * Re orm by the hand of Pi the world nee, & becomes sorrowfully His kinship r the brute mob that followed, they burn into the » are the same kind of people as nt have grown indignant over the tributed to foreign missions; go and fn all ways are—or were | blood-drunken mob 6f ten thou | normal those women's t the rope to strangle the poor fi done some kind deeds, soothed have given the warm grip of see these women tugging at a convulsions of a choking man brothers And danced like bloody A few of them They will do their daily tasks w ordinary men and women can us frenzy, it is equally hard to nity 'S MESSAGE TO THE COMING SESSION OF THE CON : “THIS ADMINISTRATION WAS ELECTED ON A PLATFORM PROMIGING THAT WE WOULD CARRY OUT THE POLICIES OF THEO | PROPOSE TO KEEP THAT PROMISE.”—NEWS ITEM, THE SEATTLE ROOSEVELT, AND WE WHY THE GRAND JURY WAS CALLED JUDGE MITCHELL GILLIAM—"I believe in grand juries at stated intervals of at least once every two years. The county officers are elected for two-year terms and I have always believed that at least one grand jury during that term to make a general investigation of all county and other affairs in the community would have a wholesome effect upon public service. became a member of the superior court bench to try to Believing this, I determined when I bring about the establishment of this grand jury idea, and in accordance with that determination I have taken this action.” JUDGE R. B. ALBERTSON—“I signed the call be cause Judge Gilliam came to me and said that he thought it advisable that a grand jury sit.” JUDGE WILSON R. GAY—"I have always been in favor of a grand jury, and when Judge Gilliam brought in the call this morning I signed it readily.” JUDGE JOHN F, MAIN—"I told Judge Gilliam sev- eral days ago that I would sign a call for a grand jury any time he would suggest.” JUDGE J T. RONALD—“The grand jury would naturally be in charge of the judge presiding over the crim- inal department, and there has been tacit understanding between the judges of the superior court that they would sign a call any time Judge Gilliam deemed it necessary.” BOYD J. TALLMAN—“Inasmuch as Judge Gilliam is presiding over the criminal department, and inasmuch as, after an investigation, he deemed it advisable to call a grand jury, I acquiesced in his request and signed the call.” Without giv Judge court lof the super and the m The withe “Draw Mitchell Gil 9:30 o'ck it ¢ 4 name ng any m in open ¢ attorney venire of 120 names | planation or comment for a grand jury to ser and handed the official order given above t« court (Continued on Page Seven.) i ONE C NOV. 22 WENTY-FOUR NAMES ARE DRAWN BY CLERK Six Wage Earners and Two Bankers Among the Men Who Are Called to Make an Investigation of All Public Affairs in King County—Judges Tell Why They Did It. NAMES DRAWN FOR GRAND JURORS J. W. SARGENT, 2415 Western av., team- ster. H. DAHLSTROM, 2240 Market st., sewer con- tractor. WILLIAM CARD, 4160 41st av. S., laborer. F.E. WEYMOUTH, 610 15th av. N., superin- tendent of N. P. Railway. JOHN W. PATTERSON, keeper. R. LISSENGER, Orillia, rancher. J. E. McCLELLAND 206 N. Broadway. L. M. PARKER, Falls City, fruit grower. THEO. LEAN, Des Moines, rancher. THOS. GILBERT, 821 30th av., secretary of Suburban Realty Company. J. T. FRANKLAND, 1615 Third av. W., stone- worker. A. H. JOHNSON, Cove, carpenter. A. S. WHITE, 416 Melrose av. N., vice presi- dent Olympic Plaster company. JOE LEMAR, 2024 N. 78th st., machinist. JOHN ANDERSON, South Park, barnman at Seattle Brewing & Malting Co. R. R. SPENCER, Washington Annex, vice pres- ident National Bank of Commerce. B. W. SCHNEIDER, R. F. D. No. 2, King coun- ty, fruit grower. A. L. BROWN, California av. and Sunset av. W., real estate man. J. O'LEARY, 323 Second av. W. N. L. JOLLIFFE, 4106 12th av. N. E., horse dealer. F. J. BOEHM, Brighton Beach, grocer. J. P. GLEASON, 122 18th N., manager of the American Bank & Trust company. ROBERT BOWREN, Renton, laborer. WILLIAM LEE, Kent. store Woodinville, Superior Court, State of Washington, for King County, In the Matter of Drawing a Grand Jury: Now, on this, the 13th day of November, 1909, be- ing the second Saturday in November in 1909, at the hour of 9:30 o'clock a. m., in open court; the court di- rects that the county clerk appear in open court forth- with and then and there draw in equal number from i, each jury box, in which had previously been deposited the names of all qualified jurors in King county, as required by law, twenty-four names of persons to serve };|@8 grand jurors in the above entitled court, to serve in department No. 1. Done in open court this, the 13th day of Novem ber, 1909. (Signed. ) MITCHELL GILLIAM. BOYD J. TALLMAN. R. B. ALBERTSON. JOHN F, MAIN. WILSON R. GAY. J. T. RONALD. A. W. FRATER. ~ALL OF IT-HOT OFF WIRE IN TONIGHT’S PINK EDITION OF THE STAR