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ES SEATTLE WANT FOR ITS MAYOR THE SLAVE D MBLIGAN GANDIDATE WTF BY RECORDS {OATS OF COUNTY we Dealer Says Gill is Known Throughout the sry as Legal Agent in Seattle of White Slavers is Attorney of Record for Cases Now hg in Courts of King County. % {Prom the Post Intelligencer Feb. 1, 1905.) are held even it must be admitted that Mr. Hi wi Dis lege! right os 2 member of the bar when fae an atterney for the most depraved of creatures, but Be admitted as true that in so doing he dishonors it of the Dishonor is net generally fim the eye of pubic opinion it may sometimes look ‘erimes. Mr. Gill's protestations that he will con professions city cannot be overcome by he has little regard for public opinion.” Jt Want the legal representative of the White Association for mayor? @convicte: Thurs aries Gil awhsy deal ir do this w mory of Max rt of this jn hite_staver, declares Hi Gill i rt records in other white » appear in court im but he has paid immigration 1 $250 to defend ¢ is known an f their class. Thurna ¢ Herman, an na Prye were attorneys for Thurna and Herman. i had been set, the notice was served on Gill, & The signature of this firm appears on the notices ile in the superior court. Me alter Gill had be: Thurna’s case came to trial Pealed Gill saw Thurna a thin. Thurna t ¥ Gill informed me that he could not be my pe sourt, He said he was running for mayor and the SPM would tell about it and it would lose him votes MOY but Gill said he would send me another lawyer Whim himself. 1 begged } Was no use, as he was running for mayor and MA people know he was Monday fe ween Twas brought into court a lawyer named MF Was there to defend i He tried my case ar Shaffner, 11 tion with 1 BWAS MY FIRST Wi He OF THAT BUSIN DTHURNA AND GLI W86 Withdrew, { me tine as ‘T) Who was re this is not an ur shown by the arrested Decern fords show that Bo Gill has not y will soon cor eve another Jay, mM matter wi three $6 may, i 4 himsels toa Bis no hy, All clearnes, Mth whit BM known, nated for mayor on the The day before { told him that he could eeting as follows m to look after my case my lawyer. Gill had sent him to the 11 was onvicted.” ED ME TO PAID ME FOR IT." stance with Hi Gill f William The Hoyt nar the Case ¢ white slaver ed by Gill the Bov s likely that Gill . d the People of tie company then, cheer a, ABOCIATIC Path, whe TIS HY Gi. DMECANKOY (>; mK) of the superior court show that the law firm : time to serve notice that the trial of these ! ! WILL PREACH “FOLD SUNDAY iRev. Mr. Herthum Willi Deliver the Sermon and Michael Fisher Will Put on Amusements. | There will be vaudeville and! preaching at Dreamland rink Sun day night Michael Angelo Fisher, who ox ducts the dance hall on will provide the vaudevil Rev. Mr. Frank EI tor of Union Ch Georgetown, will p mon. Maybe vaudeville is a strong @ word for the amusements of there will be muetl it, and some comedy evening und plenty of Will Be “Innocent” Amurement Mr. Herthum will out kind of program he thin Innocent,” and Michael Fisher will furnish tt. and Incident ally it might be suggested that Mr | Herthum has liberal ideas about amusements He can't see the young people who attend the Dreamland dances week nights shouldn't be given something in) the way of Anmesement that will please them Sunday night, and Mr. | Herthum also thinks that in| th why | Help Some People won't do them a mt do them any the chance of be throng a more waid Mr.| Herthum this o Tt ix for that ter the ball and and what other his own ex singer amusements all at pense.” Minister to Be The arrang morning f acl Ange! Censor. were ra mo isher was # tia head Herthum | leave all the arrangements to Michael, but the latter had to call for help, and finally it was agreed | that Mr. Hertham would outline| what he thought wor inno cent,” and that M i would make suggestions and the minister would pass on them SIX YEARS FOR AW OLEO DEALER made nt ty United Prees.) CHICAGO, March 1.—Judge K. M Landis, the man who sentenced the Standard Ol! Co. to pay a» $29,000, 000 fine, struck hard at oleo margarine dealers yesterday, when he sentenced W. A. Broadwell, a local dealer, to serve six years at Leavenworth and to pay a fine of $15,000. ‘The government has lost $15,000 to $20,000 through Broadwe!!,” the judge in giv sentence. said “it Ie as he was ar and went on shown that a rested, he gave ba olating the law “A wilful defiance statutes,” he added Three ot tried at of the federa dealers are to be Jig admit ted that he intimated that he might ty of the once. Judge Lar ok into the culpabi manufacturers of Iilinois repeatedly Congreseman Maxiey for Broadwell sped gave ba t deve INDIAN MURDERS TWO OVER GIRL ty Un HOQUIAM, M 4 TODREAMLAND that t have! |= He| = HEGIOTRATION PEOPLE WIN PACIFIC MAIL « FRAUD CAE NOW ON TRIAL PF. £ Winchester Faces a). Jury in Superior Court— ‘ State Has a Strong Case Against the Man. Fras x = SS THE FIGHT WITH COMPANY RUNG 1 Bleetric that etfe for th t > TERURBMN 8 ® rallroad a e P LUFF ON U9, —Secretary Dickinson wet Forced Government to wn| Grant Mail Privilege on Threat of Withdrawing Boats. Carrying | single further word can be SEATTLE SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1910. on NP THAING K STANDS be AND ONE CENT LEGAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE WHITE EALERS---HIRAM CHARLES GILL? IN THE SHADOW OF LIBERTY BELL G. N. TRAIN BURIED IN AVALANCHE The Helpless Passengers, Stalled Since Tuesday at Entrance to Cascade Tunnel, May All Be Dead— Wires Down Before Details Are Learned—Relief Trains on the Way. (By United Press.) EVERETT, Wash., March 1.—The train reported wiped out by a snow slide west of the Cascade tunnel today has been definitely fixed as the Spokane local, westbound, stalled near Wellington since February 24, The 30 people aboard may have all been killed. EVERETT, Wash., March 1.—The Great North- ern train which has lain stalled above Scenic since last Tuesday has probably been destroyed by an avalanche. “Mail train stalled above here wiped out by land- slide.” This much of a message came over the wires from Wellington shortly before noon, then the wires broke. Since then, though every effort has been made, no learned of the terrible catastrophe. Every wire, telephone and telegraph, between here and Wellington is down, broken by the terrific snow storms and slides that have disrupted the Great North- ern service. SEND RELIEF TRAIN. Immediately on receipt of the dispatch Great Northern officials equipped a relief train and started ut. Every available physician and nurse in Everett and Bellingham were hurried out on the train. Food supplies and a big crew of wreckers and carpenters were taken along. What train it is which has met this terrible fate, how many passengers it carried, whether they all went down to death buried under tons of snow and broken iron and woodwork—all this is unknown. The railroad officials got but the one despairing ery for help before Wellington, the nearest telegraph station, was cut off from the world. It is not even known whether it is an east or west- bound train. Railroad officials, however, think that it is most likely the westbound train which was stalled closest to the tunnel a week ago today. The train was a local and carried only 30 passen- gers, the railroad men say.