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; k ' i NA LINE. FROM NOON 10 PAIS yer { arity names | am Wh " ager of the] : } Lady Adt insist that the con ® acts be given , ' QGraban White was defeated by 1 Pa in the London-Mar the world. It teved he tx will-| ing to take up Lady Adby's prop ation OBTAIN GROCERIES UNDER FALSE | PRETENSE home, stable day we hat Mrs rself to be Peter son repr FE. P. Tremper, wife of president of the Seattle Title Co., and upon this representa. | tion sold her $28.10 worth of | groceries on credit. Mrs. Peterson's | name got into public print at the time she appeared as a witness for | Mrs. Jev Johnson, accused of defrauding the S. E. Co, on a fraud-| ulent claim for damages | TWO WOMEN IN AUTO CRASH All Aboard for the Skyline! First Airship to o Carry Passengers — for Fare prem Ne MANS sewer BOPP LONG IF FOR WABD BOAT CAM “ange rHE STAR ‘THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1 910. LV TERIOR VIEW SHOWS SOF 17 BALL OANS GUPPOMTING ALR EHIEP we Exterior liner, | deck and the cabins, : Ben Butler’s Grand: 326 feet long, Broadside at | Sketch of Congressman Butier Ames, Lodge out of his senate Two women w thrown from} BOSTON, July 7 rr Aw one auto, a man injured previously | frandson of the fam war-ho in an accident was } about,|"Ben” Butler, so! insurgent and four other men were given the| Congressman, mitlio’ only 38 fright of their lives when two big | years now a ant for the automobiles crashed into each | senatorial a worn by Her other at Sixth av. and Madison st.| Cabot L« s that bh yesterday evening. C. A. Sears| fore the o is en and H. Winters were rushing to |spotlight of publicity w the Seattle General hospital with| career of Senator Le &@ man injured in lighting plant con-| struction work at Snoqualmie Falls. | Just as they reached Sixth av. aj machine driven by C. 8. Mantell and oceupled by J. C. Barnum, Mantel! and Mrs. Barnum, into Madison st. They met crash and the two women thrown out of the machine, but they, like the others, escaped ser fous injury turned al with w | Eeonomizing is easy to begin next! month. not giving cheap advertising nor doin al Wo iy ‘ottices have been | 712 First avenue for 18 If bought and took | offices July 15 1,} ther office in | I will save you at least « or 50 per cent on your Dental Work and your work will be done by tried and true Graduate Dentiats of from ten to twenty years’ experic who have carefully ine if the sys of which earned — fe . both Reputation and Suc ‘The Day of Keckoning Is Sure te} Come | hould open in Seuttl work done ey in the bank, and ork and guar. (By. United Press.) WASHINGTON, July 7 | sons of the Jeffries Johnson Pit will be the topic of a sermon by Rey. J. Milton Waldron, colored, on | Sunday I wil say something to make the | coun it up and take notice,” | nald Waldron today | mrs? I eve that because Johnson Plates | Won, prize fighting will be stopped forever » white people are un- Semel A Record to Be ¥ just to Johnson, but this doesn’t] ALBANY, Or., July 7—The bodies J. 1900, deified ne re-\change the principle that fighting|of Miss Inez Taylor and Wilbur “nc | 1s wrong Francis, 26, who were drowned last ie The newspapers are most to| night when a launch occupled by a t 1| blame for the interest in prize fight |party of the young people capsized ng. If negroes attach undue im-|{n the Willamette river, were re portance to this fight, the whites | covered today ren rational.” But for the aid given by another ns oe - ~ launch which was near by, Mrs REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR. |p ancig Minn Agnes Gibbons, Mis he of personal re-| Velma Davis and Rollin G. Hac m i man, the other members of the Hither you aren't able to own the | party, would have drowned | sver your head or it leak They were being carried help-| a man is born without any poor | lessly down the rapid current when ions, he doesn't know any bet-| rescued |ter than to go and marry some. Francis had been married but a about . The first time a man rows a boat | short time Mrs. Francis is pros , “ r jacrows a creek he gets a large con-| trated trom grief today are t vietion that he’s @ natural born} The accident occurred a few DWIN J | yachtsman miles below Albany. 118 First Avenue, Uni Hiock,| A man brags about how fast he| Miss Taylor was the daughter of ’ Cee ne a gerry [ean shave when he has to eatch a|George Taylor, a city councilman. | 4 for people who| tin, but forgets to tell how he cuts| Francis was the son of County | nounce him in ¢ trict in the state as who betrays a pub To a corresponder ry legislative ai a political boss Ames ubfolded his }lined the platform will c ane the state a This fight.” he said being waged from motives sonal ambition. I am fight a principle—for the princ’ public life of live and 1 the riddance of boss Co }the reestablishment of rv | the ». through their re The 8 nd © pon which bh ia not of per ing What Lodge Stands for. is the condition He Lodge political pily passing His style has brought into disrepute the emb teh is part and cel of a decadent order of political mar republ 1am fighting for the an rehabilitation of my party. the people party are There is absolute! individualism. 1 am through mendous political power the no ebance that he would do every rep contesting against and I re nt n party Today ablican dominated by the bosses for power to down me pod's atti tude is merely that of the other trust magnates. Lodge is their prophet. It is they for whom he is working, and pec! “L want to see the lo yoreed from legislation Lodge's tutelage, ‘Jake’ W has built eal corruption in that has few equals-in the United States. Foundation of Machine. hese practices the very| foundation of the Lodge ma chine. He has built up his power not by constructive gislation but by the meanest of political trickery and jobbery. A member of his own family has fattened at the public erib, and he has foisted burdens upon the state andthe |himself and blames Massachusetts | up a machine for wife of course ex to pay their servant bby di Under jalize it. No railroad or other cor poration will back me. On the| contrary, they are frankly out to defeat me. It wae only a short time ago that Wm. Wood, presi dent of the American Woolen Co. otherwise known as the ‘woolen trust,’ which owes so much to Senator Lodge, told me to my face hing in his} ‘ardwell | politi ~~ NEGRO PARSON TO | PREACH ON FIGHT. | for it. i enator Lodge) who says he's going to bump at. nation I am length and to strengthen his ¢ we and t acquaint t Lodge's owed sem|i-nanctified mense polits age, Senator L bring sand wa of reaching an. either through polities or m It has been done before, and will be attemy again Senator 1 touch with which e and me has ne bee It t# an upt P in Massachuse will be in sym thy with me, for the rev dgelem and bossism widespread the 5 t selves have their way in 1 shal) be elected That ‘ Treasurer W. W. Francis. “No ang and partial interior view of Count Zeppelin's dirigible airship Deutechiand, half the size of the Deutschiand, will be buiit to replace the wrecked dirigible which extend nearly half the length of the airship. on Fires JOHN CORT, TRUST BUSTER, TELLS OF HIS DRAMATIC FIGHT . any fight th jbut a go jw events that it te be VMI PARTITION PROMAEM OL Ob ox. AO CARIES Fresh and in fine fettle fre strenuous Kicking open of the lof the house of Kiaw & Er Manager John Cort, the big jin America’s theatrical gro jgleefully at work in hin offi morning, pausing occastona tell callers and Interviewers ju jit wa ne Incidentally Mr was personally and profe | pleased to be back in 8: His days in Gothar | Mr. € were ntrenuc Jwith various excitement to busting, shattering ing to the four theatrical wit best laid plans of K. & EI hard, satiefying work for Mr and now t ix done tn al | pletenews, the be ease of |ker Farm appeals to him wit van and even hirsute attract! | “It was a hard fight,” wal }Cert th morning a hard but 0 ie on or in figh you win Can't Come Back I dor an have cor COMO LATTICE FRAT WORM PMOMENA OK ORC ane oan which earned $4,000 a day in the aerial passenger It wan 420 feet long and the diameter of the body wae 38 feet Ten women and 22 men were carried on the first trip, »m his|try to come back. The ‘open door a policy has been firmly established ange in the theatrical busine and he tle who substitutes the closed door ts was | going to be a very, very smart man this | And at present his name and ad lly t jress are unknown to me and my friends it Was Easy “I went to New York without any intention of being an Insurgent went just as I do every y to arrange for attractions, Wh 1 got the t was shown to me dw the ak rms that | wasn't tw ft mduct my own bu Cort, | ness her nobody, to m ne | WA king, who is better abl Whis-|/to conduct my than I my h ay if news 1 went to work on thin theory id Mr.jand found that theatre owner f over the country were substantia r of the same ¢ [ e,| thing, now tb is it, rather absurd, all of us kotowing and paying tribute to a to get t & Er done Recent But tt was a merry belief | while it Iaated—and it thar an much newspaper sp a few days for little elique ogether an Hitle figh got pace as tha a nearty at rrr orsan Y LNWNE rvice in Germany until it was wrecked In the big shel were 17 balloons a distance of 300 miles in nine hours BOAT CAR AL. Pre) “A, July 7. W. are buy, farm I on for th Urpin k higher wages fan anon Davi 1 a8 Spokane featta \h this organtzatiga’ T8 LO arrest o “Inelte « rete nm lalmed that 399 ciation are A 2) PPM or ting Pu Aa in @ gate. Another aerial Hotice the promenade street speakers wong erday and fined am ater of the industrial ‘hat they will aot all tee be Fourth of July event, The winning Girl and the wizard’; Jefferson 4 Y disturbances ) Bae of thin fight meant a lot to Seattle | Angelis in ‘The Beaut y nterfere. ale aw and the Pacific Northwest, Here's|ine billott tr ew pl nnn the lst of attractions for the Moore, | Chocolate John M T Logs and the peak for themselves rh hb 1 ‘ TO TARE} ig "Julian Eltynge with bis big com-|ning 4 r , par Walke hitesides in ‘The Powe TEN- DAY ¢ Melting Pot’; Wilton Lackaye in! vana I Frank I The Ba Bertha Kalich in rep: | in “The { Brittany’; Gert . Bister’; Margaret [ington in #| Madam Nazimova yertoire will new play; James K. Hackett in 6 } , 1 , t né a cot ae tolre; Guy Mannering in ‘A Man's ger’; a must ' t Ma World, “The Lott ' ‘ red ot a 5 City Iiam Paver t wae a : World and His Wife De le nt Taft ‘pared aa Hoppe A Matinee Idol nat < f with Gaye eat vival of “The Prince of Pilsen T hn Hays k « ¢ Fielda and . Clay Frid Madame X,’ ‘The Dollar Mark t HK, the ‘sted GUTHIER GIRLS <n FLANC E IN TROUBLE days . in he the « dig WILL TAFT GAL, | SPECIAL SES$ tock appeared against Claxton. She jtold how he bad beaten her when ¢ United jhe refuned to gi him a diamond BEVE nt, Mass. ring * « + nate may be to confirm ff new chief justios of the 9! * court to fil the caused by the deathot rumored today clares that Pri t |NAVAL MILITIA HERE FROM CALIFORNIA The cruiser Marbichead, with the | “* . COOK TOO BUSY TO GO TO _ eligi aia Se a James Claxton, a waiter, who, at} voy No. 5 at 9 o'clock this m near the tobacco aad a the time of the brutal murder of |!#. Official calls were exchanged | “**** without further delay, ra Guthier in the restricted dis | between Gov. Hay and the captain net F yoo pig trict on March 29, posed as the | of the cruiser eS ee girl's flance, and said he had plan Later in the day the officers will | * -clal session would cut (4) i an Ti nod to take her away from her|b¢ taken for an automobile ride | °° ; mmoral life, haa proved inconstant Over the city, which will include a POINTED PARAGRAP | What might be termed a regular; counter patronage. 80 when Tay-!+o her. memory stop at the home of George B ED PARAGRAPIA | atew reo! oe of eelf cncrifi he cook, got fnto an alterca or 8 yesterd od £100 | Kittinger, where tea will be served} book If sacrific te tbe lnaeer, Brown, hast |o..nmtom Was yesterday fined $1 = nh Da fi peg “ There is bgp tor gona é veloped st po with the logger, Brown, last) and sentenced to 30 days in jail for | 0Y & number of ung society as an empty o -agdege Rcd aday night, and shot Brown in| obtaining money from and beating | Women might a full dress naval |” it's awfully ve headqu re when H. E Tay the arm, Kempt decided to pretend | uy a woman in the district and military ball will be given in| who owes you k, Kave himself up for| that he did the shooting in order} “at the time of the Guthier mur-|th@ armory to the visiting officers" which ts your speek ting of EB. Brown, a logger, | that their lunch counter might be| der, which is still an unfathomed ». The Marblehead leaves with pride or viewing: evening kept open | mystery, Claxton made a dramatic | / yma early tomorrow morn Isn't it wonderful what of this tale is James! Kempt was taken to jail and/statement to the police that he | !™& and then proceeds to the Brem-| pissing one seuall pair of a walter. Taylor | and|stayed there until yesterday eve | “would never reat until he found|*™ton mavy yard to coal. do? Kempt ran @ lunch counter at 213/ning, when Taylor, having arranged | her murderer and brought him to| It's usually advisable te | First av. 8, one acting as cook, the for another cook and fixed it #0 | justt Instead of working at| Dance at Dreamtand tonight narrow-minded man & n- an walter. Now the cook may/that the lupeh counter could be | this self-impored detective job, for eee | Chicago News, “I on table, but the walter! kept open for business, then walked | - +s t have a bard time copking,|to police headquarters, told the ast cooking in @ manner that| whole story and took Kempt’s place | pleases the palate of even a lunch|in jail BALLARD CLUB IS AFTER THE CITY BALLARD, Members of in bad shape. Temporary ae, the F vernent club crossings were put im, but they ¢ bh Councilman were continually getting displaced | Bohike the question of the poor and have been of very little use. | street ¢ ning thay NOW Now that the car line is about! January I4th av. was completed, the club has taken up| orn up to allow t » Ki the matter direct with Bobike in trie company to lay and order that there may be no more win that time the street has been delay With the Kiss Not’ ’ Club She'd better not wear it too long or— NISHOP OF SWELLDOM BANKRUPT SALE WINDS UP SATURDAY thr Portiand and Ta Values up to $3 00 will stock OF SWELLD up another ee leading SHO coma will wind big $5.00 Garment Sale, disposing of the Wome 8 pmen's Tailore juite, Coats and Skirts at $5.00. ‘allored Hoffman's to close out the SHOP OF SWELLDOM With the closing of the of Seat be given at Saturday. 20M stocks merchandis ing event at Hoffman's that will linger in the minds of the bargain seekers for time to come Thirty Women and Misse Women Tailored Skirts, $5.00. Tailored Suits at $5.00 Women’s and Misses" ‘Tallored Women’s and Miases’ Linen ts, $5.00 Buit $5.00 Waners Tallored Jackets $5.00. ws ‘eis - : Thirty new Rain Coats, $5.00, omen's ‘allored reuse Women's new Line mn red Saturday, $5.00 ( $5.00 eee Women's and Misses’ values to $30.00 from the SHOP OF SWELLDOM bankrupt stock rm Additional stock from the New York markets at unheard of low prices. $5.00 GARMuNT SALE, SATURDAY ONLY HOFFMAN Cl 1316 Second Av., Bet Winding up the OAK & SUIT COMPANY, we on Union and University, Shop of Swelldom Stock Poyno reductions. ale. built with con in different co Sale price POYNOR'S ANNUAL SUMMER SALE een ead | FURNITURE SAVING ae AT THE POYNOR SALE ‘# Annual Sale of Furniture is now in {ts second week Seattle been afforded the opportunity to buy Home Deliveries are being introduced at his store $20.00, and « ton of the Famous Lady Wellington Coal fs given free with each range A tew of the speciais offered are shown below. ay ‘Thin Metal Bed selis regularly at $6.50 oat, atin lors. ver have the Furnishings of the better . made the day of sale. The new Fearless Malleable Rangy the sole agents for Seattle. $45.00 is the price, a 5 of This Solid Oak Frame $35.00; may be used for bed Davenport sells upholstered in best Chase leather; Poynor's Sale hash enameled 48 in. by 28 in. sion finish. Po: sale price This Solid Oak Library This Lady's De: Tab and in. 2% ynor's sk sells reg. ularly at $11.00; may be had in either quartered oak or mission finish; complete with drawers and pigeon holes, and large drawer. Poynor’s Sale $6 95 price . | ek Ts n. con th ‘the men ste was Tevo + The ar for x Th | The fir le sells regularly at $22.50; ‘ — legs, quartered oak or mis- od. French »plate Peal ] new jewel and glove dra} > sal now At eb A ieee | This Sol dining Table sells t } at $16.06 ix-foot extel Poynor'a : ae leaves t Sale $2.75 | price S.A.POYNOR@ carpets PURNITURE, RAMS” 706-710-712 PIKE STREET