The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 24, 1910, Page 8

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THE STAR—MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1910. Pavlowa and Her Russian Dancers Coming to Seattle PLAGUE IN BION) MONEY _ FRISCO Bay AIPPEN TO Ald ae | ; (Ry United Press) 4 SAN FRANCISCO, Oct, 24.—Ar ' q rangements are being made at the | mena local quarantine station to receive | what ia sald to be the firet conse of| (Concluded.) ae yellow fever that ever entered San |---""™ . Francisco harbor, The victim is|the wreck of the home for whieh the chief engineer of the tramp] she had sacrificed so much steamer Henley, which was ordered | And seeing Uh things her rea uy out of San ro for this pert yes: | son fled and only the chance tnter ' terday because there are no quar-| ference of friends prevented her : ;: — antine facilities at San Pedro. |from killing her children The Henley is a British ship, sail That is one of the tragedies and (By Calted Press) LONDON, Oct. 24—Dr. H, H,]!™& from Salinas Crug to Victoria. | blasted romances of life that are Crippen was sentenced today to be|!t Is delleved the engineer con-/jeft behind in the disaster in hanged on November 8 for the mur-| acted the disease in Mexico, which 65 Hves were lost % der of his wife, Belle Elimore Crip # It is one of the stories that will pen, whose dismembered body was] NOT go into the next report of ‘ found In the © r of the Crippen! President Welborn to his tock: | i home at Islington, North London, | holders, That document will NOT] dq Lord Chief Justice Alverstone def tell how & suggestion was made} Initely fixed upon that date and as |that a huge alr shaft be sunk Into} signed Bentonvil prison as the! the tunnela In which this explosion place of execution oceurred, and how the estimate of! 1 $10,000 seemed too much to spend Miss Leneve, who goes on trial tomorrow on & charge of having! putter and eggs are up! In Ta-| too much to subtract from the pile been accessory to the mur is} coma housewlves @ now paying | of dollars In the treasury prostrated at the outcome of Crip] go cents a dozen, and glad to get] Neither will the report show what pen’s trial, as she had confidently | that price, In Seattle so far] was saved to the company by fail ed an acquittal, When in mring price of strictly fresh/ ure to sprinkle those dust | that Crippen would be! eges has reached 56 cents | chambers, as required by the sta hanged, she fainted and remained) Butter, the best Washington | jaw unconscious for some time creamery product, is selling at the] ‘phe explosion, It te admitted by “ retail stores for 50 cents @ pound, line officials, was due to a collec with a bargain rate of two pounds | ition of dust in the various cham-| for a dollar bers, It is also admitted that th |FEAR OLD SHIP was for the purpose of keeping the] Sau antes IS LOST AT SEA| paths used by mules in hauling the] lethe common comment passed upon) the terrible Starkville mine disae) | ter, | True, A | “only seven Americans were killed t small cars hard enough for them) ; (My United Pres) jto travel. There was no effort to MME ANNA PAVLOWA NANTUCKET Atlantic! spray the walls or to comply with) — liners and United tex revenue that provision of the law which] Something new and sensational ple, with a limited ber of por asked to search | says that water shall be used “copl-/in the theatrical line is promised | formances tn Seattle, land, Bar steamer Oklahoma, | ously Seattle in tt ng here during | Franc and Portland wireless call for ald was| ‘The stockholders will spend their) Sovember Anna Paviowa, th Paviowa is making her seoe icked up last night by the revenue! extra half ¢ fon, Mra, Cysa with) ** Russ me an. 4 wi ay in Amerie Her wee MOLINE, Ill, Oct. 24.—George) cutter Acushna, The whereabouts three babes, her broken heart artner, Michael Mord t, made last spring, covered but W. MeCaskrin, mayor of Rock of the Oklahoma is unknown and the wreck of her hopes knows ae in oix characte J dancers from ingle month, a only the cite and, occupied a box at the Mol “ how that half million was made he Imp opera me in Mo ~ York, Philadelphia and Bow theatre here at the perforr SPRINGFIELD, Mass. Oct sant Mra. Jos. Baronski, who|®™> by @ ballet of 40 dancers frou were vis the “Gay Morn bur-| Peter Kohn appeared in the priv) iia with her four chi h aperial ballet of St. Peters The Paviow Jesque troupe, Miss Mabel Mai-|oners’ dock tn police court in wed:| Cree nour, walting for we and by an orchestra of 38 | unique tn that er ego sr Star, sang “Has ge her —_ at Prin from the rescue parties that went pb — gi tae care one an ‘ out 30! 8s et” and as she/ hat, gray & it into the ut So will a score 0 n¢ big organization will leave rd be spoken or @ note » : sang she walk the direction of; and expla that b bein nl mov —-- w York on its own special train tirely through the means of oC bo fed in an how said that | °°" . to the strength of nearly 100 pe rfully suggestive dancing i Shere weer pare! ‘gunn outl ater hie hoseymooe he would ap-| These sre the tragedioe behind) | <tr aaah antl en Pon aN His Honor, and he stood and| pear in court to answer an accuser, | the dividends, | leaned out of the box and smacked| James Moras, « rival suitor — | her several fimes right on the lips.) had lost several teeth in a “mix “at C There ter all, it waan't so bad ie The audience went wild [up.” The court accepted bail | were only seven Americans killed.” cage INE <3 spate eas - | Th words, or other words of GIRL OF 15 WEDS HER COUSIN ON the sommon comment pated ben THREATENING TO KILL HERSELF WINSTED, Conn., Oct. 4.—A ro planning to be married they forced) Were the other 48 victims, then,) mance, which began in Chippewa) Numan to leave. He came to Tor! some: ing tees than human, per! Falls early in the year, reached 4 rington last June and was joined) paog7 One would be led to think | happy climax in Torrington ses by his sweetheart, who wre her eo if he were to listen to talk in} day when Numan Ducommun, age 25, and Miss Laura Ducommun. aged 15, cousins, were married by the Rev. Joseph Provost at the par parents telling them she was gotng! ceyicial mining cirel And the to commit suicide. While @ search | Orieetricken widows and children was being made for her she was) Tnoee wails of sorrow filled the speeding to join her cousin. Upon| Douatain deflies on that sad Octo Will Have to Answer fee Contempt of Court and Also Faces Arrest on Charge Sworn to by Official sonage of the First Congregational | being located e was taken ip + morning—they, perhaps, could of the Public Welfare Lea ue— Chief of Police chureh. Ducommun made bis!charge by the Connecticut Humane | poy know what real suffering! : 4 . bome in Chippewa Falls with| society. Persistent writing to her| eens? and Various Vice Promoters Are Involved in ura’s parents, but when they parents finalty gained their consent 1. Yearned that the two cousios were c the union Perhaps the disaster didn’t Both Cases. a amount te much, from the Wall at ot i sis _ SEP, RCE ah oa =| standpoint, from the standpoint of Mayor Hiram ©. Gill and Clef of pin th » wae | 4 Sohn D. Rockefeller, and his|Police Wappenstein will have’ to! arr oh 8 charge of maintatning REDICTS DISASTER \prother stockholders of the Cole ~ cause Friday morning 6 auleance. Gecr lrado Fuel & tron Co., who pulled| Judge Gilliam why they should the } FOR DENVER PAPER S 1000 i200 ere in bret lant be puntened for contompr of court ewear ta : year than ever before. But it/in porm! the restricted die é names oe meant everything to the widows|to run une contrary to the | wit DENVER, Oct. 24.—In an ad-; America ted a pro! nd wenea and the fatherless American or etion order Inaued by him two! Gress before a big labor meeting tion when he predicted that Polish, who are forlorn today be tn tod here yesterday, Albert B, Kreitler, plants of three daily newspapers in cause the C. F. & |. couldn't spend cw of they | stituting a nutsan third vice president of the Inter- Denver will “blow up” before the $10,000 for an air shaft, and would | w! ubject e Wethen Wisshar- aisclune' dew Was national Printing Pressmen and publishers win the strike that has not obey the state law as to sprink-|® sen @ to the lenges, auetied for whitnate tr > Assistants’ Union of th, been declared by the presame ting in mines. both z ments hanmaie "tak Sane, : — | Judge Gilliam signed the order | Ronald held that the complaint was jlate Saturday afternoon command: | not properly drawn. This at te 2 sh a ea a anes jing the mayor and the chief to ap-| being attended to today, and it ts \? in court, together with 15/ expected that the warrants will be thers alleged to have disobeyed the court's order applied for tihs afternoon. j Siam at Vanderveer. Vice Promoters. | In his application for a warrant The others are property owners | Mr. Tucker recites the fact that} Jand managers of houses of {11 fame, | there Is no hope of getting warrants jand include Sam Pinechower, Bar-| from the prosecuting attorney's of {dara Orth, Gid Tucker and Jane Doe | t as George Vanderveor has Tucker, Sig Levy, Harry McKeown, | been app A and has }Sparkman & McLean, M. A. McCul-| always refused to them logh, Jack Sheehan, Charles Berry Under the law conducting a house man, Ludovic Dallagiovanns, “Big | of fil-fame, or permitting such te Harry” Roglet, Charles Shomo, John |operate on one’s property, constituts | Doe Morris, Joe L. Mareell tidred | the offense of a nulsance. The Pub | if) Hu and B. Batley Ho Welfare league's complaint ac | In addition to the citations for |cuses Chapelle, Pinschower and a contempt, Mayor Gill. Chief Wap | the re of the owners of the md J penstein and the owners of property | lght district property q te , s ; pdaue amae | AN HANG O YOU KNOW that pianos, like men, have charac- Coroner Snyder 0 Ep A ters, some good and some bad that ArthurMcCreary ended his Wek =f j own life. An autopsy showed that ; e know a great many good-charactered men— jf} the man died from strangulation we admire and like them. and that no attendant circum 4 : | stances pointed to nothing but We're sure that you, who think of getting a piano, nulcide want to come in contact with good-charactered pianos ie Watchman Pred She Po wh That's the k > carry . came to relieve hin he kind we verry || Brutally cut and beaten by a big |, - } Our experience of over half a century has \f| ruffian was the experience of Mrs. |T. P. IS WELCOME ‘ e | Ella Rockenfield. of Ike Rock. | P emr | made us wise in the selection of the good-char icntialh ths taedball Ghidee PORTLAND VISITOR linevetedl sakes day might in her home, at By United Press.) A P | 57th st., shortt PORTLAND, Ore ct Getting a piano of this kind means everything | After leaving Mrs menfield | proximately $7,000 aa = to tl Sagi sien ities . ae to se les n the fe the thus “ay ge Ph b2 ire é ie | uyer It me ans ev¢ rything to us to sell Il fled taking with nim Boo land yesterday | that very kind hat’s why we have been so par- Mrs. Rockenfield tland theatre afte * | in the selection of our line | r 1 in-} nor, the noted Irish ‘ | A good dese the { Engliet Quality has always been the first and final | sallant 9 to and and apy th ht in the making up of this line A pays she a i Fig } | opping qd wa ” pee was receive Here is the roster: wher saw the | enthumlastically, Yesterday he wa aan with aknife the guest of the Portland Pre Weber Wheelock wheeled and | oy Kohler & Chase Stuyvesant gig tpg be Fischer Kohler & Campbell ed te her ah HELD FOR DEATH Andrew Kohler Hoffman yeating on the nd, body. | Th OF TACOMA BOY he Steck Steinway Pianola jf] furt Weber Pianola lanaiauk bam ; ae Hy United Pres more money the thug then ad | OAKLAND, Cal., Oct, 24.—Daniel And other pianos that bear a notable reputation w rever “ apes fegeall verona oath : a te i good pianos are sold 1 he fainted. Mrs, Rockenfiekt’s|Town Marshal Seng, of aur | Don’t think of buying a piano until you visit our ex f the assaul the m ot George tensive wareroom | companion, was found } STEAMER ELDER |»: is ry the erland train at Redd on | " 1 Mlemir te | PORTLAND, Ore. 0 j..[taken to Redding where he will | Word reached f y re that the | 1 teamer Georg ANI JOH : |W. Wider piri ND | N FORGOT Temple of Music co and Portland, went a ohn Odell was st h sud 1318 Second Av., Seattle, Wash. river tly. opposite Fort |court when asked when he obtain ever nat night Life eda rand new » which he wa ie q - || saver notified immediately, | trying to sell f ye Bh ‘ ea lave a number of good piano that have been used, and | to the scene. Theit|night’ Odell says eb agree bis é | We rent piano || assistan 18 not needed, how-|member where he obtained the grip ' | ever but admitted that some one slipped | According to reports reaching |it to hi mto sell, He will stay in | here he teamship is withir als 1 unt! his memory elartfies. UT FOR GILL | —— , UPREME COURT IS)}. WiTiw \ ef ) (Conotuded.) ;nor nominated by that convention,| The 4 of tae ~= | dissented, and tried to get the court | over the 15 oat Damodtes overturn an established principle Of) t reverse that rule. ef a tiesar, . ttle tn the sig law? This t# one of the charges) Root, in particular, was very vig-|dear Dr, M WIATY (0 tale ong, |! Jagainst the system in Washington. |orous jn his dissent, He wrote «lamang rk A. Matt i ! Bome ten years ago one Green, | dissenting opinion of 26 pacer of | The anton ty Aneel io ian 1 miner, was injured in an accident) masterful corporation logic, in| dramatic manna commie ome In _@ coal mine in Pierce county | which he advanced two main prc tainted aiid Me tempter at | operated by the Westérn American) sitions One was that the rule stewdia al ot Pittabury, ia, , |company. The mine caved in for! gown in the Green a not ap | Prost wt ed audlence at the Pee lack of timbering, The law required piv to the West & Sinde mill case | mornt ss og chureh a the company to keep a supply Of | ‘rhe other wan that the rule nid |the letter he win yom the il tp timbers on hand, to be used by the| gown in the Green case wan wrong,| City. ¢ rhe will send to the 1 miner in timbering his work, The) and ghould be reversed : Aty congregation, ty wie ‘ company violated the law. It ad-| "THe majority opinion traced the | -tt 4» jn i mitted the violation, Vet when! rule back to Taft, the original in-la salary rpowelble for yom ta Green sued for damages, it set P| ventor of the judicial temperament. pr. y inducement” ‘ the plea that its violation of the) Root traced it even back of the Tutt | $6000 nn eum WhO ete iaw was a defense, because Green| decision to the English cases upon| had boon np eettte, stated thaeume 4 knew the law was being violated,| which that decision was founded,|Pittebace fe tern the call and had, therefore, assumed the! discarding Taft as an authority in|my y re for two months, teal risk. this languag said ane ay Soutien iE Superior Judge W. 0. Chapman! “with que regard to the learned | wank aay phe would (who, It may be of Interest to note, | ang distinguished jurist, I am led|to ad . Holy was ® candidate for the supreme? | by an examination of the casen to) bench before the hand-picked judi | believe that the English cases de ae cial convention at Tacoma August! not sustain his poxition.” j 3, 1910) tried the case, accepted the| gtare decisie ie a Latin term| FRAUDS FOUND Ih : plea of the company, and threw! meaning, “Don't discuss thie ques. | Green out of court. tion; It has been decided.” The| PORTLAND ¢ Green appenied and the ease was aaghea cupretha aeurt, le re WS } reversed by the supreme ¢ | fusing to reverse the rule laid down| ponTLAND Op On a decision written by W. H In the Noble case, gave it a new Bday oe ND, OF. Oot an appointee of Governor “We're wrong on peed Esa i tthe Censs comet and chairman of the non-partisan 1 tay wrong rather than |ine tonnes se B two diatriets iy Judicial convention at Tacoma Sep | get right.” Judge Root in his opin- | the cx ¢ + here to Seventign, | tember 26, 1910, This was @ UMD lion in this West & Slade case|have toca | if charged that ta iImous decision, In it the court) sought to give it still another mean-| directorios wad a from obpolete dy jaffirmed the doctrine that where &/ ing: “We've been right on thie| the ox vidber eu added to the rotyg jperson violates a law designed tO) question before; let us now get . nun asics } |protect the lives of his employees:| wrong.” Thus are legal decisions| MAN-EATER SHARK CAU | jhe cannot, in a f #°%, | based upon precedent. | Ah gant Waa AUGHT, ‘ et up his ation as a defense) This direct assault on the Green| weighing 510 poun es rae under the doctrine of assumed risk.| rule of the Jaw of the killed and|in the Sound Inet night , This decision followed # noted de| wounded failed, but the judges it|ermen who captured hi The iy sion hand aes in Si by be elevated to the bench proved useful | perate nti with (he eae r H. Taft, then a federal Judge, In the ting other decisions desired by | his great st ) In 7 the legts w of the reversal of the law, | hibi at a it 129 Bee is oo wollen Stop, look and’ listen | Market, today, Sentany Pay any manu d the law Mas. any employees were red and appeal En to to the ~~ [inUnionTherels Strengt f their Two methods of escape were open to them, They could get the legisiature to change the jaw or they could get the court to reverse the rule. They tried both. The effort in the leg ture was successful, but its ef. fect was not retroactive. The effort in the court failed, but al to do #o. its history illuminates the eviie | of the system. The first of these factory act casen to be decided by the court was that of Hall va the West & |Slade Mill company, appealed from Chehalis county in 1904. It was largued first before a court of five ljudges, But while it was pending la bill was rushed through the legis ature increasing the cc a a the larger ¢ tne defen members, and cane sod before the ory camer though One is moat two app in the company other ve insuring the et accidents in mind wher the new judges corporation 1 many pany again AD sen vernor nominated by the boy « i-bossed convention. They lw Milo A. Root of Seattle and Herman D. Crow of Spokane Root was attorney for the Aetna indemnity company and the Maryland Casualty cor pany. Crow was attorney for the United States Fidelity & Guaranty company. The fact that both, thought the rule laid down in the Green case wrong was known to corporation law yers, and they were appointed | on the recommendation of cor poration lawyers. Then what happened? When the joase was reargued before the en larged court, 19 prominent corpora ger Farre jtion lawy joined in a brief ask jing the reversal of the ¢ This brief was werv Investigate our cooperative plan of selling planos and jopposing counsel, but copies of it |] from 20 to 60 per cent upon the purchase price of your pasem] were sent privately to each of the || recommending us to your friends and assisting us in seven Judges. The case was vigor: | pianos. Following ts our plan ously argue d an vigorously dis When, purchasing any piano from our stock, by © 4 cussed by the court. In deciding it |}) with us, we make it possible for you to save from 20 to © he court divided, four to three. The |f} cent upon the purchase price of your plano, in a regular leg four old # who had joined in|] manner. After purchasing we give you a limited time in wHia® Green decision upbeld the Green ||) send us the names of eight or more of your friends or who are not owners of pianos and who should be chasers. For each of these names we allow you the sum @% per cent of the purchase price of your piano to apply 08 iano account with us. We allow the 214 per cent @8 each of eight names only. Our reason for “ every purchaser to only turn in names of r But the three new judges—Rud kin, who was nominated by the Far rei! convention, and Root and Crow, who were appointed by the gover sation for to Induce Rein ee who are the most apt to purebase. Should any persom Oh feign a voaten ||| Bathe you send in purchase a plano through your and ‘our effort Fe sage Ogres Na athachen {jf Combined, we will place a further credit of 5 per cent of the pit frag he Mg dang burner tn |] Chase Price of your piano to your account as remunoraties be! ! actly hoo » |] each and every sale made to persons whose names have been si 4 ha jouse, atll in by you of ' He the OUR REASONS ARE ove his h a big bn We find it most cult to procure efficient salesmen we produce results in a ghtforward, legitimate manner, and have decided that we can sell pianos cheaper through tae ; eration of our customers than we can thre salesmen, and at ame time make it possib r those same customers to 1 s aro submitted e cust will be carried on by corres No ut Entertainment }}) 220%. geese ee ee on you buy a piano, and forever des; With our t -” © . ¢ plan expect tc through sat a customers, i COLLEGEINN ago pp ! Should the same name be sent in by more than one i MERION One, RATNER SENN the one sendin n the name fir will ve credit for " : the name ecorded wy a our books, + asers will enol i and ash bstitute another name one sending | pon the aC unt, in case t 4 Late of Tivoli Opera elling pianos will be an “endless ct every purchaser ; an enthusiastic re ve actory plano ¢ MLLE. DANIEL CHICAGO PRICES -! Mezzo Soprano will ‘ok ahh ound upon ou Direct From New York at the tc We do € ht from Chicas 1 wish nas t } Store,” ee MR. PHILIP KARLE ot Oe: Se Cae 8 SNP | oe and fave Baritone, and thi At Coe ve sy 1 d buying planes ee MISS LYDIA BERTH and Orchestra Geo. P. Bent Compatif f 1421 Third Avenue, Near Pike Street FACTORY PIANO STORE

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