The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 12, 1910, Page 1

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and the whole city the e you may have © per month. te your door for yOL. 12, NO, 226. HINESE ATTACK MISSION (ty United Prose) ONG, Nov. 12.— All ana other foreign at Leinchou, of Kwang Su, are re te have escaped safely Canton, after the mission had been destroyed by -yoagened troops are on way to quel! the rioters, pave pillaged and burned ie missionary property. The cause of the riots is at. + te action by the in ordering that all be numbered. The na- believed that this in- a@ scheme to tax them, Bamed the missionaries. The “Smartest” Widow Hem Letuchou, province of $a, report that Chinese riot re burned and dev shed a of Amertean buildings are reported to fed in boats to Canton battalions have teft Can fie Kwang Su to queil dis who are reported to be toward Tsol Yuen Po to ORR Ie EIS | : thared, college and boxpital. | missionaries there Dr This i a fine picture of Mra (Giadya R 2 Martin, who, in foe, Dr, Ross, Mrs. New York is called the “smartest widow pat rive dire. Edwards and | pw, in the lexicon of New York societ artest” moa that Mra. Martin, In addi having nevera oe, is a ewell looker, a swell dresser and tertalner * all But a rank outatder at Ma & pleture, would on that alne venture the op way. She has by iAH, Ga., Nov, 12.— Bue Brown, in a Benz mathe Grand Prix cup race here this after- y the fact that ac d in the closing m ear, when (fe Chri and Christ ee ah name d eng m to insure an Welfare } e th the difficulty of | THE WEATHER. confronted tonight and & aking a choice of when they want a i t Mmesterly winds. n the law is cum eee eee hee ee brought at seas de 7 “ = — sar bermmt i not m “ * Pay? |x es Your Baby Pay? | \o 8 3 Does a baby pay for itself?" said a Second av. man toda t il ed t Sometimes ! in n think I ie o . q ‘ * ! eearily fall t . ch “Page ly mas and New Yea uta t and se - b hea . i be a arpet and he the » * , ness acc er n the * loug v nm she pasted be t om ‘ but if this i € +node pay Sun (Continued on Page Six.) pag i | re WARD AND CORT | r pert | wair She bes 8) pormer ¢ 4 i ‘ Ward and ‘ “al Se LOSS ® «""wtiat’s FRENCH PREMIER Yagabond ca iar adtacttie? TRIES TO OUST r 0. Iw a Ko. ery if ane | REPORTER iol No, | wor t tat o her dim Kauekies on t) A“ “ Ny atti | PARIS. 1 J , ppnva! William P. 9 manager ¢ I b 1 th Unite P ed € have him ¢« Peeze let bat | Only M. Briand ails in promulgating the orde he comes the expulstor the correspor sughing face of the Unite # and instead I . sod m neck tice served n Franele Warring t aby volce | ton Dawson d Dawson was ir ! charge of the Pari bureau of he United Press until 1 mths age yt me | My, Sima {# still on the job in money | Paris, M. Briand has not yet suc orrow, | ceeded in ousting hin. This \s chief. again | ly due to the action of th embassy. | American . SEA === The Seattle Star TTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, "NOVEMBER 12, , 1910, BARKING UP THE RIGHT TREE STRIKE GROWS fe TODAY fe Eighteen | More Teamsters Quit at Seattle Transfer —Veterinary Condemns Two-Feeds Practice. “It Is cruel, inhumane and post tively mean,” sald W. H. Hayes, one of the most prominent veterinarians in the city, wh waked concerning the decision of the Geattic Tranefer Co. to deprive their noon meal horses of the “There is absolutely no justifica tion for the theory that the horses will be more healthy That has been tried out. We tried it in the army and found out that a horse needs food in the mid of the day. A horse can get along with out It, just the same as a man can, but @ horse cannot do as much work and he suffers. “1 can state emphatically from experience that it is wrong, that there is nothing to justify it, it is one of those fads that spring up every so often and of course the horse is defenseless. But it is pow tively wrong nevertheless.” Daniel Bekins, of Don’t Hesitate to Phone The Star, Main 9400, or Ind. 441, if your pa per tails to reach your home regularly every night. You are entitled to good service. ~ ONE CENT, o%_7RAne, Ame) NEWS STANDS te | ARE CHARGES AGAINST GILL AND ARMS | STAR PRESENTS FACTS TO COUNCIL PROBERS To the Members of the Council Invest ing Committee— } Gentlemen: To aid you in your work of inves ing the city light |plant, which you have announced you would take up, The Star | presents the following information as a su, gested basis to start from: IN THE CASE OF THE CITY OF SEATTLE AGAINST HIRAM C, GILL, MAYOR, AND RICHARD M. | SUPERINTENDENT OF THE CITY PLANT— The Star calls your attention to these facts: (1) That Mayor Gill made a gain with the Seattle lectric Co., by Arr in employe of the S. E. Co., was to be named head of the « 1 t in return for politica} support, all of th vorkir great hardship on the taxpayers who built the plant at the expense of two and a half million dollars (2) That G sented with the fact that Arma was not conduct lant in the interests of the city og the consumers, ha iscipline or remove pt. Arma (3) That Gi Arms over the protests of many owners and business men and prope ver the protests of thd lat unions, (4) That he named Arms over the heads of J. D. Ross, ity electrical engineer, and other competent city employes wha had built up the plant within five years to be one of the best iff the country ’ The Star also calls attention to the facte— 1. That Arms has refused to give power or light to Ballard or Georgetown taxpayers, where the 8. BE. Co. has plants, thus leaving the people of those suburbs to the mercy of the 8. E. Co, which eharges them than the dinance for elty 2. That in 60 per consumers ther suburbs, cent more at es fixed by or- as Hillman ( and West Seattle, oes where the population ts small and scattered, and the business cam attle T be done only at a loss, Arms has sought new business, while at the same ti he Has irned down profitable contracts in the down town i , and crowded business dist among them Edwin London, C. H. a od Crane & Co, Lake Union Paper Mill and the Grant Smith com , nth pany : age ae 4. That on two occ ms he refused power to the American a ew Bank building—a $5,000 a year contract—driving the building trus ; tees to the light monopoly for power, on the excuse that the water horses die from in Cedar lake was wherea tromn hudar- feeding When the water in the lake was more than six feet lower th gage than it was when the bank trustees were turned down Arms sold aro worth $400 « 2,500 kilowatts of power to the Seattle Electric company at their Following tb request x 6. That he this power to the S$. E. Co. at a price one Transfer Co. cut ite horses down sixth as grea t the lowest private consumer in the city two pr ea da et walked pays, ; of a) Manage 7. That Arms turned down other profitable contracts on the i Steet thn ld excuse of lack of power, w eas as a mat of fact the city was r ow arrannement only consuming about 5,900 kilowatts of its capacity of 13,000 R Gisene head he kilowatts ‘ Sur - . " 8. That with 7,000 kilowatts unused surplus capacity in the ; af o. would : penne city plant be has turned consume ywn all over the city a the wat ‘ © State | QRRRRRADRRASARESAALAES % z mS — =) %. That when George Donlan, of 1421 23rd av,, in @ thickly S daene ‘an tae nae inf n Wt} settled residence district, applied for city 1 told to go te pe AF nd hat heli i ¢ block, was using city light, and the wires ¢ __T.R WHILST YOU SHOP TONIGHT | eon scene May K € i} | 10, That when E. J. Winberg, 1641 av., applied for light : Nhe aaeee ~/| he was told by Arms’ agents to apply to the E. Co, as bis ' P . oy reach = _— | house was too far from the city mains, wher it was in @ [ met BY JOHN COPLEY Jocrats (with the kind assistance of/ crowded residence district, 10 minutes’ ride from down town tw Im hurrying home with your Sat-|the Old Guard) was received by} li. That since Arms took charge of the city plant the profits, ¢ the wh Jay night bundios, better keep| 7: R- last Tuesday the as been! which had been steadily rising every month, fell off, and in Aug ‘in the & ” and | “ESey BIER “la dank silence in Oy r Bay ust and September were 600 less than 09, though Arms had . " . F am eye out for T. KR The colonel has not strode forth! the benefit of $460,000 more equipment of ds as ti t| He may be in Seattle’ and felled a mighty oak for the 12, That if the plant is ran in the futare it has beem 1 for He may also in Heligoland, | eqitic of the visiting Matrons in the six months past it will be wrecked payers will by ; Magpbombos , Aukiand i of Peru, Ind | again be at the mercy of the private me ; a had | 2elthe fond parents who scat had Jost] % B. te missing t ntributed 12 more off ad . F Loge ; Let the fearful the nation's po’ . ay oghs of it al red backward from . - nk i your} Tescoed por he colonel! k t m Ape thought dome] nome ‘ m } slowly, but with} There hare | . H ace te | all ite orful in no _ recep. | | ity tom mot totes |. That Seattic has 41 second T. R. has dis-land, most awfu jfurniture shops? appeared as my*|to contemplat | That Seattle wo to strug teriously as if he|there have been jgle along with loct if the had run fer coun-!no new clubs or same ratio as rved in Con On thejganized by the |atantinople were ved here hibition ticket | colonel That one Seattle department Bince he learr store pays its head window dresser g a } wires running|ed that every lots A Week? « to 4 waiting | Rooseveltian Policy had been ut-|| That dressed meats arc at| Harry White, former mayor of Se Mayhap it be|terly dis arded by the peo: of | lower retail prices in Sea than /attle, C. A. McKen and Charles ' : the En State—and othe any other coast H. Dought ently indicted by ¢ rubber-neck autos ere lof more or leas reign deg That there is a & week and ju on charges | Wont to honk-honk T. R. has mop and =mumped/ly newspaper pu I Seattle | of spiring to raud the fed» way for tourista thr t..| somewhere in a wilderne Helin the Japanese language? eral government by organizing th Liberty av., and on up ter)/has not been seen since Tuesday| That Mike Dontin, who comes to al companies in Alaska were {trochas of Sagamc ure | night; not even by Eben Tupper,|/the Orpheum next week ed te ed yesterday by D Unit tanding silent and the|who delivers the mail in ¢ a 1 of the New York ates Marshal Davenpeck. Each = it ,,,, | Bay f “Giants”? was released on $2,500 bail (iy United Brews.) 1 ane or n ile I guess that Cre and-Jackas . persif T Roosevelt,|Club is his swan ull right ALIX, Alberta , » ere at Priv tigen of ‘em | says Schnitzel Sr h , $ 5 erable uuttement bas tees a tai aes iets lly pcan ; LASSIES SELL KISSES FOR CHARITY. : oe pn ; , An organization ed Wednesday in I mi. | ene 1) on cr. aden tt yaks Yea laa tes ‘ g kisses at a shilling a kiss has pen, f fateful news of the ayhap Schnitzel {s tory way easing the war Dr. H. H. Cripper but AF oot Hig tu ne Slt ne Sohaituel tn rig ¢ ston B works, Renfrew “cvs BLEAR AND GRISP AT SPOKANE ne (By United Press.) talonling inn he " Criy H SPOKANE, Nov. 12.—On fairl game t ee Raiek.. he fast, firm ground th a clear sky | him uni ly nece floor it nint,| and « Washing The line-up ed and left na t d Ww ‘ Position Washir 7 af on |G. Harter ri . t crowd that ha J, Har Rn. G “ sing HP fo ame in| Laird R. T : ne Dr. Cripper tence r nged with | Galbraith RE 1 ether wi ad Holme L. G ar ane the local | Hunter L. 1 G Fete is football mad, | Buck a] t 1 that he . An's delega H man Q 1 with th f ed at noon today, | Ne LH : | tr headed by | Coulter FR } he w inde eattle students | Foray R. H i und he ma be re ‘ . | declaration | COUNT TOLSTOY ha i nl —] ma o ~ Ee 6 (By United Press.) A h S : , h light} ST. PRTERSBURG, N nother Suit St ccan' Los Sommer bad 8 noon nd with the of | in t n th toda C.D. Hilin ame in for one] Grimm. man is in good con: | castle Poland, and the « more jolt | iperior court to-| dition is distracted Pullman's ends are especiall She has received a lette r , t of B atrong, and_are expected to play|the aged novelist in which 1 daugt of ( havoc with the new recruits at|clares that he will live the ur, =‘The coms these stations for the State Uni-|der of his Iife tn solitar umendéed by Hillman when thrown | versit | ment laut on @ grevious demurrer, bat| Ve C. money is searce, and| Relatives of the count hi the new complaint fared no better|they want odds of 2 to 1 Jinformation as to where Captain “Polly” Grimm has been than the previous one | |" ae nditions Renfrewshire dur ing boxe Wh n ch saw an op hem, “you know he gave a kiss ling in your allenge, and th he game was I vive” Don’t Need X-Ray, Says Ped ‘wey Don t Need A-Nay, Says Peder, auto Know When You're in L sutto to Know en You re in Love Wand 4 A etre Man Who Hesitates Long penton etter i Investigation Over Wife Is Same As | the tactics of a horse dea He 7 Horse Dealer, Says Man | *heming, speculating and commer in Star Contest fea tonics yg . in est. t is busir ‘ le hi mc \ n the one who wil vie Love and 1 and t a ght n mi de m hi What do you think about it? Tell ur 1 at fi the Contest Editor, in not more than ry ir 180 words. Lots of letters are come from | mee he on ing in, but there are chances for he de-| to become t many more to win one of the 40 emain-| have to have r pairs of seats to see “The Kissing retire-| X-rays to find out if he loves her, | Girl” at the Moore next week. Other | Neither one needs to look at the! prizes will be a set of four divan uve no|other for weeks, month ears seats and a set of three, The cons he has|to test the strength of Cuy test closes Monday night. Get busy, The wh h mm: | everybody, over Sunday.

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