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whole city and the suburbs. ee tive you may have The Star tg your door for per month, ficant thing in this fight of the # one great, big zainst the Furth monopoly, valley people Je the use of the tion straight fight in this country where the dollar is ; the injunction is always rushed to the aid of the me the man and the ar are opposed the weight of pf is always thrown with the dollar an Die ©, California, this has n consumers’ battles with in the peopie’s fights ec, Maine Kennebe Pittory in labor quarre sa service rporations, ut the interests. 7 's rights Log and children threat Je a corporation be menaced with the loss of one dol- its tause cannot be so poor but that some judge will rush is aid with injunctions and restraining orders, Mark Hanna, the greatest teacher of the use of the dollar said once The courts are formed to buttress ange individual liberty menaced, edit doesn't matter M. Arma, the Gil! Furth eon with the entire capacity that of the city plant, their acceptance could not hay * Loy the skirts of made any particular difference,” sginser RH. Thomson. The said Thomeon. And by this state- " ot Arms’ | ment he punctured Arms’ shortage in turning: profitable | of water excnse. then went on to tell yesterday inja pipe at the reservoir broke a direct question, thet Arms and he visited the pliant at accepted the Amer) Cedar lake, and they heard a noise London's con-/ They couldn't exactly tell what {t others, if he had | was | “This is a terrible noise,” Arma of run-jsaid to Thomson. “I am afraid i water power*” he of thie, It sounds like water was P07 Counciiman Kellogs. | escaping.” Mat weed by these con-| Thomson said he wasn't scared final in compari. |in the least. However, he advised ENSUS FIGURES fe Wel have to wait till Fri-| the figures of Seattle's population 10 know how many of us “tll that time, He had planned on te them today og eb lieted that there will be b tods ie of a cut in the figures thst Director Durand of of approx 42,000 which were Dereau will not give ont ‘sent in fre [Wet teehee hee * XMAS PRESENTS * z * TO ALASKA. ® Birds to Lad : ; * * When the N * 5 # for Alaskan ports De * # 2d, she will be loaded down # ees Jewett of 98 23rd) e with toys, novelties, table # mat two chickens and trim |» * and various good # Hat & suit of cloth: ©|\# things to gladden the hearts & Baldwin, the 1 '\* of the young and old under ® Who stole a duck to give * midnight sun. * I for Thanksgiving. | » * was the Grst Of A000 teh kh a hae to police headquar- | ing help to the news —— MAY GET EIGHT HEY STIS JP | MORE LIBRARIES | Bight more branch Wbraries will probably be installed in Seattle as a + et result of the Increase ip population | The annual running expenses of (By United Free the present library are about $100, PS ANGELES, Nov When /|000, while the estimated value o States x 9 the Rio Gra: sent the plant is $1,000,000, The Car en Ts oH oo t neh ustees, when Seattle ap- ww returnin * years ago, would not be to join n- | lieve the city had made such an in tepped | crease as was st and preferred Barberous Mex federal census fig ‘ores, STF 0 Turkey for Them BY JOHN COPLEY Sea men and women, snugly dressed and with purses bulging money, to be exchanged for turkey, cranberries, mince pies ‘Bi the good th ings of the holiday season, surged up and down Market piace The 900d wis in their ov ng faces was reflected In the cheer hed butchers and bakers and truck gardeners behind Anyti 9 that amacked poyid rong. there was a man and woman, evidently man and wife, who #0 share in the happiness of the day before Thankagiv Y were cornfortably dressed, but there was something of sorrow was certainly out of place In BeTUO SFA D They would pause in front of some market stall and gaze long — big turkey that hung there, ready to be basketed Then oe Price—a couple of dollars or so. ah they would hurry on 4 I wish we were an, iM a tired jitt\e Md man didn't anew a Vercoat. nit fajtered his companion again, “isn't there any way we Ve a turkey, o mince pie, at least?” 1 had stumb pon a tragic bit of human interest. | h though, about « ng them any assistance, They byried Grim about it a . j SIT” began that « i cut it out,” cr 5 to have turkey this year,” sighed He just gave a more desperate tug at voice again Jerry, sharply. y of that truck “ “You know my indiges coy it me eat Lord knows, I'd give a a mars if | could. You can eat all the turkey you want Ina fait! that baled hay diet and proteids.” thveeeten that as the man tugged again at his overcoat a lent ie ne 2™ONd ring flashed on his little finger. wuraging how these interest stories are mes? human Th ’ FLIMSY EXCUSES Thomeon told the investigating that at one time he thought that | afternoon, OMING FRIDAY SEATTLE, WASH., WED property rights,” Mark wasn't always moral, but he was usually right. Take this case of the valley people They had paid the fare that the railroad commission had said was legal and a superior court had affirmed; they had a right to be carried by the public service corporation, They wanted to ride, they did not want to obstruct traffic, All they asked was that they should be carried to their destination Then bang—the injunction The company was losing some fares. It was losing the use of the cars, This money could never be regained, The Dollar was in danger. Came then the injunction. Every great strike, every fight for the people's rights, has brought its injunctions-—for the owners of the dollar. The leaders of the American Federation of Labor could not | use tongue or pen to fight the Buck Steel Range company, one judge ruled, And Taft wanted to put that judge on the supreme bench of the United States When Tom Johnson, Cleveland's fighting mayor, was working for three-cent fares, there were judges in Cleveland Arma to cut off to a ten-hour shift the almost unprofitable load given jto the Grant Smith company 24 [hours a day if he was afraid. That jhappened in July. Arms turned |}downm contracts that were to fo jinto effect in September | As far as be himself was con }cerned, Thomaon didn't think there jwae any danger of water shortage lat any time W..D, Lamb, head bookkeeper of lthe city lighting department, tent) | fled to the loss of earnings of the jplant during Arms’ administration [in comparison with the records of the department last year, Armes | himself will be called either today jor tomorrow. eee eee eee eee EXPECT LOWER TURKEY PRICES FOR CHRISTMAS * * * * * & HOQUIAM, Nov, 23.-—Local * dealers say that farmers of & Chehalis valley are respon # sible for high prices of tur ® keys tn this county, and if # the public will hold off pur * * * * * * * * * . chasing birds for Thankexgiv ing the price will be much lower at Christmas, when ®| |® 1,000 birds will be thrown #| |@ upon the market. Turkeys ee pd \® raised in the valley are quot |® ed at 26 cents live, and sell W. d Aft 40 }® for 36 cents retail i Wwe er ee ee ee ee | GIANT SCARES WOMEN Years Romance NEW YORK, Nov. 23.--A sco young women worshippers in the | mance by Church of the Holy Rosary were|¢d in this city Saturday evening thrown into hysterics yesterday |in the marriage of John BE. Thomp when.the nude figure of an unusual- | #0n, 67 years old, and Mrs. Sarah ( ly tall man appeared in the pulpit.| Lacey, 61 years old, both of this It took seven pollcemen to get him/city. In their mith they we into a cell, The intruder was tn-| sweethearts at Coshocton, Oblo, A hoa Al | youthful lovers’ quarre! separated _ them and Thompson married aw |HIGH COST OF LIVING other girl, while she married an CAUSED THIS SUICIDE other man ‘THEN IT HAPPENED. e of COLUMBUS, Ind., Nov, 23 A ft n 40 years ago culminat WOR . Mass, Nov. 23.— | Leaving him a letter in | which he said that the high cost of living was responsible for his jact, Abraham Klein, 26, with a wife and three children, shot himself dead. Our Dally Discontinued Story. Commemorate Irish Martyrs Today | Loyal Seattle Irishmen have not forgotten Robert Emmet, nor Allen. Larkin and O'Brier cuted 47 years ago today for the devotion to the Irish cause who were exe In memory of this the Robert Emmet Literary society passed resolutions pledging the people of Ireland their continued support to ward self « rmment, thanking the German-A cans for aiding them |to defeat the Anglo-American a ance and congratulating Gaelte Jeague for victories {t has won in j the Irish cause HOT NEWS That has NOT happened yet. The farmer donned pis felt boots | and knit § acket, besides some other garments suited to th of November, and sallied forth into his poultry yard A big bronze turkey gobbler strutted majesty of ne Inclemency sbout in the THEY'RE BOTH GOING TO GET IT. —_ e Seattle Star NESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1910. with night bells in their homes and automobiles kept beside the house, Johnson was fighting for the people of Cleveland against a great private monopoly But time after time judg superior court judges, actually jumped from their beds, dressed and hur ried by the fastest autos to their judicial chambers to issue in | junctions, Because the company stood to lose Because the Dollar was in danger In every part of the country the people are rebellious against the courts. A great part of this is due to the use of the injunction. For the courts have made this United States a government, not of law, but of injunction And the injunction has always been used to help the dollar as against the man That is why the fight for lower fare in the Duwamish valley is only part of the real fight. The real fight in the Duwamish valley, in Maine, in Cal fornia, in Florida, is a ment by injunction. few dollars gainst the injunction and against govern not | PASSAIC, N Lee, © Chinese laundryman of 555] Main ay., was taken to the Inola- | tlen hospital today, believed to be | suffering from leprosy, and his laundry wes closed and fumigated by the board of health DO WOMEN FORGET | TO'READ THE BIBLE? | ITHACA ‘Nov 23. The women lof this country are forgetting the | Bible,” sald Mrs. Martha Foote | |Crow In an address to the New! | York State Federation of Women's |clubs today I do not know,” she | Li jaaid, “whether this country wants) ularly — the |the afble any lor or not. The|aflame with t & enacted by the | sma (Ry United Press.) EXICO CITY, Nov. 23.—(Via o).—-Southern Mexico, partic state of Yucatan, is elion, and man Li confit laws tow states do not seem fo stand by th cording to priva advices Bible, and the constant increase of} ceived here today. It is reported divorce seems like a rebukg to the | unoffictally tha oughout South Bible by the women of the coun-|ern Mexico bridges have been try.” burned and Isolated rurales and | federal soldiers butchered tk kkk RAR RR aH) ~The Information indicates that * *% | the reyolutionists expect to « # TEE-HEE! PORTLAND TO #/ Vera Cruz in three day * HAVE A GOAT SHOW * * * Wait for Signal. # PORTLAND, Ore, Noy. 23. #| SAN JOSE, Cal., Nov Ht j}® —Angora goat men will have #|dreds of Mexicans and Ameri * © big inning at the Mid-Winter *| throughout the United States, ar *% Sheep show, to be held in #| particularly on the Pacific ¢ ® Portlar an ry 4,6,6 and 7, ®| wait today a signal from the # in connection with the annual #/ican revolutionary headquarter * convention f the National */St. Louis to proceed to Mexico and % Wool Growers’ association. #| join with the insurgents against & Over $200 is offered in reg *{the president |* ular prizes, and nearly twice *® The officers arrived here } as much in special * | Portlind, Or., having worked t ~ *| way down the coast, enrolling re ee ee ee es Mexican nd Ame f r 1 army DENNY FIELD A SEA OF MUD—GLOOM! Warren Grimm of the game bi 1 nt raiment land the entire eleven fearing Keck You could hardly blame J. Y¥ asi Pb 2 tine : u clouds of a) are hoverin ove te 1 contractor € r t Jacob Furth gave half-hour serv Gobb le,” said the turk had iA. Ing over! Mitchell, a contractor residing a ice on the Duwamish interurbar Come old wattle face,” | ‘he camp the universt Northlake ay., for having onl |today to help valley folks get home |cooed the farmer, holding forth a], The 0. A. C. deleg — amber iver this morning, He had jwith their turk presented by | tempting pan of shelled ¢ jing 20, ar wn purchased} Thanksgiving Stone-Webster stockholde | The truating bird came and be-| Journ at the Lincoln hotel turkey and ac Mr, Mitchell yg cA baaccte tl wi aaah 1 wir ; the day Sale c Finnbbek Plan National Union living or he ne dreamed he d |e ek RO tt ting | For American Farmer | be arrested for expectorating in a |» *| (The End.) | | street ca * WEATHER FORECAST. *) | INDIANAPOLI ti 1—Plar You'll ha deposit $2 ball | Occasional rain tonight and %| }looking to th anization of a id Cap art \® Thursday moderate south & J b f C national union of farmers and farm | 1 just got through buying my \* weaterly nde | 0 or arter laborers throughout the country are | Thank ne turh ynd have only eee ee ee BUTTE, Mont., Nov, 23 United | pont 8 of the N <te n ry mth rt ; 1 ap ath with | KILLED IN SHAFT State enator Carter of Montana] wayity, now tt ine aity.| Mitchell t t the high ts | -OKANE, No 3 L. L.| will be tendered the ointment pe nti ea og lg |}Pouders, a salesman in a local lof judge of the commerce court | MINISTER COMMITS SUICIDE.) another dollar, and Mitchell wa |atore, is dead as a result of a fall| Senator Carter has been sum ALTA, lowa, Nov. $3—Rev. J. 0./¢hovca his Nnerty on a ball of ¢ |down the eleva hafting yester-|}moned to Washington, and local] Kindstrom, pastor of the Swedish day. He was 25 years old, and| politicians take the summo: to| Lutheran church here, kided him-| LERANON, Ky,, Nov, 28 ar came here from Marion, Ore.,|mean that he will be offered the| self, cutting bis throat with a razor| ence Hill, a 12-year-old be t where he has a sweetheart, Miss |judgeship tinmediately upon his ar-| this morning, It Is belleved he was|day of injuries received during a | Pern Ross. jrival in the tal | tnwar |school football game a week ¢ e been fought, | 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. OM TRAINS AND NEWS STANDS be ONE CENT. NFESSION PUBLISHED WHENEVER MEN CLASH WITH DOLLARS S10! COURTS WITH THEIR ACCOMMODATING INJUNCTIONS RUSH TO THE DEFENSE OF THE DOLLARS Without a Tremor, Man ravely Mounts Gallows LONDON, Nov. 23.—Among a score of unmarked flag- stone-covered graves in the yard at Pentonville prison today lies the bOdy of Dr. H. H. Crippen, while Miss Ethel Claire Le- neve, for whom Crippen committed a crime for which he paid | with his life, is being borne toward America on the liner Ma- jestic, Dr. H. H. Crippen, hanged today at. Pentonville for the murder of his wife, Belle Elmore Crippen, is accounted one of the most remarkable criminals that ever sprung a trap in any | gallows in Merrie England. | Whether Crippen confessed jerime to his the; Heart, arrived spiritual adviser,| ministered the | Father Carey, after embracing church |Catholiciam ‘shortly before his} Crippen engaged in earnest com brief journey to the gallows; | ference with the priest, and ap whether he confided the details of | parently did not brood over his ap a horrible murder to Solicitor New: | proaching end }ton, bis counsel, or whether he sold Frequently during the talk in the 4 spurious or bona fide confession! dimly lighted cell Crippen referred Ito the London Evening Times to|solicitously to Miss Leneve, who, provide Miss Leneve with a com- the day before, had seen him for petence, probably never will be the last time known At that time the girl, registered The Times reiterates today |@8 Miss Allen, left English soil, that the American physician Refused to Eat. confessed a cunningly planned Breakfast was served at 7 crime. father Carey, Miss | O'clock, but Crippen would not eat. Lenev nd Arthur Newton, | At 8:46 the governor of the prisom Crippen’ counsel, denied notified the condemned man that knowledge of the confession, he must prepare for the march to The doomed man's last night on the scaffold Jailers pinioned earth was @ wakeful one Crippen'’s arms and bared bis neck Asked the Time. eons easier adjustment of the He called frequently to the death » litt = watch to ask the time Father i, ae ate re see Carey, of the Church of the Sacred | dawn and ad t rites of the (Continued on Page Six.) — , Couldn’t Bear to See ie Another Win Girl So He Shoots Her Down A fealoury-crazed youth shot} when Hans nd her talking with |down the girl be loved last night |aBether young man, Arthur Cude, The sight stirred the Berserker rage latent in his blood. But all Lane, #/ the pentap emotions of . weeks plodding mechanic, met the girl, and months burst forth In the ex and then blew out bis brains This young man, Hans Frieda Peterson, two years ago in| pression Boise, Idaho, nd fell deeply in “You aré not treating me right.* love. He showered her with atten-| And ause she “hadn't treat jtions, He came 80 insistent t ed him right"; because she couldn't jahe fled the city to rid herself of or wouldn't bow to his will; be him cause she saw fit to choose am For she did not love Hans Lane. other, Ha Lane's love turned to Fric < Seattle, while blind, staggering hate and jealousy, | Hans wandered f wn and he tried to kill her |looking. for the girl who left him. To him the crime was compiete, His dogged seareh was rewarded.| Without a word he clapped the He found the girl in Seattle. She | atill smoking weapon to his temple had buried herself a domestic |and sh himself dead. Cude, the employ of Arthur G. Bixby, | fearing the wrath of wounded love, fled for help. girl lies at the was drawing tc a | Seattle General hospital, with ast night, death hovering near Ce 1. |S. E. Co. Is Cons Just Smile * picket 'tex Poe m town adrona av. N climax ca If you can't possibly feel glad According to the figures of sver anything at) County Assessor Parish, the Seattle joyous holi-| Eleetric Co, owns personalty worth y season, for | $6,006,022. At least, that is the basis axation upon which the 8, E. Co, be asked to pay to King county. aven's sake dig cheerful | ¥! up a mile for the: It ts the biggest property owner im sunny afternoon the county, the Seattle Lighting Co, perm coming next and the Puget Sound Electric Co. and the banks following True, it may! nora after be raining tor re i sr oe KING GEORGE WILL . raph VISIT INDIA IN 1912 the wind'll ne blowing wie as through — the | wires; but the sun DID shine today LONDON, Nov officially. Tt has been firmed that King telephone George will be present at the mag- | Rad while it lasts it's almighty fine. | nificent coronation durbar which | On, cheer up! Smile @ Uttle-| wilt be held at Delhi, India, about | eo ty be the sun'lt be encouraged | January 1, 1912. More than $500,000 | hei a er even “i will be s to make the great r Nf pectacle an. equal to the famed jCurzon regime durbar | po You KNOW CASE DRAGS 36 YEARS : ta|, NEW YORK, Nov, 23.—After have | That on pee has sold his! ing dragged through the New York | faigoue cafeteria 4! state courts for the p 6 years, profit int the historic case of the heirs of That one smal Oncnt against the Mutual Life Insurance ipany to recover ete Yaris nd | 95,000 has been settled. The com- pany must pay full princiual at instaliment furniture store cent on bad debt | Phat Kenneth Mac h, George . T eer, Robert Grass and Cl t Sent, etc eee |Pinatond sradunteet oat estern Union jthe five bigs niversities in the a | United States—-Michigan, Harvard (By United Press.) | Pent vania, Princeton and Chiea . “ ieee ai shade neesidente of]. Nay XOnmr ROS The re | ny ear n ice, through death nation of Robert C. Clowry as prt gh ee “ident of the Western Union That Frank Paul, the law need |8raph Co. was received at the heads to be a newapane n in’ New| Quarters of the company here to- York and Phila ‘ day. Tt N, Vail, president of That Judge M and ex-Jud the American Telegraph and Tele Root went to sehoo! togethe at Al | areee he was appointed to succeed bany, N. Y low bar and Chadwick were all born in| MILLIONAIRE WEDS the month of il | HOTEL CHAMBERMAID i] SETS RIGHT HIS FARE NEW YORK, N Miss Mine | NORTH YAKIMA, Nov nie Kage \ formerly was @ {Local agents of the Northern Pa-| hotel maid-at $20 a h, was mare Jcifie road ha received $1 from | ried today to The T. Hekert, jrg }a man who confesses that he stole | ot $3,006 of tha a rid in the long rs nnd now | lat Ge Th T I t, long wants to “get right with God”, So | presid ‘ W n Union | he his fare Te ph company, 1 owd yund the Roman ( hurely LOG KILLS MAN, in which wedding was held was JOQUIAM, Nc AR t! et TOR I a killed here last |; e to » th k night, when a log rolled off a side Mr. Eek i € of age ang hill and buried h in the debr h bride ts 46