The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 13, 1910, Page 1

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7 . phe Star’s Carrier Army | Don’t Hesitate to Phone The Btar, Main 9400, or Ind, 441, If your p= per fails to reach your home regularly every night. You are entitled to good service. suburbs. the whole city and the covert you live you may have i galivered to your door for 26¢ per ON TRAINS AND NEWS STANDS bo. The Seattle Star AN COURTS MUZZLE A NEWSPAPER? ONE CENT. SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1910. \That Question to be Decided Tomorrow in Contempt Case By noon tomorrow Judge Gilliam will have decided whether or not the editor of The Star was in ‘ton. tempt of court when The Star criticised the court and denounced the use of the injunction to help the Furth Traction Monopoly crush the people of the Duwamish valley it will take but a that he has hammered the working men of Los Angeles}, | THIS CALIFORNIA MILLIONAIRE COMES TO DO ir knees till they are forced to work for a dollar a day|4 TREMENDOUS SERVICE TO BIG BUSINESS OF SE- vers i ATTLE-—HE COMES TO TELL THEM HOW TO MAKE THE WORKING MAN AND WOMAN EAT LESS MEAT, BF sumorrow | DRINK LESS her city on the Coast, will be in Se-| x oe COFFEE, SLEEP IN LESS SPACE, Go Gen. Otis comes here to tell the big interests of Seattle how| LONGER ON FEWER NEW CLOTHES. , from the workers and their families more of the Gen. Otis’ remedy is to destroy the unions ets of their tired arms and backs, at less cost in dividends | hammer t ng) to the employers. | work . Otis will be greeted at a big banquet at the Arctic} itis announced, by a meeting of “representative citizens.” | Arctic Club. The representative citizens of Seattle—it is announced low tail and tuxec But the man who swings a sledge in the foundry won't be courses, The girl who bends her frail back over whirring ma-| move noiselessly ab till the dust chokes her and her fingers grow numbed | cies to ten her eyes | The man who pilots his team over the streets through cold} than John Kirby, who comes with him. The contempt case is set for 9:30, and a hort time for The defense the trial will without doubt be finished by 12 The Star will contend that it has b ut performed its plain duty to the people in taking the course it has in this fight of the Traction Trust against the Duwamish valley residents. The Star's fight is the people’s fight against the SYSTEM by which powerful corporations can and do draw the courts to their aid whenever corporation dollars clash with men There will be no dodging of the plain issuc the editor of The If courts can muzzle a newspaper, it will be decided tomorrow. If courts in this state can put a limit upon the “free-dom of the pres: Star to put in its Patino’ o'clock to smash and bits this last defense of the men and women who It'll be in the c ge party ly dining room of the epresentative men” will be there in swal- and white polished shirts. and liquors There'll be ten o far as Star is concerned. Immaculate waiters will refilling glasses, bringing new delica- pt the appetite of this representative gathering hampagne ut ’ it will be decided tomorrow. dim—she won't be there. Gen. Otis, in his plans for Seattle, From letters and telephone messages which have come in F Harrison Gray Otis, of Los Angeles, whose proudest boast | chanic, the carpenter, the digger. 98 One step further : Kirby, who succeeded REAL TRAGEDY JIN since the postponement of the contempt cases Friday, the in- imain, in spite of hunger and worry and fatigue—he won't| Post as head of the Manufacturers’ Association, advocates the | tions are that the biggest crowd which ever gathered at Nor the family who awaits him in a tiny group of | “open shop.” any trial in Seattle will assemble when The Star's case is cold rooms. Nor the other family which has no husband} Otis would not allow the union man even the right to work Di VOR E Mil L called tomorrow [iuher to bring home a pittance of wages, but who must live| in shops where there are nonunion men, They are disturbing | Lato The people of the Rainier valley and the Duwamish valley or washing clothes or mopping floors through the| clements, he argues, and must be suppressed altogether (Mewes item.) sometimes more than that. The! Will be there, of course. Because they realize that The Star and into the night till nature demands their temporar Otis is a big figure now in the news since the blowing w Mrs. Annie Leibig was (gir! graduated from high school. | is iting their battles against the bitterest opposition from , eg ig up Ll. i : h ople won't be there either. | by dynamite or gas of his news; © plant in Los Angeles. He| 9f@nted a divorce this morning The father then paid for a business | powerful corpor ms and entrenched laws t 107 ay & eer ® from Arthur Lelbig, of Port college course for her | . > Gen. Otis wants to speak to the other people—to the men] is trading on that prominence by going on a lecture tour against | po vnsend ' She finished that. Then came| Concerns All People of Seattle. ; as little wages as they must. He will tell them—these | labor, on just the same principle that Goby des Lys and Lina r the divorce | jut there will be people at the hearing who are not di- whom he flatters as representative men—how to steal | Cavalieri and Count de Beaufort have traded on their notoriety.| An ordinary case is that of the) Once a week during the entire] affected by the case of valley people against the dollar a day from the teamster, the widow, the me- It will be a very successful gathering—from one viewpoint ee as simndrene ant vundreds | pe riod of ney vie gy ant if this universal wav supp and approval which = mam [Of the kind are tried every viet Bie Geagnter te Besttie~cs | 1ed into The Star office since Friday is any indication Ere: by the King county superior cx Sunday rnoons usually | > ; . : , | 1 " fade itinae this pret ing wai Ga Deadny ulcer ba weeke aus »| For this fight is not that of the valley people alone. And Hy } RIGHT IN THE CENTER OF THINGS, ANYWAY! probably not any more troubled in the last boat to F Biakeley. But| people of Seattle proper have come to realize this. It is the | | y » y } making his decision than er d-mother couldn't "| fight of all people against the allied opposition—the system. 14) ato aes, Thee’ Wan sothing |slong, The wile charged erecity. |" ‘The rai tions are attacking the valley people i i a jease tried yesterday, or the one! The husband charged cruelty./on the people | } that will be tried tomorrow Rut tne wife was ever so tender to The same corporation which is fighting the people of the | | N At least two persons are tragical their ltth amish vall by every hook and crook of 1a S >t } y . ly “concerned Sometimes it is “It's impose to live to r re , ; ba Pha % ‘" ok Pgs Hise ke merce bare fh: | mal more the both agre Judge nnan — ay n 1€ volitica a é NT ARRESTED | re iw the story of the Leibigs stated in rt he ental the Furth-Stone-W ebster power-hght mM There are hundreds of others if either party proved a| monopoly W R juke. ‘They were married in 1891 legal ground for divorce wad Its representatives are in the council, in the legal profes- ey i = jin Dallas, T A little girl was; it was the tragedy of mismating |; the heac t least one city departm iy Bees Prem) SS v born. She is just past 18 now, of temperaments, and that's a more | S100 ' at me be a wemygei 9 it i arta ent ss iN FRANCISCO, Dec. 13—With For the sake of the child, perhaps, fatal contributor toward domeatic | t intends to ish these valley people—for the good Suspects ander arrest in con- the @ivoree proceedings were de- discord than any cause which the | effect-that it will on the rest of the people of Seattle. WHR the todbery of $57,000 | ee no ngen seen rai he laws of the mnie ~ mart So Judge For once the peop! ve they cannot beat the Furth-Stone- ballion trem, the steamer | eight years husband and wife | Kennan granted the divorce t©) Wei tor fare robbers, they have lost three-fourths of THEIR olde, secret service agents to- lived apart Mrs. Leibig, allowed her alimony ‘ster f mee yoann t i dent their energies toward But month after month the fath- b ave Mr. Letbig all of the real) BA‘ TL E rH Ai YE! he COME ie ce 7 \er.iwhe manages a butcher si in | property ey intend to punish the valley people so severely for their - alge a “ag a Port Biakele genteth uted a ; It # a comprom judgement,” | sistance that no one else in Seattle will ever dare to raise voice Sy, fn an endeavor to t | month eo wife and child—|be announced. | of pen against them. They know the laws, for they have helped of the gang in imu ona pan at Rc at AR Le ‘ . =» | to make them. They know what they can do under the law—how A ; . a" long they can fight and delay and demur and appeal and file super- , i ——— Blood-Stained Note Bg te , . Whatever the issue tomorrow, this thing has become clear— oe ’ © lh fh assaye that it Is not a petty case out in the valley somewhere, but some | 2 thing which affects directly every one in the city. and ordinarily « | @ y y y [eee May Convict Slayer) 33sec rea oe | aid of the dollar against the people. The injunction still hangs over tice hold E. L. Smitt chee ial the heads of Seattle people in fights to come. They are beginning 1. ve th bor probe Por bee . } (Ry United Press.) hav ned that he was with Hyde to appreciate this, and see just how big this fight that The Star is 0 The authorities are in pos GHICAGO, Dec. 13.—In & Uy before latter was killed.) in amounts to. a @f five bars of the bullion stained, ink-blotted letter, w Victim Wrote Note So there’li be lots of people tomorrow eager to hear what the . ts y ne lered man wa tr t the ¢ ontn H of i court decision is. to Weert that they have lew by Nath i : ne rhage ide ange : : i mil ead to the unearthing of }commixsioner f Ore table before him was the following = inder at where “he w truck the 7 t dais the a of the ring-| Ww S ; { ” Scot , . p lice toda ev ia clew KE. ¥ tt: Tama H ’ G A ere Srrest st toe oo irae Teac seen | pla enact empleo meney te e’s Going Away! DO YOU KNOW 2 Y Math nh connection with a bi i in New Y h | the crime, bel ing that Hyde wa € « * | writing letter for Mathias nk t ended Del Lawrence going away! That South Carolina is the only i Hyde's body w discovered when idently made when After many an tter of them | state in the union in which it is im- y- . | inter bloc through the floor|the mur weapon ushed| crool words “that have wrung) possible to secure a divorce? re AF RUNAWAY £0/ IN < jand ed from the ceiling of the through H skull, The police the saline ducts| That 99,243 persons entered Se- : | Sy» “i roon yw. This room was oc-\claim to have evidence that Hyde of many a maid-/attle by w and rail during the . ¥ _- at t c writin « Math en dry he i h f 4 nt ‘biG REFRIGERATOR CAR cupled by Mathias, but the px was’ t . month of November and that £9,089 < seeking the 88-) passengers left tle in the same e ra lubrious climate! period ; | of Southern Cal-|" That 3,135,629 tons « a ee . And This It Goes! STRANGE BEAST Morale, wad. th fom exhaustion. nearly frozen Chi ‘ é id n is t oes. at ie. Dol the | dine Was importe d by a runaway stripling, som ° aa george That Seattle merchants shipped 3 eCadden of Brook-| i _ —- phn Hond as I bite : have wiped the} 565,503 tons of freight to Alaska Beier ct e| = Rams of Fliers| | Johnson the X-X/ «a's ads face || MIDDLETOWN, 9 are inet hee ea ton IR teirigerator tn whieh te ps A a The city council last night | inaLa ght when/A ange animal has bec again with pro That the highest wind velocity EEE trisoner for 48 hours SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 13. ordered a re-assesement of the 1 Pats M C.M. Wir ' aw te bodies at| ever recorded in the United States Tad travel locked in the} Fong Ye, a native born Chin- engett portions of the Josk (ae mes Pon) | MDesiat en White's he Lois theatre | was 102 miles an hour at St. Paul? & stersburg Va. ose, who has aspirations to be- | eon st. regrade. Twice the | CHICAGO, Dec. 13-—Booker | uc, retorted Her Ga Ww are going along That at every army post and th had made} ome a birdman, will fly in the voters of Seattle have refused T. Washington forgot his | griekoor have 4 too naval station the Americal flag is oo | be held te sanction a bond issue for | bp \ You maidens! y¢ T betas sancein a oD freight trains all the way| Sviation meet to eid in lencheed. Gith dusk dehecsn ls Metieecinin ware ft ee ria | never ra ore sunrise, nor al tksonville, Fla. He said he San Francisco the first week the deficit. With the re oli wi ; 1 v4 who have found | jowed to remain up after sunset? his mnind to return to hia| Im January. Fong Ye today sesament those who h and left town early today. | pried apar dge Gordon assessed nee ¢ urcease from worldly sorrow in| That there were three farmers, of comfort and luxury,| wae entered in the novice class ready paid their Johnson ate his fried chick- | Hemdrickson a8 his_morning. for |« bout eight Mr. Lawr ¢ sibeiuibae oak ac amone appear from bis accounta.| by the committee in charge of share will be rea en and trimmings alone, “Dat's | Wwe Gus’ face for a sidewalk, and |j¢ ae os ry a hurried di signers of the Declaration of m mis tor 10 months.| the meet. Fong Ye already make up the deficit created by i teste shunen dite den tie Loe cen ecg f ‘ « and t Independence? oe to weethe @ar tl hi made several practice property owners who refused " came he failed to remen ” be ¢ c That when Wilbur Wright flew too proud lo write Soy Uae | flights. to pay. | only comment. started the rumpus Wild W | To bid him ad t were oP wie aa Siatame ae ine ce. He had ran away 2 plane a home to follow aces and | =.— mene gem onan ———$_— —- —— — Hawk 190%, he ac fe Rimself an almost penniless | . V . . ‘. comy successful te ~~ She Her Beauty and Her Charms in Vain Against the Law—the Tragedy of Beautiful Helen Boyle po MSE FINISH IN . HELEN BOYLE. stern and cold and immovable a ‘ yat St. Louis, wh he was held off. When the first jury convicted! It Wasn’t His Grip ENGLAND ELECTIONS! yoyaMENSING, Pa, Dec. 1%.—~|thing the law can be as an accomplt George Parker, |her she laughed would: an snide i” lttelen Boyle has just begun to un-| Twenty-five years—it's a life time orKer peal th . nN wait, the : Pioras emanate’ nt DON, Dec. 13——A gain of po seelben iow. ' and more for one who lived on life | want 0 ee nee seer oe . OF the chan ; hir poond a pe Eastituencies was made bY|" After a night in her cell, during |like Helen Boyle , | OF ber Ms ‘ : t She ‘ mf t nd of the pub-| vost 1, George Boyle, aservat ive the liberals! part of which she raged like a| For from the moment when the} ’ 4 ; ‘oj lic, she could . Wo CARO 5 ‘ ted a fight with Pa- tes in unting Of; 44 woman, and during the other! police broke into her h plac work ex¢ . dw So loday. s of t she lay like one dead, Helen|and caught her and J Boyle h artist. He drew picture Twenty-f e decisior Wis finally: Wremaewacee iB follows: « ves | Ro with the flash of daylight |and accused them on the ping her i band f th at Philadel) sng take ail B Hberals 1. », Natlon-| pitering throu the grated bars, | of Willie Whitla—f hb nute n hour, 1} n Boyle phia was a cr 2 ro Hotien dasha se %, O'Brie rig K I le bell 1 tely ause it Ww 0 Hitt f t y we Pee a ns ha eK ine H . +e lay talams came ith 11 rt X € hought the Twe @ years—the senter he would go fr was | He will is af kne men, did this girl,| had ays lived—-and lived | had looked 4 ! xt 30 t the city hy 4 . a2 1g ‘ men were but men, easil And she b Iwa dimy b 1 } tr ¢ ‘ a mu a th | { are i} ad — poy 4 fi ut a knew ne | — ———_ PM thutterty ty-f ¢ would leave | and et f os 1¢ | M pe né € Vf SHOPP N - f I i 1 d ‘ y nd ||DaAYS ian si And I 4 ‘ ' ; ' j brough 1 n |[CHRISTMAS h a r i nd 1 Was Fireman's Daughter } Expe To Go Free : 1 ‘ 1 i Mipplied tt ~ ‘or te he had been perfect nt to I a a a ; part of ae % , i fc ah sve of herself t the time | hen st wrested for kidr j now Helen Boyle cant ng an , Oia - when, as a girl wilful daughter r ; ; that Bc bay understand WHY. Bu e ca . End of the Game. of a Chicago fireman, she had been | KO ¢ t ® bs # ne te und and. and WHAS | It's the end of the game for Helen | sent to the convent for safe keep f ree Adiclige 's a It a more B ing, then broken away at the first i p ver tha WHAT , Maes b> | And tht 1, whose mind ts | opportuntt | ferpreubtons ik ts the: Pagolnetion 2 | pa ly that p 1 child partly that She had tried to throw the cloak : * Me st ‘ phy titel gat: ELLENSBURG 4,209 | ports of a poker gambler; this Irish girl|of mystery around her life when NNN bi ometis ms ° i fora 6, gen ’ ee ation of t " t t ¢ rrested at Cleveland, but ©, weak woman 7 . of ish.| with the blood of adventure tn her,|she was arr Pyporeg: Moc pre sl f AT i E 4 at bo with her heavy hi of golden: |the telltale marks of the Bertillon | ‘ sh y Os t Bo bee fe " at | W N (| i 050 Diack has ¢| black hair, her dainty manners, her em had traced her back Te he, & hard workiug mechanic, was WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—The Dir a in the Categor eneer of refinement, her smatter Not all the way. The Bertillon : IC, v . : ; ‘ Otte) thrown into the path of beautiful] census bureau today announced the | we n 1 had d ‘our shox ond (os pe ing of convent French, her soft | men cml opi le ara of hes ween |i spans NKiok ch aiaeatnns Werk celine anee moe he cee and Ww ht| hands, b easy code of moral she ran afoul ot the police, when fg ‘ would aeé 0 enateh ash., & 050. | well erly wind +t ; “ gun to yealize how hard and! she was accused of a big Jewel theft HELEN BOYLE. Be e W ire she ild get Wena Wash 4 |’

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