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a 4 will have t Dentat ten, and years since d whieh © the warble the Com. ms) at the Ht 5 Hs ff eee ermal ee = 5 t FF To be successful as a wife, a woman to continue flirting Hmust be wililing i Hwith her husband, “VOL. 13, NO. 214 ONLY LETS WAIT AND SEE Here's the difference, When a big corporation wants to boost its rates, it boosts them; then it GETS AN INJUNCTION TO KEEP THEM IN FORCE UNTIL THE DIS- PUTE HAS BEEN FINALLY DECIDED IN THE COURTS. he people, through their r Whengt! resentatives, demand some concession from a big corporation, THE CORPORATION GETS AN INJUNCTION SUS. PENDING THE PEOPLE’S DEMAND UNTIL THE DISPUTE HAS BEEN FINALLY ADJUDICATED. The corporations always get the full benefit of the doubt, you will notice. telephone case the high rates hold, the corporation gets the benefit, In thi until the case has been finally settled. : When Furth boosted the suburban rates, two years ago, the high figures stood until the case was fought through all the court: Now, let’s see what happens on the other sid The people of Seattle, through their council, pass a law demanding that Furth shall sell tickets on the street cars at the franchise rate of 25 for $1. Furth-objects to this law. Now Furth announces that he will ask for an injunction suspending this law until the case can be settled in the courts. That means a year or two. More than likely, Furth will get his injunction. The people probably wil until the case is fnally determined. But possibly the court won't grant an injunction. Possibly the people will be given the benefit of Let's wait and see. uh ‘Rodgers, NIL MRS, YERMILYA |e eee ewe eee ee eee be deprived of the privilege of buying tickets on cars the doubt for once. Who Made Longest | «© Flight, Mobbed by Women the park, with a long black cigar WASH., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1911 Dreaded Black Hand, Nearly lack Hand at | ‘The carrot ts formed into a per what it looke Itke, anyway, , {et hand, with the ption of th thymb. That member has just : under the camera. But! J touted, and Mr. Belcher vows in actual life this Black Hand I®/thar if it had been left in the red. 5 ground a few weeks longer, the t's @ carrot! thumb would have been there, big Don't believe it? Well, F. J. Bel ax life, cher, one of Kennydale's thriving, Mr. Belcher bronght the freak to farmers, has the proof in the shape The Star office, and The Star bad of the carrot, which he dug up @ its photo taken, just so that skep- The Seattle Star INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SEATTL IN| SEATTLE ONE CENT. | HOME EDITION Wall St. i 2° a rule, doubtless because they don’t | like the risk having tools stolen. Burglars keep away from to run of ANOTHER VICTIM OF EADLY CROSSING The deadly grade crossing claims €4 another victim in Seattle yesters day afternoon when Dr. Clarence E. Wardell, 4407 Maynard ava wi struck while in his automobile at the crossing on Andover st., South Seattie, and fatally injured by an engine on the O.W, tracks. The machine in which the doctor was riding was smashed to pleces and plied into a ruin between the two railroad tracks almost a block from the point where the collision red. The pb an was hurled sufferin ured skull and broken | des minor ine NU \ a SN . Doctor Half Asleep. Worn out with fatigue from nite merous calls of late, according to those os NY when struck. According to H. French, the engine tender, who rode jon the rear of the engine, the doc- |tor rode along the tracks parall | with the engine, which was back ling, for about two blocks, He got a little in front of the engine and rbd tend at [between his teeth. ‘The aviator had|{¢™ 4478 ago on his ranch at Ken- teal folk might ve the proof ult walt : - i i 8 4 a a32 i ef i A 4 de pili A ae MRS. LOUISE VERMILYA (By United Press Leased Wize) CHICAGO, Nov. 6.—Recovering from the effect of her attempt to end her life by potson, Mrs. Louise accused of the murder of Arthur Bissonette by poison, will be jailed today. has been in a hospital. Carnegie Won’t Die Broke, He’s Giving Away Fifteen Millions Every Year, But Growing Richer Every Day) Ien't it terrible how poor Andrew | Carnegie is getting to be? And what a heart breaking thing it must be to give away all your money before you die. That's what the iron master said he would do No doubt Carnegie fs tickled to pieces about this steel trust suit hoping it will permanently depre ciate the value of his bonds—no doubt, NOT! Let's figure it up For 10 years past the laird has been giving away an average of about $15,900,000 a year. Following are some of the larger items that go to make up the total Libraries, $51,060,006 Institute, Pittsburg, $16,000,000. Carnegie foundation, $15,000,900 Institute, Washington, $10,000,000 Scotch universities, $10,004,000. Hero fund, $5,000,000 Peace fund, $16 Polytechnic —s« 000,000. And there are any number of mis 10,000. oois, Pittsburg, Have you fallen into the ordering out your Independent If so, it "t be long until t She | ithis morning before Bell SOME RODGERS “DOPE” Flew 4,231 miles in 4,924 minutes. Left New York Sept. 17, ar. rived Pasadena Nov. 5. All records for long-distance flying broken. | Mother and wife watched | } *®/\a hard time today to escape scores | ®\of women who congregated about Bl his hotel, determined to liontze * /bim. He left the hostelry by a re * entrance and made a run for his ® | automobile. “Small Boy” Saw Him Firat. It & small boy on the top row of the bleachers at Tournament Park yesterday who first sighted | the speck soaring toward Pasadena jin the clouds to the east. A yell! from the lad and the thousands of spectators waiting to greet Rodgers broke forth in a great volume of cheers that continued until the} speck grew from the distance and finally, mounting high overhead for | | teeeeeteeeeeee ) | him fly from a special train. / Surrounded and lionized by pretty California women. atket eee eeeee (By United Press Leased Wire) PASADENA, Cal, Nov. 6—Avi ator C. P. Rodgers arose tate this morning and shortly before noon journeyed “Tournament Parks | tne world’s greatest aerial achieve where hie biplane is quartered, to’ ment completed, the continent| |test several parts of the machine! crossed. |that were weakened during his _ — flight yesterday. It w nnoune: on: 7 that no decision regarding the| Dilling Not Candidate beach town at which the trans-con-| Mayor Dilling will not be | ’ pe & can tinental journey will be officially | didate for re-election at the Febru.| completed has been reached, and it! ary primary. This Is the positive is certain that the flight will not be gtatement made by the mayor te «| continued toda: | party of bis friends. | | He Likes Cream. | Dilling has never sald he would | Rodgers appeared greatly rested| be a candidate again, but ft was after his flight of yesterday, |Renerally expected that he would He drank three glasses of cream/try at the regular election, His e started for! withdrawal leaves the field open, | a time, swooped down to earth nydale, across Lake Washington, | with the farmer's clatu - = epee : Here’s Fun for 400 Kiddi The time—Wednesday afiernoon, The place—The Moore theatre The girls and boys—chtldren trom the orphans’ homes of Seattle. The Star and the Moore theatre Management are going to try to give the youngsters a real treat next Wednesday afternoon, when about 400 boys and girls will be taken to the Moore to see the matinee mance of “Mother.” Among the homes represented will be the Washington, Seattle, Mount Carmel and Ryther's children’s homes. The kiddies will occupy « whole division af orchestra seats, “Mother” was proven last night to be just the kind of a play that would please Young America, It's a plain story, full of humor and ac- ton, as some pathos JUDGE YAKEY IS AGAIN EATING AT OUR EXPENSE Judge John B. Yakey of Port Or- | county chard, who, according to Senator J.| Judge Yakey used to be called in * } when some local judge want- W. Bryan, inatirated the disber-jeq a rest. On such occasions, as ment proceedings against him, 0) was shown during the disbarment which the feature was the fact that| proeeedings, King county was stung the senator instead of the judge /for Yakey's meals, which averaged was put on the defensive and Was about $2 per day. “shown up” in bis liber: of} Presumably, Yakey is eating at passes and expense claims, is agaln (he taxpayers’ expense again this sitting as a visiting judge in King week. Meantime, the taxpayers = er = |also pay Albertson's salary Mrs. Jacob Furth on Jury Venire Mra. Jacob Furth has been “a cous benefactions, organs, the | — peace temple, and so on, that bring the total up to approximately $190, 000,000, mostly given since the sale Carnegie steel plant to the United States Steel corporation. AND ALL THAT TIME AN DREW CARNEGIE HAS BEEN DRAWING MORE THAN $x MINUTE, $44,000 A DAY, $13,750, }000 A YEAR. i The mere Interest on the bonds he «ot for his share of the Carnegie | Steel company has brought him in that time nearly ONE HUNDRED| AND FORTY MILLION DOLLARS. | Poor? Why, Andrew ts at least 150,000,000 richer than he was | years ago! | In 1899 Carnegie sold out to the Morgan syndicate for $204,000,000 jin 5 per cent gold bonds, $98,277 120 in United States Steel preferred and $90 el common. | laird copped off the 5 per cent gold bonds—nearly a hundred jand fifty millions in pure velvet, | WORKING HARD drawn on a@ special venire of 78 Jurors to try the case against A. J. and C. B. Blethen for con- @piracy to maintain a public ulsance duri: Mayor Gill's term. “Five other women were Grawn as follows: Mary L. Carrol!, 3811 Whitman st.; Em- mat 518% University Windie, Liftian Small, 710 Dakcta st.; Mar. rst Miller, 2006 13th av. The lethen trial ie set for Novem. Der 15 in Jud 's court. While Mrs. Cutting, 4338 Phinney av., was busy with household duties this morning a bul dow, and just grazed her hair. Cutting hi Mr no idea who did the) eral direction from which it came. | qu | on | TO DIE POOR over and above his own selling price two years before. Now, then, it Carnegie haa $304 000,000 in bonds, paying about $14, | 000,000 a year, and he gives away telephone monopoly trap by | $15,000,000 « year, how long will It | be before he ts pinched with pov phone erty? will find that it's going to take Andy about a Mfetime to use up|tie Saturday night the $147,000,000 “velvet.” | reported their low it will take some decades! quarters, Three rooms at more to.scatter the pitiful remnant | ay, were ~$167,000,000-—before he finally|son lost a suftease and valuable goes on the county clothing. The residence of Mrs. | sm This Shoudy, 1033 Jefferson st., was ran | wa Thieves reaped a harvest in Seat-| as 510 9th alculation is based on the day-old 80 Unable to re which the lust of quick and big profits held upon him, Eni! Soren-| son, a blue-eyed young man of 25, is now in the clutches of the law, | sleep: arrested for smuggling opium. | And a little girl In Ballard who | had expected a happy marriage in a few weeks is crying her heart out. | st On her | jumped off a train when {t was run . = | son 1 y EIGHT ROBBERIES :: lhim on the former occasion, as well Hight victims | son was . es to police head-| Great Northern train, Hughes found) name of Hanson s a rs burglarized and each per-| Sorenson eS te WHER canny as LURKS bo Betcha da Boy Understanda Justa How, His Daddy Feel About Dis Theeng §ANTA BARBARA, Cal, Nov der of my leetle Dominick, but da bo just how his daddy feel about dis theeng This is the continual wall today of John Rech, Italian gardener, he sits in his cell, awaiting trial high cost of living has unbalanced Insanity, it was learned today when the case comes to trial. His wife, who ts charged with giving consent to the murder, sits on her cot in an adjoining cell and maintains that the her husband's mind. , Will be the plea of the defense turned sudde st, when struck. The injured man was picked up and hurried to Providence hospital, | where an operation was performed, but too late to save his life. y Dr. Wardell was born in Seattle, 29 years ago. He graduated from the Southern Medical school, in 1907. He lived at av. S. He leaves @ wife and two-year-old daughter. to cross Andover 6. Da may hanga me for da mur. , | beteha heem understanda for the alleged murder of his two- Lure of Evil Gold Career and Romance for ° Spoils ON AOGKS While trying to cut across a narrow passage in Eagle Har- bor at 7 o'clock this morning, the big British freighter Hill- Man; in Jail as Smuggler“, g Bekiah tea te the viselike grip | two months ago Sorenson | ning 26 miles an hour near Ballard | ¢.7 jet from a 30-30 rifle struck a win-| when he felt that he was being | shadowed. | But shooting and could only teil the gen- | i1¢ttI0 the big profits from those aels of opium did not relin ish thelr hold upon young m, says Customs Inspector ughes of ne, who shadowed And while tin the wash ro last Sat mn of the cans in his satch ording to the Ur * officials, had been practicin nuggling for four years. He was| ater tender on the steamer of those Em: passing examination at Vaucouver. | where she rests, unable to drive When he got on the train he re |her way back into deep water. tainted ficials. leged, _ ANARCHY RULES when he| (By United Press Leased Wire) WASHINGTON, Nov. 6,—State department dispatches today state that the rebels have captured Amoy, China, and that the entire district is in a state of anarchy. moved them to his satchel Hughes | got adjoining stateroom in the | Eagle Harbor is about 30 miles ess night. I have never seen the inside of} A deep fog caused the acci- 4 dent, and the vessel was on the States commissioner this morning. | y for four years he has been it. The iller: een gold, say the customs of-|)" .. Hillerag had bi To some of them, it ts al-| loading here for the past three jon leading to the arrest of an organized band of opium smug-|¢@rgo of lumber at Port Blake- ly. She is a big vessel and was were too big to the poor water ten der. He never gave the government strong enough to see the danger sig nal that presented itself so vividly 9 sleeper. Sorenson spent &/ Fron, Seattle. a jail before,” he told the United shoal before the pilot realized king his freedom for the lust of he had promised to give in-| weeks and was completing her glers, But the profits of the game formerly the old Bannockburn, the Information, And he was not to him two months 0, Sorenson, who also went by the ago, for will not aigned until this afternoon. aske a lawyer be a ADVENTURE OF THE BASHFUL MAN _ re will be one big monopoly | Fourteen from 15 leaves one. Alaomee assumption that the §204,/sacked and a sult case and a set of | press of India getting all the telephone busi under the grotesque Sunset A Reports ind that many 1 aning people are fall- ing into this little trap. Growing indignation at the Indepen 4ent’s attempt to raise rates they have retaliated—but retalia fon is a boomerang The Bell is quietly lying prospect. It’s a cinch that ordering out Independent phones will not give cheaper telephone service. The only hope for cheap serv- ice, aside from municipal ownership, is that the Independent be FORCED TO REMAIN IN THE FIELD AND TO GIVE SERVICE AT THE OLD RATES. “Pay your money under protess,” advises Corporation Counsel Calhoun. “Then if the city wins you ‘will get your money back.” + The city can repeal the franchise of the Independent com- pany, in the opigion of lawyers. It made a contraet with the city and when that contract is not fulfilled it can be abrogated by the city--notwithstanding what the public ‘service commis- sion § « But who knows? Maybe that’s exactly what the Bell monopoly wants. It owns both systems. If the publicsservice commission can raise the rates of the Independents it can reduce the rates of the Sunset. The rates of the latter are exorbitant. No other city would stand for them. Let the commission get busy and make that part of its test cd . In the meantime temporary relief can be secured only by remaining with the Independent and forcing it to give service at the old rates. Ultimately it will be municipal ownership. not so far away either. t the highest price allowed well-r ack, rubbing its hands at the That date is {iion dollars short each year, $304,000,000 principal to draw on Figure out the progression yourpelt Figure for a day or two and you LAW SAYS, “KILL HIM” (By United Press Leased Wire) WASHINGTON, Nov. 6—James W. Finley, a convict in the Califor. | |nia state prison at Folsom, sen-| |tenced by the supreme court of that) state to the deatn penalty for hav- ing J. Murphy in the prison December 29, 1904, must die, | according to a decision of the Uint- |ed States supreme court today. The decision will apply in the ¢ of Jakey Oppenheimer, who is| under sentence of death in Folsom! for a similar offense. Finley and Oppenheimer led the attempt to break prison in which Murphy, a guard, was attacked, Under the law this Is an offens death. | | on | die indie din tien tie ie tae inna dea * * * WEATHER FORECAST ” * Oceasionai rain tonight and * |* Tuesday, moderate southerly * * winds. Temperature at noon ® * 50. * * * i ee A ie i Ee ae Mae ee 000,000 in gold bonds represents everything Carnegie has in the property laid away to yield him an- | other million a year, it's all off. Woe began welling 480 acres at $400 per acre today. Our office was so busy we had hardly time to write this ad. ‘This land tie¢ east of the Country club, and is a part of Lake Forest Park, $10 cash, balance $7.50 month will buy any acre, ‘This land should sell for $750, but owners desired to sell quick Hence the price and the terms per \furs went along with the Intruder. | of) suitcases, clothing, a 615 Boren ay., reports his room was | entered and $25 and a gold watch Who is going to be the next cor- | poration counsel? The city coun-| eilmen will probably have their | first vote on the matter this after noon, It will be only in the nature of a test of the relative strength of three announced candidates, Thom: |$ as F. Murphine, James Bradford, ‘and L. Tindall, for, from all indica: | tigns, none has the required five votes at Office open evenings until & OLE HANBON @ Co, Third Floor New York Block | 1 | Two rooms in the Christie hotel, on | or $ world. If he has enough incidental |4th av., between Pike and Pine sts.,/country for $ were entered and the loot consisted | are only 5-ounce safety |#on, it is alleged, wa ragor and @ diamond pin, 8. Siiter,|ceal them all on his p he cans of opium cost about $5 in China, and are sold in this and more. They taels, and Soren able to con pn when Men’s | Underwear } Specially Priced Winsted Mills Wool Gar- ments, $1.00. Cooper, Ribbed Wool, $1.50, Dr. Wright’s Health Un- derwear, $1.00. Cooper Union Suits, $2.50. Shafer Bros Arcade and Arcade Annex “NOPE, | DON'T CARE TO BUY i ANY THING LINE THAT FROM A YON. | HANT You To STO ANO FEMALE BUT QuEess Imave ve BUY MEA PAIR OP HOSE MU B VHAVE TO COTA LITTLE BALLAST BEFORE TACKLING THIS — FAINT AFRALO To PACE A KHOLE AEGIMENT OF FEMALES BONE NCH WANT TET BONE HOSE —* Sernene sone HOSE Hi AIS THOSE You so. STAY RE QUESTHO NE TOEITH