The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 10, 1911, Page 1

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The Seattle Star IN| SEATTLE BLOW TO FIXED PRICES OF FOOD The f low against the attempts of wholesaler and man- ng companies to dictate the prices at which food stuffs ufac Ww. wn, of the Sanitary Market grocery ONLY SEATTLE WASH Gil INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, COLDEST AND HOTTEST PLACES TODAY Calgary, map tod It's 20 below t here. ‘Tampa, Florida, is the hottest place on the map Alberta, is the coldest place on the weather BY ANGRY PUT ASHORE are to be sold by the retailers, was delivered this morning, when It’s 7 “ : ’ t's 70 degrees there. Judge Dykeman sustained Attorney H. W. Meyers’ contention Bel i basta H that such dictation js against public policy, and refused to issue | : an injune asked by the Crescent Manufacturing Co. against 4 Brown sold Crescent for 36 cents per pound, and the company sought to restrain him from selling at less than coffee Passengers, Indignant at Ac tion, Hold Mass Meeting on 40 cents. Some of the coffee sold had been bought by Brown Board Steamship Alameda from other retail grocers, and the company also sought to en- in Protest—Olfered to Pay join his right to buy from them. The company has a suit for Boy's Fare—Hard Time for ‘ 1,000 damages against Brown still pending.* Little Declare for Municipal Ownership of Telephones Lake b Kidd, J Clementson, Stowaway.” “| wouldn't bring him back Tor $1,000, This was the answer given by Captain John Johnson to the em treaties of the passengers on the steamer Alameda when they discov- ered he had ordered 15-year-old Ralph Swan, a “stowaway” from Cordova, put ashore when the big Green usiness men, A. B teamer got al last night declared for munic IM. Green. . Bath the Sunset paca Amine hie Sen “ ‘ d the Independent systems The wind was shrieking its bi ownership ritelephones and th i ft a hrieking its bit jpal ownership oftelephones/ (or. in for severe scoring by terest when the third mate and two at a meeting held at the Green ‘ _ ilors, acting under the striet 3 A the speakers pocriinivg cay 2 sri Lake pub! ry, under the} ‘The ¢ ercial club will de- the lad ane 5 detest So peggy Fr iife- auspices of the Green Lake/cide at a meeting Monday on boat. On the est, most dismal Business Men's association./the propositic of calling a pias of the island, m: away from 4 The following committee was! mass meeting for the purpose , Bn pret n i. Brg. appdinted promote a cam-jof giving citizens an opportun Snapshot Pictures Taken by Star Photographer on Some of the Windy Corners This Morning only cents in his pocket. All mg, the paign for this purpose: Geo./ity to be heard on the phone around him he could see snow, W. Hill, Dr. M. M. Null, Dr.' problem EARLIEST SNOW | Whew! It’s cold, Of course you know that. But— snow, frozen snow, and he dids't excaenat ON RECORD HERE) Po you know of a more interesting subject than the even have an overcoat to cover hile utifully \False Re orts on The nearest approach to the} WEATHER? : a Passengers Astounded. $45.00. P Present enow record was in 1903. Well, be seated. Get close ‘to the stove or cuddle up to The Alameda arrived here last raw: Cedar Ri D | Threeeights of an inch fell onthe radiator and read all about the weather. : night, and the passengers told the edar River VamM [wow 11 of that year It was one For instance, this is the.coldest day on record in Seattle This snapshot of two Seattie maidens wading on the beach near | stor day behind this year. ‘This morn-| , Rareisinge tiey atihpee , Alki point is reprinted from The Star on one of those hot days {ast he passengers at first did not Nailed b Erickson ing am inch of snow fell. Here's) f0F any scans Uf . ‘ July. It's printed again today just to-remind you that warmer days are | know what was happening. Whem . : dope on the earliest w Again, this is the earliest snowstorm for Seattle on record coming. the Mfeboat was lowered and the ber ogres inyeeronge A err vad ar Date.| The wind reached u velocity of 42(i#. broken temperature and snow) ¢ ee A @ boy shoved into it, the realization / aso ttherg patie oo Dee niles an he t 10 o'clock thin) records | of the act staggered the: | cireulated about the Cedar Dee 0 ora es on the orth. Aa hOOm Cause of Cold Wave 166 bd 2? “\nardly got away 106 teat oa rs fitver, dam. Foliowtag Counciiman Nov the temperature had risen Only one) “Cold air corrents which have ver 0 as 1S a dozen men offered to pay the boy's Goddard's charges that the pro Dec. ¢| degree, standing at 25, been eirouiating in Western Can ? entire passage from Valdez. But : | posed site for the reservoir was Dec. 15 aaa for the past 48 bourse « j 73 ” e {the captain 4s deaf carte bounded on one side by a Krave! | jgg Nov. 15! Once more—It's the coldest day hepounible for the present cold snap. | them. Capt... S. De Pue, himself F [tea opponents ¢ mumicinal owner | 199 Nov. 23\with two exceptions, in November /Btjose currents, centering about Al an 1S | sariner of experrence ana fies 4 jship tried to make it appear that | js9g Dec. 29 tor 21 years. berta, were swept down along the Yukon skippers, were astounded at : | the city’s water system was a fall-| iga9 Dee. 17 And finally—It’e not over yet. Pacifie const by north winds, The j Cap Jounsen’s actions, Captain we. 1900 Nov. 18 qe jocal weather bureau predicts | high winds brought the cold weath De Pue asked to have a wireless 4 Reports were nt to outside | taq1 | another cold night and more snow! er before it had time to lose much message sent immediately to the * ewepapers proclaiming th Dee. 24 Winter Starte Early. In traveling company it raitie bat Captain aa |tle bad Nov. 11) Dashing out of the Alberta for Cold in Alberta Johnson rceisee to send {t at first. owned wa Dec. 22 ests, Old Man Winter sent a shiver Alberta, the mercury Finally he ordered the wireless Ee Ne ch the Canadian wilde, drove | repint below zero} or fo send it, but the passen- criticisms wore entirely unfoun t hurriedly to shelter and then thy morning the opinion viewed this morning are nd th neer, who accompanied I cman és . he villages and ofthe weat ane that} $s to whether it was really pedaré, bimeel! admits that he had owne with xe aperatures, He tha end in nc Snow ed. At any rate, the com ever been engaged a day on Wate stopped long enough to give the aud cold w ted for d to reply j Works or dam cor os 910 mereary bulbs a wicked jolt and tonlaht Nothing Unusual. 4 In the years marked then sped down the Pacific eoamt| No records ar for Seat is nothing unusual in pute : |PREPARE HORSES Was no snow for that nea and over the mountair 19 the tle before 1890 memory Swawey cena whee a | January of the lowing Pore nd coun Envious at of old residen f 1861-2 reaches the first plec i SENATOR GORE FOR ICY STREETS the even record of & for mild was the coldest seen here, and| American territory,” sald BW, Pie ss ab ela . agreed ph ag winter weather, he made a deaper:|the cold weather began early. The om, superintendent of the Alaska or: and United States s Saccene-teara nenoolalty ate wally way, and. the anawer winter of was also very cold. | Co., thie thanuiak from Okla i for the jey streets and | Pi ew and the passengers, this noon fr e flocked to the blac 7 po eal AND THEN TOO SO SAD oweve indignant t the heart- ception con t the shops to have them shod — ’ ~ | aS ie eee King str scorted| sharp at Oh my! oh joy! the Gpal Trust said, | paroone ne boy had paid his him to th t on your horse ‘and he rubbed bigihands’ in glee may fre 0 Cordova, but noon the senator! urges County Humar On my! ah mot the fp Fract ead, his money gave out there, and be edents of the Broad | sock a And he groaned in misery; He is the sc as Val nook. |B A gad lout: bt a will get. thelr drivers But IH get mine when hot days dez, who built the Swan block there, ; a Senator | in troubie durin, ad wave come ai S at one time e1 4 hold a at the| Some humane drivers wrapped The toe Trust said, noe t on Free veer wealthy hotel urlap about their horses to And I'l! get mine right now, by gum. A cent years, and the boy bas bess at : o'clock tonight the senator keep them from falling | My United Freee Leased Wire) | COAL TRus¥ The Coal Trust sald. ice TRUST working in the North. His. pee will deliver a lecture at the Y. M.| There is po law against LOS ANGELES, Nov. 10.—| > 01 8 a CA |khoes for horses and the humane | grand total registeation for Decem |COLDEST DAY FOR }LOW MARKS FOR gg ese Rl, eins society urges owners to see that! ber election, 174,691 | EARLY NOVEMBER SEATTLE WINTERS as a “stowaway” con yestane FAFT REPRIEVES ae the winter OPeTlY shod) Total number of men registered.) tn only two instances did the| Low marks for the winters of the morning at 8 o'clock. Despite the DOOMED WOMAN” ‘” gg Sites eon regis.|temperature go lower than today |payt 20 years show that in many rp, cutting atmosphere, the cap- POISO! ? shal" nurelee '* | during the month of November, and cages the thermometer registered in put him to work scraping a “f cy Waites Hrtan Rennes Wie RIVAL ISONER? | tered, 73,029. Hin each instance it was at a later | helow’s today's record, but in most| Picture of Dog Defendant, “Spot,” Taken by Star Photographer This am pipe. He was hoisted abave SUWAN Tenn., Nov. 16.—A}| i funiind Brees Benaed Wize) Following the strenuous re ‘ n 9 Pp A erar deck, as high sibl hile Nov. 10-=The police] i:Scon campaign in the history of in the month. Here is the/caxes these records were mad Mor ning leck, as high as possible, a splem ; pathetic plea for “ag life of @| today te to exhume the ssis GAG Lan’ Auaeilon nWwol tone | well into the winter. The record Every dog has his day, and, known to have acted th re a8 he get for the bitter, driving negress, Mrs. Hattie Lomax, sen-| mains of John McDonald, the first t le Temperature PaSeO “gpot,” : lenin | t 4 “Bpot.” thrdegh tor. | Wind with the realization that not lees am P re Date Temperature. | “Spot,” the English setter belonging 1 “Sy nroug tenced to ht District of| husband of Mra. Jobn Quinn, who| [han ‘is4g91 persons, Including 4/1991, Mar. 3 22|to Mary C. Keene, 221 18th av. S.,| ney, set up the defense that he was xo re,temperatre ore aoe % ia the r of her) !s he today under suspicion | women, are entitled to exercise the $8 | yR92, Jan. 12 23 | had his day in court yesterday, and driven to harsh measures on this| poy° isc +h pw Aiygncg er pr husband, interrupted President, % Slaying three husbands a8 @/ 1014 of wuffrage at t ext regu 8 14898. Jan. 31 established his right to protect his occasion bec Lavanburg Care-| wag still weakly ateem seis gs Taft's visit here today result of the testimony at the! iar election on when J 80) 1894, Feb, 21 tail against being stepped on lessly used his tail for an Axm the cnptainve canine eee The t granted Mrs.| Inquest over: aman WhO | Harriman, socialist nominee for 39 | 5895. Dec avanburg, a tailor, want-|rug, or something of that kind “ is, when the : . : “ m , ome on the | 0 3) ause t t | storekeeper warned the skipper a Lomax reprie n all| ¥88 found dead at his home on the | mayor, and ». Alexander, ineuwm: 14 | 1896 cause the Liewellyn s The melee occurred 1 mber| that the lad was likely to fall at hope o doued. eight of 3 a nichgo . : he bent, and up-for reelection on thé . iti, ter had tasiated on Cs freedom of : 10, i a confec tionery a re * any minute trom: ghee exhauslind ‘" She was to 0, this! ™ of N 8 eels OF | wo-called Good ment ticket be 27/| his tail by sinking bis molars into | 1718 Yesler wa. udge Ronald ¢ 4 . date having been fixed 5 iat police prove true, Mra, Quinn's | nSie Sn polls. Both 1) 1899, e tallor’s right ‘The evidence | quitted ft.” and awarded judg-| ty Priscoempntin es larva hay: repriey ated Ju A wide.| case will almost rival that of Mrs./¢.ctions today expressed satinfac-| !4 i 1900, showed that ot” had never been| ment for defendant cleaning, tama et to work spread sentimental plea to save the Louls Vermilya, the alleged whole- ag 2 AS A result of the registration. | 1a Nov 1901, ee pases —| : ide tates the’ matey being | sale ner, who is held here. 1901, Nov 902, ap . ” | indignation Meeting. eran it ceo heen ine witha te ; 20 i903, I'll Live to Be a Hundred.’’---Uncle Joe), 1 exsty at 1 o'ciock ine vig first w rin ch a aes Pe BB Badia «| 17 1904 boat was stopped and he was put ity in the ret’ of ‘Columbia * “WHAT BOGUE PLAN * 20 1905, (By United Press Leased Wire.) hore. When the passengers learn. since Mrs. 8 tt was hanged for|* eeAne a gees ithay ent FLORENCE, Italy, Nov. 106 27 1906, NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—Uncle Joe,Cannon declares he is too old to | ¢d what had happened, they called 4 complicity in the assassination of! * , WR. B. Willcox, under the ® | toward Pyle, 68, of Wilmington, 4 1907 be .a candidate for president. He says although he does not feel his |@ meeting, and, en masse, passed President Lincoln. * pS merioestendil aby ss * | Del., considered by many critics the 2 1 seventy-five years, the people know of it and do not want a man of |Tresolutions denouncing the captain - —— % Improvement Chub, wil et \cleverest and tmost original Ar 2% his age as a candidate, “But what I think personally is another mat- |&nd urging his dismissal 1 rl cher p Bens ne omen peste =i gh os | 1908 i ter. | expect to live to be a hundred,” he said, standing on the deck | Capt. Johnson left immediately Se ee ean be Lone. * | here of heart disease 1910, 24 Bass of the Christobol, just before sailing for Panama. last night on the steamer Victoria k % o'clock. Allg) ions vill be &| Ra WBE ca = will be seen from the Just to show that his “seventy-five” are not telling on him, he | back to Alaska F anuwered. ‘The public is im. Lk ® ® Rw Rt te te et tw! e as, tee Lotnvormenrg| Nooked up with Governor James Watson of Indiana, had a big dinner, weer # ited aie * j ae e's homperatire|took in a couple of shows—musical comedies, with seats down im front eee ee ee ee ae HER BOY MISSING * Meee MBLl ae it was colder Inet] <-and almost saw the sunrise when they left a cabaret affair, And ; (By United Pross Leased Wire) * “Where is my wandering boy ® } he January: But it breaks the records | Sverner Watson wasn't up to see Uncle Joe off. Men s SHANGHAI, Nov. 1u.—Danger of SCARED VOICE AWAY * ight” Is Gen ae plea of * i for early temperatures, * | = An anti-foreign outbreak in China, (By United Press Leasea Wire) | * Mrs. Viola Monson, who writes . od which may compel the active armed! CHICAGO, } 1 mes Ryan'® from Glendive, Mont., to ask #|? kK eo - Pp t t t verc Intervention of the European pow: |has recovered his voice today, after |x that inquiries be made for him * | OrKing || Sends Wife Checks ndependent 1:opdacco interests oats ers and of the United States, is to- having it frightened away for sev-|* In Seattle. Roy Monson, who # |} | ecial day be 4 here to be the most eral hours by being suddenly ac-|* is 15 years old and who may | (OLYMPIA, Wash., Nov. 10.—Re t t g t rt ti § a menacing feature of the anti-Man-|costed by a uniformed policeman.|* have taken the name of Roy * Man |oamse he convinced Gov, Hay that rotes ains ou cuon if} Pp 4 chu struggle now convulsing the | Ryan was locked up, but could not|* Dickinson, 1s believed by hiv * , he Was sending his wife checks,| (ay United Press Leased Wire) and Harry Hunter, attorneys for| count The sen nt against answer the qnestions put to him by|#* mother to have come to Sent * Jamds ‘A. Hyland will not have to| NEW YORK, Noy. 10.—Strenu:|the independents declared Ai if} fore $, reports from dozen the officers, Physicians who re-|* tle August. Anyone having * é , }gortwiek to Minneapolis to stand tri-| us protests against the action of{he did not take an appeal to the|$ sections say, 1s growing hourly, and|stored the man’s volce say dumb-|% knowledge of his whereabouts *|} Who does not invest some >/ aj gap wife desertion, as charged in]tvs Unatted States court In approv-|S¥breme court of the United States | &n explosion may come at auy|ness was brought on by aphasia, # ix requested to write to Mrs. #|{ Of his earnings has as much tian iqdictment returned there, Hx the United States court In approv| yeainsy the reorganization plan, |< tim caused by fright % Monson or communicate with #|) Chance of ultimate succ ; a 88 {tradition was refused. Hyland is|ing the re-organization plan of the/another method, probably even|} IE ESTES aS aes ey | The Star office, aloe cnelessed man ‘in @ kicking ?] now in Seattle American Tobacco Co., were regis |more effective, would be adopted. | “ ys * | $ contest, é i és ik tered at a meeting of the Indepen Resolutions appealing to Presi- Started to Clean ‘Out the Family | fe te ti ee tek ttt tte Put part of your earnings in dent Tobacco interests here last/dent Taft to carry the approval : + | = and near Seattle and you will night back to the supreme court for final|} ‘These coats are well worth Shot by Relative Waiting for Him} NO WOMAN MAYOR J} reap « large reward as the years itm, Sea, te" igen wore seri he met at the ec pce a fan wpghi roll by. . came under the fire. Felix Levy | ing. He 8 (By United Press Leased Wire) aged 20, is under arrest. | DAVENPORT, Wash, Nov. 10 Ricccoi Casta ct alts eosaiin ied LONDO: Nov. 10-—Witliam | «Dh : aie es for Saturday only. In- WALLA WALLA, Nov. 10—| According to Beers, Arvin came | Davenport will not have a woman inning stream can be secured | Clark sus author of innumer 1912, Morgan will be taken tonight |; Cluded are rough materials in Warned over the telephone by Mra, into the house holding two loaded |candidate for mayor, as a rewult of |{ THnning stream oan be soured § ite facinating tales of the sea, ono HE MUST HANG ene etEee tlt sich kegen S06 gray aniatarer Arvin that her husband, Ed Arvin,|guns, He fired first, Beers asserts, |the primary Tuesday. Mrs, Clara)? aie may run four years. Better }|8 England's foremost fiction writ.| (By United Press Leased Wire) | appeal will be made, | was on his way to the home of his and then the young man shot five|A. Wright was defeated on the|{ #noe mis Min Tail NOU. tL } ong, if dead here after an ilness of| GRANTS PASS, Or. Nov. 10.— i eee es f son-in-law, Robert Beers, to “clean|times in rapid snecession, each |Citizens’ ticket by Frank B. Ben ’ eight months. He was born in New| Mike Morgan, wno was convicted | NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—“Publicity out the family,” Clyde Beers, broth-| shot entering the aged man’s body.|80n, ® merchant. He will be op an) York im 1844, but at 13 he joined]in this city Tuesday night of mur. fiend,” is the way Geo. H. Mulligan, er of Robert, awaited Arvin's com-| The police, who bad been warned | posed by George E, Craig, independ |the British navy and served to man-j}der in the first degree for slaying Who married Bessie Vanness, a cho Shafer Bros Ing with an automatic shotgun. As|also by Mrs. Arvin, arrived shortly | ent candidate. OLE HANSON & Co. hood, Among his works are the| John E. York in this city July 13 of Tus girl, deseribes his wife, Her f & result, Arvin lies in a local hospit- | afterward, accompanied by Arvin's| 47) =~ sof . ‘ : “Wreck of the Grosvenor this year, was this morning sen- marriage and her present suit for Areade and Arcade Annes Hy al at the point of death from five|son, who declared that Beers could) Now watch the price of cc Third Floor New York Block {| Frozen Pirate” and the “Life of|tenced by Circuit Judge F. M. divorce are all for publicity, he}, | gunshot wounds in the body. Beers, | not be blamed for his act, go up! » ashimnratontennctintine [Satkine to be hanged January 5,’ says.

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