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fil Rescued by a Seattle Captain (hy United Press Leased Wire) ASTORIA, Or., Nov, 14.—Snateh ed from death by the herole action ef Capt ck” Bailey and his of Captain “Buck Hiey of Seattle and his crew, who ran the little tug Tatoosh to the side of the appar- ently doomed steam schooner Wash ington, through the pounding surf on Peacock spit, at the south of the Columbia river, the passengers and crew of the Washington, nu: ing 48 persons, are safe in Astoria today. After 24 hours penned up in the Washington, drifting helplessly toward the rocks of North Head, while tugs and life savers stood by riesa to aid on account of the terrific surf and gale, the hopeless. ness of the wreck victims was re- Weved when the Tatoosh nosed her way through the huge sombers. passed a line to the drifting sntp, towed her off the shoals, and finally landed her at the Callengar dock here fast night. When the passengers and crew of the Washington stepped to the dock they were cheered like men who had come back from the dead Throughout the trying ordeal the passengers and crow worked will ingly under the direction of Cap tain Winkel of the Washington from the time the schooner went on the spit Sunday afternoon moment when the anchor chains Were snapped and the Tatoosh started towing the battered bulk from danger. Bailey Isa Noted Sailor Graft cid waterdog, known practically every Coast antes man from the Straits to San Diego, and to every deep sea sailor who has sought refuge in a Coast har. bor, all knew St would sometime be the fate of Capt. Charles T. Bat ley, of the Columbia river bar tug Tatoosh, to be a hero. They knew that he had heroic blood in bis veins. For many fears Capt. Bailey and the Tatoosh have patrolled the lone vigils of the North Pacific coast, and many a life and ship owes its rescue to the indefatigable efforts and stout heart of the old “water- dog.” Many times he has run just as great a risk of his vessel, of his own life and those of his crew, but his efforts were unheralded; the stage was not hero-set. It was the same devotion to his calling, the same heroic bravery yesterday, that nerved Batley to Buide his frail boat through the seething waters to the rescue of the passengers of the schooner Washington, LWING MAN WITH DEAD MAN'S KIDNEYS) (By ‘United Prese Leased Wire) PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 14-— Vital organs of the human body do not lose their usefulness with the death of their owner, according to Dr. L. J. Ham- mond, who today is treating the medical world to the remark- able apectacle of a patient liv ing with a dead man’s kidney acting normally within his body. The experiment wae per formed at the Congress of Sur- geons of North America, when Dr. Hammond removed the kid- ney from a man killed in au au- tomobile accident and grafted it on to his patient. The dead kidney came to life and contin- ued to perform its functions. NEW LIGHTS ORDERED A resolution was passed by the council yesterday providing for lights at 19th av. S. and W at Lander st., Forest st. and McLellan st; 18th av, 8. and Lander st.; Lander st. and 20th and 21st avs. 8. Misses’ | Mannish | Coats SPECIAL $15 Made Tailors of by Men High-Grade Materials Shafer Bros Arcade and Arcade Annex The Seattle Star INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER ONLY ~ VOL. 13, NO. 221 INVESTIGATE DEATH OF THREE HUSBANDS MRS, JOHN QUINN, She — marri John McDonald at London, Ont., Oct, 1883, McDon- ald died Septem ber 23, 1901, at Jackson, Mich., of aleoholism She married Warren Thorpe Oct. 1901, at Jackson, Mich Thorpe was kit} ed by a “burglar” at bis home June 13, 1903, She married Jobn M. Quinn at Kalamazoo, Mich, not long jaftter Thorpe’s death. Quinn was shot dead by a “bur }elar” at Chicago, Nov. 2, 1911, wotll the | WARREN THORPE JOHN McDONALD JOHN QUINN The deaths of the three husbands ;was killed, a few hours before he} lot Mrs. Jane Taylor Quinn are be | ing investigated by the Chicago po lice while she is in a ceil. Her first {husband died of alcoholism. Her second husband wax shot dead and jahe accused a burelar. Charles E. | Thorpe, her stepson, testified that | she wax alone with Thorpe when he | WHY DID PRETTY ANNA TORELL DRINK POISON? When Miss Anna Torell, aged swoontd and fell to the floor uncom |sclous at the home of her mother. lerty to his son. Her third husband shot In his Chicago home No veliber 2. She accused « barglar of the deed. A revolver was fow later hidden in her bathroom. of her husbands were insured her favor. | [to the bath room and drank a vial of carbolic acid Why she took her life neither her Tit Fifth ay. N., dylng a balf) mother nor her friends can guess. hour later, the motive for the sul- if jt was a love affair, Miss Edith jelde vanished with the girl's death.| Morrow, her girl chum, does No one but Anna Toreil will ever know of it. To her she confided all know why she drank carbolic her secrets, but there was no lo’ od-bye, mother,” she affair, If it was something tha she ran from the bath room at 11:30|was said or done at home, her }last night. The mother, Mrs. Chas. | mother does not know of It |Oleson, saw that girl's mouth I left Anna at 20 minu |was seared with acid stains. Be-| last night,” said Miss Morrow fore she could utter a word th morning. Sh wi screamed with agony and fei. joking, and I never | died at the city hospital pier Anna Torell was apparently in| She better spirits last night than usual. | her in Bhe had been yisiting with a party | al arra Of girl friends. Returning, she went | made |e: canie this saw her hap left no note or other sign of tion to end her life. Funer pgements have not yet been The next move on the political | attorneys of the state. checker board of special local in-| Craven's friends at first suppos |terest is the appointment of a suc-jed that Jones would support Cra | cessor to United States District At-| ven, owing to the fact that Craven | torney Todd, whose terin expires |has always been a strong sce on the 12th of next month. The lof Jones as a candidate. contest lies between Hermon W.| In the senatorial primary of 1908, Craven, of King county, a progress-| when Jones and Ankeny were can ive, backed by Senator Poindexter, | didates, Craven put forth his and B. W. Coiner of Pierce county,| strongest efforts for Jones, and backed by Senator Jones was one of the few King county Besides, Mr. Craven has the sup-|men who went on the stump for | port of a strong element among re- him. Jones’ fight in that primary, publicans who do not wish the ap-|so far as King county was concern pointment to be determined by|ed, was managed by a committee mere factional considerations, and | of sixteen. A request has been sent who recognize Mr. Craven's strong |to Jones, backed by fifteen out of claims for the position because of| the sixteen members of that com his prexious services mittee, and by every King county As to his ability and fitness for|man who went on the stump for the discharge of the duties of the Jones, asking the latter to return office, Mr. Craven has the highest/the favor and support Craven for lof recommendations from leading! district attorney. 5,000 CHILDREN IN FAREWELL | MASS TO CARDINAL FARLEY (By United Prous Leased Wire) 5,000 children gathered at NEWYORK, Nov. 14.—One of |cathedral dressed In white and cat the greatest outpourings in the his \rying American Ylags and the pay tory of Catholicity in New York | colors, yellow and white. joccurred today when a farewell \mmaws was celebrated in St. Patricks | \cathedral in honor of Cardinal| SUGAR DROPS | Designate Farley, who sailed for| |Rome at 10 o'clock aboard the| Market prices are more agreeable |Kron Prinzessin Cecelle to take up |to local housewives than they have |were appointed to the College of | been for some time, The wholesale | Cardinale The noted div’ was price of sugar h. ken a 25-cent ‘accompanied by Cardinal Designate |drop, which will probably affect Falconio, former apostolic dele-|the retail price. Eastern cranber- gate to the @Jnited Bate Both | ries are arriving, and should re- were appointed to the Sollege of |ileve the present scarcity. Grape- Cardinals several weeks ago by|frult is cheaper and Tokay orepen|t ‘ope Plus. are a trifle lower today. SEATTL TUESDAY, NOVEMBE IN| SEATTLE ONE CENT. HARVESTER TRUST' IS FINED $50,000 (By United Press Leased Wire.) JEFFERSON CITY, Mo., Noy, 14.—The supreme court of Missouri today issued a writ of ousterenjoining the Internation al Harvester Company from doing business in this state and fin- ing the trust $50,000. It was Missouri which: first dusted the Standard Oil com pany from the state as a combination in restraint of trade. REGULT OF BRAGE’S REPORT The decision was the result of & report by Special Commission er Theodore Bra ouster sult begun when Gov, The report alleged that the compan; trust laws by controlling practically: afl makes of harvesting machinery. The company’s reply admitted if connection with the parent rporation of New Jersey, but denied that it had violated any of the laws of the state of Missour b MAY DENY INJUNCTION Judge Hanford today took under aflviesment the Seattle Electric company's application for an injugefion aguinst the new city ordi nance compelling the sale of ticket} Gn the cars. The arguments, which were begun yesterday, were ®ampleted today by Assistant City Attorney Hughes for the city ad Attorney owe for the street car concern The court intimated several tmigg that the reason the tnjunction were insufficient, angahose who heard the not be surprised if the injunction t tenied Spokane Loses Her Noted Rate Case * WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.—The gee yor iia laced one constitutionality of the hk and! nok be said to be unduly favored. short haul clause of teh act to ress ly because the raflroad car late commerce was established to-| in order to met water com- day by a decision of the court of fou, charge @ léeser Yate from commerce ork to Seattle throug’ > Though this decision enjoined the Asda o.§ atthe through S00 reducing of rates in Intermountain . provided the Spokane rate is cities, as the interstate commerce mable per se, and the Seattle commission ordered, the commission is not tnremunerative. found satisfaction in upholding the|' #Bpokane’s case is not unduly long and short haul clause of th ause, if a lower rail had violated the Missouri the standard plants and leged for case will (By United Press Leased wire) was to have transfePred his prop- |ing ite Two | in | Reno and other tnterior cities which not | | laughing and jf ‘CRAVEN HAS STRONG BACKING] FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEYSHIP | were forbidden, Se lows, by reason locat ble to secure fagplies by wa fad would, there in the nature of things, have oo fadvaniaxe over Spokane. commerce court emphasized fia authority under the law to grant | of Mts ptions to the application of the and short hau! clause, declar belief that cities having water traffic a titled to lower rates than cities where there is no} water competition |v. Blow to Spokane This {6 ag evere blow to Spokane. & man going by the name of M. frown ie reported to the police jas] working ® confidence game | anions rafiroad conductors. He eiiims to be collecting for a relief fad. He has buncoed several con dietom, it is alleged sought to have their rates equalized on the basis of through rates to th Pacific coast In this connection says For example Wedens¢ Temperaty the decision ain tonight and {lps woutherly winds as Seattle can gep at oon, APPLES ARE FULL OF DOLLARS some house rea), bright, silver coin. wite wants some] better quit selling those ap wm apples cheap—or| ples,” exploded the fruit seller Zrather pie ot| when he saw the man reach out apples su itable for another apple. He quickly for ples—she can | grabbed a knife and slashed one| get a bargain at|apple after another open to find one of the fruit|some more money, but there was stands in the pub-/ nothing doing He market today. Tt took him quite a while to tum The fruit vepdor| ble to the fact that he was being | this morning cut} made the victim of a practical joke | pu about 20 of/by Chefalo, the magician playing p in the laud-/at the Pantages thix week | able endeavor of] It cost Chefalo 20 cents to give finding half doblehe Star man’ $10 worth “r “ive F lar pieces 1M) when he accompanied him to the i them jmarket this morning. At a fish! Honest, that's | stand, Chefalo bought a crab for! a fact. You see,| 20 cents, and asked a boy employed & dapper young | the open. He did, man with foreign/and he made a grab for thr Accent sampled) shining half ddllar pieces which one of the mar-|were mysteriously revealed. But ket man's apples|Chefalo insisted that since be| and nearly broke bought the crab, the money be-| his tooth, he said, | longed to him. And the boy sor-| when he bit into | rowfully fave up the money | @ half dollar reat jing ight in the| VERY DISTRESSING | choleest part LITTLE DRAMA The fruit man looked puzzled, ne Seventh av. and aputtered some! art at raat night jxort of an apolo-| Lady (colored, in distress)—Help | lgy in his bewil-|me, kind sir; help me! iderment and of-| Chas, Griffensten—You have only fered him anoth-| to call me. 1 am at your service. ler apple. The| Distressed Lady—Oh, how 1 jcustomer again|thank you. A monster of a man| bit right into ajhas been following me, and 1 am} ania ————-| terribly afraid to go home the dark Charles —Fear |ghali protect you Scene IL: FP | home—exact Ranch and |ortne ady—can 1 ever thank sou enough ‘ou have saved muh fe. Truck Farm be uatiee— Ah! y Mow sot Ue for $1,500 to scrape it Stew: | Chicken not, my lady; | t porch of lady's location unknown to it. "Twas a mere trifle. The Lady—But you are hero. Farewell, farewell! | Charles—Au revoir Scene Ill: Police rly this m Charles—She such a Eo headquarters, $50 cash will secure acres of beautiful, level, nd, situate north of Washington % of a mile. touched me for $6, On the grim, stone slab in the morgue at Everett today is stretch pr ground suitable for home. | lent opinion seems to be | son, |so. ‘The Nm SMS Better secure a place to live by and by. Secure it The price will nev the terms easier, now x be less or OLE HANSON & Co, Third Floor New York Block ‘a ; dee Diese gma, ered, Oh a large trout stream. About an acre of higher ed the body of a 15-year-old girl. On the border line between ten- |@er childhood and budding young womanhood—and lying dead in the | public morgue. It's a story as old as the snow-| \elad mountains to the east of Everett, this story of 15-year-old Letha Lamara. One day last April she met Louis Lamara. He made love to her. She gave him all her | young heart. and she left her Oregon home with) Didn't know Andy Carnegie was in town, eb? Well—he ISN'T. This man is a Seattle citizen, the big {ron master who's throwna than old’Croesus ever thought of F.C. L, Sergeant is the nar lived In Seattle seven years. He land, the same year Andy fir world in bonny Scotland. For the past 10 or 12 ¥ Carnegie, from New York to Sea have insisted that he ts the quite indignant at his insistent der if Andy sees this pic A photo of the two st build, would be inte st 8a Perhap: visit bim height NO SUCH THING AS | OLD AGE (By United Presse Leaseg Wire) | BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 14.— There is no such thing as old age for the man and woman who have lived the right sort of live aid Judge Wm. Eastman, 73, of Omaha, who today is marrled to Mrs. Sarah Green, 62. The ceremony was per: formed at the home of Floyd Green, on of Mrs. Eastman, here. Men of 60 who follow their ations to ke a bride usually rm of adverse criticism 1 the judge. “The preva that a per after passing the three score milestone, should go into the rd, But I'm not going to let them consign me there In a great many cases it is more advisable for a man of my age to marry than fora youth of 21 to do} man 8f 70 knows enough | k before he leaps. He knows he's about. He realizes the married sta same a st continu to lo what sanctity of the HURT IN RUNAWAY HOUSTON, Tex. Nov United States Senator Wiliiame of Mississippi is here today to attend the wedding of his son, in spite of painful injuries ved in-a run away accident. The senator was hurled violently to the roadway when his horses ran away, while leaving his home in Yazoo City He was badly lacerated about the hands and face. him and went to Everett. Mrs, Henry Eaton, the girl's mother, had objected to the mar riage. Her daughter was too young, she said, And after the couple had left, Lamara wouldn't let her know where they had gone. A few days ago Lamara and his girl wife were arrested, Lamara ran a small cigar stand, and he was charged with living off the| earnings of Leth, In her little jail cell the girl They were married, |thought it all over, thought of her/hand of death stretched over her. happy, carefree tife with her| multi-mi jfied in striking in cd TY EDITION tl Some patriots long to bleed for their Wcom” but the majority prefer to feed for it i er NEWS WIANDS Prefers Death to Disgrace rimself while He while shot, vas fran- help, and mother’s L. Ov it the bule mark ine skull of the against grand and ce that of son's young wife—he 1 li baby ame of having amily employed as @ and Hibler, merchants, $13 Weate he sold 23 5 $6 each, ‘otaling $128, to R. H. Newborm Thomas S$. Marks for only, jand jand 1826 The latter disposed of four sacks, peddling them from a wagon im the Renton district. Detective Hubbard became suspicious and \d not tell a coherent rrested them for larceny, then confessed their transae ung Simpson. Simp | son keeping th 5 im jthe pre of several witnesses, His trial was to have come up preferred death rather than the felon's brand MAY YET SAVE BEATTIE (By United Press Leased Wire) WASHINGTON, Nov. i4.—Attor |ney Waiter C. Balderson admitted today that Paul Beattie made am fidavit in his office last week re diating the material features of his testimony which his cousin, jHenry Clay Beattie, Jr. was con vieted of the murder of his wife, near Richmond, Va The affidavit was presented to |Gov, Mann at Richmond today, and for this reasen the governor post- poned his decision on Beattie’s ap- |peal for commutation of the death sentence, WOMAN AUTHOR OF TALKED OF BOOK but he's an exact “duplicate” of way, careless like, more millions having in his wildest dreams. of ¢ gie’s double. He has was born in Cambridgesbire, Eng w the light of money-making Sergeant has been n for He has met some ple who lionaire, and who have become al ture he'll want the Seattle man to ding toget esting. Big Trouble Over Garbage (By United Press L ed Wii NEW YORK, Nov William, Ashton's threat to call out the 20. 000 teamsters in the of which he is the head tn an effe o bring the city of New York to terms and win the strike for the gar lectors is being opposed members of the Many nsters threaten to de pose Ashton if he forces the pro gram through, as the teamsters do not feel that they are called upon to take an active part in the trow ble between the rb men and the They lare further that the street cleaners were not justi sympathy with same union. the men SRS oe SS ® + Water will be shut off in * Youngstown tomorrow, from 9 * a. m. to 5 p, m * [ze ea eRe ajcle Wasze MME. KARIN MICHAELIS. talked-of book in Ew nto nea | ‘The Dangerous Age,” The most peas le 5 . by Madame Karin Michaelis, a Dan- wezesnie. jish woman. The book is an inti- { mate study of the heart of a woman conceived and brilliantly A storm of discussion been started wherever “The Nangerous Age” has appeared, for It not a book for sweet sixteen to Pousn) euted Madame Michaelis seems to think hat the dangerous age is along about 40. ‘WHEN A MOTHER IS THANKFUL THAT DAUGHTER IS DEAD mother in the Oregon town, thought thah in that man's grip,” her moth- of this man’s coming, of the love|er had exclaimed when she heard of the life | the news of the arrest and was fly- they lived afterward, and the deep|ing on her.way to Everett. shame of it. That is all. Letha, too, decided And then, all alone in her cell,| she would rather be dead than con- with no comfort remaining, this lit-|tinue to live a life of shame. tle girl quietly decided to end it} And as the girl's body lies on all. She secured a piece of string |that cold slab, with the drip, dripy the prisoners used as a clothes- |of the water above it, the mother line. Tying it around her slender|may be offering up a prayer of |throat she leaned forward until the |thanksgiving that her daughter's agony was over and the merciful|soul is at rest. For there are |times when a mother would ‘rather “1 would rather see my girl dead | see her daughter dead than alive. she so freely gave him,