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Moraes % * “* AT THE PANTAGES THE SEATTLE STAR “What Started You to Drinking?” Asks Attorney; ‘ Booze,” Says Truthful Jack This business of being a peace Maker may be all right, but not On Occidental av Beene for the desired armistice may hold iteetf forth as the Taft hotel, Mhie truth was weightily impressed tapon a Mr. Sider when he attempt ed to call all bets off in a fistte @ebate between one Abbey others. Just what provoked the or fginal argument neither Sider nor Abbey could venture to say “Hut the only explained to Judge Gor don. And he had a purple lump hanging over his left lamp to prove it. That was enough punishment, the judge estimated, and tet the Matter go at that. “Booze,” Says Jack. Jack Parks, who Works for a cab company, stayed on the water wagon for a whole year, He works fm the shop—he's not a cabbie, you know. He fell off Saturday, and dropped with a bie thud, too. A ubiquitous cop heard the noise. and picked him up on a drunk and @isorderly charge. “Honest, } didn’t take a drink for he sald, yesterday started you Saturday queried City Attorney Raph, Pierce. “Well, boo replic ‘That allenc ed Plerce up so neatly that Judge Gordon asked Teave at his convenience this time. He Forgot the Di M. Sasick accumulated a package of “wet Fut it made him forget to pay a Jap reataurateur on Weller st. a much clamored for 10cent piece Basick told Judge Gordon yester day that be has forgotten that he forgot the dime. = Jack At the Theatres Ree een eRe * AT THE THEATRES * Moore—Lawrance D’Orsay in “The Earl of Pawtuc = Metropolitan —Dark When Kaighthood er.” ow Puncher audeville. Emprese—Vaucdeville Vaudeville Grand—-Vaudeville and motion pictures. eae eteeeeeeee TTtt eee cece es AT THE EMPRESS * * BREE RE REE ERE “I now play ze ragstime,” an ounces Vilmos Westony, the Hun Barian pianist at the Empress this Week, after playing grand opera welections with rare technique and all that sort of thing, you know. And he got six‘encores. Sul livan and Pasquelena, in a funny sketch, get a number of chortles for their efforts. Karga juggles to the satisfaction of the audience. Ar Adair, a musician, opens the Dill. Phillips and Merritt sing and dance. eESEe SESE EEE EEE EES RRR RHR *| * Peed ae a es vee 6 5 Mystery shrouds the headline Bumber on the Pantages bill this week. Chefalo and Mile. put over some of the cleverest acts Of magic seen here in many years. | Jenkins and Covert are really! clever, especially the male of the team. Eddie Roesch, an old Seattle favorite, sings an illustrat ed song. The Sandros brothers have a fast acrobatic and strong man act. The Diamond comedy four have yoices that blend well and they also furnish a bit of comedy MERE REE ERE * * AT THE ORPHEUM * * * bln ln dln dle il ile in iain in linn tind John and Emma Ray are the headliners at the Orpheum this week, in a clever musical skit en titled “The Bandmaster.” They a REASONS BANK SHOULD even though the and liek In the whole fight 1 got myself for trying to stop ~ it.” Sider Jack to! goods that was a hummer, | +t 0b eee ee ee Palerma , portion |" Siok He has an additional $6 member now Cop's Questions Unconstitutional When Patrolman O'Brien antly interrupted an animated dis , Jeusston over--well, over something or another—on Washington st, to | inquire of Charles Nelson, who tn formed the court that he worked at , What the nature of }his ceeu Charles raised @ question of constitutionality ICs none of your business,” he curtly replied. O'Brien was insistent “Where are you going? jauéry No, 2 Nelson duplicated | tlonal objestion. O'Brien suggested taking @ walk to the police station. | “What for?” Nelson asked. And according to Nelson's story in police court yesterday, O’Brien replied “Because we need the money Nelson could see no constitution al objection to that, since the re cent Standard Oil and tobacco de | cisions, and he went along } Judge Gordon let him go on his promise to adopt In the future the was his the constitu: Alphonse and Gaston versation with cops, |OHIO WANTS RADICAL CONSTITUTION By United Press Leased Wire) COLUMBUS, 0., Nov, 14-He’ Wert 8. Bixelow, th cinnati preacher, is being boome oF president of the coming cons tutional convention, which prox ses to frame iical than that of Revised con) old-thners on the circuit, th work in “The Bandmaster” is fully | up to stangarad. Mr. and Mra. Jack are again on the Orph-| eum boards, and judging by thetr reception they still have a warn place in the hearts of local the goers The bag-punching backs, Harriet and Harry clever stunt Richeson Trial January 15 (By United Press Leased Wire) BOSTON, Nov. i4.—-No further fattempt will be made to postpone the trial of Rev. Clarence V. T Richeson, charged with rder of 19-yearold Avis Linnell, his for mer fiancee, by inducing her to ake cyanide poison, according to a atement made today by Attorney | am Morse, counsel for the ac pastor. ‘The trial will now begin Januar 15, 1912, at which time James Lee, | prominent attorney of Virginia will here to assist in the young minister's defense |LOSES SAVINGS OF |: | LIFETIME IN FIRE}: (By United Press Leased Wire) CLEVELAND, 0, Nov. 14.—"I od intended us to > our me Mrs. Winifred Carr, 60 weeping. She sat gazing into the} ashes of a stove wh the savings of a The money burned by The | Dist a const Avie figures on the tution enth show th of them tve and were and the réw as con: ed as such, were elected Of the 97 progressives, 61 them had pledged writing to work nitiative and |ttion percentages vativos themuelve ndum with whic | of labor and the Oblo state grang: was accidentally het son James son has appealed to Asst Atty. Fogg to ha ¢ treas department redeem 2,000 AUTOMATIC | PISTOLS FOR COPS : | _GBy United Press Leased Wire) | LONDON, Nov. 14—Two th }sand members of the London are to be armed automattc than emp! more wooden “truncheons sized by the Houndaditch murders last December. This wili be th first time the force has.carried any thing more dangerous than the hts | self to death for “Jumbo,” ed} your pardon; alibut, | take,” | discovered in shrimps, ? cans WHY _ THIS BE YOUR BANK bund: milk, 1 butt First of all, absolute security for your funds is as- sured in The Dexter Ho forty-one years this has been its foundation principle. Also, it is progressive in policy, adopting every ad- vanced banking method for greater service to depos- itors. With its associated institution, Washington Trust and Savings Bank, it It has a large staff of make it a point to be ey eremn s with de- positors. - OUR OFFICERS WILL BE PLEASED TO CONFER WITH YOU UPON ANY BANKING TOPIC. Dexter Horto Gee0dd Cherry COM RESOURCES the _largest and most com- Horton i e& IN Rational Bank 17 Mittions rton National Bank. For Wall Paper The Globe Wall Paper Co.'s REMOVAL SALE 20 to 50% Discount Wall Paper Wood to Burn Room Moldings White China Framed and Sheet Pic- tures Will vacate our present location dare selling Wall Paper from 5 cents per double roll up, Globe Wall Paper Co. 907 Second Ave, fic Northwest. exputaings officers, who BINED New Yors Building | famous Cin-| d a and vote for the} Perrrrrrr rs T | Paul land show, International Welfare union wilt neet at the ¥, M,C, A, Nov, 28, te permanent organization Rev. G. E, Kalstead of Kingsbury, Cal, whe waa fr ntly struck by « Seattile-Hverett Interurban train, showed improvement at the Noble hospital yesterday POPP eee ee ee 2D » a The trustees of the Labor * Temple decided that they & would refuse to pay the im @ creased phone rate, and ad & vised the manager of the La: @ bor Te woctation, FA. Rust, to tender a check to the # company at the former rates # * * | oieteMetalialielialeMeliel Miss Edna €, Cameron, with the publicity department of the St to be held under of the N. W. Develop , will leave for St, Peat the ausy ent lem about Dec assaulted EL. Ray when the lat move hin truck » was blockading the tracks. cording to witnesses, Jus tlee Brown assessed a fine of $60 costs. The motorman suffered two broken ribs track mond ter re driv a motorman, eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee eee ee ee eee * * On January 23 city linemen ® left a coll of wire In front of * the Lowell school. Little Rob. ® ert Haynes became entangled # in the coll, and he was hoisted # | to the crossarme of a tele #/ graph pole. The wire then ® slackened and the boy plunged # to the ground, He suffered in # juries that kept him from # ach three weeks, Judge ® Main awarded bim $800 dam- * ages. *! * * eee eee hee John W. Considine and Senator |r. D, Sullivan, both theatrical men, | arrived early this morning from the Ea agreed upon by the Ohio federation | Sherman got his wr »| Mra. SSeS EEE ES | latter, November 14, 1863, le army up te Stevenson and Pri dmeport and put an entirely néw face on t military pect of things.in and around Chatta nooga. Instead of the Union army worrying about the fate of Burn. side, threatened by Longstreet Grant, united with Sherman, was able to hit Drege a body ahd Grant lost no more time in getting himself tn position to make the decisive swing. clubs, will bazaar next Thore home of Mrs. T) F. the University are extended to the gem public. Reeth eee eee * Warren C. Stetson, formerly ® of the Stetson-Post Mill Co. & died yesterday at his summer # h at Eagle Harbor, His ® surviving ch * bedside when death overtook @ him. * ee The new list of positions open and advertised by the civil servic commission contain, among many the position of a rat poison. 5 a month er, which pays $7 Meddie 0. Hamilton of New sec of wi tle Nov. 24-Dee. 4 ard in lectures in IBY of the city during her stay Officers and members of the Arc Brotherhood from attle and Vancouver left last night for Port land, where the grand camp of the order begins a three-day session to NEW YORK, Nov. 14.—"Miss Car rie,” the pioneer elephant in this country, and said to be more than 100 years old, is dead, after a thrill ing circus career. She grieved her her mate. NEW YORK, Nov. 14—"1 beg I have made a mis strange man when her apartments by Mra, F, J. Swift. “Certainly,” satd Swift. The stranger took 3,000 loot with him said a Mri charge Sarah A. Hing, who has of 15,000 girl students in China, is in Seattle. Mrs Hing is a white woman, who was married to a Chinese mer chant in New York lx years ago. They have both been in terested in educational work in China. She left Canton fol lowing its capture by the in surgenta. +e * FO IOIOIIOIIOI ITOK NEW YORK, | Nov. 4—"1 never | know what to do between midnight and bedtime,” Uncle Joe Cannon | told Jim Watson of indiana, the a Methodist elder, piloted Uncle Joe up Broadway to pass away the hours, NEW YORK, Nov. 14.—Delegates attending the convention of: the Protestant Ep! New York diocese, split on the pass. age of anti-liquor resolution, “Some of us here see no harm in a glass of wine.” PULLMAN, Ill, Nov. 14.—@urg lars broke into the grocery store of Charles Corkerel, helped themselves to choicest stock and then broke in- urant next door, where Because Paul Buchmann, an aute| campus | See eee EERE H copal chureh of the | PEOPLE | The Rey. Dr, Jenkin Lioyd Jones, Chicago's great preacher and ¢ cratic eftize was born 68 years ago today, | in South Wales. | Hin pare brought him with them when they pved to Wir | and it} was an & volun teer from that} state he fought} an & private tn! the Civil War, At} th clom f the | war he entered | a th vlogleal) school and was | later ordained a Unitarian minister. In 188% he or. | jned the All Souls burch in jeago, adopting for its creed ¢ Around jehureh he butit a community The Abraham Lin that plety the spirit n afford to be = we can be practi of every chure intensely human, Within the com jing year Dr. Jones will celebrate the 30th auntversary of his pastor eo | CHICAGO, Nov. 14-—City hospital | |physicians are pussled to account| jfor the frozen et which Horace | Ale xand a circus follower ot yesterday, when the thermometer |here was not anywhere ne: | freezing mark KANSAS CITY, Temporarily insane, G drews boarded @ taxicab and tried| to cut off his hand, so that an ace dent insurance company would pay | jdouble indemnity “for injuries re. ceived in travel.” | ~ CHICAGO, Nov, 14.—Archie Novi koff got a warm reception from three friends of a man for whore | arke he was responsible, The} aree poured gasoline down his Kk Bnd then Hit a match, Novi hoff will reca INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 14.—The federal authorities today announc ed that no further steps in the Me Namara probe here would be taken until December 14, aa the grand jury, following the submission of a partial report, has adjourned until | that date. ; WANT THAT LA D Four councilmen have themselves at a pilin wv. dhhogs h ial with the mayor and the library true: teos yenterday, to acquire by neces sary legislation the triangular tract on Yesler way, between Second and Third aves, left by Henry L. ¥ ler for brary purposes. ‘The plan is to inciade $40,000 in the 1913 budget with which to build the Yesler Memorial howpital, at 23rd and Yesier way. If that ts the executors of the Yesler estate will release te sree |property to the elty REYES PLANS FIGHT | EL PASO, Tex., Nov. 14—It is reported here today that a ad herents of Gen. Bernardo Reyes, | who would be president of } have quietly enlisted and have collected a big ry to attacking the It is rumored that the x of a certain Mexican staie aying Madero and in recety:| ing arms and ammunition in readt- ness for the revolt | PANIC AT FIRE Narrow escapes from death fol-| lowed the ery of “f in the pire motion picture theatre hb last night, when burning films b jxan to hiss and sputter in joperator’s box. Many bruise in the rush, but no one was se jously hurt. The flames were fined to the metal operating box "FORGERY ALLEGED) Herbert V. Perry, prominent real estate dealer, who was arrested in San Francisco last week, was to-| day sent to the county jail here to answer to the charge of forgery.| It is alleged that Perry forged the name of George E. Clark to a mort gage sold to Mra. Tillie Birdsell FIRE AT JUNEAU JUNEAU, Alaska, Nov. 14.—In a heavy gale, fire broke out here yes: | terday In the buildings of the Un-| fon Wharf company, which were! destroyed, at a loss of $50,000. For! a time the whole waterfront was threatened We will fit a gold-filled frame, guaranteed for five years, with spherical lenses i and leather case, complete for \g $2.60. This includes a careful and accurate examination. See our Kryptok lenses, with no lines or cement scal for close and distant vision. Saves two pairs of glasses. Mounted with Shuron ¢ glass or spectacle mounting. Curry Optical Co. Third Floor, 344-345 Arcade Bullding Bring This Ad With You ton car to H. M ager of the chauffeur & street car and & telegra for ar mangled nove overnight YOU'LL FIND IT HERE | 5!5,000 FoR A NEWS OF THE DAY CONDENSED FOR ponstrating a Win Winter, sales m While out 8. 'B. Co, the W drove ine machin plains Winter to the He in anking from the Wint and ton and killing little into | with npe-|fine was 15 5,000 |the » company impatred | $200 ntl! Nov. 17 poy th att thet fae mow the mitted to the an order of Judge Ge JHE MAY HAVE TO __ eve | PAY COSTS, ANYWAY old, or be gor berma ne | Uh Sees es NOT Aneeeen CO. yeare ago for running over Henrietta Johnaon whose and to a fine of $200 by governor fina up to the courthouse with the| MOUR, ‘This in @ mistake Bat he forgot to bring along| Armor company has no cor taxed up as costs, He will] with the Armour Packing co ener ing in a previous temue, the teen company, in Market, was shrunk the Sanitary clemency came 'g216 Furniture Dry Goods FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Store Closes Dally at 6:30 Unusually-Low Prices on Untrimmed Millinery a timely chase a new Winter Hat large assortment of favorite trimmings, a3 fo ws FRENCH FELT HATS with velvet fac ings, in small and medium shapes, $1.95. SOFT FELT HATS in turban and sailor and shapes, in $2.25. brown, navy VELOUR HATS in small shapes—black, brown, gray, green special $3.75. and selling that offers decided price. to women who are about to pt ntages It embraces the n’s popular shapes and materials, and a BEAVERS in large and small shapes; black, navy, red and green, special $3.75. WHITE BEAVER HATS, large and small effects, special $4.50 and $6.50. THE ASSORTMENT OF TRIMMINGS includes Ostrich Plumes, Feather Bands, Flowers, Wings and Faney Novelties at very | interesting prices. blue, special two-tone effects, Second Floor, Women’s Plain and Novelty Suits} Special, $35.00 Icloths, cheviots, serges, worsteds and tweeds S' ITS of of fine trimmed in bra tailored with m graceful models styles. Sizes 34 to 44. quality, beautifully-tailored—many effectively revers, others sally trim and ted and paneled large collars and h simplicity into unw ts are narrow-cut, in 7 Special $35.00. Misses’ and Juniors’ Plain and Trimmed Suits Special, $15.00 ipa ~ Suits simply tai and fancy styles—the materials are fine quality cheviots, serges, worsteds, mixtufes and tweeds. The coats are lined with satin or soft silk; the skirts designed in pretty plaited, paneled and kilted effects. Sizes, 13, 15, 17 and 19; 14, 16, 18 and 20. velvets, are ly youthful lines in ored Special $15.00. Second Floor Specials in Furniture _ Solid Oak Dining Table Special, $7.95 WELL-MADE Oak Dining Table, in dull Iden finish ; has 42 round top extending to six feet cial, $7.05. —Third Floor. Quartered Oak Dresser Special, $9.75 Quartered oak Dresser, in dull golden finish, trimmed with wood knobs. Top of case measures 18x40 inches and beveled French plate mirror 18x30 inches, Special, $9.75. —Fourth Floor, Solid Oak Rocker ) Special, $3.85 WELL-MADE and carefully constructed Rocker of solid oak, in a dull golden finish, Has panel back and full box seat construction. Special, $3.85, : eee ~~ Mail and Telephone Orders Carefully and Promptly Filled Frederick & Nelson INCORPORATED =) Third Floor. Through an error in proof Pa nt of the ARMOK Packinal Publie misspelled to ARel thet