The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 3, 1912, Page 6

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(By United Prove Leased Wire) NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—Agair Mtion of the Dorothy Arnold disap. DPearance mystery seems at hand Private detectives declaring today that they have located the girl in @ Hudson river town. COMPEL SETTLEMENT SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 3.—A les of mass meetings of citizens favor of compelling the Harri man Hines to negotiate for a settle Ment of the present strike of their shop employes extending over 14 Western states is proposed by Pres f@ent Jas, W. Kline of the Black emiths’ International union in a let ter recefved at local strike head quarters today. Similar meetings have been held fn Chicago, Centralia and New Orleans. Duke Breaks Into Opera (By United Press Leased Wire) LONDON, Jan, 3.—Oscar Ham- merstein has accepted an opera by the Duke of Argyl! for production fn the spring. Hammerstein sailed “SHOULD YOUR Love oR ME BE TRUE PIN ON YOUR Coat THIS Bow oF Bive,” Ax, SOMEPODY MASE SE 4 LEAP YEAR LETTER — fH ISS MISS DLLPICKLE: Baturday on the Lusitania to visit hie sick son in New Yi i i fH i i aE rg 9 2 = i & z Fy H 3 iF gs il Fs g 3 ¢. | g g & FreSe £ £2 FE a8 g = 4 s i } i i Est ge Province of Mongolia bly will be made a Russian | Protectorate. The revolutionista — most of the remainder of ‘That is the Chinese situation to- day. Fast * SACRAMENTO Grows SACRAMENTO, Cal, Jan. 3.—An -| ple dumplin, ! Here is the \atest and best por- trait of Dr. Wu Ting Fang, foreign minister and leader of the new re- publican government in China. Put a Ban on Mince Pie (By United Press Leased Wire) SOUTH HADLEY, Mass., Jan. 3 ~Belleving that mince pie and ap- make the girls so wleepy that They cannot do their . | afternoon lessons well, the lunch- eons are barred at Mt. Holyoke col- lege. "aayraeaer™ | TAFT SELLS LOT DE PACHMANN ‘Fhe World-Famous Pianist TEE MOORE THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 4th 00, » Pern 8 Gallery, Reserve Gallery, ‘Admincion, SLL SEATS HOW SELLING SEATTLE THEATRE Both Phones 43, TONIGHT—ALL WEEK. Bargain Matinee Thursday, 25¢. IDA ST. LEON IN POLLY OF TEE Nights, 26e, 600, The and $1. $1.00 ‘760 PANTAGES THEATKE Vaudeville De tuze Matinee Today 2:30. Twice Nightly. EE FAMILLE Datvis Sensational Equilibrists (Bpeckal Added Feature) ‘our Other Big Acts, SUUREER ER ENTREE FOR $100,000 keke hh he CINCINNATI, Jan. 3A piece of ground 56 feet square brought President Taft $100, 000-—as much as a year's sal- ary—today in a sale to Mel- ville Ingalls, chairman of the board of directora of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis rafiroad. Ingalls has & sixteen-story concrete building on the lot, which had been leased to him. Khana hhhhh $500,000 FIRE IN STOCKYARDS (By United Press Leased Wir CHICAGO, Jan, 3.—A fierce fire which swept the Chicago stock yards and destroyed one of the big ift warehouses wae extinguished ere at 3 o'clock this morning. It caused a loss of $500,000. For a time it was feared the SESSEEEEEE EEE ET THE STAR—WEDN ‘Adolf Discovers It I Pieteaicaneneitiiines “iF YoUR Love \ FOR M@ 13 DEAD WEAR INSTEAD Ts Bow OF RED! ID ISS FROM HeR— Tee-HeE, mY Lore NT N@ I ver Ss. This Driver and Auto Ran Amuck; ‘Cops’ and Citizens Scattered Just a dinky little two-horse affair, Policemen, motorcyclists, deputy for it was. would feel like he had lost his self| the'cin steempted te etop the mad respect if he were seen in such @ | tight machine. It finally did stop. But when it sigzagged its wind-| Near the Stone ay, bridge the car ing way on First and Second avs. | sank into a ditch. There th ir last night it inspired a wholesome | was discovered lying fat on awe in all who saw its crooked / back with his face under the ma approach or heard its loud grum-|chine. He was trying to solve the bling. Motorcycle cops pleaded in| pusele why the machine refused to vain with the driver to stop. Pa-| continue tn its uneven course. trolmen at street corners waved) When the cops dragged him out thelr sticks majestically at bim to he rubbed his eyes in astonishment halt when they sighted him a block | and wondered what all the excite- or more away, but deftly stepped ment was about. Ho said his ma- aside to let him pass when he got chine had just been repaired. It nearer. Mere pedestrians never had no side lights, or even a nom- stopped until they'd got inside the ber, After acquiring a Now Year's store doorways to avoid him, and load of “wet goods,” the driver ap- from these strategic points they | parently decided that it ought to could only gaze on and admire bin | be carried in an auto. And he cer speed-breaking cross country ran. | tainly carried It. —- Michigan Governor Attacks La Follette (By United Prees Leases Wire) {tack and the fact that it was do- GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Jan. 3.—|livered in rg eg sieaet te ~ Leaving here today for Kalamazoo, | Will help the jn aspirant ithe presidency, They accuse Os- Senator Robert M. La Fottette be | born of deliberately stealing La gan the last day of his Michigan | Foliette’s crowd when ‘it was learn- tour. Tonight he will speak in Chi-jed he could not appear. cago. The standpat faction regard the All throughout Michigan today | Osborn speech as a trap deliberate- there is heated comment on the at-jly laid by the progressives in the tack on La Follette delivered yes-|hepe of arousing sympathy for their terday at Lansing by Governor Os-jcandidate, who was thus attacked born. La Follette’s friends insist} when he had not, apparently, the that the vitriolic natare of the at- opportunity to defend himself. == SS eS RRR KAEHEAHKRHHKKEKREEE HILARIOUS TALE OF CHARLIE AND HIS “GLAD RAGS” SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 3.—When Charlie Powers, a clerk of Stockton, “dolled” himself up in a swell check suit, red tle and pearl shoes, he said: “There'll be something doing when I hit San Francisco's New Year celebration.” Today ho says: “Never again!” Harnessed in his sartorial masterpiece, Charles curled him- self up in @ berth aboard the steamer Pride of the River, bound for the big town. He dre He saw himself and that sult pictured on the cover of the swell tailors’ magazine. He awak- ened. Glad rage were gone and rough brogans encased bis feet. “Stop the ship! I'm robbed!” Charles yelled. “A bum—a stowaway!” somebody said. The captain was going to put him in trons, They gave his story the laugh. Kicked off the boat into the hilarious Market street crowd, he was pushed into the gutter. “Tramp!” sneered the crowd. . “Oh, for them glad rags!” yearned Charles. He beat it to the freight yards to take a train back home and elimbed to the “rods” of a car, Then his eyes bulged. He shrieked. There sat his suit, shoes and tie—with a b Fight, crowd, police, Jail—and Charlie's sporting the checks and tie and pear! button: ‘* ers on his way home again today ‘* pseeeestesetes tele e ese * x * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *~ * * * * * * * * * reek nk = ‘ OUR * ee or ary SS es . = eae =e SOUR, GASSY, UPSET STOMACH WILL FEEL FINE IN FIVE MINUTES You can eat anything your stom-;stomach. It digests your . meals whole of the plant would go, and ly the entire city fire depart. | ment was rushed to the scene. There was no loss of life and no, serious accidents among the fire men. To help out the unemployed in Seattle an ordinance was intro duced by Councilman Blaine yester day to authorize the board of pub lic works to do local {improvement work by day lubor wherever pos-| 100 and sible. It was referred to the 1. nance committee. jfeally does al) the work’ of a healthy ach craves without fear of Indiges- tion or Dyspepsia, or that your food will ferment or sour on your stom- ach If you will take a little Diapep- #in occasionally, Your meals will taste good, and anything you eat will be digested; when your stomach can't. A single | dose will digest all the food you eat and leave nothing to ferment or sour and upset the stomach. Get a large 60-cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin from your druggist and ‘t taking now, and in a little while ‘you will actually brag about nothing can ferment or turn into] your healthy, strong Stomach, for acid or polson or stomach gas,| you then can eat anything and ov which causes Belching, Dizziness, ajerything you want without — the feeling of fullness after cating, | slightest discomfort or mnisery, and Nausea, Indigestion (ike a lump every particle of impurity and Gas of lead in the stomach), Biliousness, | that {8 !n your stomach and tn Heartburn, Water brash, Pain in! testines is going to be carried away stomach and Intestines or other| without the use of laxatives or any symptoms. other assistance. Headaches from the stomach are| Should you at this moment be absolutely unknown where this ef-| suffering from Indigestion or an; fective remedy 1s used. Diapepsia | stomach disorder, you can get r Hef within five minutes. 2AYs JANUARY 3, 1912. VEN SHE SEES Diss Bow oF Bive SHE VILL KNOW 189 TRUE, HURRAH FoR LEAP YEAR I! “NOBODY LOVES ME; BUTCHER SHOT A BUTCHER Wire) Poh LAND, Or,, Jan, 3---Albert Brown, proprietor of ® meat mar. ket, who wan shot down by Robert Simms, a rival butcher, at Gresham last night, will recover, according to physicians today, Simmoe is held tg the county jail here for action by the grand jury. Following & series of petty thefts at Gresham, Simms received an anonymous letter telling bim be Was suspected, and advising him to close up shop and move. He brood od over it for seevral weeks, then sought out Brown, who he be Heved waa the author of the epistle, and shot bim through the arm and Blaine Playing Funny Part, But IsVery Clownish :Counciiman Blaine now comes forth as the real humorist. He tn now posing as the champion of the oly car line. Can you imagine itt It happened at the counci! meet Ing yesterday. The single tax Amendment, proposed by Council man Erickson, was up. “1 do not wiah to debate the mer te of the single tax,” said iHlaine. "But it's going to burt the mu nheipal car line.” “As chairman of the finance com- ,]mittee Blaine then attempted to nhow that the taxes would be re duced to such an extent the city’s bonded indebtedness would reach over the constitutional limit of 10 per cent of the assessed valuation, and that therefore the car bonds could not be sold. Blaine did not mention afything about the obstacles he bad put in the way of the sale of those car line bonds up till now, Erickson's amendment, however, passed by a vote of 6 to 3, and will. be put up to the people at the March election. Love Lands This Youth in Jail (By United Press Leased Wire) BERKELEY, Cal., Jan. 3.--Love tor Mayor J, Stitt Wilson's pretty Wyearold daughter Violet, has landed Frank Catton, son of a well- known Berkeley contractor, In the Jone reform school for a two-year erm today. The boy was out on probation and, while reporting reg- ularly to the authorities, was keep- ing company with the girl, a pupil at the Whittier grammar school. Deciding to make a new start in life and to lay the foundation for a happy future, Catton went to Portland, Or, and he failed to re- port regularly to the probation offi- cers while away. He became lone. His luggage consisted principally of bundle of letters from the girl. Miss Wilson says she will wait for him, HOOK FOR SUPREME COURT 18 WASHINGTON REPORT | } | v TRAUIS JUDGE W. C. HOOK | From Washington comes the rw | mor that the president has con- fided to two senators his intention of appointing United States Cir. cult Judge Williant C. Hook of the elghth Judicial circuit to the United | States supreme bench, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Justice Harlan, Judge Hook was born in sylvania, educated in St practiced law at Leavenworth, Kas., for 20 years, He became a |federal district judge in 1899, In {1908 he wes made o clreuit judge, He became a federai district judge in 1899, In 1903 he was made a cireult, judge, He concurred in the opinion of the lower court dissolving the Standard Oil Co., which was later upheld by the su- prome court. He ts 58 years old. Penn- Louis and Do You See \ ANY DER Words by by Condo r A ONLY Doty ID iss DINGS RED. MATTER Mir DISS BLUVE RI BBON ¢ I'M GOING OUT IN THE GARDEN AND WORMS.”—FROM A WELL KNOWN PICTURE = (By United Press Leased Wire) WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—Presi dent Taft today took formal cog- nizance of the protests against the appointment of Justice Wm. C. Hook of Kansas to be associate Justice of the su e court. The president told nator Curtis of Kansas, Hook's sponsor, that he is now considering the name of Jui 30 DAYS FOR DEFYING COURT “No, | will not pay her any money. I'll give the children some, but not her.” This defiance on the part of Thomas Hall before Judge Tali- man resulted in the former's being sent to the county jail for 80 days for contempt of court. Judge Taliman had issued a re- straining order against his col- lecting a debt of $133. Disre- Gerding this order, Hall coliect- ed it. Judge Taliman offered te forego the technical con- tempt if he would consent to Ive his wife, Ruth Hall, who suing him for divorce, haif of the money, as It was commu- nity property, and she had been left destitute, Hall refused. DICKENS’ SON DIES SUDDENLY NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—A sudden attack of acute indigestion is the | cause given today for the death of |Alfred Tennyson Dickens, son of |the celebrated novelist, whose body Mes in the Hote) Astor, where he was stopping. Dickens was on a lecture tour of the United States. } His home was in Melbourne, Aus. jtralia, and the funeral arrange. |ments are being delayed until word jis received today from his children. He was a widower. TIED TO CHAIR (By United Press Leased Wire) PORTLAND, Or., Jan. 3.—P. J, Sheppard, proprietor of a country |store at Shattuck station, just out- \side Portland, is under medical treatment today, following an en- counter with two thugs, which he and his wife experienced shortly be- jfore midnight The robbers tied Mrs. Sheppard to a chair and beat the aged grocery man over the knocking him resisted them, cured a few dollars from the ti and escaped READ LORIMER OUT? | (By United Press Leased wire) | cHlexGo. “jan “3 Governor Deneon ts giving his personal at- tention to the plan to read Senator Lorimer and his followers out of the republican party by selecting anti-Lorimer delegates to the coun |ty convention, The governor dis | cussed, with several of his adv: Ways of eliminating the Lorime nbers of the republican county ral committee when h PROGRESSIVES FORCE TAFT TO RECONSIDER AN APPOINTMENT Learn Millinery. Complete Course Taught Thorough and Practical. Price Right. | thee Swayze of the supreme court of New Jersey for the vacancy. His statement is taken to Indi- cate that the president, after inti- mating that he bad decided on Hook, was forced to reconsider, in view of the fact that the progres- ives had planned to break all sen- te precedents, and hold up the | pomination | More Trial for “Doc” Lyman LOS ANGELES, Jan, 3.—When Dr. John Grant Lyman completes his 18 months’ term at McNeil's island for conspiracy to escape from a United States officer, he will be brought to Los Angeles to be tried on # charge of fraudulent use of the mails. } The tement that the Socal | jcharges against the promoter | would stand was made by United {States District Attorney MeCor- mick. Lyman’s arrest followed the exploitation and sale of lands in Panama. Ask for Booklet showing we 6% on Savings’ You ean pay in er withiraw amount at any time. WASKINGTON SAVINGS AND LOAR ASSOCIATION 10 SECOND av. Bstablishea #2 Years. Herman Chapin, Pres. wm. jum, Vice Pres.* Raymond R. Frazier, Secy. eras NG BET isces= NOTHING SET TE DENVER AMBITIOUS (Bs United Press Leased Wire) DENVER, Jan. 3.—Second only to San Francisco, Denver intends to be the real tourist center of the country in 1915, “tourist year,” and the year of the big Panama-Pacific world’s fair, The Chamber of Com- merce here is planning, among oth- er things, a six months’ musteal carnival. tries of free “f | be held is under consideration. Justice Bars a Beer Trial From Her Home (By United Press Tease Wire) CHICAGO, Jan. 3.—Catherine W. McCulloch rode in a patro) wagon seated beside six cases of beer yes. terday. She did so because she had refused to permit the beer to be carried into her home, AS justice of the peace she heard @ case in which the beer was an exhibit. She would not allow the beverage to be exhibited in the room in her home which she uses. as a court room. The prosecution would not try the case without exy hjbiting the beer, Mrs. McCulloch solved the problem by riding to the police station and hearing the case. there, KILLED ON BOBSLED NORTH VANCOUVER, B. C., Jan 3.—-As the result of a decision be- tween a bobsled and dray wagon on St. George av., Donald Smith, a young boy about 12 years of age re- ceived injuries which resulted in his death. GEORGE AND THE CALCUTTA, — Jan King George and Queen Mary attended the Calcutta race meeting today, ac- companied by Viceroy Lord Hardinge and Lady Hardinge. They drove in state from government house, . The chief race of the day was for the king-emperor's. cup, (RESCENT BAKING FULL Pounn 2 SciNl i —_—__ -—. 2 ths. for 75¢ New Laid Eggs, 45¢ 7 Full Cream Cheeq, j 20c Ib, 9 ES TreCorner Butter N. W. Corner: 1st and Pike« Sch iefer ener

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