The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 22, 1912, Page 8

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SITUATION DESPERATE IN ENGLAND, (Ry United Press Lew LONDON, Mareh fs now hoped, the miner Britain resume work ing of the week trade and the unprecedented. It Western railway present t Great begin at the the dist that whieh its been Great to the enormous able to will begin coal h maintain a full to cut down next From all ¢ tricts come week t industrial dis * of Increasing des-| titution, Intensified by cold ood tn clement weather The Paisley thread today, ftetting out 12 mills closed 000 workers are 4 that tonnage 000 te lying the Southampton docka, includ Majestic, St Philadelpbia. id at ing the liners Oceanic Panl, New York and OFFERS CASH FOR FREEDOM LOS ANGELES, Mareh 22.—Chas. Dean, aliag “Hoffman,” held on charge of having assisted in the rob-| very of more than @ quarter of a} million dollars from the New W minster, B. C., branch of the Bank of} “Montreal offered ‘cash tn blocks of $2,000 to be permitted to escape from the county jail here, according | to Turnkey Osear Norret! Norrell declared, offered him to ald in his escape, stating that sim far amounts would be given to all who helped. According to Norrell’s story, Dean | talked to him of the bank robbery intimating that seven men were im put and that the greater part of the loot had been taken to China.| 52 BODIES y United Press Leased Wire) M'CURTAIN, Okla., March 22.- ip Fifty-two is the total number of corpses removed from the burning | mine of the San Bois Coal company | tod: Thirty other bodies have been located In the tilne, and 25 miners were brought out allve,| making a total of 107 of the en-} tombed men accounted for | Funerals of 25 of the victims) were held here today TWO RED RATS Two red rate™ part of the 25 ro dents dyed and otherwise marked by the department of health and sanitation, and Iiberated on the waterfront for the purpose of trac ing the migration-of the rodents from the waterfront to the rest denee district, have been caught one at First av. 8. and Massa ebusetts Hornelson, the other at Clay st. and Ratiroad ay. by Edwin Pierson. Roth men were paid the $2 bounty SEATPLE BOY LEADS. At recent eximinations held to} qualify aw practitioner in the Belle yne hospital, New York, Cart “4 Burdick of Seattle headed the of 60 applicants, 14 of whom passed the examination. Burdick is o graduate of the Broadway high school and attended the U. of W His parents live at 717 Bast John at. } ; CARROLL'S MAGIC STORE Superior Mags Puxgies and Lew 110 Seneca ALBERT HANSEN Established 1853 PRECIOUS STONES, FINE JEWELRY, STERLING SILVER Corner First and Cherry SEATTLE PAVENG. ade tnt ave floff A al Your ol carpets. from oid carpets por teres. Hit-and-Mins Carpets, yd. 2he VALLEY WEAVING rugs ARCHITECT BUNGALOWS, 4700 AND UY NICHOLS INCKLEY BLK BUILDER Meek Trunk & Bag Co, Inc TRUNKS AND # We manufactur goods right here in Seattle and sell them at 921 First Av ner Madison. M. #82. Ind |Herman Heyneman, millionaire 1655, Le AMUSEMENTS MOORE THEATRE Tonle Bpecial uns. Priced Ma Lae 1 “TWO WomEN” of Week canteen Seattle Theatre ih re ON M “a ‘Tomorrow and Night “ LADY" Next W tarting Honda “The White sh 4 “THe DEY 10 PF OTHER PANTAGES dd Vaudeville Means antaces Vaudeville we st, His Company mplon tightwelmht, ie and 26 World's sted by idle} tuak [placed wt $2 jescaped prisoners showed fight DISCHARGE PASTOR REDUCE WOOL DUTY, “tor the t GRAPHIC PICTURE OF ONE RESULT’ OF BRITISH COAL STRIKE | This photograph, just over from ud weeks, UNHAPPY BONDS | “How does a matrimonial Bond look to you?” he querri “O, | should love a Bond of that kind,” she replied ‘blush- ingly, That wae nearly nine y ago. But Cora has be come entirely indifferent to the Bond she accepted then, and 80, Harley Bond this morning filed a divoree suit inst Cora Bond, alleging cruelty. She lives in Michigan at pres ent, Bond says. |Moses, Capitalist, Secures a Divorce lawyer and secured a divorce rs, Dora Moses in Judge Gay « Prva on on the ground of incon patibility. The couple had been! married for 27 years and have seven children, the oldest 24 and jhe ngest 7. The winor children kre with the mother, at Ann Arbor, Mich. Moses testified that domes tle difficatties had caused a num. ber of separations, but that for the of the children, they again and} again effected what turned out to be only temporary reconciliations Moses requested the court to fix the amount of alimony, which was ) a month. Moses, cap leat, from Get Desperadoes TICTON, B. € Cornered by posse over 100 strong and seeing no chance to egeape, the two desperadoes, James and Wil- son, who escaped while the pris oners of Constable Aston, from the steamer Okanogan, were captured late last night without a shot being} fired, Provinelal Constable Roth} was in charge of the posses, who! were armed with Ross rifles and quite prepared to do business if the Mareh 81] Struck by Train Wy (Hed Press Leaved Wired PASADENA, Cal, March 22 Edward A. Rasach, 26 years of age, well-todo mérchant of Pasadena, | was etru@k by © Santa Fe train to| day as be wae driving down town in hia automobile, the machin be. ing carried a block on the plot of the locomotive and then dashed to bits, killing Rasach iostantly Al moet every bone in his body was broken. (By United Press Lercec Wire) PORTLAND, Or, Mareh Rev. Albert Ebrgott today {s die charged from bis pulpit at the East ide Baptiat church, the membe of his congregation having voted to dismiss bim after long discussion, Many members of the church as serted that Rev. Mr. Ehrgott’s work in maintaining a labor bureau and} seeking 10 establish a grocery was interfering duties to the ehureh. with bis (By United Press Leaned WASHINGTON, Mareh gressman Underwood introduc the house duty on with th dent 0) Con 4 in} yesterday a bill reducing} wool, which is tdentical! vetged hy Presi commi 4 means indorsed a bill ways a derwe SAN FRANCISCO, March 22.— rep resentative of the American Tobac co Co., has asked to be relieved of his position as Pacific coast agent ast. Heyneman plans to sail for Europe in an effort to re cuperate his health BODY STOLEN FOR SPITE BUDAPEST, March \ somewhat gruesome story reaches us from Debreezin Hungary. The body of Josef Szabo, a rich merchant of that village, has been “recently stolen from his widow by rela tives who are alleged to be in censed at the omission of their names from his will After obtaining possession of the body, these people bur jed it in- the common grave yard, telling the widow after ward that they had done #o to “save her pain and trouble. The widow then had body disinterred, and @ neral followed on a sew magnificence hitherto known in Debreezin | Rk TT TOT TOOT tt tk MILWAUKEE, March Chop- ped into an unrecognizable mass, the body of Miss Anna Miller. was found in the kitchen of home here today. A hatchet jfound nearby. The police bel Miss Miller was murdered by maniac, TUNIS, March 22.—Dr. Naame, a French physician, declares that adrenalin injected into the veins will cure cholera the fw of un SSESSEES HERE SRE EOE EEE EE rduleoininiaisiedeledatnideiedpitetetnias her | haa by the coal strike—A yard full of idle engines. That picture may be duplicated in the United States before | Florence Rose | about. $7,000 | the THE STAR-<FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1912 | lreated on a { | | London, shows how greatly British railway traffic has been hampered | Girl Tells Story of Horror (By Uaited Pree need Wire? SAN FRANCISCO, March 22 Submitting allently to a series of brutal attacks for more than a year in order to shield ber mother from the knowledge of her misfortune 17, Ie at Inst free with hér alleged persecator, Christ Fillis, a coffee roaster, behind bare in the city prison today The girl tells a pathetic story She earned her living In a coffee where Fillls was employed | jand also, The man ‘paid to her, she said, whieh al One day he dragged her an alley and chioroformed her, After that he altacked her on numerous | occasions, alwaye using chloroform, | while the girl, fearing to destroy) the bappines of her aged mother.) refrained from making the man's crime putble Fillis’ rough actions toward the | girl on & street car drew the ard tion of » policeman and caused by arrest, which brought out the tery. | attentions rep int LESS ACTRESS IS LEG TO BECOME A BRIDE’ ‘ MARJORIE MAHA PORTLAND, March 22.—Mar-jdivorce she obtained last March jorle Mahr, the crippled chorus| The bridegroom is W. H. Robin- girl who was run over by « train | son, a traveling salesman for a shoe | two years ago and lost both legs |firm, who has been her devoted | near the hips, and for whose ben-| friend three years ond was one of efit the Portland public raised the firet at ber bedside at the thme is to be married. of her accident The ifcense haa been taken out As if in defense of wedding ring. bought and all) Miss Wahr sald today H that defers the day ts the granting | 1 think it fs a pretty good wort, | of the dispensation required by the |of a man thet will offer to marry a} Catholte church, on account of the girl with two wooden legs.” her action. | commie DROPS DEAD | Chinese Suftragettes, maed Wire) WANKING, “March 22.—Chi nese suffragettes today attack ed the quarters of the Nalonal embly here, routed the statesmen and broke all the windows in the'building. The women were incensed becaui resolutions granting them a franchise right had also placed certain restrictions upon their a laborer | while at work on the new building now being erected as the Franklin high school and Mount Baker Park . dropped dead of heart failure this morning at about 11 o'clock. Arlington was at work on the top floor of the struc ture and was in the act of Wheel ing « load of brick when,, without a murmur, he sank to the floor and was dead before medical assistance could reach him $7.50 GLASSES NOW $2 For Ten Days Only. , $7.50 GLASSES Joe Arlington, $7.50 GLASSES wow $2.00 now your face, Any style you de wlnssen 1 tho strained pain th gotten all this and » EXAMINATION ADSOL, U.S. Optical C O17 Fins AVE, Bring Thie Ad With Jelsco, hue ag | Bling, for the Sat | whenll WILL INVITE BIDS ON TH PROPOSED TERMINAL P b “I KILLED HER TO STOP HER SUFFERING”, ; United Prees Leased Wii SYDNEY, N. 8, W,,. March I killed her because | couldn't bear to see her suffer This in the keynote today of « full confession ma to the police by Fréderick William Ball, the “Dr Crippen of New South Wales d hin Ball was ar San present it phe ration of fava, 1 wuld 1e p at night had just when 1¢ Bhe with rheumation. be 1 could oaning 22 not hat end ft ch es Of private han Walt that of advice of Haro a done of medicine decided to kill her wertog apoak got a wan sing te and to about \ wnat kitchen urted wide spparen Bridge | tlor with to the the teun her eyes or, but I pulled the trigger and whe fell dead. I then put th in @ wheelbarrow, rolled it down to} the paddock, where I built a bonfire and burned it, clothes and all RICHEST SAILOR VALLEJO, Cal., March 22.— To Chief Gunner's Mate 6. Tomke of the cruiser Denver, at present in reserve at Mare Island, today belongs the dis. tinction of being the richest fighting seaman alive. Tomke has just received news that his grandmother has died in Stras burg, Prus leaving him $100,000. Tomke fought in the Boxer uprising in China and through the Spanish-American war, He will serve out his remaining enlistment term of two years. WIRE THE KING Declaring their — loyalty America, but holding to the ons and ideals of thelr native land, prominent members of the |italian- American colony of Seattte| ata banquet at the Rathskeller| last night eulogized the king of| Italy, conveyed felicitations at bis encape lawl week from the hand of the assansin, and in a cablegram went to the king at Rome expressed their undying love him for the og n did not fine “Lo terme of revtrietions and ttenden, ion npeak public The it ing ths bride here vessel bound for Francisco after crematiog wife's body at Bingara “My wife had suffered bod j hin exprenged short-term Vesaea ee a ae A torribiy | | exxuae ee a 2 ‘TRY TO HOLD SLAVE GIRL is BAN FRANCISCO, With a charge of burglary « her which is believed to be . jon the part of her countrymen to | prevent her from leaving San Fran-| May, a Chinese slave! girl, 1 under arrest here today She was boarding the steamer Man jeburia to return to her native land lwhen arre wted } The girl dectares that she saved the meager earnings of four years purchased her freedom, but that Lee Fong, who caused her ar rest used to allow her fo. He bas enlisted the service of the} powerful Bing Kong tong to hold! her here, #he says y The Presbyterian mission is mab ing an tnvestigation of the case SUE FOR JEWELS (ay United Presse Leased Wire) NEW YORK, Marek That | civil sult may be brought by the relatives of Mre. Mianche M. Car son, the Ban Francisco society wo-} man, who commitied «ulcide here after her arrest for alleged smux feponition of the $20, 000 worth of jewelry nelzed at the time of her arrest, is the opinion of the customs officials here tod: Mrs. Carson's brother, Paul M ry, of Low Angeles, is hastening © to clhim the body ALLS FROM CA Joseph Lombart, 27, 18th av, & and Lane st. fell from a street car! 28rd ay. and Jefferson st. last evening, suffering # fracture of the t the Providence hospital it te amid that he will recover. : NAPOLEON II), Was PARIS . phy Napoleon left, and as if to help atill, his hea forward. Th The base of t The entourage some ‘ day that th old now PRACTICAL de Parts is publ from the letters of L From them 7" lems od Melle 1 his arma ang thez an | limped that h ker and fond of wily after tile o ‘hat bad been ¥ n oung than Lam” ER AREREREREEES A Small Thirtg to Look for— one Ned 1 SSSR ESE EERE E EE EE ESD to | to tradi f for Threatens Seattle Actress. NEW YORK, March 22—Lau rette Taylor, the actress, who start ed her sthae career in Seattle, and whe is now starring in “The Bird of Paradise,” has recelved a threat ening letter, written in a schoolboy jhand, which reads: “You bave five | weeks to live.” Wm. Collier, the} actor, now with Weber & Picids, |recetved a letter of similar nature. FLUSHING, L. March 22—! Bach weds as “Oh, bell'” and Damn,” which appear in Shakes \peare’s “Merchant of Venice jnot be read by girls in the grade, according to school officials decision. FOR MEN, WOMEN §f Ps Ye. AND CHILDREN iy DINHAM-STREHLAU THIRD AND UNION SIGN BIG ELECTRIC S# 905 Railroad Avenue Are on the verge of collapse. The creditors are demanding that their bills be paid at once. sent Mr. S. Arron from Chicago to take charge of their accounts and act as receiver. Money I and money I must have, he says, so here goes: Merchandise will be sacrificed, prices will be! no reasonable offer will be refused by him, and he is going to stay until all bills are paid. Store has been closed while taking inventory of stocks ‘SALE WILL COMMENCE SATURDAY MARCH 23, AT 9 A.M Carpenters’ Tools, Guns, Revolvers, Ammu: $1.19 | It’s Worth While” White e price, Ib. Mixed regulat Best Porcelain Koamel, reco lar price $3.60 Sale price Best Paint Enameled Sinks $2.47 Hose, with $2.67 blades $2.79 irice’ O96 49c §9c “29c 39c '49c 20x20 Iron regular price $5.00. Sale price Cast regular price 10c Ib. imo Pipe Wrenches, Sale price 5c 73c warranted $3.25 4c regular price ited Poultry W Sale Robert Mann's Double-Bit regular price $1 Axes, Sale price jauge Galva price $2.25. 0 feet of oyplings Sale price High-Grade Rubber regular price $6.00. d Fence Wire lar price Solid Steel Snatch gular price $5.60. Sale price Blocks. 80 rods to 12-inch regular pri Sale pric Reliable Lawn Mower, four p 34.00. __ Jack Planes, regular price regular Sale price * foot ‘inch Plow Steel Cable, price 8c"foot. Sale price, $2.2 High-Grade ets, regular price $1.25. NickelPlated Hose Sale Boom Chains Sale price, Good, Heavy 4 Sale 2.50 each each ce 50 price pr —_—————. 7 Nickel-Plated, Good, Heavy Brees: regular price $1.00, Sale High-Grade Forgéd Crucible Steet . Spade, regular price $1.00, Sale price Solld Brass Spray Pump, fitted with hos nozale and sprinkler; regular GO 97 price $3.60, Sale price .........Qée erintinptiecintepicianentinnmeatinmniciiany ies Best Wire Nafls, mixed; regular 44 price be Ib, aflale price, Ib. 2C 14-Tine Bow Brace Steel Garden Rake. regular price Sale price Atkins’ Two-Man X-Out Saws, regular r Repe Rifle, price 7c ft. Sale price r Repeating © $10.00, Sale Solid Brass Gasoline Blow Torch, regular pr $1.98 Sale price .. Dies, \-#inch 3.49 Round-Point Steel Shov Tbe, Sale price Long Handle, els, regular price Armstrong's Stock and regular price $5,00. Sale price High-Grade Mattock Pick, with handle, regular price $1,00, Sale price Liquid Veneer, Sale price regular price 266 ¥ 905 Railroad Avenue Grand Trunk Pacific Dock “The Old Reliable” Foot of B

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