The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 17, 1912, Page 6

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6 HOW TO GET FAT | M Use Samose, Say Bartell Drug Co.! and Quaker Drug Co, and | Put on Good Flesh iss DillpicKle Renanoer, ADF, TODAY You HAF Yo REPORT Te MR, TRUE UND Go ON HSS REGULAR PITCHING STAPF. HURRY OR You Be carve! sMea The almost universal interest in physical culture the best ey ce that can be offered as to the 4 of a simple and selentif method of making thin people fat, Inc and restoring | health Athletics. A UNIFORN € sing strength an ex the when carried to e, often réult in straining al organs. How much better it would be for the average person to math and flesh This flesh form milated by using ng food ts it enter orgar extra it builds the ness. stomach; it helps the | similate the food and flesh forming ele muscles and the t the up the limbs into s ‘oun apely been so successful | making thin people fat and re ing the - weak and run down strength and health that Bartel! Drug Co. and Quaker Drug Co., the popular druggists, sell it under their personal guarantee to fund the money if it doe fit mose has EAST Lake Washington Acre Tracts EASY TERMS Prices $100 Per Acre Upwards Path, Which Ends Abruptly at Prison’s Door. BY FRED L. BOALT Once there was a pack of wolves which preyed on sheep, paying lparticular attention to ewes, The wolves were swift, strong, cunning jand cruel, and the swiftest, strongest, most cunning and crue) was the | leader . The tale telis that an accident befell the leader, who could no longer run swift-footed and strike savage blows with his yellow fangs |Then did the pack turn on him, and, though he fought despairingty, jthey tore him flesh from bone . | One about the the and the tirat He a blac unob of three aide of 30 got and Ratlr It a man on the right he foot of Columbia st a quiet day ain viewed visit was ustache years axo, old station at prospect with ttle smile of pleasure. David P. Eastman 505 Lowman Bldg. set and ne tall, and he ewned and so quiet voiced and nm manner that he would have passed unnoticed in a crowd The man’s name was Clarence Dayton Hillman. SAW THE PAY STREAK HERE by fre Denver that amateur wres attracted little attention in ‘ao as &n Argonaut in search of the Golden paused In ensied flight for Alaska, but Hillman Seattle the streak which was to make bim rich He a be nm a modest way, in the easy-term. real es’ basiness With his scanty lbought a few re of land In what was th eon Lak THAT GREAT QUALITY- Old-timers laughed at the stranger's Venture Green Lak«. will always be a primeval forest But Hillman had what most business men have | He believed in his im inings. And be bad within himself, | it magnetiem, bypnotism, saleamanship—with which others see and believe in bis dreams | Hillman today has many enemies. And among, hix mies are | estate men. Yet even his enemies in t compelled to pay him a meed of grudging praise, In the trade, they say he “never lost a sale His Green Lake addition was soon sold out, and went Into @ to enormous amounts purchase more ly retaking and selling in sme! parcels BOUGHT | 0W, SOLD HIGH Addition followed addition. He bought low and hundreds turned to thousands, to tens of thousat thousands. And within ten years this man of imaginatic several times a millionaire, H 1 his dreams Specialist As time swept on, his greed for gold increased. His love of the eiacces iniaen wee yellow metal became obsession. He thought money and talked money ce meas ae Jin his yellowstinted dreams he saw Seattle a city of 2 million people shies aaverciachaent ‘0th and he its greatest millionaire. The oddest thing about this dreamer is that, for a while, his dreams came true. Stald, honest real estate men frowned when they read his glowing advertisements offering the public golden opportunities to doa bls and treble inves His nerve and salesmanship enabled him to get top prices The public fell all over itself tm Its eagerness to buy his lots on easy terms, and, when he operated within an hour's ride of downtown Seattle, his customers—or, at those who carried through their contracts—realized their golden dreams. You see, he had imagination. At one time in his career he served 20 days in the county jail, H turned his cel! into an office, and from It sold lots for $11,000. Amo his customers were two deputy sheriffs. “BOSTON HARBOR” y and of himeelf as the builder. ide of Olympia, and ca Ithy-look thie He a he DK # 80 plainly man u clain St rs Hillman searcel hie only of ability days, but Others naw where ler those brave Iman had stinetion in Seattle come, easy stages to a was he wax an bet pay long-time. payment vital of Jean than $2,000 he n Seattle's oulermos 1 rked IMAGINATION The wise ones sald not—imagina 00 he a fe SPECIAL THIS WEEK ROUND ENSES im a Gold Filled me jargon of t in land. 3 {REGULAR VALUE $7.50) W. ROBSON speci . _ high andr dA bec sold n ad cash Cut he and All Week Matinee Today age Offers “MADAME X” the usual Henry W. Savage! cast, headed by | Adeline 1 Seattle Theatre HT-—AL1 rey night ita Henry W ieee With He bought land 4 it ston Har He dreamed of a c on the Sound at the other FOUR OFFICERS ARE SAVED FROM TITANIC Saw Fatal Berg He said that while passing the tical spot on which the Titanic the iceberg that qhattered rong hull, a day or so before cident, h aw a passing close enough itened monster to photog this same iceberg. that rent the steel pla than Titanic ishing Ships Near But the commander fanned a new spark of hope in the bi of the, steamship officials, a hope almost d beneath the offi cial dispatch from Capt. Haddock It was that the Ultonia passed the ice where the Ti tanic must | later struck large num of fishing venus were no’ refully through floes, en route to Halifax. He lieved that perhaps it was pe that of these y. have Titanie to boatloads that wounded giant TON Bargain M. oe T Jennie THEATRE Se an | COLISEUM | - “sige fr (By United Press Leased Wired NEW YORK, April 17.—What Frederick Ridgeway of the Inter. national Merchant Marine said was an official wireless dispatch re ceived here shortly after midnight jlast night was believed here to shatter the last remaining hope w that the list of survivors of the Ti- It |tanic disaster might be increased. lieved 1 The message, which was the le he “Olympic via Ce The Carpathia is t at has any survivo: |neither the Virginian jrisian has any. The —|fourth and fifth offic tanic and econd erator were only den truck th floe. wigantic the it be ph Ive casts nor second of the Marcon! officers third Th op re quench when field the ported saved. While was liner in Pie Her f the Race called up the of cked at i) omen here the her berth bein ing ult WILLARD THE MAN WHO Grows OTHER HIG PANTAGES be sible been put advised by wirele toll claimed off Cape tel nd Sta srs captain ome rT enough to the nid off from the rushed to the White waa, STRIKERS MAY SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SEATTLE phone office scoTen 17 Ab ainst bh The a ed to release him wed to remain quest, ing him d, a mem: | threatened committee, | feared ht J, J. riker but he chief of al re fe wa ‘deportation own wait had gun w were They ak the strike Rogers, ‘the und George executive last Monday squad of Montesano. They would be killed if to return. Yester the He Rog out for an were trikers’ at outside to “slug bis life of their for kidnaped b: ook# in the wa zat the jand taken deputies” to told they | attempted | a speci comm charge. TOPLAYS TODAY CLEMMER THEATRE :!2"!!%!!="2" erdeen city authoritie SEATTLE BEST PHOTO | | torne PIPE” i PLAY HOUSE is “THE P. Wilde without @ the } of le to return to Finland The strikers are talking of send: ing children to Seattle and Tacoma to raisg a strike fund, as was done In the Lawrence strike. Parks and Chlef of Police m Of Aberdeen h been ed with notice to show cause in Chehalis county superior court they should not be restrained from preventing public meetings in Abe were among the citizens begun ye nns, who are and mo communit Seven or have left day afternoon quiam, where wore own terday bench an his abductors A. Thorn organizer, and Charles Miller forcibly taken two miles out of town at noon ye terday and warned to » | They walked to Montesapo they were brought » in an wile Ep Silvo, a “as been an sted quarters [ FT ~— \s > Marshall Entertaining Mus ‘Temp! the why vend later nn to police h harge utomne four young active and taken where wi ad was laid Mise DUC PICKLES, We ARG IN A SARIOVS Dipricucoy, COULT You MAKG® ADO | wore jatled | THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1912. on, 1 HAD AA Rie! THOUGNT OF THAT — 1 SEWED ON Ove For HIM ALL NI@NT. WEAC IT 18 ALL READY AND WRAPPED UP, YOUR UNI {CAREER OF HILLMAN IS LIKE THAT OF WOLF WHOM THE PACK WOULD NOW DESTROY Imagination and Over-Mastering Ambition Drove This Amazing Personality Along a Spectacular } bor.” He chartered the old side-wh fo the guards with prospective buyers And between the dock at Seattle and the dock at Eagle Harbor he actually sold $150,000 worth of land to people who bad never even seen Boston Harbor ler, the Yosemite, and loaded her HUNGER FOR LAND His ambition previously had been for more and more gold, but now bis one endeavor was to turn his gold into land. He bought th of acres at Birmingham, thousands at Catheart, and, not content with buying all the land he could in Washington, he parehased thousands of | res and hundreds of miles of water front In California As long he confined his operations to ttle, the wonderful growth of the city made money for all of his customers. But when he cured and platted 12,000 acres in townsites at Birmingham and started out to make @ metropol joston Harbor,” he left the Seattic ephere, and the expected increase in value did not come. First one and then another of bis customers made trouble for bin He went on selling, selling, laughter the threats of the dissatinfied beLeving the Hillman star would bring bim safely through the financial web of his own weaving unscathed His belief in the power of money became a religion. No Mosiem on his Knees, facing the East at the toll of t mosque bell, ever wor ahiped hie god with greater faith or more persistence than did Hiliman. His advertisements in the newspapers became the stock joke of Washington, His 200 chickens, bis 400 Belgian bares, “the widow who had to sell because of the death of her husband”—these became fami! lar, stereotyped Hilimanisme THINGS BEGAN TO HAPPEN About this time The Star cast out bie advertisements, The Seattle Estate association appointed a committee, consixting of R. W. Hill ne W ing and Ole Hanson, to investigate Hill ® methods But Hillman laughed and went on selling land. Then U, 8. District Attorney Todd started proceedings against him for using the mails to defraud, but be still laughed and went on selling and selling. The federal grand jury indicted him, but “C. D.” the Mau without nerves, withe fear, without shame, continued unheeding his pursuit of gold. The trial came on, long, tedious, nerve-racking ut the man of remained as (mpériurbable and unaffected as Mount HE STILL SMILED The court sentenced him to He did not falter. He tried | expedient. He went to the 1. 8. cireult court of appeals He went (o the supreme courtwf the United States—apd lost and a half years at Mo J expedient after legal and lont He still a few daye Hillman will enter upon the term of punishment which all his millions @duld not save bim. He will be shut off from the world of business, which was bis battleground, from his fam ily, whem be loves Long ago # real estate man friendly to Hillmen reproached him for his mothods, Hie reply was to draw from an inner pocket a sheaf of certificates of deposit, They were bis justification, That was—and in, it seeme—bis limitation, He cannot see beyond if. He has impoverished thourands. Most of them are saving for homes. AFTER THE THOUSANDS He has a wonderful physique, and he hi ked for outdoor work at the penitentiary in order to keep fit. He hax a wonderful mind. Hi concelves big things, He disitkes litte details, He was, for instance, slack in making collections, Others grafted on him. He did not care 40 did not care for dollars, or thousands of dollars, but only hundreds of thousands of dollars Hard, strong, cunning—he is at least game “| will take my medicine,” be says. | Since his conviction Hiliman has been sued for about $2,000,000. lin the neighborhood of 200 suite have been begun against him. Some no doubt legitimate—but some are not. | WHITE STAR ==> KNEW SHIP (Ry United Press Leased Wire) MONTREAL, April 17.—Wi mes: received here tod te that officials of the Star line knew when they suing reassuring sta’ Monday that the Titanic had sunk The announcement given out Mion day, declaring that the passengers crew were safe, originated in New York offices of the com ind! White were nts in thi pany It was learned today that the dis. patch sent from Montreal Monday saying that the Virginian was tow ing the Titanic Into port came from the wireless operator at Cape Race who addressed his message to va rious newspapers in Canada and the United States This message was generally accepted here as au thentic. It has not been explained what the Cape Race operator based The for a living now Yes, but he doesn't get it, 1 turn all of his manuscript PRESIDENT HAYS SAFE MONTREAL, April 16.—A wire less message received here today stated that Charles M. Hays, presi dent of the Grand Trunk Pacific jraliway, previously reported among |the victims of the Titanic wreck, |was safe aboard the liner Car his message upon pathia - j raclee Regrade to Be \The Calitornian Discussed Tomorrow Coming to Port 1 Goddard will intro-| resolution tomorrow after-/ BOSTON, April 17.—Announce noon before the streets and sewers) ment that the steamer Californian, ecnates which will again re one of the first veasels to reach th the Ye er way reg ade que vicinity of the Titanic wreck, had |The Tesolntion will direct an n-| started for this port was made here quiry to the port commission on today by officials of the Ley nd | what disposition it is ly to make|jine, They decline ‘. r of the earth to be removed. The re-| whether the vessel carried in bodies of any wreck victims, The. «grade falled go through before because no adequate provision was rT p ‘S| Californian is,due here tomorrow, made for the surplus earth me r son ie writing re | | | | Couneilm duce a ive ler tion Bremerton to Have | Phone W 472 Municipal Waterworks BREMERTON, April 17 By a vote of 498 to 198 Bremerton is to. day celebrating a victory of the bond tasue election for the purehase of the Bremerton Water & Co., which supplies this city with jwater, for $150,000 Investig the special fea |] tures of the SAMSON MARINE |FENGINE before purchasing Elliott Bay Yacht & Engine Co. R. Ave. 1.08 ANGELES, The case of Bert H labor ma in an alle Los Ar jwas dr the Cal, April 17 Conners, union charged with complicity sd plot to dynamite the 6 county hall of records pped today at the order of court Conners was tried once on the charge, the jury disagree- jing. Similar cases against F. Ira Bender and A. B. Maple recently |were dropped 1042 R 8, W., Seattle. Near West Seattle Ferry Landing ell When She Made Adolf’s Un Go iNTo THAT ROOM AND PUT ON THEN Reporr TO Me ON THE ands | poor | HAD SUNK: Power! Words by Sc , Music by Conde Now CLEAR ourl! AND DON'T You UNTIL, PUT ON CONG BACK A GAG PAL NOTA Bico, iform MT. FORM, HERE Xt Am, SURVIVORS _|KING PIERP. MORGAN ARE WELL (By United Prees Leased Wire) NEW YORK, April 17.—All the Titanic survivors are well, This was the m the offices of the Cunard line here) today from the Carpathia, which is) steaming to New York with the 668 survivors of the | disaster in history. | At 11 o'clock last night the Car- pathia was 596 m st of Am |brose channel, and will be off jandy Hook tate Thursday. The vessel ie due to dock early Friday. Nathan Straus Collapses ROME, April 17.—Nathan Straus suffered @ complete collapse he |today when informed that his |brother, Isidor Stra the New |York millionaire merchant and philanthropist, probably had per-| ished in the Titanic disaster, His jeondition is reported serious ‘10,000 Hear _ “Battle Bob” at Portland PORTLAND, Or. April 17.-~De claring that vast combinations of capital are the most serious men: ace the United States has faced) leince the civil war and appeating to| the plain people of Oregon to re- |move that evil and restore @ form of government representative of |the masses, Senator Robert M. La Follette, candid. for the repub- lican presidential nomination, ad- | dressed 10,000 persons here. The auditorium was jammed and hun dreds were unable to gain admit- tance. Senator La ‘ol. Roosevelt: ba He declared that the trusts had prospered under Roosevelt, who, jhe charged, had failed to make wae of the Sherman anti-trust law, or lrevision of the tariff downward two weapons La Follette «aid | Roosevelt had to use in coping with the situation. | Senator La Follette gave Co! Roosevelt credit for doing what he| could, but remarked ironically that | “God made Roosevelt an agitator— not @ conservative statesman.” | Referring to President Taft, Sen. ator La Follette said bis rival is an easy-going man, who never did any hard work and who fell into the hands of Senator Aldrich, Speaker | Cannon and “ministers and serv. | ants of these mighty powers.” lette went after mer and tongs. Zon 1 _2_- J. PIERPONT MORGAN—Sketched From a Recent BY M. E. PEW % NEW YORK, April 17.—J. Pierpont Morgan’ old today! And here are a few facts concerning the Born at Hartford, Conn., on April 17, 1837. For 20 years has been undisputed, absolute king of finance. . | At 75 this tremendously energetic, full-habited the threshold of the grave. And when J. P. Morgan dies— what the Unquestionably the financial system, as typified by . ‘Cruiser Salem Is | p survive him, but the question is, by whose band will it move) Nearing Carpathia’ Morgan is today in the zenith of his power. Hin mighty of affairs ramifies to the length and breadth of the country (By United Preas Leased Wire) | ult even to Asia | NEWPORT, R. I April 17.—A He is dominant today becs of mes received here to. |4auntless strength, undeniable exaction m the United States scout | elements and ted co alia Salem announces ¢ the Money is Morg H »proaching the Carpathia | industrial incorporations a speed of 15 knots an Ag {to be called the Merc wireless can |the Products of those ind is prob. | lation. of thi There has just tained | #4n's New York bank grasp. n ought to be fMluminat ork of /8te8s, Which has been side-stepping an investigation of the j trust This statement shows that there is such a trtist, amd |name is Morgan controls 12 New York ! For instance: Morgan op es ot trust companies, with total asset $1,109,291,000, of which is) al and surplus of 1 857,700 are deposits. The total capi | (iy United Lensed W institutions, that traffic in more than $800,000,000 of dey CHERBOURG, April 16 y | is $182,687,200. vessel in this harbor is flying flags| = Morgan not only at half staff today as a tribute to| practical purposes he has at those who went down with the liner | stress, the 16 banks and trust Titanic, by the Standard Oll coterie of fina | such, These 16 institutions have c al and surplus | $137,552,200, deposits of $707,312 d total assets of $873,905 | if Morgan's actual control of American finance could De Geman) it would stagger the world, and it is a safe assertion that My has it within his power to capsize the ordinary run of tradem pie ie over night, if he should happen to run amuck . 2 — ae Commercial Club Consolidation Tax e Conners club will notes date with the Chamber o°sty ce until that reactions: few progressive rough its system, © Tilt “ cided at the meeting held last More than that, the @ club adopted the Peco of its committed 9 drop the ation unti the Ct bis ruthless age power to quickly gall. His glittering array of and mercantile institutions would nt King, except that he is not stries only as (hey relate to financial mimi s stock in trade hour apparatus distance, it accurate list Titante’s survivors can be the arrival at New anard liner AT HALF MAST hi horitative statement of been compiled wh before the ( is financial combination, But ait posal, especially in times of finaas anies which are ¢0l not the St dominates t his ch he'll leave any sands of time? He ought to leave a good many He's always side-stepping.”—Kan sas City Journal “Do you think footprints on the Hillman Goes to MeNeills Prison Hillman, real estate man of fraud in the use of be taken to the Pierc Friday afternoon, and to MeNeil’s island pent aturday, U, 8. District : Todd received official per 1b, |mission from the department of xreen | justice at Washington, D. °C , . terday to withhold the filing of the pail ompour mandate committing Hillman prison until Friday WESTLAK cuRs, c pke uk che Ib.; Te cD convicted HN} mails, will eream | county jail $ ijfrom the eam | tentiary | Attorney eimbert cheene bs f sharp itter | ve h ae incubators $8.00-—The Ides. imate, Sixty os in Pre, the Chas, H, Lilly Cd, Seattle. Foot of Ma Swanson, the flour trust buster ie (euhve 2 }has some extra specials for Thurs. sult pork, te Ib.,/day and Priday amok : i i‘ pring 5 halibut » « lard mustar |lamb | saunas " eee St and black = Kk cheese REMOVAL SALE butter We will soon vacate our present locat and are otteges of je; bine nt Potatene a mense Hine ¢ i WALL PAPER Plotures, d ranch exes 400 Washington crent | ib $1 |i if From White blank papers .... 2%e per eingle English aoe teenie bread ’ sar 106 pork p loaves it Embossed papers fc rm . Se Lirlap, seed, 208 R CO. made ans, pt 2 uban gr | 2¢ 1 basket Ye mier Co, 2 Ibs u GLOBE WA 7 SHOOND LL PAPE shrimps, 10¢ AY. a eS Page ceo sEEE SS HOE EE! a aim) fpenst | neo s|" S895) } Eiht a8 f f so

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