The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 30, 1912, Page 8

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FISH TRUST BEATEN AT ITS OWN GAME BY PROC RESSIV: CITY WHOSE OFFICIALS-OPEN LOW-PRICE MARKET FISH SOLD FOR Se PER POUND WHEN TRUST RETAILERS ARE ASKING 150, CLE VELAND’'S NEW CITY FISH MAR KET. ern 000 It ts selling fish to the; with city officials as stockh and with a nominal stock of $6 serves to make ract possible mpany cannot make der the terme of incarpe- ‘The fish trust that has heretofore | business. controlled the Great Lakes fish | patrons of the municipal market at trade has been beaten at its own game by the city of Cleveland. has gone into the 5 cents @ pound Dealers who buy the trust have b Jat 15 cents a pound The city pays the fishermen per r fish. at's what the conde any their fish from fish retailing fish — rat the Independent fishe fearing reprisal fr wouldn't make a deal with the city Finally, however fisherma steamed out, set bie nets, and came nm with | pickerel. He got bis pound and went back By 10 o'clock of the first day the municipal fish market was sold out Late in the afternoon the tug came in with another catch and that was all sold early in the evening Thenceforward the municipal flourished mer 1 cents one trust ends pays the to bu their fish 3 cents a The trust cha }for fish than the for fish at retail | The municipal fish market | made possible by the organization of the “Muntetpal Fish Co.,” to side step the law as to municipal owner ship in Cleveland. This company.) marke 8 retailers city is charging — riggs (at picture exhibition) ry sera - *: are ergo > JUDGE GAY’S LAST a. Fe = nition — gsc alt pring” canvas of Dauber's before DAY ON THE Grigg» —Shouldn'§ wonder BENCH the same one he had on view last December as “Late Autumn. | At 10 o'clock this morning Judge} G. S. Dudley J ot 2cc828 32 wees) ; | judge of the superior court, and to- oe = SOSCOCHSSSHOOOOSe |morrow morning he will resume private practice of Jaw in the Alas 5240 Rainier Ave. Beacon 1371. Col. 40. B * THIS SHIP, ° |ka building. Judge Everett Smith, who was appointed to succeed Judge Gay, will take over Judge Gilliam's department and try non- jury cases. Judge Glitiam wil! pre |side over Judge Gay's department. At @ farewell dinner given by | Judge Gay to the court house re porters, he announced that he will |not be « candidate for any office lagain. The remuneration for pub- | ie service, Judge Gay sald, was out of proportion for similar service in private life. Judge Gay served three years and four months before | he tendered his resignation. To night he will be the guest at a/ dinner at the Country club, ar ranged by his associates on the bench. GIBSON-CHANDLER FURNITURE CO. 510 Pike St. New and used Furniture bought, sold and exchanged. We have the most complete ‘stock of second band goods in the city at the lowest prices. We exchange new goods for old. We will vsiit your home on call. Fine repairing. the trust, | 900 pounds of herring and | TOO, WAS WRECKED, BUT ALL ON BOARD ESCAPED OOOOH OHHH HHHH HHH HHH HHH SS SOS KNHped firmly In bin hands fHE STAR—TUESDAY, APRIL 30,+1912. LASHES SiG OF DISTRESS (fy United Cress Leased ire? FRANCISCO, April } nro Norwegian — steame Admfraten, hich flashed distross signals oat sea 26 miles west of Humboldt, in last night, is believed to be in that vicinity today The steam ers Carlos and Centralia are stand. ing by, ready to, give assistance. The Admiralen is known to have lost her rudder. No news was re from the steamer at the change here today, ‘The Admiralen left Norway January 3 bound for the Alaskan fisheries, She was last reported from Punta Arenas March 30. The Admiralen in 906 tone. TAFT CONTROLS IN NEW HAMPSHIRE CONCORD, N. H, April 20. Fully one-half of the 800 or more delegates to the republican state convention ay to choose dele gatematlarge to the Chicago con vention reached Concord last night The Taft forces were conceded to have a clear majority. The Taft leandidates for delegates-atlarge as named tonight & Wenter | brook, former Charles M. Floyd, Robert H. Spauiding, of Rochester, and Tyford Merrow. An Alleged Forger Calgary officials have communt cated with the local police depart ment, asking that they arrest Alb u ailor, aged 21 years wanted in the Canadian city on a charge of for A complete de scription is inclosed in the letter Anne Mo-gan Back | Navy Restaurant | Cy United Press Leased Wire? NEW YORK, April 30.—Miss | Anne Morgan, daughter of J. Pierpont Morgan, today set up | 1,200 navy yard work In the | restaurant business. She sur rendered contro! of her Brook 1 ing establish y employ ry Gave a check for $1,000 as a sinking fund, If by December 30, next, the workmen have proved they can operate the rant successfully on thd cooperative bi it will be given outright to them i] eooe cd ° eoeoeoeoeoeoooe i who is] ° BIRMINGHAM, Ala, April 30.— Man'e-size courage has won a col lege education and a Carne | medal for V1 -year-old Henry | Mathews of Dothan, Ala. Dangling head down at the end of a rope, 30 feet below the earth's: surface, in a bored well only 15 inches wide, he lrescved Bennie Grant, a 3-year-old, | |who had fallen in When th n of the b urface ned to be lowered ppling b almost in no & without an they big enough te it a me nt living burial for the tiny vie » before help could # could hole or suffocatic reach him. Henry Mathews, tallor's ap prentice, volunteered to do the only | thing possible. So they tied « stout rope to his feet and lowered him, | head first, down the narrow hole Twice they let him down and brought him up. Each time he | |tried, but failed, to grasp the baby Then again he went down, and the | third Ume emerged with the baby a Twan't nothin’,” said Henry, | jwhen the men cheered and shook! ‘WASHIN | _ EXPERIENCE United Press Leased Wire) FRANCISCO, April 30— Nervous from thelr experiences aboard the wrecked Uner Titanic and on the ship Carpathia Dr. Washington Dodge, assessor of San Francisco, Mrs. Dodge and their litte son are home again & BA rese BOY DROPS HEAD DOWN, AT ROPE END, INTO WELL TO SAVE BABY Henry Mathews, aged 11 the baby he sav his fi his hand. Then he Back the taflor shop GTON DODGE TELLS OF ON TITANIC Mner, but he believed their womanly intuition had warned them against the Titanic When asked if he wholesale condemnatic Ismay was justified, stated that there of opinion regarding this, as Ismay was in the last boat to leave, believed n of J, Brue Dr to the Dodge was a difference and (my © a BOSTON,. April President Taft and Former President Roose velt spoke throughout the state yes terday until jate last night. Both referred to each other with con tinued bitterness. Roosevelt left late at night for Oyster Bay, where he will receive the Massachusetts returns this evening The president, after declaring he was sorry it wan nec ary tor him mingle In a political suggested ‘an amendment stitution #o that id nerve or Ineligible for diemn n ou said tn me by othe dore Rooseve “l was a m been a man of st < aah every man who has his body and who ba epre sented as 1 ha ed to fight, I al to my f ir Masnachuse who, I be eve in @ square What Teddy Said. Roosevelt in his speeches aed Wire) to etru: to cor a will,” he condemn n conch ut Theo been m been think She’s Charged With Murder of Baby ILOBE, Ariz, April Mra. L. ovitch, a young matron, is un arrest here today on a charge ed her 6 6 administer by The nfant died in agor | who was from the Jame, found a carbollc a [neath the mattress of the bed Ipled by the mother Maico- viteh den NO'GERMS FOUND Informats oon- Mre fex the charge officers of ap edd |terday by a committe investigate. h tion of he r water shed which » } with ite drinking for over a month have > contamination of typhoid germs, rinted to the trae Cedar (TAFT AND TEDDY AT 1 am ath The only clase is hatred oiitictans tring is ly LAncotn's bor problems, be it he means most of his sete ctated by ‘bt that My, who are neither r feeble, ot he Taft of the politic and of the w MAN I ETT logging this cit jeft a wick bed Mra. Bar band ha: ett fears nepire much warm, but bebing the great sinister of corry wandered that perished in the river, thowe meq Mr. Tee ‘tier Me ot Me" and that there are no earél itary conditions inst week The littl E Henderson, 1406 y away from home afternoon Ure the neighborhood was ye Sa a He was found at « or 30 minutes the poe Tot Stays Away” year-old obiid 4 bor's, & few blocks away from home ALASKA EL (By United Press Lease DAWSC April turps r White Hi Phelps, Capt son district diaty Martin, Chas ree South Dawson—Dy, x Two are still in doubt. ghting the Right Plag }| Kill the Catarrh Germs and the White Is More Than Consumption Half Solved. s caused by germs; so is Catarrh. other People who have catarrh are lable to become vietims of | eonsumption The reason is very simple. vicious, can make little | throat When, however, the n of catarrh and the ravag: consumption ¢ and ends in a coffin. Get rid of will breathe HYOME! of devilish catarrh microbes, the n easily and quickly find a home to thelr thus begins thousands of cases of consumption It starts with a tarrh, if You have it, and you ean get rid of it) a soothing, healing antiseptic air that f the nose and throat and goes clear into the alr cells of the i where it destroys catarrh germs and cures catarrh. Sprays, douches eatarrh. them, and HYOMEI gets there whi) Delays only invite n auy good drag store for $1.00. you can get a bottle of HYOME! for snuffs, ojmtments and stomach dosing You've got to get where the germs are before you le all other treatments: ediess danger; get a HYOME! outfit If you already own a only 60 cents. ack <j Germs of consumption, so matter he headway when the membrane of the nd bronchial tubes is in a healthy condition. e i % ns otlan pk lege tm Po S MISSING Avril 20-—J, erator, Well known i a8 Was feported BUSo stveresc PaO SROCKESEOS SESE! day after @ trip overland from New York Dr. Dodge declared that Mre Dodge did not wish to sail on the Titanic, saying that she did not Ike a maiden voyage, but that he {nsist ed. He said many busbands told bim their wives objected to the many did not believe it necessarily his duty to stay and go down with| the captain because he owned part of the ship. | Dr. Dodge said that at first he did not want his wife and son to jeave in a life boat, thinking the | Titanic safer i} Hot water coils made. If you are moving we will pack your goods. NO-PAIN DENTISTE \“‘Monstrously Out | of Balance” | Taking the position that it would} be “monstrously out of balance” to | punish minors who buy lquor| equally as much as those who sell) it to them, Mayor Cotterill yester- day sent a communication to the jcouncll vetoing the bill fixing the | | Penalty on minors at 30 days in the | city jail or $100 fine. The mayor | points out that the ordinance would |result in stopping. prosecutions of | cafe and saloon men who knowingly | sell liquor to children. The mayor, |however, finds no fault with pun- ishing minors who appear older |than they are and falsely represent | themselves to be of age In order to |buy Hquor. He denies that minors | appearing to be of age will be pur- |Posely used as “stool pigeons.” CASE MAY GO TO JURY TOMORROW CORVALLIS, April 30.—With the| defense making rapid pre 6 in| presentation of its ca he trial] orge and Charles Humphrey charged with the brutal f of Mra. Eliza Griffith at her ar Philomath, last June, is d to go to the jury today Phone Main 3227. zsvs This is the only large den- tal office in the city that te owned ana managed by graduate regis- Case Refuses to Draw Warrants _ to Refund the Coliseum Company County Auditor Otto A. Case to- day gave notice that he will refy to draw any warrants to refund the Coliseum Investment Co. part of the money collected by the county for the rental of the Ca) }iseum building, at Third av, and Jefferson st After a year's litigation Judge y last Saturday decided that the county, while owning the land, had no claim to the bullding. The coun ty commissioners contended that by the terms of the agreement with the original lessee, Col. George B Lamping, former county auditor the building was to revert to the county with the expiration of the lease on April 1, 1911. Judge poet —— PPEpEresr. Raber. Learn to dance tn Guaranteed. Private. Prof. jo any! Dreamland, Seventh and Unton. Som SS oe | decided that the lease provided that three arbitrators should fix thi value of the building, and the coun ty must pay By this decision the county is required to repay $19,000} ts collected in the past year, 500 a month, or $6,000 for the the rental fixed in the original red den tints aasociate with him We Make a Specialty of Ladies’ Suits French Dry, Steam Cleaned and Pretec “tor $180 Quilt, Br at Very Re Union Dye Works, Inc. Classy Cleaners and Dyers Office, 1025 Pike St 1428 10th Ay. Ind, 5192; Main #167 any a= of men who the actual not competing with that cl tal work for lese than then have students do your work. as his license where you can seé it Gold Crowns, #400, Regular $10 Plates, Poi and Portier nabie Prices. 8 contrary to fairness to compel the county to} virtually continue an unfair lease with Col. Lamping or the Coliseum Investment, Co. after the lease has | positively il I am ac-} tually co! by positive man date to issue these warra shall positively decline to do so,” 4 y! Case's positive statement any sense of vy $10 Norwegian barque Gunvor, wrecked on the coast of Cornwall, England The biggest steamer that floats and th: windjammer of the era at is passing are both grist for ocean's mill. Within a few ¢ of the black Sunday that saw the fatal berg drift across the bow of the Titanic a big, three-masted Norwegian barque, thé Gunvor, went ashore under full sail on the Cornish coast of England and became a total loss All but one of the crew escaped by running out on the bowsprit and dropping on the rocks, Then one of the men who had escaped thus swam back to the wreck and resqued the one man who was afraid | to Jump. | Dr. L. R. Clark, Manager. 1405 THIRD AVE., N. W. CORNER UNION 8T, NOTE—Bring this ad with you. SUP WE STLAKE S&P PUBLIC MARKET. wa WV ednesday’s ‘4 Biz Specials WESTLAKE SPECIAL { FLOUR, NO. 50 SKS. $1.10 . 5 PAILS 55¢ LAR NO. to PAILS $1.40 clals are below wholeral t at the pF ; id what quantity your t buy in, The Westlake Pub je Market is T SAY YOU 1 WHAT Goo! OU For Goi SAW IT IN THE STAR. SHOT HHHS HHH SEOHOOEEOOO OEE HOOD Pd WHY? ° BY BERTON BRALEY. POOP HS OHHH OEOOHH EHH OOOE EH EHO OOD | (The Titanic had not boats enough to take off half the passengers and crew.) “Women and children first,” they cried, And brave men quickly stood aside While the boats were dropped to the heaving tide. Where the ice floes rise and fall, And the great ship sank in the gloomy dee Dp. To the icy floor where the blind things creep, For brave men’s lives are very chea And “there were not boats for all! I make your glasses The satistactic tomers who h the greatest é w ° ¥ rc ° ° That many copies of The Star were sold on the average for each pub- lication day during the year ending December 31, 1911. This showed an increase over the year 1910 of 6,350 copies for each There was plenty of glitter and glare and show, Plenty of gilt and lights aglow, Hut when she crashed on the hidden floe Where the night hung like a pall, Halt the souls in the murk and gloom re sentenced to die in an ocean tomb, ith never a chance to flee their doom, Since there were not boats for all! day. * The daily average circulation of The Star for the year 1910 was 35,- 449, which was an increase over the year of 1909 of 4,000 copies. And so eee eon cine dn the 2esuenna it has been year after year—regardless of general business conditions—The r household. Besides you get aig Star has grown legitimately, consistently and solidly. cb pd nc igen vetting eng Newspaper publishers the country over estimate that an average of five "de a persons read each copy of a paper. One copy to each five persons is con- sidered the point of perfection in newspaper circulation. On that basis 208,995 persons read The Star each day during the year 1911. AND THE ENTIRE CIRCULATION IS CENTERED RIGHT = . ; HERE IN SEATTLE AND SURROUNDING TOWNS. The Star management invites any business man, whether an advertiser or not, to investigate its circulation at any time and in any manner desired. A line of people numbering 41,799 standing in a row each and every night to buy copies of The’Star, would make an impressive showing. IT paper WOULD MAKE A STRING OF HUMANITY 25 MILES LONG, ALLOW. ji! . bs Baas BAL ING THREE FEET FOR EACH PERSON. | above spe EQUIPMENT HE National confined to o f the nk First he name of Right—why was this true? vhy were the boats and rafts so few? That death was certain for men and crew, While their loved ones vainly call? A thousand great-souled heroes drowned As the ship sank to her burying ground, And this is the o % found, There were not boats for all branches of It maintains ev partment of the perfect! equipped national bank, and it offers the services of each and every department to the people Our officers desir know the First Natio accommodating bank wher« ee every consistent advantage may be had. STALL NUMBERS ON PUBLIC MARKET, 2 Ibs. Home Rendered Lard $78. Sete Nock’ or Back Bone®. K, Raking Powder Half pound Ground Mustard Ridgway's 5 o'Clock Tea ‘reason be h Ducke Rirge, “doz Full Cream. Cheese, ib: |23e ney English Wainuts, 2 ibs se h Roasted Peanuts, se Poe a ra tonae ise | Berawbervies, BaF babket TITANIC RELIEF FUND $1,500,000 LONDON, April 30-——The Titanic funds, including those collected in the United States, now aggregate well over $1,500,000. The suggestion has been made that suffi cient money has been subscribed, but the mayor of South ampton points out that a large number of persons are needy at that place and he wants the collection to continue YOUR ACCOUNT SOLICITED rs Lenox So ie FIRST NATIONAL BAN Pioneer Square, First and James ESTABLISHED 1882 Loc Coppered Coat and Hat 16-inch Bi

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