The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 22, 1912, Page 3

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|: Special cursion to Bend wes Seattle Saturday even ‘August Jist; will give a day a half at Hend, and arrive fp Seattle Tuesday after. $25 Covers All Expenses. BEND PARK CO. 483454-455-456 Empire Bldg. Hateson Optica co ats on Sain Const pub wil het Iwvisibie and cap S| The very best ang te. Hable watches bell. also diamonds at} the le ce | Houghton YOUR EYE ned and fitted * by ex-} .| senate, however, ; a inf - Lf ie pounds for tec Raina pound, bia Rough mn. Ave. Serth iano. ga pikwarr er. ACRE FAINT | O15 Fen GA ‘Tisting, Painting Ganesan OK Katimates Gt é- IFL MAKES ACH PARENTS FORGET FIGHT y¥ United Press Leased Wire) SAN MATEO, Ca’ Through efforts of their daughter Gladys, Nicholas J. MeNamara, re tired banker, and his wife are reconciled hi today. Returning home after a journey across the continent, when he at tempted to overtake his wife in New York, McNamara went at once to the family home here. Mrs. Mc Namara was already there, having arrived some time ago with her two sons, She had retired when father and daughter arrived, but Gladys, who had not seen her mother for two years, went at once to her mother's room, A family reunion followed, That everything was for given was evident from MeNamara’s statement Mra, Cora M, Perkins, the com panion of Mrs. McNamara, and Frederick Pattison, chauffeur, still face the possibility of trial on in dictments charging them with the theft of MceNamara’s $4,500 auto- mobile. TAFT VETOES BUDGET BILL SECOND TIME (BY United Press Leased Wire) WASHINGTON, Aug. 22.—Presi dent Taft vetoed yesterday for the secon tinfe ‘within a week, the budget bill,” because the measure provided for the abolition of the court of commerce. Members of congress president this afternoon told that the the Dill would be passed over his veto! nu Frye) bership of both houses are opposed) bing the cable with one hand p | as more than tWo-thirds of the n to the court President Taft's veto was contain jed in a message of but jength. It called attention tu bis ob Section to the abolishment of the | commerce court, as expressed in bi former veto message. Congressman Fitzgerald of New York immediately moved in house to pass the bill over the pres ident’ Veto, and it passed. The failed to pass over the veto STEAMER ASHORE (By United Press Leased Wire) SAN DIEGO, Aug. 22.—Wireless dispatches from the Magdalena bay, where the large freighter Pleiades, is ashore and In danger of belne broken up, indica*. that there ts still some hope saving her. The wrecking steamer Greenwood is rushing to her aid from San Francisc: The Pleiades crew is on its way here. The cruls- er Denver was near the Pleiades | Yesterday, but has left for Corinto, ! according to word received here ) nyne att Fothe Ils Schoot 1¢ th & S. % PRINCE RUPERT and s. Leave Seattle, o'clock mi! rince r Char $48 Seven . §, PRINCE CRORGE Wash. Wedn: tdnight, for t, Stewart ay Victoria Granby Bay, Queen and stew ART, B. ay a5 Ss. PRIN ce “ipeer Tri-mopthly from Prince GRAND TRUNK FA\ PUBLICATIO ditho a i. Go ewe c. Pp. Phone Main 5709 First Ave. re also Business Openings miles, connecting Jian Homestead Lands i nURG Gen'l Agt. Pa nd Yesier W partment Wash « Renton, Rai Jackson Street nier Valley, and Columbia ONIZE THE FOLLOWING FIRMS IN YOUR | DISTRICT, THEY COLUMBIA _ GROCER W. P. PHALEN ) Phones, Beacon 1522, Columbia 1 4 ‘The waar my Up-to- ants Grocer of Rainie: Pure Foods—Full Weights JACKSON ST. TAILORS OLSEN a Wei Bs ‘Tatlors Only Our Motto—-Fit Guaranteed” 2AIT Jackson Bencon 1476 Star Want Ads Bring Results, | Phone Ind. White 301, Su: ARE RELIABLE RENTON SENE RAL MERCHANDISE | ‘Williams & McKnight IP YOU COME AND SEE US WE WILL SHOW YOU | LIVE WIRE BARGAINS x 71, Ind. White 221, HARDWARE Renton Hardware Co. Some Big Specials on Here. COME AND SEZ. BIG SAVINGS M. 391 REAL ESTATE We make @ specialty of City Property and Factory Sites; can place with @ legitimate proposition Chicken Be A Mortgages WILSON & MAK Harries Bide, Kenton yeh ane RAINIER VALLEY DISTRICT FLORIST Did you ever You could Me-half or ‘inves: ry Bahn 6 Old Brighton “Ve top to think that | from one-third to} foot of Holly #t.? Line, get off at FLOUR White Front Grocery Deh = 4100 Rainier Ave. The Cleanest Store in Rainier Valley. Rainier Beach Pharmacy “Phone In4, Col. 160, Beacon 819, Bést Drug Store in This District RIGHT PRICES. Star Want Ads Bring Results Aug. 22.—/ 10 Hines in} toe} vieinity of] \NAVAL BASE IN SOUTH SEAS; o Parsley . | Bare t BY OLIVER P. NEWMAN When the Hudson Tunnel Com pany's skyscraper in New Yor? reared its skeleton about 22 stories into the air, a slender, inconspicu ouslooking man in well-worn had | |clothes stalked up to the foreman on the job and said ‘I want | | ) | to go up to the let aces The burly over with | plied } “Help yourself going up on All right, jumping on looked him grin and re foreman a sarcaatic there's a girder he derrick now sald the stranger the girder and grab Haul away! foreman signaled the heer and the visitor sailed up 21 stories, while t man gasped in astonish Ten ater the inconspicuous man he had ascended, whereupon the }foreman grasped his hand and said You're all right; who Mah name's McAdoo, reply Then the foreman took a big tum jble. Before him stood the fellow who put the tunnels under the Hud son river and who was the presi dent of the company that was erect ing the tufinel company's building That's the particular variety of nerve contained in the midst of engi descended are you was the PRINCESS W The establishment of a naval station at Papeete, Tahiti, by the French government in the near fo ture and the rapid development of the rich isles of the South Seas will be due to the efforts of Prin cess Pomera, a Tabitian Princess Pomera vas not forgot ten the existen er numerous possessions in the South Seat Amid the juxurions (ropical growth there were thousanes of cocoanut trees. The property able of great developme and the prin cess, without taking another soul into her confidence, proceeded to plan for a development of the French colonies with an enthusiasm that soon dispensed with the usual red tape of governments The opportunities afforded the mother country to make her pos sessions something of profit ap pealed strongly to France. Engineers were appointed to make the investigation, while the princess packed her trunks and | hastened across the land and seas THE MARKETS the rim bent The following are average on paid by local nts to the producers and prices stoners. come wi % 14% | Ewes | Wett Sprit i Rolled ham Ox tongue i Poultry, Loeat—Huyto | Spring brofiers Carrots, local Beets, local | Turnips, sack | Radishes, doz Grapes ‘omatoen, box Cantaloupe Feed, Selling Eastern Washingtor timothy Puget sound timothy PAifaifa | Wheat hay oo@ iy 00@ 16 0O@14 M4 00@ 27 oq 20 Bran Shorts Whole corn Cracked corn voodt | Middling: 6 Rolled oats and bariey mixed 37. KYSCRAPERS, TUNNELS, POLITICS, IT’S ALL THE SAME.TO M’ADOO "| When ° THE STAR—THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1912, NYMPHS ARE ROUTED BY AUTO LIGHT WATERBURY, Conn., Aug, 22.— Several conf jones have solved the mystery of why, for the last five days, a score of the prettiest sum. mer girls of Litchfield have been | going around with scratched faces ind arms, some of them limping and ail looking much subdued, It was all due to the suggestion of one of the most adventurous of the girls, She thought out a gam Nymphs.” When the ot girls eagerly asked for an explana tion, she whispered the proposition to alll It was 1:30 a. m. on the day Jchonen, It was chosen because the night was moonless, They - stole along in silent, single file, until they came to a section of the bank of Lake Bantam, hidden from the main road by rocks and bashes. for his friend Woodrow. Amid great giggling, there was 0 general disrobing and the girls were Wm, G. McAdoo, vice chairman of|ciad only in thelr classic outlines the national committee, who is J08t! Hefore easaying the swim they had now boss because of the breakdown | ¢ of Chairman MeComb, and who tt also father of the plan for banks and trust companies everywhere (o accept and forward popular sub \xcriptions to each of the great party treasurers. This very aptly filustrates the character of the fellow who began life a poor boy in Georgia struggled through early young man hood in Knoxville, Tenn, tackled the great elty of opportunity above the Statue of Liberty, ‘tied New York and New Jersey together with a string that everybody but Me Adoo declared could not be made elevated himself to a position of wealth and tofle and did a big part of the job of nominating Wood row Wilson for president McAdoo's dad was prestd modest salary, of the Un nd McAdoo got mont of ation there. He hit New York in 1892 pdiately saw the waste rey in the at arrang t for crossing the Hadson. Two con ind river r McAdoo 4, and talked rich men listen to him Hi money to speak for hime Everybody iow knows nt at hap McAdoo got the money and ug the tunnels, and the ar his name, and he's head of the company tbat runs them, in| aplte of the fact that he never was and is not now an engineer William G. is now digging tunne! ome for they carried out the nympb fdea in a mad dance on the sands with clasped hands and fly ing hatr and were shouting In glee whe denly thelr ries turned to screams of dinmay Athwart r well, their fie ures—flashed a great shaft of light which played and danced from their floating hair their fash ing heels The light high powered lamp on an bile that had crept al} slowly down to the lake shore. Then the motor car still, as if spellbound, tut with the light dane ing in wildest animation Very wild animation took girle, too. They went shriek all directions, making wild fruitiess grabs for their clo’ They fell and acrambled over rocks and w t into bushe And the Nantly bruise and the bushes scratched and ae Wi the bat thar /ars? “g awhile He talke Gisthina and he madt ee eek ti had 6% joyous an . from a great automo tly and the ne in} burrowing rocks ung naughty hed vibrant honk Ps car sudd The girl and then painfully « dressed and silently} hotel, N again | nymphs 700.MARINES — ARE ORDERED TO NICARAUGUA United rrees Leased Wire) | ferry be honk, honk ly dashed whimpered ered up or wat ols the be omy WASHINGTON, D.C, Aug. 22 Seven hundred marinés were order Nicaragua by the navy de The transport Prairie, at Philadelphia, will sail at Eende ‘with that number of men digect to Colon, Panama he cruiser Californian, now at @an Diego, was also ordered to sail! for Panama City, The 700 marines | will be taken across the Isthmus and placed on board the California and rushed to Corinto, Nicaragua,| ENDLESS CHAIN FOR BILL TAFT (My United View Leased Wire) WASHINGTON, D.C., Aug. 22 At endless chain system of letters. it was learned today, is to be sed] to raise funds for the election cam paign tn behalf of President Taft | and Vice President Sherman. Mrs Mabel Boardman, national director | of the Red Cross society and a per | sonal friend of the president, is to} manage the plan Charles D. Hilles, chatrman of the | : republican national committee, | said that Mrs. Boardman is doing this ‘work as an individual and not} as the head of the Red Cross wo-| clety Under the present plan $1 is to be solicited from each person re celving a letter. BRITISH TUG CHASES (By United Press Leaset Wire) VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 22. —According to word received here from the west coast of Vancouver island, the govern: ment tug Wm. Joliffe chased an American fishing schooner outside the three-mile limit yes terday. The schooner had her nets out Inside the limit, and when the Joliffe hove in sight, called in her dories and headed for sea, getting out of sight quickly in a fog bank. The | Joliffe picked up her nets, which were full of fish, and dumped the latter overboard again, after keeping sufficient for food. ed to pastwes nt INS AS STATESMAN, . PRINCESS POMERA. to her domain of coral reefs and copra. When the Tahiti they engineers arrived at found that every ar rangement had been made for the work in hand. Princess Pomera had everything ready for the ex perts. This included a stanch little} schooner, which was used in cruis. ing about the islands. WON’T VETO CANAL BILL WASHINGTON, D. C,, Aug | President Taft was learned | day, will not veto the bill, although |the measure. that co it to. Panama canal he does not He thinks, ver ess should make it plai that the bill is not intended to re peal the Hay-Pauncefote treaty Owing to the lateness of the sion and the need for immed | Panama legislation, the president | will sign the bill, but probably will & message to congress outlis send ling his objections to it CHASING FIEND approve howe Playgrounds League, Important Meeting Quarterly meeting of the Seattle Recreation and Play grounds league will the Hall of the Chamber Central building Assembly jot » Commerce feorner 3rd av. and Columbia st jo All who are interested In retadn ling the old eity hall site for public EUGENE, Ore, Aug With! park purposes, and In deciding jthe aid of bloodhounds, a deter’ pon the best location for a public mined effort today is being madé/ stadium should attend this meeting | by the authorities here to run down/ag ithe committees which were ap |the murderer of 12-year-old Mildred |pointed by the league to confer Green, who was slain in her bed at/with the city council regardipg the her home here. Careful examina-| park and to select a stadium site tion by physicians showed that,|will make their reports, and | contrary to earlier bellef, the child) same will be voted upon. |had been outraged after she was ANTI-HATPIN killed Prisoner Inherits $250,000 ds: secaknin? wheal” Chasis) Wine WASHINGTON, Pa. Aug SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Aug. Anton Kardos, an Austrian} 92-—There will be no more eye insurance agent, of near here, sent| gouging Ir San. Francisco by all his savings of years to an aunt| the deadly hat pin, if an ordi in Austria-Hungary, who had reared | ance approved by the public him since the death of his parents | Welfare committee of the board in infancy, to tide over financial dif-| of supervisors is passed. The | ficulties four years ago, he acted ordinance forbids women to allow hat pins to protrude more without hope of reward, He re ceived his recompense today when | than one inch beyond the crown of the hat. | a letter from a village in Austria | informed him that the aunt, Mrs, Susanna Kardos, had recently died | and left him her entire estate, esti mated to be worth a quarter of a| million dollars. | posing Kardos’ good fortune comes at a} tence was suspended it period of low ebb In bis career, a8$gnown’ she gave Hquor he is now serving a sentence of | Hiumberg only after he approached three months in jail on a charge oti nes with agua in bis hand embezzling insurance —_socf@ty | NO WONDER — DID IT PORTLAND, Or, Aug. Cravens fined $60 for of liquor put Tes sie was sen |which they drank j}eurred in this vicinity IThe ¢ | His injuries were held at 4 this afternoon in} the | dis: | was to Robt.| The Italian-Turkish row, as seen by “Klods’ Hans” of Copenhagen. SEVEN DEAD FROM POISON AT A PARTY (By United Press Leased Wire) VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 22.—A Montreal says: Seven men are | special dispatch to the World from | [now dead, three are lying between | |life and death in the general hospi- | tal here and a number of others are | andering the woods and fields | | around St. Lambert, near here, stark | raving mad as the result of a birth day celebration held by foreigners across the St. Lawrence river from Montreal, Sunday night in large quanti- ties and is believed to have been | doctored with some deadly poison, is to blame, A party birthday ¢ gang ers was in progress when supply ran out. Six bottles whiskey were brought from Mont real to replenish the supply. The bev was ¢ shortly af began t terrible powers Two men were arrested | on charge of being respec seven deaths. They Zimmerman and Kost both of St. Urbain They were prominent Russian colony here. feature is that the became stone blind before they died, and when the police brought the two prisoners to the hospital and asked them to identify them the dying men declared that they could not see a thing. The man who was sent to the eity to pur chase the liquor Is now among the dead. He paid $3 for the deadly staff STOLE $10,000 (te Unite SAN MA Mysterious robberies the of labor the beer to f one commemor rward assert the Bella st, Mont leaders of a A peculiar are the confession of formerly a hotel down when up today by Frank Masse waiter here, who broke “gweated” and led the police to a cleverly « aled cache, where more than $10,000 worth of jewelry and plate were uncovered. FRANTIC DASH J Press Leased Wire.) B.C, Aug. 22- le to retain. his lib. erty, Ja a recent arrival here from the United States, was arrested on @ charge of theft was in bed the dressing, made jumping the a shot afte time, Murphy 4 dash while e window stories into tive took wide fi and & for th three tec at went was but it Murphy ly overpowered slight New York Boston Niagara Falls uffalo Albany dorataien Adirondacks 1000 Islands Atlantic Sea Coast New England Resorts Montreal Quebec White Mt’s Washington Newport News Bar Harbor Modern oe Kettle Cleaners free Furniture Company, ' funds. In spite of his good fort he must complete his sentence, D Whiskey | ot | seven men all} cleared | | adiong | light well him, | | MEN WANTED | Your Opportunity Investigate It Ay for it in work while doing it n whereby improve ave a very fine proposition for a few men they can secure a 5-acre orchard tract their tract and support their families nicely Isn’t That Worth Investigation? Phe Great Creator only made made, Population ts limited only will feed Land is the basis of all wealth the road to freedom and independenc the basis of security for all wealth Kages—all depend on the fertile soil. Irrigation Is Insurance No other kind of land has the possibilities of irrigated land, No crop failures under irrigation. The great increase in values of irri gated land is not possible with any other kind. Hor rists in the favored fruit districts expect and look forward to an annual increase of $100 per acre in lands planted to winter apples. And they get it. The sale of full bearing orchards at $2,000 to $3,000 per acre in Yakima, Wenatchee and Clarkston attracts but passing notice These pric ¢ not fictitious. The net returns are often equal to half the price of the orchard. Nor is this a gamble—one year of big returns and three or four lean years. Winter apples always pay big in Washiagton irrigated orchards. They always will. There are no fattures. The irrigable orchard land is but a few blots on Coast map. Three years out of five fruit east of the Rocky moun. tains is either a failure or nearfailure, It has always been so. It will always be so. It's the climate—Dame Nature Mr, Workingman, can you afford to pass this by without in vestigation? Remember, our irrigated orchard lands are in Grant county, the new fruit district now in the public eye. Remember prices now low but must rapidly advance to the same level as in the older fruit districts, Remember the the settlers get In. Remember that our district produces more and better fruit Remember are only two miles from Adrian and four from Stratford the main line of the Great Northern If you can’t come in during the day, phone us and make an ap- polntment for evening. We on the second floor of the Leary building, right at head of the st at Madison street entrance, | Adrian Power & Water Co. 225 LEARY BUILDING. Phone Main 8868. pay will be the soil so much land. No more by the number of people Land is the one unfailing anchor, In the last analysis land is tocks, bonds, debentures, mort the Pacific time to buy is when the country is new, before miles we on GOOD TEETH—SMALL COST The very finest quality—SUPERIOR DENTAL WORK —at our LOWEST CUT-RATES is what Ohio Dentists offer you. They-are all experts in their profession and do their work quickly and efficiently and with Jess pain, Every- body ought to have their teeth in first class condition all the time. All our dental experts have had years of actual experi- ence. Remember all work we do is GUARANTEED IN WRITING FOR 12 YEARS. FILLINGS 50c UP $8 CROWNS $4 $10.SETS OF TEETH $5 $5 BRIDGEWORK $3 AND $4 Finest Gold or Porcelain Bridgework—regular price $5.00 for $3.00 and $4.00. We can replace teeth which you have lost with bridgework, or teeth without plates. $10.00 Sets of Teeth, $5.00—$15.00 Sets of Teeth, $8.00. We guarantee all our work to fit perfectly and look natural. EASY PAYMENTS ACCEPTED We will accept part down and balance in easy damon while work is being done. Come in today for free examination and cihdate we re open Sundays from 9 to 12. OHIO DENTISTS Second and University St. Opposite Stone-Fisher Co. Low FARE EXCURSIONS Where there are hundreds of delightful places to spend a summer vacation. Included among these points are fascinating New York, his- toric old Boston, all Atlantic Coast resorts, the Thousand Islands, ‘and the picturesque Adirondack and New England Mountains. All “Back East” excursions at greatly reduced fares. See that your tickets, which are on sale at your home ticket office throughout the summer, read via NewYork Cntral Lines * The Water-Level Route’ All tickets are optional for rail or water trips between points on the Great Lakes and Hudson River, and pro- vide liberal stop-over privileges at pe gd Cin- cinnati, Detroit, Toledo, Cleveland, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Albany, and many other points of interest. The convenient and comfortable train service and interest- ing scenery, make the journey itself a most enjoyable feature of your vacation. Ask us for a copy of our “Guide to New York City.” It is an attractive booklet, containing a map of, and valuable and interesting information about the great Metropolis. Your local will be glad to advise you as to round-trip fares. ‘ets arxl sleeping car accommodations, of for suggestion information fand comolete i regarding trios East call on or address our Seattle Office, 714 Second Avenue L. F. Jones, General Agent Passenger |

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