The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 31, 1912, Page 3

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ISERY [LIGHT STRUCK fp NINETEEN : BLIND urs Gm o Sour) .npSRBON, Ind, Oct. $1.~Htine: Taking “Pape’s toon persons are reported to have Diapepsin.” been stricken blind as a result of sasing at @ light caused by work — men welding with an electrical ny ate ts sourleg proc on a trolley wire, aceord- sch er tee like ® ing to local physicians who were erefusing to digest, oF called out of bed to treat the cases. and eructate sour, Several who saw the ght were not or bave Pheagen, stricken until a few hours later. Heartburn, fullness, taste In mouth and John Hagel of Hamilton, O., who is here visiting his mother, waa mth beadache-—thia is Indiges ease of Pape's Diapepsin ge playing cards in @ lodge room whi cents and will thor he shoved back his chatr and ex- claimed, “I am going blind!" He your outoforder stom. suffictent about the was assisted to the home of his ine in the tage some one © suffer eat dark rooms all of today. A local eye specialist said that in each Case attended by him the inside of the eyelid was greatly ir ritated He gave an his theory that the pecullar raye of Nght given out by the welding process caused the quick development of bacteria, al- ready lodged in the eye, and blind ness resulted, mother, Virtually ali the 19 re- ported to physicians were kept in from stomach to a pharmacist to show you ak your printed on of cases, then you will why dyspeptic trouble cade must go, and why they F sour, outoforder wo ta five min fe harmless and though each dose sufficient to digest for assimilation into the food you eat, be you go to the tadle je; but, what most, is that you That your stomach and !n- ‘ clean and fresh, and eet need to resort to laxa PBver pills for billousness xp ip will have many Diapep- ‘as some people will call f you will be cranky about stomach preparation, try a little for Indi. re c. gastritis or any other no pe now, tiils minute. and rid yourself of wel ANS’ LOSSES seer" Wire) Press Leased Oct. 31.—Belgrade dispatches received here today ad mit that 4,000 Servians have been killed and 7,000 wounded in the fighting to date. Milltary experts here figure the Servian losses at easily double the figures admitted. The Bulgarian officials so far have published no figures of their losses, but it is estimated here their killed and wounded will reach 25,000. DRIEST TOWN (My Untied Press 1 Wire) stomach | LONG BEACH, Cal, Oct. 31 | | Long Beach is believed to be the! j driest town on the Coast today as) a result of the victory of the pro} hibitionists here yesterday. The} jdrye carried the city by 2.000 ma | jjority. So stringent is the new/| liquer ordinance that a physician's; prescription will be necessary to obtain a drop of liquor, and even a n be filled but once. eo Dancing taught in 2 wate Inatruc d Lessons every ¥ and evening HIPro PROM aad U siverst } | prescription H BY FRED L. BOALT A man has been cured of a ter rible disease, which was killing Limiting Hours for him. No medicine was used In the cure. The physician did not resort Railway Employes |to hypnotiom, mental suggestion or even prayer. it was the cure of (Ry United Press Leased wires |"indrese. TACOMA, Oct. 31—That the de} The man, a month ago, was close partment of justice, at the instiga-|t© death. Today he ie strong and _jtion of the interstate commerce |Well and master of himself. commission, ie making a deter-| You will find him at The Open 4 mined effort to secure strict en-|O00r, on King st. forcement of the federal statute Have you ever gone the boore SEATTLE’S B limiting hours of work of railroad|ToUte?” he asked. “If you have, PALACE. employes is indicated here today in|YO" know that the habit becomes University. suits filed im the federal court by|* disease. When a mooching bee Per Couple. el Ethelton ing with week, The gar stops you tn the street, and his stator ee ee bands are shaking, the muscles of The Northern Pacific raiiroad|bis face quivering, give him money |was recently fined for working a| for whisky For if he does not get telegrapher more than 10 consecu-|Whisky he will die tive hours. Suit was Instttuted to-| “You, sir; the day against the Great Northern |D¢¥er thought it would, but it did. company for working a train crew|!¥e always earned good money over the legal limit. The govern-|!'m a blacksmith and toolmaker. ment aske that the road be fined|!t# @ good trade. | have no one on nine counts, $500 on each count,|dependent on me, so 1 spent my or $4,500 in all money having « ‘good time. ~ Hut, little by little, so gradually that I did not realize it, I lost the habit of industry, while « spirit of restlessness grew witoin that I changed jobs and cities more and more frequently. And the first thing | knew | wan almost down and out “I say ‘almost’ because during ali the eternity of nightmares through which I have passed I clung desper- ately to the shreds of my seil-re- spect and made futile efforts to pull myself up. “Do you know what it Is to want #9 30 to 40 bushels wheat barley, flax, hay. ete. in ON THE PRINCE . ool Dept. 103 Seattle, Wa. SCHOOL TEACHER'S LONG RIDE CENTRALIA, Oct. 31.-——-Mias Cas aie Cales, a school teacher at Ran- die, rode 68 miles on horseback in order to attend the annual insti tate, which opened in Chehalis. It took two days to make the trip. [THE MARKETS | prices chants ; paid by the retailer to the commis. Toners. The prices paid the farme Price,” Fate to- and have a good y people. Admission 16¢ Dodge—When 1 was «road I was constantly taken for a certain crown prince whom I believe I re- semble. Hodge—I suppose you had to shell out some large ttps. Dodge—No; I let the prince get the reputation~of being a piker. HUSBAND DID NOT SHOOT WIFE (By United Frees Leased Wires SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 31.—- Practical exoneration from all sus) Chucks ....-. NA picion in connection with the shoot- og FG. I full eut.. ling of his beautiful young wife {Five So 4° jcame to W. P. McComas, a wealthy | ifinds, steer mining engineer, here today, with |reports of physicians who operated jon the woman, who is now con- ceded to have shot herself in the McComas apartments here yester- day after a quarrel with her hus band, which was the finale of an all night tour of the beach resorts, Dr. Wallace Terry and Dr. Her- bert Merrili operated on Mrs. Me- Comas today at Aldier sanatorium, where she was taken after the shooting. The physicians removed a portion of her skull, found that |the bullet had taken a circular toe | OUT, and declared Fly ® i ace sible for it to have ma fir by L mee the an fpne| anyone but herself. in front of - block, and think fe. 35 erat GALLOWS ROBBED ver that they are wrong DF) (my United Press Leased Wire) NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C., Oct. 31.—Death came between Convict re a oe bf ind and the vcomegge be when the! night, son, together with er pean” on santher convict, named Smith, “0 Feds 75,000 those| killed a guard in the Dominion pen- sa the bn convinced) jtentiary here. Wilson and Smith for fi me were only yesterday afternoon in- L. dicted for trial by the grand jury. Wilson died from blood polson|,, caused by being shot while attempt- ing to escape from prison. CARDINAL FARLEY “OUT WEST” DENVER, Colo., Oct. 31,—After a visit to the tuberculosis sani- tariums following his dedication of the Imm: ate Conception cathe- *|dral here, Cardinal John M. Fa) of New York is on his way today to Salt Lake City, where the car- dinal and his party will spend a day ax guests of Bishop Scanlon, uy! ‘al « prices, unless other are for strictly first Fune—Puying Price. Ewes, ranch wish int. erades 42 ‘Pork Dressed bogs Trimmed sides Short loln pork Shoulders Pign teet Spare ribs Pork sausage Liver sausag Hologna Bacon Botled barn... ue, each « Ox ones, x tr Hens . Turkeys, Roosters, live, Ib. Spring ducklings & ONT DK. BROWN. 4 tet of the off Ducks, 014, ive, Ib. Heotn, i 0 el ‘Turnips, sack Fe stern Ratnothy un wv jock 5 ‘*f the Postal Tele~ People wie wank?” boore got me. I) me, so/ & drink: More than once I walked al! the way to Georgetown to get} fone. I knew a bartender out there who was friewdly and would trust me when I was broke. “Mave you ever reached the | point when, for days at a time, you could neither eat nor sleep and when, in the endiese hours of the night, wild, senseless thoughts surged through your fevered brain? if you have ever had insomnia you have suffered a similar torment. You fight, and fight, and fight. You say, ‘t will i aod “twill steep’ and ‘| will NOT drink.’ | “But by and by all the power of} resistance seems to leave you, and you surrender again-and again and again a drink. You would steal for a drink. You would, perhaps, com mit murder for a drink, if you could get it no other way “it was that way with me. Final- ly, one day, | was standing before a bar, with a drink in front of me, but | could not lift it to my tips. God, how | wanted that drink! 1 ltried with one hand, but It shook |as with a palsy, and the stuff stop ped over on the bar. | tried with both hands; but the glass kept slipping through my fingers. “My mind, you understand, was clear, | remember that the ban tender laughed and helped mq raise the glass to my lips, and drank After that my recollection § o levents fs not clear. I was in man saloons, I was drunk all the tf 1 drank more and more to the horrors of sobering up. in rooming souses time, Some nights I didn't kno TARRED GIRL SAY And you would beg for} THE STAR--THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1912. CURED OF A TERRIBLE DISEASE WHICH WAS KILLING HIM; CURED BY KINDNESS where I was, “Then one day | found myself in the alley just outside The Open Door. | didn’t even know what part of town | was in. | was sick, | think | was going mad. ‘I bumped against this door. Someone within opened it, Then a spoonful of soup trickled down my |throat--the first food 1 had tasted jin | don’t know bow many days. It was hot. and peppery, and savory trong with the juice of beef. ext, | wae in bed—a soft bed, with clean sheets. Though 1 do |Rot remember it, I know now that the superintendent, before he put jme to bed, stripped my vile rage |from me and washed my body. “1 alept the clock around, realized where | was, and wee giad. But that night | got drunk again, and @tayed drunk four da: 1 came beck to The Open » Four times | fell, for the disease is not conquered in a day. And each time the euperintendent jisughed end eeid: ‘We'll try again, my friend.’ en, one day, the superintend- id me that he had once gone same route I had traveled, oly be had gone farther than | had! gone, He got converted, he told me, and after that he did not want the drink. "Weil, | don't know much about tianity, but I know kindness I meet {t. I found The Open , and a friend waiting for me I needed & friend most. And that realization came to me ppotite left me. can eat now, and sleep like a ind my strength has com: The thought of drink WORE WOMEN’S CLOTHING | NORWALK, 0., Oct, 31.—-The lit- jtle town of Clarksfield today was thrown Into a fever of excitement and gossiping is rife as to the identity of the six prominent |Clarkstield township men who have beon indicted by the grand jury for |rlotous conspiracy following a three weeks’ investigation into ring of pretty Levalley on the evening of Aug. 30. | reste. The general impression had pre Get the Original ona Genuine HORLICK’S MALTED MILK The Food Drink for All Ages Rich Mik, Malt Grain Batract, Powder Not in Any Milk Trus! Ts" Insist on “HORLICK’S’ ‘Take « package home AMUSEMENTS SEATTLE THEATRE Phone Main 4%, TONIGHT—ALL WEEK WIGGS OF THR CABBAGE PATCH” Evenings, 200, 80¢ and 60e. SS Mats. eee BIL IL The Heavyweight Juggler AUL SpADoNt R BIG 8. & ©. Hoth Phones 6108 “CALIFORNIA” A Big Operetta, with 16—IN THE CAST—16 The PANTAGES Matinee Dally Twice Nightly , First Appearance in Amerte “THE GARDEN OF ALLAH (Greatent Moving Pieture Hyer Made.) “THE sragenc JOHNNIES” 4 the tareifor several days. 18-yearold Minnie |that the tarring was caused by agi ;¥ailed here that the perpetrators of the crime were women. On the \ulght in question, according to the first story told of we crime, as Levalley was persuaded to take a walk into the woods near the town by two women, where it was said ® pot of tar had been kept boiling It was said then tation over reports as to the young a prices! The names of the indicted men are | woman's conduct. |being kept secret pending thelr ar-| The girl, however, told a differ. ent story to the grand jury. She |waid that on the evening of Aug. 30 lhe was on her way home, when she was seized by two men, din gulsed as women, and carried to a barn, Rage were placed in her mouth. Unce at the barn, she sald, hér clothes were pulled from her and she was held down while the tar was poured on her. HE MIGHT HAVE CAUGHT BURGLAR if Frank Gordon, clerk of Judge Gordon's justice court, had paid a little more attention to football while he was in college, and less to law, he would today be celebrating the eaptare of a burglar. But he turned to legal torts instead of tack les, and his burglar got away. wife told him that she heard a man in the basement He turned on the basement light, opened the door, and, as he did so, @ man rushed out, headed straight for the Taspberry hedge. Gordon is pretty spry himself, and as the man charged the hedge he made a flying tackle. He missed by six inches. The burglar hit that hedge In real full-back etyle, the hedge gave way, and while the tackler was scram- bling to his feet, the Intruder was making a touchdown-run down the street. NATIVE SONS HONOR IDGE MACKINTOSH ive Sons of Washington will Rive’ a dinner Friday evening in the Washington Annex for Judge Kenneth Mackintosh. Judge Mack- f Ih, one of the founders of the organization, is the first Native Son to be appointed to the superior fh. Only King county products be served, and it 1s planned to have every section of the county represented on the menu. Oakiand.—After telephoning the police that two robbers had mur- deréd a man in a lot, Jos, Santos awaited the arrival of the officers, Vhen the: me Santos explained the “dead” man got up and walked away. THEY WEREN’T (HER FRIENDS | E BAN DINGO, Oct. 31,.—-Mont of the hearing in the case of Hubert G, Lewis, on trial for the murder of ©. H. Tolliver, the airship inventor, and Mrs, Toliver, was devoted to the reading of testimony in the dat vorce case brought a year ago by Mrs. Lewis on the advice of the Tolivers, That sult was unsuce ful and the couple reunited Reading of the minutes of the dl- voree trial showed that after the testimony had been given, Patter: son Sprigg, attorney for Mra. Lewis, told the court he had be com ground for divoree. commenting on the case, had become evident that the Toll vers were not good friends of Mra, Lewis. REDDING, Cal, Oct, 81.—In spired by religious fervor, Edw Howard, a ranch hand, confessed to the murder of Frank Greenburg, near Fort Worth, Tex. in Decem ber, 1900, and ts today in jail here formally charged with the crime. Howard, who was employed on a ranch near Twin Valley, 36 milen east of here, first told the story of the murder to his employer, C. H Pabo, of Oakland, who is a mis sionary. The only defense he of- fered was that Greenburg would not pay him wages due. “lam anxious to square myself with God and the law,” said How- ard JOHNSON CASE UP NOV. 12 CHICAGO, Oct. 31.—Judge Frye postponed consideration of the ab- duction case against Jack Johnson until Nov, 12. Until this case is disposed of, Lucille Cameron, the 1Syearold white girl, in connec tion with whose alleged abduction the negro prizefighter in accused, will be held under the court's or ders, although directly in custody of her mother, Mrs. F. Cameron Falconet, of Minneapolis. Once a Bartender, Now He's a Bishop any years ago a boy slipped bar many a schooner of and poured out many a “pony” for the parched and thirsty throated river men who frequented the tavern bar ou the Susquehanna, The rough frequenters of the bar called him “Mary” because he was eo slight and so little like them- selves. “Mary” in today Bishop Wiiliam P. Eveland, head of the Methodist missionary church work in south- ern Asia, and he will soon sail for his new field. He has been bar. tender, bootblack and candy maker, He attended a Methodist revival, and soon after took up religious work. He did janitor work to get through college and become a preacher. FIRST REPORT ON FAIR’S FINANCES {Bx Uelted Freee tensed wire AN FRANCISCO, Oct. 31.—The first report of Rodney 8, Durkee, comptroller of the Panama Pacific exposition, handed to President Chas. C. Moore today, shows that but $2,325,801 of the signed sub- scriptions pledged for financing the exposition have been pald in. This is fust a little over 38 per cent of the amount promised, Although the expenditure of the buildings and grounds committee has been im excess of $3,000,000, there still remains a balance in the treasury of $630,044, 100,000 IN CLUTCHES OF LOAN SHARKS NEW YORK, Oct. 31.—More than 100,000 persons, including 30,- 000 municipal employes, are in the clutches of New York loan sharks, according to figures published here today. The report also says the money lenders are responsible for a great many suicides, defalcations and petty thefts. Recommenda- tions also are made to put the loan sharks out of business. (By United Prese Lensed Wirey PORTLAND, O 31.—The case of Charles L, the celebrated trick chimpanzee, whose owner is suing the Northern Pacific for $200,000 for his death, will prob- ably go to the jury in the federal court today. All of the testimony ia in, and it !s quite probable that the decision in the case will be ten- dered to the interstate commerce commission to govern that body in adjusting 1k@ cases, The case is being watched with interest by‘railroads and theatrical managers throughout the country. The bringing of expert witnesses from the Hast by the railroad to rove that the monkey died of tu- |her opportunities and linger jong VIKING’S DAUGHTER LIVED ON CANNED FOOD AND CANNED MUSIC—EATS SALAD DAILY NOW if you would interview the, Her age is 19. Her eyes are blue viking’s daughter, you must catch|Her cheeks are pink. Her hair is her between shopping trips. For/light brown, These are statements the viking and his daughter have of fact. Her charms do not need just returned from the whaling sta-| literary embellishment. tion at Akutan, and the latter is| Canned Food and Canned Music. making up for lost time. Her English is charmingly pre When you are on a whaling |cise. She was not “lone-lee” on steamer you wear rubber boots and the ship because she worked hard ollsking, and n ers of the ward-jand found everything “ver-ee _in- robe are not considered important. |ter-esting.” They fed their bodies The colffure is an inconsequent|on canned food and thelr souls on trifle. And there are no manicur-|}canned music ists on whaling ships. | Therefore the viking’s daughter It is not strange, then, that when |finds double pleasure in dainty the viking's daughter returns to ciy- | food, napkins and finger bowls and ‘ization and the land of stores and music that is not canned. Indeeér shops she should make the most of |she made her viking father install * plano in their suite at the Wash- ington Annex, for she is an accom- plished musician. over lingerie and ribbons and laces and all the thousand and one pretty erculosis or some kindred disease has cost the railroad thousands of ars. and costly trifies that delight the heart of woman, even the heart of a viking’s daughter who slays whales. But, she adds, whaling is hard, rough work, and not good for mu- sicianly hands. ;. The thing the viking’s daughter The viking is Captain Sverdrup, hankered for most when at the sta- who discovered the magnetic pole, | tion was a crisp, fresh lettuce salad. built the Fram of South Pole fame, Such a salad is, it seems to her, the and accompanied Amundsen on his | very antithesis of the “hor-rob-bell trip through the Northwest passage. | od-or of the whale.” She eats salad Hie daughter is Miss Audhild| three times a day. Sverdrup, who for six months did Originally Captain Sverdrup and man's work aboard her father's ship his daughter came from Christiana. with only sailormen for company, | Horn to the sea, the captain abhors and the nearest women indian life ashore, and his daughter takes ‘women ashore. after him. Paid Advertisement. Good Roads Mean to the farmer what GOOD street car service means to the city man Vote for 160 miles of good country roads and 64 miles of paved highways within the limits of Seattle $3,000,000 Bond Issue November 5, 1912. National Park Route ROUND TRIP TO SPOKANE ACCOUNT National Apple Show Tickets on Sale November 10, 11 and 15 Final Return Limit November 19 Three Trains Each Way Daily ving Seattle 9 a, m., 7:10 p. m., 10 p. m. TICKET OFFICE COLUMBIA AND SECOND Cc, W. MELDRUM, City Passengér and Ticket Agent. L

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