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Like the * idea of misdirected energy is for ‘a big, prosperous city fo waste any time on like Seattle petty police when there are so many big, things to be done. “VOL. 14. COAST BOR LEADER IN (By Unit 1 NAPOLIS. Nov. 1 fon to dynamite th Olaf A. Tveitmoe Trades Council, w fay in the trial of ur mite Clancy, another San Francisco labor leader, assisted McManigal said out the plans told mo,” Me, “Tveltmoe was) on the Coast. He was anything to! for Tveltmoe was Mayor McCarthy of In fact, Tveltmoe Press Leased Wire.) TO DYNAMITE 5.—Sworn detlaration that the ¢ Los Angeles Times building of San Francisco, secretary of as made wy Ortie E. McMani- nion men charged with illegally | HE PLAYS IN TWO Movies,” You Will Be Interested in The Star’s Stories Ab NO. 223. RONALD MAY GET ON BENCH Judge J. T, Ronald of the superior court may receive the appointment of federal judge from Presidem Taft in place of Judge Clinton W. How. ard, who is oceupying the bench at present by a recess appointment. Whether Judge Howard's name will be again sent to the senate is not quite certain, It is practical. ly sure (hat the senate will refuse to confirm it, so that President Taft would b* called upon to name some other candidate. By naming Ronald, who ts a dem- crat, Taft might get the senate’s confirmation and thereby succeed in blocking the appointment of a Wilson democrat, Furthermore, if Taft takes Ronald off the superior court beach it would leave a vacancy SEATTLE THEATRES AT THE SAME TIME David .Kaplan |- with him to the Co, near San Fran- the explosive with building was so many people ied, but seemed sorry that “Bad escaped. On the Bast, he said he was so many people about the explosion, everybody was look- Finally Jim told me he ft no longer. He got ‘at Salt Lake City and re ‘the explosion, McN id me, was Tveitmoe. He as Jim always for shooting and and Otis Sanford, last August, took dn his own. ee getting up a sel | He claims the Sanfords him at the end of the intention to “knock HIS FOR LUCK? Cal., Nov. 15+-Town G. R. Hendrix, saloon- | st $3,000. He got into an! about it and was fined) he found a buyer for/ } fintures. After that a crashed = through Wrecked the place begun laying eax I stop them?-—H Your hens are veg have can dinner, on which Of bread should the Inquiring 12 people prefer to but-) on the top, but 46 #0 on the bot- turn the stice over I make a window box?—! SP & Go0d-sized purse and | years oid and am very fre, with = young indy | another city @ tegularty, put ful that I do n Points tr ndence of t ink should 1.000,—-5. BD. | | ot} We am ti- days %, T send some drawing by| YorR magazine, are} d class mntter?—se | drawings to an art ask his opinion. | TWO BOYS, “vicn FRED L. soaLT luckier? ore me a photograph Vincent Astor. Work. qs i~ hia drawing board next to | | } ' WARREN KERRIGAN Want to see the handsome cow- boy actor with the dreamy eyes? | Well, he will be playing In two) different Seattle moving picture houses tonight at the same time! Strange folks, these photo-picture performers! For example, the handsome Warren Kerrigan (that's his mame) will be playing tonight in probably a thousand different) theatres, and he will be thrilling perhaps a half million people. Kerrigan plays for the American Film Co, which makes its moving pletures at Santa Barbara. Cal., and the nickel shows throughout the! country use these films. Practical-| ly all of the nickel movies in Se-| attle have had Kerrigan, and many of the dime houses are glad to get! him. This week he is entertaining) the patrons of the Circuit theatre! |in the leadfng role of “The Intru-| | sion at Lompoc,” and at the same time Savoy patrons enjoy bis act ing in “The Fear.” He has also been seen at the Isis, | | the Melbourne, the Washington, the Black Cat and the Odeon. Warren Kerrigan is a matinee idol in the moving picture world Kerrigan used’ to be known as the “Gibson man.” Before he joined the “movies” he played the e7-1| leads for two seasons in “Brown of | 7, Harvard.” Of course, ber him in “The Bes! “The New Cowpuncher Promise.” He was the doctor in “The Ref- ormation of Sierra Smith,” and played “Jack” in the picture drama, “The Jack of Diamonds. you rei Man W | and “ The| ing of age by taking possession of New York realty and stocks and bonds worth easily $75,000,000. Now, it is a pecullar coincidence that “Vie” Gauntlett, Star artist, is also 21 years old today. “Vic” is celebrating by putting in several hours at his drawing board. To- morrow the cashier In the business office will hand him an envelope with some money in it, The “flimsy” telis me—the story, of course, wan written at the New York end of the wire, and the writer, I suspect, is an unconscious | snob—the “flimsy” tells me that young Astor fs the most eligible | young man in America, if not in THE WHOLE WORLD, and that all the mammas of daughters in the “smart set” are scheming to get him for a son-in-law. Isn't After a Wife Vincent, however, “realizes that wealth so Vast as his entails great responsibilities,” and he denies that he is engaged to anyone or even thinking of marriage. “Vic” is not thinking of marriage either, but for other reasons. | Sth Ie “Vic” Gauntiett, Star besides the pictur “ihewe wom tne t A informs cel a page e\egraph rating his com- me that young | The “flimsy” gives a wealth of |detail, Vincent is well set up and weighs 140 pounds. ic” ie also |well set up, but he’s 10 pounds for Hay to fill and this Ix not dis pleas to the old crowd which is about to Ko out of power. Before taking the superior court bench by appointment from Gov, Hay, Judge Ronald was a member of the firm of Ballinger, Ronald & LISTER SAFE IF COUNT STANDS Despite the alleged Juggling of figures by Hay appointees, a. plar ality of 603 in or of Rrnest Lis tor still stands today. With bet two precinets missing in Jefferson county, that have no more than 30 votes each, the total vote shows Lister 97,219 and Hay 96,611 Lister's Lead Here. The official canvass of returns !s being made by every county today tm King county, the canvassing board meets at 8 o'clock. Deputy Auditor Pendigton, however, had completed the check in the guber-| Ratorial and congressional election |at noon. His figures show that) fom Chi Lister Jeads Hay in this county by 7414, and that Hay leads Hodge by only 199 votes. The totals are: 27, Hodge 14, 7 Congressman Humphrey leads Dan Landon in King county 353 votes the totals showing umphrey 20.480, Landon 20,127, and Hetfner 18,222. Detectives Stilt! at Work. Chairman Hugh Todd of the dem ocratic je committee, ls keeping the Burns men on the trail of the Hay men throughout the state until the final check is made and the op- portankies for counting Lister out! are completely climinated ALIENISTS CRAZY, SAYS SCHRANK MILWAUKEE, Nov. 15.—In a confidential mood, John Schrank, charged with assault and attempted murder of Col. Theo. Roosevelt here, told Dis- triet Attorney Zabel here to- day that he believed the alien- ists appointed to examine him were crazy. The lunacy commission prob- ably will make ite report to morrow on Sehrank’s condi- tion. AFTER INFORMATION ON STONE-WEBSTER OLYMPIA, Nov. 15.—Chairman George A. Lee and Commissioner Harry Wilson of the public service commission, who left for Washing- ton, D. C., last Wednesday, to at tend the convention of the National Association of Railroad Commis sionérs, will make a trip to Boston to get data on the Stone-Webster interests in Washington, and will also go to New York to get first- band information on the Pacific leptione and Telegraph Co. PORTLAND, Or.-—John Bun- ny, not of moving picture fame, hit Honus Blatz in the eye, and now wants to sue Blatz for damages. The eye was glass, and Bunny bruised his fingers painfully. Aa I shift my eyes from the ple- ture of Vincent to the face of “Vie” at his drawing board, I seem to see & resemblance—a fancied one, probably. But this I know, that both were born of woman, and each has the customary number of fingers and toes. Strip them of their clothes and they would be alike as peas ina pod. Iffam any faces, “Vic” has the greater force, the higher Intelligence Vincent never earned a dollar in his life and never will, “Vic” be- gan hustling for a living when he was 12. Vincent doesn't know the value of a dollar. “Vic” knows the valuerot a two-bit piece. How “Vic” Broke in has ambition, When he waa 16, selling newspapers and running errands for a millinery firm, he used to draw cartoons and submit them to The Star. work was amateurish. The Star wasn't enthuslastic. ce seldom got past the office boy But he wore us out. He wouldn't quit trying. Ambition wouldn't let him. And so, in the end, The Star took him on and gave him the chance he wanted He's making good. He hopes to be a second *Vig” heavier than Vincent. Vincent's eyes are bine. So are “Vic's,” Cory. What is Vincent's ambition? To Judge of} | 15, 1912. ONE CE { | } | ' LITTLE FALLA, N. Y,, Nov. Mi! “There are still men who want to | die rather than lose thelr tiberty, and you can count on me when te time comes,” said Rev, G o RR. Lung, socialist mayor of Oe tady, N. Y¥., as he walked into jail this afternoon to serve & y sentence rather than a fine and give up the right of Tree speech. There in a strike of the textile workers here. Police ate enforo ing a city ordinance which probity its speaking on the streets Mayor Lunn declares thin ordt- nance is unconstitutional, but the |police, urged on by mill owners, have enforced it rigidly. Taking the bit tn his teeth three wooks ago, be led a little party of | three, one of whom was his wife, mother of his five children, down to the elty park. There they spoke ldefense of their right to free lapecch. One man read a para- graph from the constitution of the | United States, another a quotation from a speech by Abraham Lincoln, od the woman read an excerpt rist's sermon on the mount Lunn Ie Convicted All were ar and carted off to jail, charged with “Inciting riot, a felony. A storm of protest fo! lowed. The charge waa reduced to a misdemeanor, Lunn, the first man to be. tried, was found guilty yesterday and sentenced to pay a fine of $50 or go to jall for 50 days. Determined to carry the fight to who are = ie of Kumanovo, on October fighting scenes, both in the BY R. J, MACHUGH. | The battle of Kumanovo be-! ganion Wednesday night at 8 o'clock, when a Turkish regu-| }lar division attacked the Ser | ; the last ditch, the etrike: beiok treated as were thom at Lawrence, Mass, last year, have promised to stand by to the finish. | So Lunn ta going to jail | “The people of America baven’t | lyet begun to realize what this fight means,” says Lunn Detperate fighting went on till) FAKE STORY beset sens om } At 1 in the mong the | The latest story about the work! Sepvians launched a counter jof the women protective officers! attack and the Turks were lengaged in safeguarding youss drigen ‘back into the hills girls was shattered today when the two girls aged 14 and 16 involved jin the case and their relatives made | statement to Chief Bannick prais-|were found whose heads | ing the two women officers for amashed by spades wielded their actions Servian irregular troops, who fought! The complaint mate against the with unadunted bravery all through women officers was voleed by two | th ight. ' young men from the navy yard, - Turn Guna on Troops. | who declared they had heen inter.| When morning broke the scene fered with by the “purity squad.”| was appalling. The roads and fields The girle who were with the two|weFe strewn with dead and wounded men, however, declare the com-|mep, and fhe Turks everywhere plaint made is false, were flying for thelr lives in panic; Rear Admiral Reynolds, without | before the infuriated Servians. At making any investigation of the | daylight the Servian artillery came) | merits of the cane, and without se-| inte action curing & statement from the giris| Dense swarms of fugitives in a or their relatives, complained to the | Narrow valley offered a target. The | navy department guns poured shrapnel! over the fly i lima Turke. The hall of lead and SENATOR RAYNER 1s irap mowed them down in heaps un | VERY NEAR DEATH Ul the roads were choked with dy WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.--Owing ing men or horses. One shell burst in the center of a | to a sudden relapse of Senator Rayner of Maryland, who i# seri colmn, killing the gun team and, fously ill from neuritis, members ovérturning a gun, completely | blatked the road. A wild panic-en of the family are at the bedside here today. Fear is entertained sued, The Turkish gunners cut the trages, lenving the guns and wag that Senator Rayner will not sur vive. viah outposts in front of Tova There mist but the cofmbatants to see each other was some the} moonlight enabled | battle. man were | by) ons bebind, and galloped up the val leyv@ver their own infantry, riding down men in the muddy road, where VINCENT AND “VIC”, ARE 21 TODAY. - WHICH IS add more millions to the superflu-)21-@ Mfetime of work, And even if ous fortune his father left him? To | he! Yarrives” and his toils are re- own a bigger and finer yacht than | warded, yet he cannot, in a whole Pierpont Morgan's? Or a motor-| lifetime, save against old age a sum boat faster than the duke of West-|eqtial to one year's interest on the minster’s? Or will he give his best | inferest of the Astor fortune! thoughts to polo, or art ad But “Vic” Isn't Jealou or the social graces? Suppose, just for fun, that * Vincent's income, which he! cotld earn a salary of $5,000, |doesn't earn, is $3,000,000 a year. | the average, during his whole life He can't possibly spend it That | “big money for an artist. Sup- income will pile up on him, year) pose, too, that he didn't spend a} jafter year, and he will be power. jeeme of it for anything. Saved ev. less to stop It. ery penny! | Golden Chains Will Fret Him. Tt would take him 15,000 years to He “possesses” this vast for-}earn a sum equal to the Astor for-| tune? He doesn't, IT POSSESSES | tune! |HIM. He will always be its slave,| “It isn’t fair!” you say | |The golden chaine will fret bim,| Oh, 1 don’t know, “Vic isn't but there will be no escape, He} jealous of Vineent, When “Vic” will never know who are his true} meets the right girl he'lt just nat- friends. How can he? urajly get married. Locally the} Lucky? I don't know. I'd like|event will be worth a paragraph or to have $75,000,000, But would I/so, but it won't be noticed in the enjoy {t? I can't eat more than! presa of the world, Designing three meals a day, I can't wear|mammas of .the “smart set” won't more than one sult of clothes at a) bother “Vic And he won't have grounds for suspecting that the 1) girl wants him for his money. And he'll know that his friends are real friends, who like him be- cause he’s “Vic,” and not because rated at so much by Bracstreet d Dun, Then, at race is run, ic" } on| time. te feels that way, too. know, because we bum around to-| |gether. I wonder If Vincent's appe- | | tite is as good as “Vie's.” | wonder | if he has “Vic's” capacity for gen: | he’ | ulne enjoyment “Vie” hasn't a dollar to bis name jthat he Lasn’t earned, He faces at the last, when “Vi O gorgeous cortege ipper photos show Mayor Lunn defying the chief of police to the arrest. jempt to read aloud the “Sermon on IE ERT S WIPED IN ONE MOONLIT NIGHT (EDITOR'S NOTE—R, J. MacHugh, a war correspondent with Bervien army, here gives the firet complete account of the out the Moving Picture Pla HAL cry NS AN ANDS Se o Lia iNT w | | | | | } | beneath ljunches of some of the miners and | i ] Below a picture of | OUT | | ) } 23-24, including a description of battle and during the retreat of Turkish army. The letter was delayed at Vranje by the strict | @ensership exercised on ail correspondents at the front.) j | they were trampled to death by the feet of their comrades behind. Oth ere were pushed over the edge of a precipice into the mountain \orrent below The path of the retreating Turk- ish troops has been marked by urder, mutilation, pillage, devas tation and arson. Bervian officers! report incredible cruelties commit ted by Turks on the Christian pop ulation, Wherever the Turks bad passed, the Servian troops found corpres lying about—disfigured bodies of women avd men and chil dren, with their eyes gouged out Women, it is alleged by the Ser- vians, were shamefully mutilated while sti! allve. Corpses of men| burned alive were found tied to trees, In one cares a body bore traces of having been roasted on a grill j | THINGS ARE RUNNING, IN FOURS WITH “MAC” Four months’ hard work In the woods, four hours of hilarity in the Occidental av. saloons, four blocks walk along the water front, four raps on the head, four hours’ un-| consciousness and four empty pock | ets, with a total émptiness of $160, | was the experience of J. R. McKen tie since August. The latter part was gone through | with last night GIRL HKOBOES FIND | TRIP STRENUOUS BAKER, Ore, Nov. 15. pretty girls, each 18, giving names of Kate Camel and Anna; Evans, are today recovering from the ardors of having “hoboed” from Boise, Ida. | The girls, who we beat their way to § they have frien to come out of a box car € ‘ation recently under, of the girls prevented her from | roughing it” further, LUCKIER? | Two | the trying ®, where VINCENT will follow him to the grave, No} relatives with “expectations” will! hurry through the obsequies to squabble over the dollars he leaves | behind, There'll be a few tears shed, but | they will not be crocodile tears, Excuse me, now. I must con-| gratulate “Vie” on being 21 years! old, healthy, hopeful and NO worth $75,000,000, | he Seattle Star _THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, NOVEMBRE HOME EDITION | church give his age . yers. Another Is Printed Today RYE, the packer, who has a tight on F his hands which is making cheaper meat, tells his side of it on page 4 today. Even if gou don’t eat meat (a lot of us don’t, owing to the money shortage), you'll be interested in what Mr. Frye has to say about it. TWO YOUNG WOMEN ENTOMBED WITH EIGHT MINERS (By United Press Leased Wire) SALT LAKE CITY, Nov 15.—Caught in a cave-in of the} old Horn silver mine at Frisco, Beaver county, two pretty girls, Misse Hazel \lexander 19 years eight ight buried tons of| jably were cut off in some of the lower levels, and, it ts feared, will succumb to fi Jamp before they ean be reached. in the party Alexander include and Arnold Robinson, sight- and Jim Riley, night shift boss. Koy Alexander, foreman o the mine, and father of the two girls, is orivoned with those ia the lower level stori communicati with five members of the %, npris- oned party, including the two} e girls. They were located at a| 9 Those Misses Banks seers with the David Daisy and aged 16 and respectively, with 1 miners and two male seers, this afternoon are thousand rock Rescuers minute re of working in 15 ys, suce water. We are not suffer * * rain tonight or Sat- & moderate easterly © Temperature at noon, ® * * KRKKKKKKKEK === SPECIALS IN THE NEWS | TEXAS WOMAN has just 000,000, IN THE partition of Turkey, Austria doesn't want Servia to get the second joint DANVILLE, ILL., democrats rub it in by burning “Uncle Joe” Can- non in’ effigy. MRS. CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT estimates that 50,000 women in New York support their husbands GOVERNMENT BULLETIN says farmers’ wives are joining wom- en's clubs, Prosperity has freed them of drudgery. BROOKLYN JURIES awarded $10,000 for the loss of a thumb and finger and only $1,500 for a life. POLE FINDER PEARY will sit at the north end of the table and Pole Finder Amundsen at the south end at the Explorers’ club banquet in January MARRIAGE AS a cause of insanity is suggested by the fact that there are more housewives in the Milwaukee county asylum than any other cluss of patients. WHEN A Sudbury, Pa., at 62, spot near the 300-foot level “We are not injured,” was the! word sent up the tube by Miss| ley Alexander. “We have the | a little ‘ H ing.’ | BOSTON, Nov 15.—An 4, Puperintendent W. A. Henderson, | autopsy performed here today ho is supervising the rescue work, | over 4 , said he hoped to reach the girls | 0ST the body of Miss .Mar- and the three miners included in| jOri¢ Powers, a stenographer thelr party early tomorrow. The| found di: in a bath tub in fate of the neven other jtaprisoned | the Revere house here, showed p is not kiown They pro b- | that she died from natural BRIBERY j causes. A statement to this JUROR jeffect was issued this after- SWITCHES }noon by Medical Examiner AGAIN) Magra TACOMA Nov! 18 ss Miss Powers,” he said, “was not tog of the sudden tagn af the wt: | murdered. Neither did she commit dence yesterday in the Houston | Suicide. Death was due to natural jury. ribesy.° cape, durot. ieaeast uses—enlargement or dilation of » from his home in Woodland |*h¢ heart 4 permission to go on the Miss Powers was found dead yes- * Hiate his affidavit e744 afternoon in the room which and “square himeelf. with the |®2¢ had occupied the night before court,” He declared he had been| With A. T. Cummings, a wealthy misied into signing it by. Juror | Produce dealer, by whom she was Milleson and Charley Peterson, one | ¢™l0: ee ae ee of the attorneys for the deferise, paces the: eutoome'; Ot: She: ee last Sunday jome in Wood- | PS last Sunday at his home in Wood-| “Cummings admits registering Judge Cushman refused Houston | ims Powers and himeelt at the and Bullock new trinis yesterday | hotel here as °O. F. Davis afternoon, after exposure by the | MAfe By was arrested Pe Sour kovernment of an alleged attempt | *fter the girl's body wi ne bey of Houston's friends or attorneys |) The water in which ¢ to use undue influence to get jury-| Mimeanee, which was as oid | men who convicted the men to| Sivstance, which pany eg swear falsely in an effort to get a| S108 of gin also was found on @ pg 3 or nearby table Samuel Milleson and John’ Bo- | CALIFORNIA gart hud made aftidavite they had | CLAIM CALIFO made a mistake in their verdict FOR TEDDY BY 200 Later the other jurors charged Mil-| SACRAMENTO, Nov, 15.—After leson’s affidavit was false a review of official and unofficial Houston and Bullock now must |totals reported from every county either accept sentence, or appeal to jin the state, Private Secretary Me the cireult court of appeals at San |Cabe, at the governor's office, to- Francisco. The _benalty may be day stated Roosevelt appeared to $10,000 fine or two years in prison|have carried California by more or both. than 200 plurality over Wilson. She went to visit “mamma.” That| wee eeaRRAEKHARARER was 19 years ago, She hasn't re-|% turned yet lt “WEATHER FORECAST On this" ground Fred Dickerson! Light believes himself entitled to a di-|% urday voree from Mrs, Jeasie Dickerson.|% winds He filed the complaint this morn-|% 51 ng. The couple have one child, al : irl of 19 kkk kkk sold a 1,000,000-acre ranch for $ bride of 20 heard the bridegroom at the she jilted him then and there. She didn't think he was so old PROSECUTED BY three wives on a charge of bigamy, prisoner zed for leniency from Judge Mulqueen of New York, on the ground pat he had been punished enough. Court dissented and gave him five Home and Clothes Two Interesting Subjects On page 8 The Hoff- man Cloak and Suit Co. have a message for the ladies of Seattle, which tells of seasonable merchandise to be sold at less than usual prices, It’ pays—and pays well to read the advertising columns of The Star carefully each day. On page 2 in today’s | Star will be focnd an an- | nouncement from Cal- houn, Denny and Ewing, | which will be of particu- lar interest to those who desire to get “back to | the land.” By the way, how about that want ad? You have something you'd like to trade or sell, haven’t you? A Star want ad will do the work and at a mighty small cost, Just phone Main 9400 or Elliott 44 or call in at The Star’s downtown office, at 229 Union st., with the Souvenir and Curio Shop.