The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 11, 1913, Page 1

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¢ nd at al, he all it, ed ve ht or. cancelled two trains out of Seattle and two out of Tacoma. The company took off the tra 12:05 noon and 2:05 p. m. There were many others who did likewise. “Was it made in Seattle?” Ask your grocer and your merchant that question when you are spending your money VOLUME NO. 168. 15, SEATTLE, — LAWYER DEAD OF INJURY Be Judge R. George Mangled and Crushed in Downtown Elevator. DIES THIS MORNING Operator Accidentally Starts Car; Jams Attorney Against Wall. By Fred L. Boalt. I have a great scheme. It popped into my head just now as | glanced over the pages of the new Seattle Blue Book which is off the press to- day. I am going to tell Harry Whit- ney Treat about it, and, if he will go in on it with me, we will make a lot of money. And I will become, with Harry, a dictator in society. Frankly, | do not care much for the Blue Book. There are 1,300 names in it. A Blue Book is sup- posed to be society’s “Who's Who.” Society, to be genuine, must be ex- clusive and limited in its membership. I contend that there cannot possibly be 1,300 members of society in Seattle. The social climber will agree with me that “society” derives its author- ity, not from within, but without. If the people who are not “in” want to get “in,” then it is society. But if they don’t care a cuss about getting “in,” R Judge R. R. George, one of the beat known lawyers of Seattle, for mer justice of the peace, and pr dent of the King County Humane weciety, died at the city hospital this morning as the result of an elevator accident at 9:40 Wednes fay night in the Lyons building, where George had offices. As George stepp at the firs @ up and jamn the elevator and the shaft He was dragged almost feeond floor defo: the was dropped to % feet to the basement ees A * * Tells of Accident then it is not society. Nor it society At the hospital he regained con-|| if they all want to get —and do. > make a| the accident. | elousness sufficient! ‘Wiel statement of Look at it this wa Vic, the artist, and I arbitrarily declare that we are “society.” We put on hoity- toity airs and cut the editor dead when we meet him in the street. Are we “society”? It depends on the attitude of Art, the office boy. If Art says, “Yah, yah! Who wants to get into your old ‘society’?” then we are not society. We are ridiculous. But if Art, and the editor, and the foreman of the composing room, and a lot of others say, “Gee! Don’t we Boalt’s Going Into Society! Judge R. R. George G. G. Campbell, E Young and George W. Beeler at Dn. Weldon | A 3. JUDGE The Seattle & Pu | BROWN FINES | MEAT PACKER $500 7 aint was made ND YET THEY SAY THEY HAVE Two weeks ago the Puget Sound Electric railway, operating the Seattle-Tacoma interurban, 8 leaving Tacoma at 10:30 a. m. and 12:30 p. m. and Seattle at On the day before these trains were cancelled, a resident of Foster, coming to Seattle on the train that left Tacoma at 10:30, had to stand up all the way into Seattle. As a matter of fact, about every time they came to Seattle on that train they had to stand up. Go any night you may happen to have time to the corner of Occidental av. and Yesler way, where the interurban cars take on their loads at 5:05 and 6:05 p. m. FAIR TONIGHT AND The Seattle Sta THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS. WASH., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1913 wish we could be ‘in’ society with Vic and Boalt?” then we would be society indeed. Which brings me again to my big scheme and the Blue Book. If anybody is in society, Harry Whitney Treat is. I’m going to pro- pose that he and I get out a Blue Book next year. It will contain just two names—his and mine. Not an- other darn name! Then won't there be some sore- heads in this town! We will sell our Blue Book for $10 the copy. A thing, to be ex- clusive, must be expensive. In the years that follow, Harry and I will be seen together constantly. We will be inseparable. Harry will be seen in my box at the theatre. The society columns will note that Boalt is Harry’s guest on a yachting cruise. Boalt will drink Harry’s cham- pagne, and Harry will feel free to borrow Boalt’s makin’s. Picture now the jealousy of the ambitious climbers. Imagine the horde of snobs seeking to win our smiles. Vision the subtle wiles of |; the bourgeois rich. Invitations will be showered upon us. “Good things” in business will be put in our way. Then, quite frank- ly, we will say: “For so much money we will put your name in next year’s Blue Book. they fall for it? Tut, tut! Do fish swim? If 1 pass you in the street tomor- row or next day with my nose in the air you will know that [ have seen Harry. FRIDAY; MODERATE = * O RAISE THE RATES! men crawling through the windows of the cars because the seats are all taken and You'll see the platforms jammed so that the passengers can’t get through. There’s always a little bit of room inside into which an ordinary man can squeeze, so they crawl through the window rather than wait an hour. The other night we saw Bob Bridges, the port commissioner, crawling through a window. He does it without ruffling a feather because he has become an expert. And still Attorney Howe, representing the interurban line, shed tears before the state public service commission, so moved was he for the welfare of his masters. They were going broke, he said, if the commission wouldn’t let them raise their rates! EASTERLY WINDS, The Star Is the Paper That Goes Into the Home! More Than 40,000 Sold Every Day; son | Number Is Growing Steadily OKO A AYHOR ‘DIES ON VOYAGE Mayor of New York Stricken in Mid-Ocean While Seeking Health. |OLD WOUND BLAMED ON THAINS AND NEWS STANDS. fi ONE CENT. A LATE PHOTOGRAPH OF MAYOR GAYNOR BIPLANE DIVES IN. CROWD opeller of Machine Cuts Woman Spectator and Boy to Pieces. MAN IS DECAPITATED Four Killed and Seventeen | | Attempted Assassination Two Injured in Odd | Years Ago on Steamer Accident Now Causes Death. COBLENZ, Germany NEW YORK, Sept. 11 Suc cumbing to the effects of an assas- |sin’s bullet, two years ago lodged in his neck, Mayor Wm, J. Gaynor of New York is dead today aboard the steamer Baltic, which | will reach Queenstown, Ireland, to- night on its voyag: from this city. 11.—Four persons were instant. killed and probably fatally, near 17 others injured, two which Buchen beuren today, when a biplane driven by Lieut denly dived among | | Sept. | Teuberne sud- the spec- tators Mayor died yesterd A woman and a boy were cut His 5 who was with to pieces by the propeller of |him, immediately sent the news by the machine. | wireless to Queenstown, wnence it A man was decapitated anda | |was cabled here. patroiman's skull was crushed. | Immediat on the liner’s land- The spectators were watching | | in body of the the flight of Lieut. Schneider, | will be shipy ack to when Teuberne’s aeroplane div- ed among them without warn- ing Bullet Lodged in Neck | Though heart failure was given }as the immediate cause of the may- jor’s death it was indirectly due to» the bullet from the revolver of his paehatei tr assailant, John J. Gallagher. Lee Strait VP ER ROOD. The ball lodged in Gaynor's neck, suspended for the remainder of the | where it was a constant source of discomfort to him, and recently renee oe Manager Raymovd na caused repeated fits of vomiting, pas weakening the victim’s heart, grad- Strait drew his suspension for his ually breaking down his health and William J, Gaynor was born at Whitestown, Oneida county, N. Y., in 1851. In 1873 he moved to Brooklyn and worked on New York and Brooklyn papers while studying law. He was admitted to the bar in 875, failure to take proper care of him-| self, He has been out of the game for the past week, said to have been suffering from ptomaine poisoning SELLS MURPHIES IN compelling him to spend much of his time at his country ho | On the day he sailed, Mayor Gay- He became nationally known for his work in breaking up rings/"or told Secretary Adamson, to within the democratic party and his action im securing the conviction) Whom Rufus Gaynor's wireless mes- of John Y. Kane for election frauds. sage was addressed SACK; GETS $10 FINE Gaynor was elected judge of the supreme court of New York in) “Il am constantly coughing and ; 1893 and re-elected in 1907. He resigned in 1909 and was elected mayor. | Suffer from an incessant itching im . “ A He twice declined the democratic nomination for governor, and was ™Y throat It is terribly weaken- J. V. Stanley, of the commission | mentioned as a presidential possibility in 1908 ard 1912. *|ing and wearing on me. I cough so firm of Glickman & Stanley, 920 ise vi hier i bl Siri th | much that I am afraid of weakening Western av, was fined $10 this my heart. I feel s as if it orning by J police i would burst.” court for sel by the Of Course It’s None of Our Business, BUT— i : sack Instead of by weight Why 4 * HI Gilt b ‘ Sails for His Health y doesn’ uy a toupee? The strain and excitement of thi Why didn’t Dr, Matthews take that automobile mayoral nominating campaign Why does big, 350-1b. Crawford E. White wear a Norfolk sult? Why not a Little Lord Fauntleroy costume for Crawford? And a lace collar? against the THE OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE Why doesn't Dan Landon get a megaphone? Why doesn’t Dugdale have a bali game at his park some day? Why doesn’t Judge Humphries join the Turnverein? in September was still further ex- hausting to the aged city execu- tive, and on September 4 he decide ed suddenly to sail for Europe, take ing his son, Rufus, and a nurse with j him. | “The first message telli |mayor's deatt s of the was telephoned to feet bic He had sustained in-|ing Co., and Monroe |me at my home,” said Secretary Meal injuries, fracture of ‘the| vice r SIX ( ‘Hil DREN WITH |Adamson. “I did not believe it, but ke ose, jaw, and com-| max a : ~ urrie Oo mM f othe found fractures of the left arm and| frown, upon conviction of having | ties Crawford E. White and Louis - ae bh: the hip. sold 29 cans of te Mary-|Silvain prosecu' the case. F company sent the original ites most of the 2 eine Johnson of the | | agi oned to Mrs Gaynor, at Young and R. D. Forbe » with » justice ants | ington, state chemist he, Is a % She collaps Bri A tebe hf a ome eens ncaa ca FOR MURDER TRIAL 22008255 Morning punishm fixed law is alto-|for human consumption, The cans |covered later and is now bearing up Operator. Faints Puiee too small for the nature of|were corroded, he sald, and the i oo pis A. “ Beckw the crime ee ee Mrs. Ada Pond Westman killed}ed © woman's innocence. To the| _ bast Message to New York om . | | her husband, Carl Axel Westman, | Coroner's jury she testified that nee Q nor's last message to mes | | she went to the tman home to |New ork, sent to the Evening a final! OLD IT at Winslow on April 28, last, so toothache medicine, and Mail Friday, read hed finally recovered that her alleged relations with a he found Mrs. Westman ir The rent payers and taxpayers mable him to go t« sit | neighboring rancher, Peter Bow, bed at the exact ne the murder|of New York will not throw the @iarters, where, while esa SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 11 might not come to light in the di-jof Westman took pl seve government of the city back inte Matement, he again co 4 SAN 1s : Pies Ma ees nl cal ie ct vorce proceedings, which she start-| miles away in the Hall shipyards,|the hands of an outside king graft. é 1 must have got sot the ng a} ay anes 38 ed, and so that she might not be) where he was employed as watch-|er. Nor will they throw it into the troller instead of the of the | Maury ‘ and dunes on the outsk the deprived of the custody of her six| man control of a vulgar gang of grafters, fer, when I tried to close it be-|H. Harris, charged with conspiring | city, a lone highwayman early to-| i children and her interest in the) The alibi is further sus 4 by|all of one stripe, such as met at ~y Mr. George he said, “andlto saborn perjury, opened this day deratied an electric car, ro' bed | ‘ ranch at Island Center. tence from Mrs. Westman’s|Delmonico’s. They will give them » car tefore I could! morning 7 Conductor J. C. Byers and Mote ways _ This is the state's theory In the |« ren. All six of them are the shovel pa ft, h ween the jal Prosecutor Matt I. Sulll-| man C. 8 hrin of $13, and the You MAY BE murder case trial, which is on at| the courtroom, sitting beside thet king, no clown, shall rule ie t rounding reviewed elope f ! he scene tho | s , sha “sgl ating surrounding y wed the, opement ; tr C , ne. | ABLE TO GET AWAY Port Orchard. - : moth ee this town, That day has gone for Yiges and Camine with Marsha ake r sen Mrs estman’s defense is an rs. estman was exonerated | ever.” Judge was a resident of] Meniieion and Lola Norris, with | ger was returned | |(WITH THAT DINNER TABLE AlibI. She is represented by Attor-| by the coro: uty; but Bree] The anyors “iiarehon: te ae ue §g 22 years. 2 view to showing that ee per x # ae old ons ould i the} MANICURING AT HOME, neys G ge Olson and Judge Milo|cutor Moore was not satisfied with |meeting at Delmonico’s related to of the peace charges grew out of the two] bandit, 5 cents more. ow you fe ot the result, and after 0 e conference between “ Wag a candidate sy eee attempts to induce|have iwobits, the price of break Bur, NOT wHEeREe eR racainatib: iecidaty 1 the Jophi:| laveutigationt ted the oven iat te poniakeson errean boss” ou b h tor throug N ow bea quic y >, %, ¢ z ns ries ‘ahs or be fe Nis leu. et, = Marsha Warring on (thr nugh M ‘ fast. Now beat it qui I'M EATING !!! ty of Mrs, Peter Bow to Mrs, West-| chargin with murder in the|tenants, at which Edward McCall a 7 e Nell Rarton, to testify falsely in ne man first de Judec nch, before | was chosen Tammany’s mayor. Poarth av the Diszs and Caminett! white| HAS ANYONE SEEN ROBERT? _— bird Haw: tu Oncol the wiknwaade| WhUnl els ta auW cx taal cliowen! wity ckoniioe any’s mayor. et Will be held by © lave cases. Robert J. Hanae 10 years old,| | relied n to establish the accus- | her g0 on $6,000 ba When notified of his nomination, mn. 2 1 SS left his home % Walnut av.,| IP ARSE TST ee ia . a pice anaree em tccend ptember 3, Mayor Gaynor was | Tuesday morning for school, and |too weak to speak, and his accept: HE STAYED AWAY | bas not been heard of since. He | | ' ! ance was read for him. Secretary |described as ht « exioned H H Adamson described him today as ae blue-eyed, and wearing a green] having thrown himself into a chai ones se a air és LOS ANGE pt, 11—The- | suit Moan ca ane h patie Garris aris in his office, following the nomina Their m a 7 odore L. Froeh chief teller Mrs. J. W. Clark of the Wright) FORT SMITH, Ark., Sept. 11—/tion ceremonies, and. murm Ht age span-| 0 ’ | hotel, 166 Washington at., was Nineteen-year-ol : nH , Tah : Roe ned 16 y 1 Wr Marah lot ahd tional Savings and |{ | | ashing , n-Year-old Lydia Karnopp,a “I'm tired out; I'm tired out 1913, the of antare. Gr | aahanae here, committed | When You Want Some- booked for reckless driving Wed- daughter of a local 1 saved He had expected to remain but a ote it w ‘oc rit, | suicide by oti, uimself thr thing Call Main 9400 nesday afternoon, and r ased on the life her pet ¢ but she short time in England, de Lollia $) a A H i he heart In Seba ser hi rye ; : : $50 bail after her auto struck Starr | will be a cripple for life as are ey rd ph te voyages la Spann and t © babies a resident in pizich of the || 0} ave a telepho: ‘on || ‘ the ocean than his sta broad ; n| Pr ee a ' A tolept ' y Pfell, 16, at Fifth av. S. and Dear-| sult of her d Running in front ofit hin amine aaa bank stated that Froehling r may phone 1 Hl ents || benefit him counts were perfect shape 1 te 1 wil! (AN born, Je sustained a broken thigh | of a street car, she pushed the dog! With Gaynor'’s death, Adolph r ¢ o ees that Ps “ it in ua 1 give —— ———— iaeehencmeseneienticia and numerous bruises le was/to safety, but was run down and » president of the bo: of ale liilled himself because of ar them ‘and iil ba Gatt ia abel inaus al ‘n, a republican, becomes act- taken to his brother's hor 5515 her right was crushed off. = —— | Rainter av ? ; brace’ citloaa tite Bouve J. L, MeDalliare, 1226 17th av ’ nd Corte sho 229 Un | - ~ N was also injured by at wuto COUPON 18 fon Tete iy By a resolution passed by the | drive ¢ hose identity | tween Second and Third The Central Labor Council is i driven by a womaa, whi ntit NO. 65 or at P. H. Mutlen‘s, 6409 Bal. ||planning to extend a welcome to|P°"t , Commission, the pier head has not been learned. The accident be ony four coupons clipped from The Star, consecutively num lard No matter what you || ‘Tom Mann, the English labar lead ba Givvrmered ik MSO teat es ut iio Tt ; ee we LENOOT he Mu J. H. Scott, driv f wag red, ‘esented 5 ile want to buy or sell, elther ad * . Nes ce [nesday nigh 56 TIGRE 500 ~ kt small tory . vt preesng Sy phcbedeed ty vee ere t d at 7 Star office with 16 geritey wih Uiitebe ona me oe ei 1d || er, who will arrive In Seattle some beyond thes OOfoot Une establish: |hadiy bruised, ‘The woman aid not Thinking a sma pedo wrapped on, is under in connection Minnesota, Olic ond iaine Ponkareacerii: (att * Pennants will. be through its classified column time next month. Mann was firet ue i MLE NA sa wey the | stop. line aananlin wen at pple he as an Juveatiga cn: bala aa ent by mail if 5 cents additional for each Pennant is enclosed Remember, cash Want Ads ||secretary of the London Reform if rire” will, be compelled. to| tiyattcrowenie sh and Pine. nan WASH TEROPAD hac Reuaae Tota iotaet Pee oe ee s Bred," Mail to The Seattle Star, 1307 Seventh Avenue, near Union cost only one cent a word, and |/ (Union, and he hag beon prominent: shorten their length. This will |viation of worous sink Into, the: aubstance.¢ Whe torsade (and young men, tereARnle Nha eae | dis results are obtained j|ly identified In lajor moverhents widen the waterways 125 feet on |! meh Dee Calan anis can bein oded, almost ending the boy's ¥ 1 he netghborhood of S5th — - + in England sinee 188) each side, | rtisement ‘life and Greenwood

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