The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 9, 1914, Page 1

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ee ree Why Does a Woman Cry “Without Any Reason’? Why Does She Sigh? Why UNSETTLED The SeattleStar SxymutetUUANNNEOOELAUUUTUAANATOEEEEEUU UAT ean we 42,000 Paid Copies Daily fe TMM VOLUME 15 and Some Other =" Ee ] . Bel =sa A View of New York? No, It’s Our New Skyline With the Things to Make Us Proud We Live in Bustling Seattle WEATHER? TONIGHT AND SATURDAY Does She Day Dream PROBABLY RAIN; MODERATE SOUTHERLY THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS NO It’s a great old town we live in—a great old town with a sky line, viewed from the waterfront, that carries us back to the New York city of only a few years ago. We've added the Smith building during the year 1913, and we're promised another one almost as high before two years have passed. We're the healthiest city in the world, with an inexhaustible water supply and unsurpassed for purity, carried to our homes We have spent $12,000,000 on this system, plant. through 527 miles of water mains. and we have spent $4,500,000 on our own electric We light 800. miles of city streets and sell light and power to 32,000 customers. NEMPLOYED AN RIOT: FIGHT FRISCO COPS | of the riot ; SAN FRANCISCO, Jan a The police prepared today for serious trouble with the unem- Leader Says He Was Beaten in His Cell SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. The cases of the six lead San Francisco's unemployed, ar- rested, charged with inciting to riot, were continued today. Wm. Thorn, one of the prisoners, ob- jected to the delay, saying It was unsafe for him to remain in prison. “Last night they put me ina solitary cell,” he said, “and after midnight four policemen came In and beat me with clubs. If you will exclude women | will show you my bruises and scars.” “That is a matter for the chief of police, not for me,” answered the court. The situation was ,intense following yesterday's flash in which five hurt police- men’s clubs or flying missile Gix arrests were made. “No more parades without my) ission,” was © of Pollee e's announcement As a result Afterward came the additional order: “No more m ngs in Un fon Square without.the permission of the park commission Chief Expects Trouble The chief fea these orders ould not be without trouble. Capt. triet Police, 36 in Compan Fected to hi the alert for Plain clothes men were detailed to keep watch on all gatherings of | struck the unemployed whip. Will Not Ob He labout 30 pe of the park dis ructed to mounted Anderson station, was fight yester an a t b thre iness followed were es on a you ry ah @ wa at # Chief ey icemen Y ALLOWS $5,750 FOR JUR brought b placed th the » McPhee court case nd Malco! » Judge Ga Henr: he cave am's court, in same suprem Gil Thursday ry in the former v Rew trial being order Rastelli lost hi engine at arlington ELLEN A COME BACK WOW! SEPTEMBER MORN IN THE SNOW CHICAGO, Jan. 9.—Wearing only a waist and a stocking, a wornan wa found posing In the snow early today by Policeman Cornelius Cooney. “Um September Morn,” she told Cooney, who led her into a hallway and phoned for a pa trol wagon. Physicians will examine her ee court and 4 the s operation of a du Puget Sound railroad ikee & g through the Milw LONDON, Jan. 9 Fy will play the Abbe Vival of th rash tins,” which Produced in the by a Benedictine It coma a booger to Keeping and the maper Wet-Powells Sor vertis — $150 PLENTY FOR A FUNERAL, SAYS JUDGE “If | thought they would charge more than $150 to put me away, | would make a strong paragraph about it in my wiil,”’ Said Judge Dykeman, when he rendered his decision against the rkiand Undertaking Co. Thursday The undertaking firm sued the Dexter Horton bank, admin Istrator of the estate of Joseph Buckley, a laborer, for $273.25 for funeral expenses. The bank refused to pay more than $125 Judge Dykernan held that $150 was plenty enough for the funeral of any ordinary man ONE LEB, married GOES TO THEATRE; FINDS. LONG LOST SISTER ON STAGE RICH MAN'S SON IS HELD AS SLAVER MOBILE®, Jan Bradley and K 9 Delilah son of Mins on a whit we guarded 1 can with the ti to marry His married hap Foster deciared he stand by the girl, Th here from Pemberton, O'SHAUGHNESSY AND HUERTA ARE TOO FRIENDLY VERA CRUZ 1 charge ir » hotels today Mr. Foster lerstanding that he was me as soon as he got a said Mise Bradley toda iife had been un Intended to couple came N. J n. 9.—John Lind back with him to Chris Affaire the United States Mexico City for his as girl in the t is be have be time did not get ensure Eleanor Whipple ‘ emt in frien Pr Mre. ¥ ent Golden Dream” at mora f ome and ater new O'Shaughne on we whereabe together NOT A REAL GIDEON Melville J American, er «irl € nvent and sider girl came West and was NDON, Jat Shortly afterwards cor said he lost $5) wh he was adjudge ith $12,000 Habilities and no assets A PENNY SAVED, ETC. ndence ceased and each was fi t to the week bear her isw#eemed to Any time Andrew Fron ges In the he ma Jan Mra CHICAGO. the thrifty n wants to boll € woup to ga ram and ae NEW PENNANT COUPON BILLIE BURKE POSES ice The Stage Beauty WEEK of Pennant had at The Star office Art Serie branches by pre coupon and venty-five by mail must be addressed to can be thi cent enting 20 cents and it for each Pennant I All mail orders 1309 Seventh Av Main Branch: Northwestern Photo Supply Co., Inc. (Eastman Kodak Co.) 1320 Second Ave. Bathing Girl and Co-Ed Pennants can also be had this week. The Star, And the Girl Stays With Her Husband. SEATTLE, WASH.,, FRIDAY, JANUARY 9, 1914 r. | bank CENT 2? We'll Tell You Why. in Saturday’s Star | ——— $$ WINDS. OTT LULLLLLLLLAALLLLLLL LLL NIGHT EDITION ETM MULT Smith Ira Building, During 1913 we spent $5,000,000 on city work, adding to our 999 miles of sidewalks, 641 miles of graded streets, 402 miles of sewer, 202 miles of paving and 21 miles of cluster lights. Our exports in 1913 were greater by $500,000 than in 1912, and we added in that year scores of factories to our industrial list. During the year we passed Kansas City and are now the 20th city in size in the United States. In 1914 we're going to build four or five bridges over the Lake Washington canal and we're going to cut away the court house hill. And do a lot of other things that will make 1914 a year of tremendous municipal progress. | It’s a great old town we live in. eee Doctors Quibble Over Their Ethics! Now a By Fred L. Boalt Is there a medical trust in Green Lake? Is it a mercenary and murderous combination of doc- * tors which places lucrative practice and dollars above human lives? Is this combination made possible by the medical of ethics?” “code M terday Pruzan With dr the the th little wet with unter “M I Green i irl dea went of taken ; sick was apper is. We called Dr Ore 4 her ble hospital \ “Then he uld be |that he. with the Dr another ¢ ner rm ne Ip of reen T would perf talked it over had \ then | be | practiti | 1 with all we \nd lit lf r | must que y to draw the last cent n Fe the But Dr. A. pooh-poohed the suggestion. I said I |wanted Dr. Sharpless, because I had heard he was a skillful vas re from | “*Get Dr. Sharpless, then,’ said Dr. A., ‘and I will drop out of the case entirely.’ Id the chance t knife A thrust into aid: ‘I my will ha the ce: I asked tion Who Dr. Sharples » woulk 5 \ i ur doctor he 3 tol n Dr lThen Dr, A, must ask me to oper aid Dr. Sharple \‘But Dr. A. refuses,’ 1 said. ‘Then I can have nothing |do with it,’ said Dr, Sharpless “That, | have discovered, is what the doctors mean by being ‘ethical.’ “The operation was performed Our Lilly was getting well and was taking when Dr. A. came down with the mumps. case over to Dr. B “There a turn fo Dr. B. said nothing w much company, and she Finally, Dr, A Somehow the tube had. become misplac The poison had the intestines, becau it could not escape through the “! asked Dr. A. how he could account for Dr. B. sald: ‘OH, WELL, IT WAS NOT HIS CASE.’ ‘To save my little must be Again 1 asked for D ain Dr, A have Dr, t vr no one. Horton as one of the best surgeon Dr successfully, | believe a little food He turned the Ally sereamed in agony fo y was peevish, ho s She had too the worse Lil was wrong aid was red from the m fter the o imps an examination n to drain the pus ¢ athe nd spread throu. made ¥ carelessness, ant he girl's life there Sharpless, and ag Then asked for Dr in the another operatior refused He whom T had hea vou city A. would not consent to ite, and he said he w und I said Noble hospita would oper little girl wa Horton if he my Lasked Dr when he asked me where he said: ‘I am too busy “Puzzled, | went to a doctor who Is a.close friend of mine jmedicine that minor In Lamplight Story, “Break o’ Day, Father Is Grieving! A Child Is Dead! ’ | told him my experience, and he told me about the Green Lake trust. ‘Green Lake business for Green Lake doctors,’ he said. ‘ALL HOSPITAL BUSINESS TO GO TO THE NOBLE HOS- PITAL, WHICH IS IN THE NORTH DISTRICT, AND IN WHICH YOUR DR. A. IS A STOCKHOLDER.’ hat can I do?’ I asked So long live in Green Lake,’ he told me, ‘you can hag but a Green Lake doctor. All 1 can do for you is to tell you names of the surgeons in Green Lake—Dr, J, Tate Mason, the Dr. Maxson. turned to Dr. A. and said: can I have Dr. Mason? Mason isn't in Green Lake downtown. How Goe But ax you no one the ‘If I cannot have Dr. Sharpless or any more,’ Dr. A, said. ‘He's about Dr. Maxson? * gald Dr. A 1 will call him up right away Maxson was too t Reluctantly Dr, A Mason's being called, not, however, to operate, but for » While Drs. A. and B. rmed day before ng, Dr. A. 6 Well in another doctor Dr ISy consented to consultation, did the work yesterda Yesterday, Py , if you are net Dr Dr. Mason ca when 1 and look ation was little girl was d atisfied, you can call Now? He zan 1 asked shrugged his shoulders while my and turned away. little girl was dead e- Coroner J. Tate Mason made this statement to The Star: “Dr. A. called me on the telephone at 8 in the morning. 1 had to get out of bed to answer the call. The operation was to be performed before 9, he said, and could | come right away? “| explained that | had had no breakfast, and that | knew nothing about the history of the case. “Well,” said Dr. A., ‘these people have heard of you and want you here. You re not to do any work. Come if you can.’ “When | reached the hospital | found Dr. A. had his hands all washed and was ready to operate. There was nothing for me to do but look on. 1 didn’t do any good by being there.’ alk ry licati It woul ‘ruin” them if they theve sa Li t kr why They all know about the Green Lake medical trust. They admit it is a “damnable” situation, and “outrageous,” but there isn't anything they can do about it. he € us « the downt hen a whose practice in medicine is small, said another, “gets a chance to pull off a $200 surgical job, he'll tackle it, even if he is rusty.” : net ight not to be The two I wn doctor allowed to distinct sur- practice are as medicine as 1 dentistry And a tourth rid ee? mistakes « th 1 a fa r much depends on nursing in not often harm. But surgery If your chisel slips, start on another knife slips, somebody dies.” like uM ocan But ] ul ture ference di marred and if your ece in surgery, Dr. B. said there Is no medical trust in Green Lake, and that Dr. A. offered either to work with Dr. Sharpless or to drop out, so that Dr. Sharpless could have full charge of the case, as Pruzan chose. hours. | agree muld n surgery 1 made a mistake in not the » Dr id Dr alled The operation,” BUT THE CHILD DIED! in Tomorrow’s Star |

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