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~}in & “SPENDS 11 DAYS IN PRISON JUST BECAUSE A DEPUTY — _ SHERIFF MADE BAD BLUNDER An officious deputy sher- WY biundered, and W. Meenach Spent 11 days in jail. Meenach, who In the em- ploy of the city health depart. Ment, was driving along Pacific ave., in Georgetown, on Novem- ber 19, when he was arrested _by Special Deputy Jones of Du- 4. wamish. A. J. Bossert and his son-in-law, B. A. Thomas, near Renton, several miles distant from Pacific ave., had plained that they had lost some Meenach, who has lived in King county for ten years and is highly Tespected, was charged with petit larceny, {The warrant was not read to him. He didn’t know why he was under arrest He was returning from Seattle, having taken a wagon-load of prod- ce to market for his brother, who has a large farm near Auburn. The brother being away from home, and Meenach not being a property-own the latter could not furnish the $500 ball demanded, and so he lan Guished in jail, awaiting trial “He wouldn't have cause of his arrest but for the lucky chance that put a copy of The Star! learned the! yin his hands while he was pee in a cell. In the newspaper ne read| that he had been arrested for steal ing pigs! | He missed Thanksgiving dinner with his wife and son, and he mise ed the family reunion which had| been planned The case came up In Justice Brink- er’s court Tuesday. There wasn't & particle of evidence against Mee- nach, whom Justice Brinker dis charged with apologies Two conclusions can be drawn| from Meenach’s experience Persons charged with eal should be tried as soon as possible} after being arrested And boneheads should not be permitted to wear deputies’ badges| MARTIN IS GRABBED, Martin Howard, ¢ hotels last night He was at the Unemployed Dor mitory first, but he defied the ‘jungle cops” to make him work They rolled him—and found $12.50 and four loaded revolvers. He's in the city jail now changed | | FOR ‘WINTER Gives | Excellent Results in Futsien EXT to artificial most convenient for a wide range industrial and domestic and most , coke the cleanest, gas is fuel both satisfactory of heating purposes, It gives intense and long-sustained heat, without smoke or dirt, requires little attention, and is very economical. easily handled. We sell Oven Coke fre and.screened to lump, nu form price of $6.00 per ton at the yards, usual charge for coke is sold at $5 50 per This coke gives excelle tic use wherever hard who have once used it in will never discontinue it Inquiries will receive struction in its use SEATTLE delivery will be giv It is much lighter than coal and more ym our new plant, crushed t and pea sizes, at a uni plus the and Bench carrying ton at the yards nt satisfaction for domes- fuel is required and those furnaces for house-heating prompt attention and in en when desired LIGHTING COMPANY | PHONE: MAIN 6767. | | | | | sacred concert at Ply | masked bandits | | next week to discuss plan of canning| ° right: A scene from Curtia film at Moore; Doro: thy Gish at Class A,; Lillian Walke Clemmer; Hobart Bos worth at Mission, ° \ Left to | By Norman Rose Staff Special NEW YORK, Dee. 5. ‘They wanted Luigi's sisters’ His sisters are pretty girls! They wanted them for white slave That was why they killed Laigi' Maria Macaluso dark eyes blazed, her slight form shook with | emotion as she gav clew to the murderers of Laigi Macaluso, whos into a barrel, was found in a lonely section off L The kirl whispered stones of the gloomy Tombs cel! as though fearing that the in which she sat might open and bi forth death—the red and wanton pistoldeath with which the “gang sters” of New York's East Side lay low thelr victims. For six months Maria Macaluso has lain in a ce dd with the murder of Giuseppe Marino, 13th st “It was the who killed Luigi!” she hoarsely declared cousin. Ever since | was arrested, after the murder of Glu seppe, hé has been trying to get me to tell the police about the who was found shot yw death in a flat gang. He sent me # note when | was in the hospital, begging me to tell all | knew about the white slaves and about how the gang killed Giuseppe It was for robbery they killed Gluse stole $100 from bis body. They were going to cut off his arts and lege, and put him {n a bag, and throw him in the river. But ht the police we Lillian Walfte Girl Reveals Murder as White Slave Plot! Forced to Confess Slaying on Threat of Death coming, and they ran away you killed lum we will kill you as we Then pe because he ma killed him! “L was afraid, I knew they would kill me, so I told the police I i killed Giuseppe. But I did not! I only said so because I was not #0 | afraid of the electric chatr 1 was of the gang. But now they have killed Luigi. 1 will tell, 1 do not’care what happens After Giuseppe was kil they put pistols to my head to make me promise to confess | had murdered him. 1 stamped my foot and] said I would not, and one of them drove a knife into my leg! If I had not promised I would be dead and my body would have been found in a barrel or in the river | ‘Luigi wanted to be good. He wanted to go straight. He tried to keep away from the gunmen, But they kept watch on him, One night they say to him, ‘Luigi, will you give us your sisters!’ He has two sisters, and they are both pretty-—very pretty. Luigi, he tell them no, they cannot have his sisters— he will sooner die than give them hie sisters! So he does die. The police fing him in the barrel Maria relapsed into wience. Only 19 years old, she is looking straight at death. She bas told th lead to the finding of the cangste: squealed,” and the pistols ba the gang's swift punishm or vhelter of the great gray prison Only there is she safe. THE SEATTLE STAR ARE YOU A MOTION PICTURE FAN? HERE’S YOUR MENU FOR COMING WEEK "You slave! they said to me, de you a wh must say that If you don't, ¢ police things she knows that may rs who killed her cousin. been loaded that will squealing.” once Maria has left the EE She has| make known a J | 204, with Chief Engineer A vis in charge. House leaders are opposed to probing readiness of U. 8. to got to War as untimely Charies H. Sainton, noted English portrait painter, dead in New York. K. M. Takahashi, Japanese artist, architect and writer, dead in St Louts. Report shows U. S. army has clothing on hand for six months and MOVIES AT BON FOR CHILDREN Movies have been added to the| attractions in the children's Christ-! P. Da Ww. W. 6B. charge as he prepares to board liner Unemployed give successful vaudeville entertainment j U. of W. students sign petition asking self-government St. Clement's church holds special anniversary service Sunday morn. ing. King County Prohibition club | meets Tuesday night Hamburg-American liner Saxonia, interned at Eagle Harbor, not for sale Robber stops E. 8. Simmons at Dexter ave. N, and Thomas st.; gets $2.26. Amphion society concert, Plym: outh church, Wednesday night. | President Landes addresses demo. crats on university's needs Rev. N. E. Jensen, first Coast deaf missionary. will be installed at Trit-| mag playroom, on the fifth floor| Thuge attack D. H. Green, 64, at/°f the Bon Marche, starting Sat eo Pont urday Shilshole ave. and Vernon place. A tworeel film story entitled, Denver Union Water Co. bought 1,260,000 feet of Douglas fir in Se attle Saturday Women’s Card and Label league} opens employment bureau for wom en Transportation club banquets A.| J. Hillman, new Milwaukee general) freight agent Dixie Jubilee Concert company nouth chureh| “A Child's Dream of Santa Clau showing the good saint with reindeer Dunder and Blitzen shown. Free shows are give every hour of the day, starting on the even hours ‘BLETHEN IS IN BAD WITH COURT : A. J. Blethen, publisher of an aft ernoon paper, in cited by Judge Tallman to appear December 10, to Sunday night Highland pharmacy held up by| Fruit men meet in North Yakima | low-grade fruits. International Bible Students’ as- sociation moves to Moose hall |show cause why he should not be Rotary club show In new Stuart) punished for contempt for an artt-| building closes Saturday night | cle attacking William J, Burns, de Ingurance companies agree to USe tective, for the purpone, it is alleg war stamps. Jed, of wrongly influencing two | Judson Mather gives recital at) cases now pending in the courts, in } Plymouth churgh Sunday afternoon.| which Burns asks Michael Betty, suspected burglar, lands in jail Missionary society play at Green wood Christian church Sunday night | University opens forestry course January 4, for which high school| education {s not required | State Senator Campbell addr of F on KEW cur 9 Cc o, Second Ave. near Madison St. Open Forum at Redmen hall Sun-| SUNDAY, MONDAY say aight 2—Days Only—2 ° ° | ELSEWHERE if 6 I ‘1 “The Master Speaker Champ Clark returns to Washington from lecture tour. | Mary Simpson, 22, loses position 9 in Chicago and sells her hair to @ pay her room rent Kan City postoffice plans) Two parts, episode No, 2 aeral mail route to serve branch Full of ‘ ceaiioas ull of surprises. Norway swept by violent storm and many boats are wrecked, Carlton Hudson, Chicago, arrest-| ed as bond Jumper in New York in 1894, admits charge, | U. 8. and Great Britain agree to! lift embargo on shipments of wool from British colonies to United States, Prof. Wm. T. Sedgwick, Boston, elected president American Health association Pittsburg counciimen cut their own salaries as economic measure. Willlam Rockefeller and seven other indicted directors of New Haven railroad change pleas from plea of abatement, which is denied, to not guilty. Stockholders of Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. of New York vote to mutualize company. “The Heiress and the Crook” Two-part detective drama. Also 2—Funny Musical Comedies—2 —<——— The “CIRCUIT” is the ONLY Second Aye. Theatre showing the Universal Film Co, leases at 5¢ admission. re- 0,000 damages U. S. reclamation service reorgam) could outfit 750,000 men in shorty time. Contract let to San Francisco firm |to complete dock at Pearl harbor, | Hawalt M, D. Egbert, veteran South Bend police judge and editor, stricken with apoplexy Yakima hotel, North Yakima, clos ed by sheriff on foreciosure of mort | gage | George H. Farrin, Portland attor- ney, disbarred for alleged check ir regularities Negotiations to settie strike of | 15,000 mine workers in Eastern Ohio foe | | of bonds of cre pf Interstate bridge Frank 8. Barnard succeeds T. W. Paterson as lieutenant governor of | British Columbia Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity | Will convene tn San Francisco next ear Two socialists are among the pine candidates for Tacoma schoo! board. Fred Brantner, convicted of land frands at Portland, sentenced to 13 months at MeNet! Island prison. Secretary of State Howell says there were nearly 9,000 Ulegal sign. 0 ors to petition for eight-hour bill Opening of Panama-Pacific fair at San Diego postponed from Jan wary 1 to March 13 Mrs. Ernestine Dreyfus, Kan City elected executive secretary of ational Council of Jewish Women varie Dorris, Centralia girl, who ran aw from home after being | whipped by father, found near Roch | ester Customers bring shoes he: from every part of the city, be cause our work Is different. It's a bit better, REGAL SHOE REPAIR SHOP First and Seneca. Main 4136. In a Two-Part A Beautiful Scenic o Admission Class Mre. Susan Rowland, 95, pioneer | Woman of Northwest, dead at Ray. Milwaukee company withdraws four trains between Tacoma and Grays harbor. Edward Keyes, 26, slayer of Eu- nice Staizer, when she refused bim at Tacoma, sentenced to 20 years at Walla Walla Two Tacoma children bitten by| and John Braham, with the artist's for) touch, has used it as the theme of dog given rables. Pasteur treatment 1 280rge W. Wickersham, former! panies the pictures torney general, declines to coup office of district attorney of! New York when Whitman vacates it to become governor. Liebler Co. theatrical producers, | | file involuntary petition in bankrupt- | cy in New York BRADFORD SAYS | CITY Is RIGHT . With the assurance from Corpora tion Counsel Bradford that it Is te fai for the city to operay that part! shown at the Moore some weeks of the Lake Burien line outside the! ago, {s the city, and with Councilman Dale's resolution to stop making appropri ations to that part of the line killed by the city utilities committee, the squabble with the state is hanging fire, temporarily, while the state's suit against the line ts getting un der way The suit is brought by Attorney General Tanner, on the ground that it is iNegal for the city to operate outside the city ° _CAMPBELLO COMING Francis Ford is making prepara tions for a tremendous six-reeler entitled “The Campbells Are Com ing.” It is a story of the Sepoy rebellion In the Special 2-Reel KEYSTONE COMEDY LAST TIME TONIGHT NEW PROGRAM TOMORROW DOROTHY GISH Majestic Feature “The Saving Grace” MUTUAL WEEKLY, NO. 101 A KEYSTONE COMEDY r Educational Picture 5 Cents At Pike St. is adapted from the novel by Au- gusta Evans. le 0 | o |two-part Eclair drama, starting at the New Cireult Sunday, deals with the attempt of a bogus count |to marry American wealth, and of | |the American lover of the girl, who fought schemes with ones. that | |were equally as ingenious—and more effective. There are three Jother pictures on the program. | eee Moore, Monday evening for a nine days stay, The pictures are by Edward Curtis, of Indian ple ture fame. Among the primitive tribes of the totem villages of the North Pacific, he found a people with the most vivid traditions, a number of the most dramatic ceremonials and heroes, He ps of an aged | the prowess of a 8. ja sheaf of legendary heard, from the story-teller, of | young warrior Mr. Curtis wove this thrilling na- tive story into a colorful, romantic drama and set about capturing It with his photographic wizardry The natives caught the enthust asm. They knew 1¢ «story as| | well as the white man knows ° and the Bean Stalk |it spontaneously | All the requisite properties were gathered—their gaudy sea-going war canoes, their grotesque mask of mythic birds and animals, thelr |stone and whalebone implements jof battle and their rich robes of fur. Here was a house reserved for feasting and wedding dances— | there, a whole village to be burnt to the ground by the torch of pil- Jagers. Nature provided a fitting | background of abrupt cliffs, stormy waters, and dense forests | To make this record complete, Mr. Curtis transmitted their Jelustve music to the phonograph \his incidental music which accom- Paaeaeeue ALL-NEGRO CAST | A two-ree! comedy In which | the entire cast is made up of | negroes, entitied “Aladd in Jones,” has been issued by the Historical Feature Film C Chicago, and exhibited to me bers of the trade press. The action, a dream of an old col- ored man, is rapid and snappy. | It will be released soon. | — ed j “ST. ELMO” AT COLONIAL |” “St. Elmo,” the picture that was attraction offered by the Colonial for the coming week, starting Sunday. The picture play IT’S A FUNNY ONE A George Ade comedy, “The Fa- ble of the Club Girls and the Four Times Vetera: a matrimonial jfilm story, is one of the pictures |that closes tonight at the Mel bourne. 18 TAKEN AT NIGHT Actual night photography has been tried out for the first time by the Univer “The House of Fear, ing Margaret Irwin. startling, weird effects were ob- tained which promise to give movie fans a new thrill when the multiple ree! drama makes ite appearance soon. . . . i —cly AT THE NEW CIRCUIT The Heiress and the Crook,” aj o * miss WALKER AT CLEMMER Jack | @ and could act} | | | ledy; ie oe a rs o Five other motion picture fea- {AN EDWARD 8. CURTIS FILM | tures, including the Hearst-Selig - - News, are on the program The film, “In the Land of the| Head Hunters,” starts at the|,, Varren Jaxn, tenor, and Wallace at the pipe organ, have new mustic- al selections ie a PUTS OVER scoop a f The Animated Weekly camera |™man put over a clean scoop on the Yale-Harvard football game. With- |{n @ few hours after the game was jover, Saturday, Nov. 21, prints |were being rushed to exchanges throughout the country, and on |the following day many theatres showed the greatest football game jin history with the largest crowd lever assembled at such a contest. | le taste AT THE ALASKA Theodore Roberts, in “The cir. cus Man,” is the headliner in the proram that closes tonight at the Alaska theatre. “Helen's Sacri- fice,” a Kalem raflroad drama, is one of the joint headliners with “The New Magdalen,” starting Sunday, —, ELEASED MONDAY “Damon and Pythins,” the new photoplay by the Universal Co., will make {ts appearance in the high-class theatres throughout the country Monday, following a most successful premier in the New York theatre, New York, Nov. 30. oo ————___@ WILL FOLLOW PAULING @ Close on the heels of The Perils Perils of Pauline,” Pathe will issue an- other serial with practically the same cast, although with adven- tures and “punches” of a distinctly different eka" ee Clreult Untit Saturday Night “Perils of Pauline.” serial, and four other pictures. cary Alhambra U.ntii Sunday Night “Called Back,” drama, and comedy. a eee Clemmer Until Saturday Night “The Plum Tree,” Essanay dra- ma; “Bud, Bill and the Waiter,” comedy; “Hearst-Selig News.” eee Alaska Until Saturday Night “The Circus Man,” drama; “Pathes’ Picture News” and a comedy. eee Grand Untli Saturday Night “Thé Master Key,” a_ serial, @)| and two other pictures eee Class A Until Saturday Night “His Prehistoric Past,” two-part Keystone, with Chas. Chaplin; “The Little Country Mouse, drama, with Blanche Sweet; com- “When Queenie Came Back,” Margarita Fischer, . edy drama, with . Melbourne Until Saturday Night “The Pines of Lorry ison drama; “The Girls and the Four eran,” a George Ade eee Colonial Until Saturday ight “The Walls of Jericho,” drama. eee dran Times Vet- comedy Liberty Unti! Saturday Night “The Fortune Hunter,” six-part comedy-drama, Mission Until Saturday Night “Aristocra drama cee - ! RESIDENCE THEATRES | At the Home Until Sunday “Our Enemy's Spy,” three-part drama; “Animated Week! No. 141, of Noy. 18; “In and Out,” com- Friday only—“Million Dollar No. 8. . ¢ Mystery” a. At the Pleasant Hour Until Sunday “Diplomatic Flo,” _ three-part drama; “The Head Waiter,” com- edy. e @ Lillian Walker, affectionately | called “Dimples” by her many ad mirers, because she possesses two | wonderful dimples that might make any girl envious, is a real American Beauty She is a stunning blonde, with very dark eyes and pink and white | eks. She has been a star with the Vitagraph moving picture company for several years Possessing a beautiful, face—ability to act and two dim-| ples, who wonders that such a| charming combination would be welcome anywhere? She opens at the Clemmer Sun day {n a fascinating {dyllic drama, “In the Land of Arcadia.” Miss Walker {s supported by Chas, Kent, Rose Tapley, Kate Price and other well-known stars. happy | For Grip, Influenza, Coughs, Sore Throat COLDS Two sizes, 25¢ and $1.00, all druggists or matied. ¥ hreya’ Homeo. Medicine Co, New York.—Ad= at iam Street, vertisement.