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Think You'll Go hange their Seattle theatres 8 for There'll be new prog The Star's F 4, just what they are oe eee ning @ a or twe intend Q to Turkey dinner, sit right down tide where you'll go to Movies Thursday ? Thankagiving e editor tells you now and bille today So, if you de \ ‘ONLY PAPER 18, IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS : ONE CENT On NEWS VOLUME SEATTLE, WASH., WEDNESDAY, NOV. TRAINS The Seattle Star STANDS ) AND be AS” | Endl |ARRESTED AS GIRL’S KIDNAPER Grandson of Burgomaster of Hamburg, Germany, Held Here ens d ae, 1 ze visited 1 to see Diack save for a He was freshly shaven and bathed He met the editor Tells Us of His Book j “| have written a book,” he sald, after @ formal exchange of courte ee. “It Is called ‘Christi It Heeomewhat, or | might say, quite! @teational. I think it might inter | et you. oe "Yes," replied the editor. “When! Rie published I should be pleased | Pw have a copy and to give you Wome padblicity as its author | Henze stood thoughtful for a mo went, | “Weil” he sald, “I am glad to) fate met you. I wanted to meet Mi the editors today.” | methodically on his knows now that! What Henze wanted was an offer fe podlish his book in The Star. In ihe editor's mail Wednesday morn ftgwasa letter from the dead man. Leaves His Manuscript ' He etplained that he intended to} @0d his life. He had deposited, he wald, in the vaults of t People’s Merings bank, triplicate copies of Wis book manuscri which he di Teeted the chief of police to deliver fo cach newspaper published in Se-| ate. } About 9 o'clock Tuesday night Henze blew out his brains with a Yallet, His Jette: closes “hs I believe you desire to know Smetbing of me personally, I will M4 here that I was born in Ger Many about 46 years ago ut 1 fave resided the United States for more thar ears, and in this Ieeality more than three years. Begins His Book In Prison “Recently I have resided at Pos ftsion Point (the eastern ex femity of W where If lave made enough t¢ © on fatching a few fis Motch ¢ fn band.” letter is dated fetroductor Thich he sta fa prison. tr closes, “a tonfident fas fallen thia ‘Mit to the “And, to co oted as heer | Weather Forecast | Occasional rain tonight and Thursday; moderate southerly winds. g 4 Cy INSTEAD OF \ SHOPPING WRAAAAAOMAAAWANVOW yTiPhA AT SEAT { 74m. m., 14.2 1. 32 42 p. m., 0.7 ft / | oa ieaaaaee eee HIS wonderful war picturé was sketched by Cartoonist Robert Minor in the Vosges battle zone in eastern France opened on a village. Fire had broken out the situation—the catastrophe—the terror of war. No other American cartoonist could have handled this remarkable assignment—“Ripping the brass buttons off this war”—so vividly, so vitally, as Robert Minor is doing. More war zone sketches by this talented artist have just arrived by the latest European mail steamer and will be printed in The Star during the next few days BOALT MEETS’ | :: JOTTINGS } YALTY: A (WILL EAT. WITHOUT UNIFORM) SHIPS 10 BE ’ WENATCHER, Nov. 24—Pire! Chief A J. Vaniandingham (or, Y'KNOW The German guns had just The non-combatant inhabitants fled. Note how the artist brings out in rough charcoal the feeling of THANKSGIVING TO PLAY FULLBACK Provided the The Star staff take moving pict WHERE TO BUY TICKETS United Cigar Store.. Alaska Bidg Chauncy Wright's 1420 3rd Ave. Barteli's Ocug Store..1402 2nd Ave r without his unifrom ay he was fired by Charge, ince is fine otograph res of Jacobs will ne petency TOUGH FOR ALLAFAR | | (OLD HARVARD STAR. | ‘LINE OF GRAIN IN PRISONERS’ GAME North tank team has an ad- ? Brown @ Hulen's Gaillargeon Bidg. vantage im Weight, but for severa SEWARD, Alaska, Nov. 24- airs rd County Jail Courthouse wa e i r yunk s ttle _ , oon ie holap has litte Gime - Down {n th é The following telegram w BY FRED L. BOALT “ — a pd was ned $600 The Port of Seattie’s Han legiate f . sent to Gov. Lister Wednesday: Soine of us who, in our best bi be j and costs Tor illicit Nquor selling it ford st. wharf and the unfin ! “We, the inmates of the King and tuck went to the Knii ape a bet ir e rn. ished Spokane st. warehouse county jail, cordially invite your ‘columbus hall last night to er husband learned of the v4 s honor’s presence at our football hear the marquis and marchiones* punishment and died from the| #f¢ @foaning with stored | |) Harvard's ¢ game Thankagiving day at Oug- of Aberdeen, made a ridiculous shock sacked wheat, and ite huge Today he ts #till playing dale park. The game will be mistake ne — | bulk grain elevator at Hanford put under the banner of a called at 10 a.m. We expect It fs rather a tremendous exper’ HE CAN AFFORD TURKEY st. Is half full, according to a na mater Gov. Carison of Colorado to be this coming face to face with (Continued on Page 5.) SHOOTS SUSPECT THRU RIGHT HAND 4,16 in J ed 1 4 RON ' aw Ha 1 ie the e of ( t ave ki { } € H cs GIVE DINNER TO SEATTLE’S BLIND Following of their end fathe®, an, lat nuttin eam te eattle's sind people at the Germania cafe Thursday noon | by quis and her SEWARD, Alaska, Nov. 24,— report rendered to the port L. A. Stockdale, as he now 18! present. Very respectfully, L. & flesh-and-blood marquis and “| Bob Griffith, dog musher, Is on commissioners Wednesday by known, In cn of the North!| K. Stockdale, chairman.” even more 80 me fd by an the trail leading from the Idita- E. J. Forman, agent in charge tank team of King county jail pris-| | ally re hans ot know pertectly | rod with three dog sleds carry- of the port's’ East waterway oners. His name, when he was at | @ ns A ards, a above an earl and| ing gold bullion estimated at terminals Harvard, wan not Stockdale e | Gaye the ab tees Siler inks Sieae well, is a grade @ j yves $250,000, iast of the season's He ways there will not tell what {t was. He let trick plays, wit! j almost as Important os ® Cer sev-| clean-up. He will get out in Stored in these thre slip a remark during signal prac: ‘Sones $6 sotthes the ad Por my own part, jus and earls| time for Thankegiving (517 bushels of wheat Itice Tuesday tn the jail yard which | vantage the North tank may have e roma cel gg yg i Pegs a" i | “These factitt etrayed the fact that he fs an ex: in avo a among my intimates, ar <i to r mbridge man, And he knows slab it as ths aman tins a ways tell a lord when I see one THE OLD TURKEY t r| foot One. needs only to S60] cnet spies, ther whl be sed tor Wrong Man _rathe for | tecsuehl. Oe ope et salon, t be used fo! Pick Out he " « the report, and adds » In action to realize that supplying Christmas trees for the Many in the audience less ton | Now when we gaze upon your if were filled the year} On the East tank team ts a for.) 7tt ee eee tunate than I pald scant attention rack around “with wheat for storage|mer Seattle high school star, who| “Chetier Hodge. Jaller Talley, anc to the frail little man 4 & ae No wonder we should scold, they would only pay expenses. is younger than the Harvard vet nan to represent the players wil hammer coat who sat on her ls For what is left will sure Seattle must have an outlet for/eran and full of pep. © charge of the distribution of ship's right, and focused t come back, grain coming in here, and For-| He {# not so sure that the North |; 9 000) n the atiff, almost soldierly. f Warmed over, h and ||man announces he 1s now directing |tank enptain can outdo him Pamraca we iliteain iat ie an who sat on her ocaiglgeeet aah cold. is ntion to securing an outle Bull Bros. Print Tickets Wauradas at Ddabals perk This gentleman wore a perfectly | § @ Th ade of the Panama ¢ promises to be a great Kame.| woritte and “trusties” will be on fitting dress suit and ae Lge — has seric h apped the port ery man is confident of bis own | the ianimes to keep an eye on the allar T ever saw. His flor iin | DINE ON CARIBOU by stopping «ra ments to the|team and is ready to go In for bet ye was grave and his manr seit DAWSON, Ne Mail Atlantic coast ter or for worse tg eee as elit att tf formality, tinged > t ' that stiff ality, tinged wing | Dozens of sourdoughs and settlers Forman quotes the state Persons anxious to attend the! one to any seat in ragga ted with members| of the territor 1 dine on car grain inspector as saying that me began « siege of the cou Ticketa will be on sale this after n the por nd with ¢ hry i rn this next season Washington will 1 early Tuesd dem noon and Thursday morning, at the f the a lor of thia| Thanks @ result of the produce 10,000,000 bushels of |tickets. There were none Reine (A Se ena ixnered | M8. on r 1 1, along) wheat, and he declares the The Star telephoned Bull Brot * * dgeted | Glazier tral bulk of this should pass thru jers, printers, and asked the price LASKAN th ° 0 fide pallet y' the 1,000 BANQUET Al iS - . 7 TURKS 30 CENTS A POUND Efforts will be made to in print them for nothing a Turkeys were moving fast at the! duce some company to estab- |came the reply, “and be glad to do a Wickars ot ® Was Only Lawyer Hughes markets Wednesday at 20 cents a| lish @ line of bulk grain ships | it sh Oh ang deat aere I heard a girl say to anole! gee | pound between this port and Balti That Is the kind of spirit which and William C. Edes, chairman o that t jeman in the high col-F more. With such a line estab. | prompted Dugdale to offer his field |the Alaska engineering | commt ar every inch <3 ' i ! It be able to to prisoner-players, and the #ion, Ww 6 honor jest’ at an WE'RE GOING HOME, THANK shed, Seattie wie Montene [kind that moved several downtown | Alaska Thankagiving banquet Wed and # ; ; t the! Special menus for Thankegiving| divert much of the Montana |kind that m ‘ ntown 1 n e Ved urse knew 5 ° | were. being at «| grain, which now goes to Min business men to ask for ticket to |ne day night at the tlc club tr On tver P. D.| Tuesday | neapolis and also to Portland, | place on sale ____| Dinner will be served at 6:3¢ ne other than awyer 2 Hughes of Seattle, who ever cag ouaes SHERIFF HODGE AND NORTH TANK TEAM, PHOTOGRAPHED IN JAIL YARD Seattle master of Hamburs Wednesday, charged with a Baron Alexander consul, hearing of the lad’s and arrangements are bein $1,000 bail. Young Binder is allege ave. The girl is 17. COMMERCIAL CLUB FAVORS PORT BELT PLANS Following a@ spirited argu: ment, during which several un complimentary remarks were bandied back and forth, the Commercial Club, represented by an unusually large number of its members, Tuesday night adopted, by a large majority, the resolutions of the club’s waterways and transportation committees, endorsing the port commission and the proposed belt line. the discussion which pre. solutions, which by ndorsing comprehensive scheme for a line, but opposing the transfer of funds with which to bufld it, was ed and as vehem- | Councilman Erickson said ite back-firing recommendations re minded him of the old bit of verse “Oh, mother, may | go out to swim? Oh, yes, my darling daughter. Hang your clothes on a hickory limb, But don’t go near the water!” After Frank Hanlon fic manager for the port, had talked ive minutes about the terrific amount of money which he said the belt line was going to cost, and that | } f | former traf. elit was all wrong that the shippers complain hing charges W. K. Sh large wise about present s being discrim don stood up fall out of Mr were awit ina and Hanlor He Comes Right Tt bas said the little official communication to read or took a Back wel on He re it. It was from George R. Breen n charge of the port's Bell » harf, and it had to Jo with a consignment of 750 tons of sulp! signed to A Campbe 03 Western ave. on a ship belonging to Frank Water honse & Co The Waterhouse company, how diverted it to Pier A (in of Hanton) with the state t that the port commi 1 had no right to exist, and that the com: pany would not be a party to its support Charge Double Rate It cost Campbell 99 cents a ton to handle the consignment at Pier A. It would have cost hin rents at the port do Also he paid a Sheldon said th Municipal na s report reminded him of the ntlemen who were in favor of prohibition, but a its enforce. ment.” Albert Daub eritized the elub for rendering a report after “twenty four hours’ deliberation,” and ob jected to Vort Secretary Hamilton Higday and rt Commissioner Ewald on the committee which r the repe atie by Neck 1, J, Carkeek, after reviewing the club's work on the belt line, de clared the railroads have Seattle by the neck, and that “it is the worst blow that could befall the city” if the Waterfront traffic belt should continue in the control of any fm terests but the port commission. Paul Whitham, chairman of the Muniei committee which drafted ds-T-win€ai's-yor lose” Ort, AL ed the of soft He lauded the port commission and its accomplishments to the skies, and sald he hoped the best Von Carson, daughter of Mrs. P. A. ny | Jailed When. Plans for Marriage to Girl Go Rudolph Binder, 19-year-old grandson of Nicholas Von Binder, noted German philanthropist and burgo- is lodged in the county jail here bduction. Girsewald, German vice plight, hastened to his aid, g made for his release on d to have kidnaped Mayette Carson, 6531 Palatine They tried to nm me marry her,” said Binder would have é so. But w I returned from San where | ment “ith we girl to whom I had een betrothed for four years. [ learnec mething that e me decide I would not marry her Says He Will Starve “Neither will I submit to 1 y confinement | t if 1 am show you 1 shall allow myself to starve to death rather than suffer that dis- grace. I will prove that the word of a German gentleman cannot be broken by mere physical suffer- ing sent 3on of Edward Binder, pioneer |German merchant of Yokohams, } Japan, the boy was forced to leave jthat country with his parents whea war was declared, or submit to con. y Seeseent in a detention camp. Says He Was Duped He came here and purchased an automobile, with which he started | business for himself. He carried Miss Carson and an jolder sister from a hotel to a cafe one evening, he said, and later to another hotel He insists that he was duped by the young wor after which the mother demanded that he marry her. With that inten jon, he took the girl to Tacoma, October 7, he de clared. This trip forms the basis of the abduction charge against him Out of love for his fiancee in San Francisco, he said, he decided to inform her in person before he married the Carson girl. On his return he found condi- |tions changed and refused to have anything further to do with the | son family side would win at the election. J. F. Cronin, member of the Com- mercial Club committee, said he has n a shipper and has “suffered from the extortions of the monop- oly.” We know that @tscrimination exists. For three years we have had promise after promise from the railroads that it would cease. For ears we have been advised to wa awhile—WAIT AWHILE! WAIT AWHI HOW MUCH LONGER MUST WE WAIT? DELICIOUS TURKEY DINNERS Will be served at Seat- tle’s leading restaurants and cafeterias tomor- row, and the prices will be remarkably rea- sonable. Without a doubt, thousands — of people who don’t wish to go to the bother of cooking a big dinner at home will avail them- Selves of the downtown service. As the prop- rietor of one. well known place remarked, “The average couple can save enough this way to go to a good show after dinner.” lhe menus of Seattle's leading restaurants and cafeterias, besides other ippetizing for the dinner, on page hanksgiving will be found 2 today. suggestions — EMER SSRI