The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 8, 1910, Page 1

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HE SEATTLE aC AF TH hi AN OFFICE IN SEATTLE » Made le Millions by Grinding the Poor in America—How He Sent Girl | Aviator Tells of Plans for} Flights Tomorrow and She Stood by Him. i prayers © his offi. t from to Tolma is Tomar aa District ‘seit tt funning Columbia. + Canadian | i, That's the Seat Northern bas been ree store for © av for the the dase Teer the abies for men.) w mee B.-—Louter fat w and ele night, an tower the a the staircase b« The cruisers Colorado arrived * Banta Rosa : here rus giris appear ja the D. MH, Tolman office, in through the United Stetes and jed his fortune on the dollars nfortunates who in time of ne he local office leaves Seattle for . os. the wordt In Beattle, who say Tolman ts States. T eomark Was ave vielous, bad as they © the penttentiary—a girl him, her employer it te n prosecutor arke Dorts Griffith a year ago wee the brightest girl that ever worked for Tr Whenever there was trow ble office, she was the one to atraigh things out Girt One day Tolman sent her to Hart ford to start an office that officers had shut up. The state had just passed a law that made the loaning of money at 15 per cent criminal The gtrl did not know (hte when arge. She was arrested. A Hartford business man bailed her Tolman wouldn't furnish the ts Arrested, office rent again,” was his only com But TM get arrested, and if my r hears of it her heart will be the office, You won't 1 stand with you office was started again. De tives raided ft and Miss Griffith arrested and charged with ary convicted her a ay a fine « year in or court sus and spend a appeal} the superi ed the decison We'll take it to said Tolman. agal asery will stand Toiman Oodged Court. the supreme aw The prosecutor offered to let Mise Griffith off tf Tolman would allow | himself to be arrested. He refused. Miss to her fat court merey on he or declares Conn eut's usury w unconstitutional this girl must go to the penitentiary This ix the kind Tolman is. The Star story adont hi ago. It is pertectly and unio takes saad on Page Thirteen.) eee rere ee eee CROSS DOESN'T LEND MONEY In the Het of foan offices published Wednesday the name of F. H. Cross, 208 Sub ‘onsidine building, wae aentionsd by mistake ne an establishment at that ad ress ts conducted by J. W ardson, whese case will take y The Star Cros jeweler with room at that ad up la only * * - * * . + * * + » - * « * * * * eee eee eee eee eee eee Cetera IND D PAVLOWA GIVE WIL DEST eeuT NEW YORE HAS EVER SEEN), bar MRUBSIAN Gini Dance,’ a 4g | | | | | Nights I know, | eee jair as ap endurance test | Charlies K jail.! | |} place that he WILL REDEEM MYSELF, SAYS C.K HAAILTON Sunday Park Ideal Place. CHAS. K. HAMILTON, “I am anxious to redeem myself | in the #yes of the The onty failure I was here in Seattle. and Sunday Beattie public ave ever m: On Saturday I will try all the fancy and in addition will hew long I can remain in This was the < Hamilton r4irand laratior this me He te rk le idwood p be held Hamilton as an ideal ated bigh above the 1 a mudhole, the al ter and the currents The starting ground is long and 800 feet wid the size required. The tand ia level ang@ smooth, and Hamilton ways that ft is the beat ting has encoun The machine w park yoster a n by lt will be fresher and 2,000 feet . several the boats the were nuts, fine sha the Mahts Sat Tickets wil offices of the company at tight and ¢ . will for inday be fully re urday and & be sold only Anderson Steamship Leschi, Madison and Madrona. parks. This pre vent irresponsible pardes from disposing.of (he pasteboards. TL kets will parts, one @ company at aser. In case two the CHILD DROWNS IN IRRIGATION DITCH (Star Speci BVERRBTT, April §—Pe terday she near ‘GUS ANDERSON THE DEAD MAN (Star EVERETT of the througt she: Special Apri the elas bette 5 hint « loéal mit to One wh ere room a the {ne everybody w are Wildwood | the SEAT ‘LE, WASH., FRIDAY, APRIL 8, THE SEATTLE 1910, ‘DR. MATTHEWS AS GOOD-AS.A CIRCUS, | SAYS MRS. HUTTON, SPOKANE SUFFRAGIST eet a Mra, May Orkwrl | Spokane's famous suf stirred up ever Or, speech of a month he characterized the suffraget Cause a8 a form of maleitis. | tter to the editor of th Spokane Press, which reprinted the speech, Mrs. Hutton says | Raditor of The Press; 1 desire to \reply to Dr. Mark A, Matthews’ of Geattle attack on women in your {neue of April let. He saya: “But frage agitators are female freaks suffering from male-itis,” which he laterprets ax “doalre-ttls. | Of all the accounts that have reached me of tomfoolery stints performed by foolish freaks on All Fools’ Day, the unsound ranting of the long-haired, spectacular prenol: er from the Scund city ie the worat Had I not previously heard some lag ti pintons on the wo man's suffrage question of this in dividual, who claime to be pastor of one of the largest Protestant churches tn the United States, I | Would think be waa suffering from | NOTORITIBS, by hie attempt to per |Petrate this April Fool's Joke. Hutton, of OR. M a MATTHEWS. | wae once told ‘whan in Geattice j that | should go to hear Or ‘ews, he wa LET US HAVE PEACE } —— : } Must | gest | thei this gruel war go on the P Intell troubles to some Hag t ink dw to drean whereby 1¢ shedding of perfectly ¢ and morning be confront | Must we ntinive Canflot some neer and the Tir tribunal and save Must the read this of ing | front page carr run naagee uck in the ad alley, gecking shrapnel type to lay his rival low hrill primer f the rrent issue such inne as it in ice he Gates ) rais dd, the n¢ great public is not of either concern—the liar’ today An haggling aber of unseemly ther the im the bosome of deserving ct ag 13-columa of the other conservation the laughter ftom rkened ly d tones rei Must our trey of the colonel meet in mortal con ers we Mr. Chea rt in th mifect bec ¢ that b ten fhe laws fob betting an tact as can t Se far xf the of ape for the deta achievement There is no lack of int the Vat can over five cents an inch « board 1 work } us park t let one ne side ¢ h under bonds to keey the and urnalisti 1 nd e ob one the w the} tush > th I ‘A DECENT BURIAL IS ALL Pleasant cemetery, that remaine doomed to ath of shame lot in Mt all astols fortunai standard on her brother as she lay un that « # said rue slab Hed of polsor ciety her, it on a 8t whisky. The ¢ was & hu » and there f adversity until she ¢ her last dohely resting 6. She dig@hh in a Sixth dieing Be was DO by ié whe pass ed om WBF tound dead In her \ a woman of 40. the calm-| jfi¢ha of death could not remove { sin and sorrow on ber me soul E Died a Drunkard. alcoholism verdict of the coroner it it told the radtt and the Ia but of 8 despair, And Mamie Pastola morgue. Many few know who he acquaintance of her neve war st ca 1 ation the remains of tken to the er name ntl one autre F brotl well k esident Put tt own rother the bod h of | wonrar } | whether a) did known. Butterworth the body weveral days tn the that whén Mamto Pastola wa ered into her grave there some one by to offer a weak, @sring woman came, or not a pray ie & Sons & No THIS WOMAN ¢ GOT IN LIFE not ot hop a low for one ‘We have never buried a woman 1 Gilber wil in potter’t field terworth, “and we secured a lot tn etery and gave decent burial A decent tal mie Pastola got o Mt the poor ie about a t of life LAWYERS WANT ANNA’ Ss MO Anna L pheurn this oraek ant In @ suit for $497 superior court th plaintiffs the in Ohami 6 Complaint t rk lawyers ne Gamplatnt the plain n th ty was ont rendered ent pnit is t was ren th Pleasant woman 4 t But 1 We m1 i) Me NEY|. lotion that | had been reared ao |eording to Episcopalian methods and belleved im the “eternal fit of things; that | preferred my | religious devotion conducted de \eently and in order; also that | pre \ferred to witness circus perform: | | arces in a tent with proper accom | paniment. It je & wellknown fact that were not for the support the men give the churches, preachers would soon have to look for other tions if it | oceuy | Women Got Money, Then Barred women of Seattle Mebarment fron Aq of 1 presume the ol owe the insult of the missionary convention }to Dr. Matthews and those stamp. 1 aim surprised UW not add injury to ineult by the good slaters t6 cook « for their | Raising sions ts an be relegated t begins at Matthews and women his Nd masters money Charity in Dr men foil the past Even Seattle to home own city who desire ow Matth. | as good as a cirous, | (Continued on Page Thirteen.) «DSB TO DENOUNCE BALLINGER ? New York Morning Paper Authority for Statement That Ex-President Will Side With Pinchot. @ Staff Corress Press &—Former Pres eit arrived in Genoa at fterncen, He was not expected until tomorrow He ie cleared that he was simply dr here by the houpitality of the peo: Instead of the privacy he had ex pected, he was confronted on every hand by crowds of villagers threw flowers in his path and waved banners with mottoes of welcome He found it impossible, he said, to revisit the scenes of his honeymoon trip. dent the 5 o'clook th A morning NEW YORK , print public cial dispatch it is #tated hnounce Sec | Batlinge | Pinch upe States | mation « wf the Roosevelt communication reached « suy chot at Washi Pinchot is in and Roosevelt will | eeerok is aequa’ ipal points of Pinch ot controversy 4 x, the his arriva The article states from a m and that a ffect has ifford Pin this « pe. He at Genoa Rallinger ‘MARSE HENRY | By United Press.) WHAT ANGEL WATCHES OVER DOORSTEP FOUNDLINGS? ith but th firet eweet p atr therhoo Are the field and the ungle ore n? in the in ir lives suffer ytarvation, and courage defy tb “ storing terr mar Was the Mother? @ mother cros Who this y bourne f the which no female ary Did put in fover's pid mora tre her may ret and al aw the ant ure trust ords winds « ff and forsaken of retribution mmer, in lett an fickle nly to t the dark ‘atood guard tor of someth to this er up rd. her ba t the wh Whood fr To th ght ¢ om day t @e confect er but in en living, cooing evider hoart tragedy; a ti » that speaks of a And Cone Jo the bottom There's No Anewor know ts that | hs begun, t tgs ap Poor little } tiny spun ¥ of time and you alded and uncalled? over nang anew tl un me t uman be ur thread vent ing, wh the hero What on that n you r unher angel alley not fall of }her 1 \ May Ne wo | ON TRAINS sup NEWS STANDS AMERICAN BANK BANDIT CAUGHT Dying Robber Confesses to San Francisco Police That He Tried a Hold Up in Seattle - - Attempt Was Made April 19, 1909, and Was a Failure. ONE CEN (By United SAN FRANCISCO, April 8.—Harry Hall, whom the police believe to be Clyde C. Canfield, of New York, died this afters noon, Hall patrolman Press.) had wounded Patrolman Casey in the thigh. The handcuffed When they came on however, pulled his revolver, pe and pr shot and his man before other cemer . { arrived the scene both capto isoner were unconscious the the Ameri year ago. d when 1erous Fran- had that the and robbed trick Young’s No one r the rt Leaven- money ne, 80 t the police- there held streets. back and did ay | held up t Tenth be- I held «lay J y jobs. “OOD STEERAGE PASSENGERS MUTINY AND ATTACK GREW Series of Accidents and Panics Reaches Climax in Pitched Battle Between Officers and Crew and Ignorant Steerage Passengers—Girl Killed and Many Hurt in Explosion. (By United DOVER, Eng. April 8—Five hundred immigrants, who mutin- ed aboard the British steamship Kanawha because they had been refused permission to go ashore, were landed today under a guard of marines and bluejackets from a warship in the harbor The grants were placed aboard special trains for London, where the Cairn Steamship company’s officials will see that they are ntil they can be sent to their destination. grants from the Kanawha will be joined in London by were landed here by the steamship Upland ants are mostly Swedes, Russian Jews and Monte were rescued at sea yesterday from the burning which was en route 1rom Liverpool! to Portland, Me. Press.) ven care The thers The imm They airnrona, 400 ¢ 9 negrins ner C nts, taken aboard the rn to land e sent aboard Monte n to go Jews gainst the er Upland, The SALE FOR MISCELLANEOUS wered with tt tearing and dragging umpede four ea and Ww ulty ant nen, them For there every birth occurring at are 16 deaths, sea

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