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{rot All of T he THE SEATTLE T he LOSS IN [ INGHAM FIRE : (By United Press.) M s estimated today yed isa fire last ni toot { S structures to ashes « ser Us Injury of A was ¢ Hing on Th exact origin of the fire ta n A inl a bakery and bou nde ! Astor wok bot j the buildings and streets x supported by piles, and tee} space underneath the buildings caused a draft that spread the flames with startiing rapidity. The *n were unable to save any i mn the block, although three ’ jonded to the alarm | and « of hose played on the bt wae with difficulty nt i be kept from lea sts. and caus « sti At ow me May 24.-—-De« ® the fire sed D and burned part MeCreed one building before it was check and driven back Have Narrow Escape. merd in the lodging houses ert of Speaker Cannor od of the republica t block barely escaped with Stanton We a ores of mem and ABRouD bis “nh into the street in their congress today as an clothes, half dead with suf Ninetenths of Japanese} town was in the block burned and Bis , supp nearly the entire Japanese colony | of the city is homeless today The let of property destroyed ‘are follows president in order Building jointly owned by Brie | the promises of & Smith and Chris Semon,) convent Candy Store, Chris Semon i. men Tepresenting the n¢ house and saloon, Krasske | Dulliyer, Cummins, Con mery Co, New England) Norris, and fewer bakery, Japanese barber shop, fe the interests Provty’s Candy Co, Anchor Bar, the Buffalo second hand store and Chapman's bar’ shop. Aldrich and Can The audience of 6,000 Amer- cheered wtidly | tian IN HISTORY May 14, 1419 8 BALTIMORE. Md—Mrse. §. baby was bors in| Farnandis, of 303 14th av. N. Sen the house ot tle, with 17 others, was slightly in- | Ee: ¢| jured when a apecial tr as second section of No. oe. exnn. | Southern railway, w i 4 Reine Victoria Cedar Run Ridge, Va. i | day. bff and the inst amt of DWARDSVIL n Bame te a hour ficial ulewtlh held word in | ville img yester- | millions of homes | day when their gaxoline motor car | from dad up to the| hit « dog near here. The car left! eM tei you who Duke | the track, tore along the tes for 100 SO Rint was .on a tet. Thix| fet. and then plunged” into the | when babies come t Oe | Can't tell how famoux - i and at wee mahip Yucatan, wree accordingiy DS aheter . 7 in ley Str has been ee eerces pricars | "ained ‘and will arrive at Seattle! _— . | June % « b up heraeit, arge oS. ROTHWELL ASKS Keone HALL TO QUIT | especie Hall, clerk in the city comptrotier’s office, and for merly clerk of the Seattle park board, has been asked to furnish | his resignation to his chief, Wil Both- | resignation has/| simply because u Walter A A eerine Bete recorded in seattic liam J. Bothwell, on June 1 well ays Hall's requested ‘Abbr: @ from bitlhoar nere ia no work for him to do and) Poet anything jbecause of Hall's failure to obey | would rders. Hall takes the position) was the rer that bis removal fs in the nature Secretary of a political punishment Poster Pr Hall refuses to state whether he | will appeal to the civil service fay for the | ORS TNE Mission or not, It is probable, | them were det however, that he will | ag Re SRS PS ndry wor [ERE EERE EMER E SE | OM A strike * Mast unts! their * THE WEATHER. * Per cent wae * , * mal rain tonight and ® “haga ao 1 Cooler tonight. * Tho * Moder ate southwest winds. oa nd author + * O48 SME ER RELES VEE SEATTLE, WASH MILLION DOLLAR DRY DOCK SINKS AT MANILA (By United Press.) e MANILA, May 24.~The drydook Dewey, the largest floating dry« lock of the American navy, sank in 70 feat of water here today. In some unknown manner the water-displacing valves the drydock were left open The costly machinery of the Dewey is ruined, according to naval engineers, of The Dewey” was tnetalied at Olongapo, It could take care of Olongapo, Subig bay, July 10, 1906, | vem of the Dreadnaught class. after having m towed there from The dock cout $1,000,000. While Hams rs R # via the Suez canal. /the Dewey is out of commission : drydock was used by the’ war vessels in the Orient must use hips of all nations touching at. the _Kowion, China, drydook r an “TMA MILUON DOLLARS FOR NEW WARSHIPS: Two More Dreadnaughts, Two Fleet Colliers, Five! Submar'es and Six De-| stroyers Authorized. (Ry Untied Press) WASHINGTON May 24—The naval dill for the year ending June 30, 1911, was passed yesterday by the senate. One hundred and thirty-four mil Yon dollars are to be spent, and VESSELS COLLIDE; 40 DIE Great kane ‘Sue Is Rammed and Sinks In- stantly, With 18 of Her Crew of 23. oy Untiea 3 Peees.) LONDON, May 24.—Twenty-two | persons were drowned today in the ee 2 what le going to be done Engiieh channel when the Clyde Two first class battleships, to | "*** jorrymere wee rammed and sunk by the German four. masted ship J. R. Vinnen in mid. channel. The Vinnen made tor Cowles, in| the lale of ¢ Wight, badly crippled. | a lowered her boats) just after the collision only one man of the Kerrymore wee picked) up and he died soon afterwards. } The Kerrymore was cut in two | and tank instantly cost not exceeding $6,000,000 each and when equipped with armor and guns, about $12,500,000 each. Two firet ch colliers, to coat not exceeding $1,000,000 each Five submarine torpedo boats, | not exceeding a total of $2,500,000. Six torpedo boat destroyers, not exceeding $650,000 The senate aleo inserted = reso Nation providing that net more than | TUESDAY, MAY MR. AND MEAS. JAMES A. MAXWELL. The Star 24, 1910. New Insurgent Leader HO! YE BRIDES AND BRIDEGROOMS OF e Star Distributes in the City of Seattle Every Night Over 25,000 Paid-for Copies, and This Is tar’s Circulation. JUNE! 00 YOU WANT TO BE HAPPY? Remember the hax succeeded bame ON TRAINS AND NEWS BLANDS be. ROOSEVELT LINES UP WITH THE INSURGENTS ONE CENT Pleaded With Taft to Support Their Cause and Oppose Aldrich and Cannon, the Day He Vacated the White House —Taft Sidestepped With a Joking Re- mark. (By United Press.) WASHINGTON, D. C., May 24.—-That Theodore Roose» velt is with the insurgents, heart ar of a hither to unpublished report made by a cor ttee of insurgents to a caucus of the house progressives in March, 1909. The endorse ment was given the insurgents in the strenuous closing days of Roosevelt's administration. With this support behind them the house progressives, with “Roosevelt and Insurgency” as the battle cry, are plan- ning a terrific campaign next fall that will sweep the former president into the whirlpool of politics. The endorsement which forms the groundwork of the cam paign planned, was given to Representative Nelson (Wis.), Representative Gardner (Mass.) and Representative Madison (Kan.). The three representatives were sent as a committee | by the insurgents to Roosevelt to obtain his endorsement of the | insurgent policies. They appeared before the caucus and made |a report of the result of their mission. The report is here made public for the first time. ! On March 3, 1909, the report declares, Roosevelt proposed te | give Representative Nelson, as chairman of the insurgent commit. tee, a letter endorsing the fight made by the progressives on is the gist Speaker Cannon and the house rules. He expressed thorough sympathy with the progressives, and said: “Cannon has been the Greatest obstacle to efforts to secure good legislation throughout my administration.” On March 4, after having spent an evening with Taft, Roose velt asked the insurgents to excuse him from writing a formal one battleship should be bailt by! (hy Canes ‘Deets It was a desperate hunt | letter incorporating these views, on the ground that such a letter the same firm. > Just think! Suppose you had made up your mind to discover some might embarr the new administration. The two new battleships will be| CLEVELAND, O., May 24 Who could give advice to the 490 or more couples who will be [i Standing in the president's room in the senate wing of the Dreadnaughts, and the largest war-|—-Eighteen of the 23 members led thie June iff Beattlc. Real advice, we me not theory or ff} capitol, Roosevelt took Gardner and Nelson by the hand, and turn- ships in the world. - — crew of the steamer [JP Sresching. but = the PLAIN, SIMPLE ADVIK THAT Comes ff} ing to Taft, urged him to ne up the a cause. That was . . (} FROM EXPERIENCE. Pretty bard task, huh? So many have " Roonevelt’s last acts during his administration, the re; | rowned today when the vessel’ anether. you think. It was quite some task The insurgent executive commit-|He said he had been dealing with sank after a collision with the/ But The Star has ened, It has gies tee for the tee gave the fouowing outline of | these in his own way and let camer James B. Wood. The} ¢ dane, 3 lent given by any preacher famour [their visit to the president before | bis successor would want to do the |W rammed the Goodyear, YOUVE NEVER BE FORE HEARD THE AMES ae eee ae Tare icant bec aliens |tearing a big hole in her hull. |For Tae MAX AND WOMAN WHO ARE TO TALK the bce on erage a PET ebjeation ahceobins lable gle jrent and the Goodyear sank ay They've lived « 7 wares that thet i was mendour March 3. to secure Roosevelt's en-|the insurgents was the fact ¢ l most immediately caging ea ee aan gg tas have been [/dorsement of the insurgent attack | his successor might be embarrass UNIVERSITY OF WASHING-| The collinion occurredd off Port |E married for 09 yours r love affair begen nine years before 9.0% Speaker Cannon and the house | ¢d. mre RL oe TON, May 74.—everal hundeed vis- | fareques, Lake Huron. The Wood |B that. So far as we can learn, they are the longest-wedded couple rules, to be made during the spe a itors crowded the campuw observa-|was severely damaged, two holes | in the United States. They live in Caledonia, N. Y. cial session of congress to revise ran hour and a half Roosevelt ‘ory last night to obtatn a view of having been knocked In her bow They are entitled to give advice to the sweethearts of June, are the tariff. Roosevelt was moving | talked over the questions connect- Halley's comet clarified by the | The Wood arrived In Port Huron to they not? out, and the executive offices were |ed with the insurgent movement. eclipse of the moon day. The members of the crew re And they will in confusion. The former presi-/The committeemen outlined var The demand for the telescope was | fused to discuss the accident far WATCH THE STAR dent led the committee into the fous projects. Repeatedly Roose so great that Prof. Gould was un-|ther than to say that the collision old cabinet room, where Nelson, | velt evinced a desire to ald the able to obtain a photograph of the |occurred during a heavy fog _ oom <4 — - vege = oe —-. Z “1 ce ae oe eed a way cu heavenly vagrant | Moat of the rictt of the acc y mittee, outlined e plan of attack| would not leave him open to @ piccmiat S140 end: 0:48 the moons] dent lived BigP ork a Oe | THREE THOUSAND EASTERN LOBSTERS that bad t n made defined Its ob- charge of having interfered with which Ie at its full, was totally | e crew of the Goodye ject, estimated the chances of suc-| Taft eclipsed by the earth's shadow. The abe doe bathing the tion ee COME OUT TO OREGON TO LIVE cose the insurgent program, and Finally he made this suggestion eclipse began at 7:20 and by 11:45/ curred, and the er of the Wood lasked Roosevelt to endorse the offered to write a letter to had entirely disappeared threw life lines to them. It is be (By United Press the Pacific coast plans officially Representative Nelson endorsing “The comet, stood out fn all its) lieved that most of those drowned TOLEDO, Ore, May 24.-—Nearly They were in the care of BE. E.| Roosevelt raised himself fn his/the insurgent program splendor,” salt Prof. Gould |were drawn down by the rush of |2,000 settlers were added to the Boothby, superintendent of the | chalr be oe = leg up b say nae He told reminiscently of having I think It was as 1a view a* water when the biq vessel Boothby Bay, Maine, hatchery a favorite deliberative attitude, | written flar letter for the use we shall be able to obtain. The| Tne heavy tox sade the work of |pemuation of Oregon today. They} "2°21 ition 2,000,000 lobster ioe Lelabpoa his hands behind his head | of the unization” republicans comet will probably be visible for | attempted rescue difficult traveled from the Atlantic coast to yore brought. to the planting /and sald Jearly in his administration. In re 10 days, setting a little later ench| Among the known dead are Mra. | ¥aquina Bay in one car grounds in the bay, which are seven yw, boys, let me think out| turn, he said, they had promised to evening as it moves away from the | T Hf. Bassett and her daughter of| The colonists were a promising low Tolede loud, t through his legislative pro earth. From calculations the head| Marine City, Mich. The steamer |Gatch of lobsters, which will be ernment recently planted Cannon Against Him. " of the celestial wanderer was @p-| William Seamins was nearby at|planted in Yaquina Bay, near oysters in Yaquina Bay For thirty minutes he proceeded d see what they have done proximately 19,000,000 miles from |the time of the accident, and in| Oystertown, by the government, in venture is oving suc-| to outline position in the im-|for me,” he ejaculated, leaning for the earth yeaterday, with a tall 10,-|pelieved to bh acued severallan effort to establish te: pending tive strugg) He} ward and grasping the arms of his 000,000 miles long.” persons before pr ding to Sault pointed out to himself and the in-) cha cone Ste Marie, Mich., where she is due , surgents ighout his ad om afternoon 5 ATTLE TAKES were straight at a fielder ministrati Cannon and the circumstanc he 5 KILLE Lyneh made a beautiful running | certain followers had op; 8 would not write a letter for eatch of arnwebe irive | measure measure that | A tion but it ce used Al RACE RIOT : OI te MORNING GAME in the fifth, and saved a core, advanced advocated eely and without re among * st Tsasiteaib as Flanagan was on third, with | jn the be ug that he personally embers of the house. It * WHEN IN A HURRY *) 1neik on wo favored the insurgent cause and be shown to anyone, he said, (hy United Press.) | To find a buyer, a tenant or #| YANG %., May rks made things lively by was in sympathy with their ain Uncle Joe himself. The let- BOGALUSA, La, May 24—]|* Help, step to your phone and ®)The Turks 4 the Beavers three fast double plays. Miller He however, that he was now as outlined was to be a complete |Three negroes and two whites were |* dictate an ad to The Star. ®/\this morning 2 to 0, after a game ked for the Beaver preparing to get t of the lime. rsement of the insurgent pro- killed and a score injured in a|* Main 9400; Ind. 441 ® | that was replete with sensational | the frat two innings, set light, that another was to take the amending the rules and re- lrace riot following a negro picnic |* * | fielding and steady pitching and kept the hits well re and that a new president ing the.powers of the speaker, here today. A quarrel between a|¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ #¥ ¥¥ HHH! Thompson was on the mound for! The afternoon game n at like to have them taken son the next day Roosevelt white man and a negro started the f “ |Seattle, and the best the Canucks called at 0, The score from his hand at the president's room of the trouble. | , BAN etre sere me anes could get off his delivery was two! . | fer RMD Roosevelt declared it seemed he! senate chamber at the capitol, sign- Town officials have telegraphed | aa see A. | hits. He was pretty lucky, how: | Vancouve 0 6 1, would be encroaching on the pre final bills of the administration, to surrounding villages for aid in Henttle of a (over, as the Beavers were solving Batter Thompson and Cus-|rogutives of his successor if he Roosevelt were grouped super ing disorder. to price of milk, |him toward the last, but their hits |ter; Miller and Sugden i publicly endorsed the insurgents bors. of the hoube aad the Gas Taft was also in the room warreling re evelt sent for Gardner and een ling ? éé TI 99 | Nelson, He grasped Nelson's hand fy WHAT ARE THE P ese ay fateh of ® neighbor Well, I'm sorry.” Without dis- ji under arrest BY T. J. DILLON. {kind of love, akin to madness or|men rescued from starvation, who | friends She sacrificed a boy'’s)rifice, and no woman ever sacri Jis but a woman who gives her} cussing directl suggestion as heroism, according to the etrcum-|for months after they have return-|honor and a father’s happiness; | ficed more than this one; her fault| honor for love, only it is a man’s/it had been made Meale, will Vhen Henry Bernstein wrote) stances, be they in accordance or to the land of plenty, steal food| she compromised herself tn other | was in sacrificing too much But top and not the honor we attach | jy ia he had brought tor, to wu rhe Thiet’ he dredged the depths |jn opposition to the conventions of | and hide it, obsessed by a horrible| ways—anything to keep her hus-/if love is everything, if it is the/ to woman ntion the suggestion that the a bt up alsociety. But “The Thief” is not|fear of a recurrence of hunger.| band’s love, As for the ordinary | gre t of all things, the one Man's honor is to be hon ao be yevieed. ana:’ Gannoma tf woman's love. He brought up &) tent of a lover | Their instinct of self-preservation| heroics of love, she would doubt-| thing, how can there be acrifice | woman's to be virtuous. We r power abridged. As a result of the Dag L, but a pearl embedded in| Sung see Laws | blots out thetr reason leas have died at the stake or sent| too great? What are mere prop-|ily forgive the woman who sins in| discussion that followed, he sald, Atkins | muck and slime. The muck and] 50h. took the love of wife ig’ Measdald ton eve. | her soul to perdition if it were re-|erty rights as against love 4| woman's way for love, and although | he concluded that it would be im. rown' sne were washed away and thelang husband. This is the love| “The Thief” is a girl starved for|duired of her. She would have been | woman may properly giv up her it ts a Weel harder, perhaps, We! possible to write the letter he*had fa 1 remained translucent and| tried and found sacred. Husbands|love. Finally a man loved her and|® melodramatic heroine as a mat:| life for her husband, may she not | forgive the eee who is dis-| offered Nelson. He expressed great ro hiecrde by + waatand wives have been known to|she lived the rest of her life in| ter of course wpa Ret gues Sh peg ‘" [honest for love. We refuse to} sympathy with the insurgent plans. That the dredge bucket was brave death and even seeming dis-| fear that she would be deprived of Anything for Clothes. jobligations to society greater than reason or be logical about it, we Well, Mr. President,” said Gard. filled with perfect unsullied| 'TOCe ‘for each other, but they al-|this love--that she would once} But she was only an ordinary| her right to be loved? What ts the | simply condone it, perhaps shed a! ner, “will you ask Mr. Taft to do a shock to us, because We! ways atop short of actual dishonor.| more starve for love |woman, and her great Imagined | relative ca a cg Sg Soin antl Lae of pathos over it as he ein - taueht ourselves strange les-| They do it to save each other from! Love to this wife was every-| peed was clothes parison with wh a _ eee | Love Its Own Law. With an impulsive gesture Roose- oe ED et which we call love. | some catastrophe. But Bernstein's thing, it was her whole life, her| If she could have secured these |of existence hat rights has the truth is that love is not! velt grasped Gardner and Nelson ie Bk ahig= Pha gph page Bg heen “4 _ thief for love. She steals| whole soul, She thought of noth-| clothes and thus insured her hus-| love susceptible of mathematical demon-| by the hand and led ther where r rnd re gee Sega Rogen bet he loves her husband, she| ing but love and the fear that she| band's love in any other way, abe} No Answer Comes. stration. It does not begin here! Taft stood, The other occupants 1. i old, whose in-|steals because she is afraid that| might lose it. Her husband's tn | would have done so she would| These are the questions Bern-|and end there; it is not amenable| of the room started their at 4 ers young po pony short of lar-|her husband may cease to love her,/ come was not sufficient to keep| bave given up anything except her|stein asks in “The Thief,” and,/to any statutes or ten command-| tention was turned to the two con: ation does not fall shor’ vnies. |ahe steals from her bost friends—|her gowned as other women were,| husband; stealing was the only|needless to say, gets no answer.| ments; it makes saints and sinners | gressmen and Roosevelt pap tod A aes Mon ‘emotion as there 4# nothing she Will not do to|and she stole to buy finery. She|way, and she stole. If she had|The doctrine of mine and thine/ according to clroumstances; it Is Roosevelt briefly explained to oa 0 Oe oe ve love's| keep that love. |was not vain, she had no care for|thought it necessary she would| permits of no exception, even for|law unto itself, Men in fear will| Taft the plans the insurgents had |iafatuation and thus save ie em This 18 & hideous view of love,|the admiration of other men. Her|haye done murder just as readily| love, and there always remains the| trample on women and bables and/ made to fight the rules and Cannon, jfaco, We are, as & oan we are| which we speak of as holy. It i#| husband was her all | as she stole. command, “Thou shalt not steal."|women in love will tear down the|and pleaded with him for five min- Phe yr hay a ‘s throw|a monumental, selfish, egotistical! Not only did she steal like “al Those who make phrases about| but while one sits in the theatre | heavens. Stealing is one of its les-| ute rt the insurgent cause, | pen ve rc naar we are|love, cruel, reckless, despicable—a sneaking lit beast,” but she|love may deny that this woman’s| and watches Miss Shannon the} ser crimes And the fact that t ending “at ut kee your hands Fide away fOr Cleo pit hon. the | love that knows no suminit of sacri-| gladly allowed an infatuated boy| passion was real love, They may| wife and Mr. Kelcey as the thief happens to be married to off so [HOt At all aatonisneriatross pays|fice or depth of degradation, but it|to take the blame for her thefts,|find some other name for it, but to|band, there i# naught but sympathy | object of her affections is an in-| Taft ned to the fervid plea oo he nen Ge foo. bee ee coal is none the less love | she willingly brought shame on the|do so fe to quibble in terms, ‘The|for the woman, who has loved not|consequental detail, more apparent | threw up his hands and turned the conversion 1. ‘¢ #ay to ourselves, is one| In Alaska they tell stories of!heads of her husband's closest! chief characteristic of love is sac-! wisely but too well, After all, shel than real |matter off in a joking way