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HE SEATTLE ~ vol. 12, NO. 105. MARLTON BOY MAY GO FREE Fight On Between Youth’s Family and Rela- | tives of Murdered Wife, Into Which the Italian Le-| " gation and the United States War and State De partments Are Drawn. (By United Press.) He intensity ¢ r of Mrs fon, will be | t erican cx fo Italy for t I Mary } influen Maly to extradit harlte : Nc machinery of the United invoked by relative p murdere States ! and It woman to secure the means by are endeavoring to prevent the | agencies are is return. | Paul Chariton, ¢ bs the accused mm n, has ep gminent lawyers (o defend ‘Already they have in Zed Bim to repudiate his con a Rave told him to plead . Was Porter Chariton im of mental pr tion? prineipal question that ool before Italian os be to bring | The at-| P| Ade rly | Se meerenenrnensmeeeanaenanenamucmrsts | and the that young man say father brings forward ‘ to prove the as| & Scott Denies it. | brother of the dead) that he was not. He fe written by Charl happy honeymoon | Tegnazzi, on the Como, which, he that Charlton was) —_——— | Injunction Stops “Medical Examination” of Women in Restricted District by that he sunt | wife. He cherishes | sand jewels that she | of bis first few with her. # Murder Caimiy. oa discussed the de on his wife, of @ tile attempts to Judge Webster, sitting on the |King county superior bench, at noon today made permanent the/ [temporary injunction granted last week to put an end to the so-called “medical inepection” of women io} the restricted district by city offt cia’ | for the defense) The injunction restrains city of-| that they will set up! fictals from paying any salary to} to clear Chariton. Dr. W.T. Wooley and Dr. W. C.} and Former State's | Woodard, who made the medical | ards, counsel for| lay ordered that ra be allowed to see These doctors maintained an in-| spection office at 519% King st., where every woman in the district was obliged by police regulation to appear for medical examination | every week } A fee of $2.50 for es tion was charge turned into the every week since 1 this sourc 50 Between 40 6 women ¢ examined | David Zerweh, a property owner, sought out the junction, claim. ing it was but a subterfuge for lt censing vie@ in the city. The in junction handed down by Judgel Webster today stops the examina- tions and the exacting of fee At the next meeting of the city council ‘the corporation co 1 will be imgtrocted to appeal from Judge Weiiiter’s decision to the su- preme court of the state. Serene ea eee saps ‘S His Sanity iM meantime alienists for the examine Chariton to test Man's sanity ye familiar with that Ch examina average city last Italian if extra famnot be convicted of any grag t. The pen : is six years’ imprison This, in the case of Chart [be tantanfunt to death the youth is a victim in an advanced treas April government, through Montaglia, the Italian } Will use every ef. extradition. Attor- lon claim that un tis being made, and in-| the state department at . bas taken an active in ‘ fase through the tn ‘ot Captain Scott © MU. &. in Fight. ME Who are closely watching * see in this action a * between Scott * * * THE WEATHER. * neti * Fair tonight and Saturday; * light southerly winds. * * * Oe ee Se ! | the act HEXICO CITY, June 24.—Thirty-seven persons were 50 severely injured today when a troop train was n the National railroad in the state of Colima. | Four cars broke away from the train and were derailed as founding a curve while traveling at a high rate of mew Ma down grade. The cars pitched over an embank- ¢ 4nd the soldiers were crushed to death. \ By Were on their we in border to pr fon that EOF Borme tire to the 150 408 families ot » Were aboard the tr May that sever from the f Sum the majority or the Ered remained ab: So eame. Seven offi Pt be among the ipion ana conductor ‘ Piaeed under arré LSS yewerers hee we) Dut a mere would be but a fragment YUCATAN «| Washington; a life alwa AT PORTLAND & | of b western ups and downs, of Comat No mere jotting down of days (By United Press) rd Ife story of Gov Graw. It must B. C., June * Yucatan wii and the state, in the progress and de ee 8 Portland The Lake Washington canal wil a marble hall of fame will have monument promise that he | unceasingly fortune buffeted him. recitation of the CCout deeds he performed and the causes Ore Altogether, the life of a man; 4 man whose principles always rone efforts. to the top—rose and fell, and Not once in his life did he p man, or trample down a weaker brother, SrA examinations in behalf of the city. | | victory for Poindexter and the pro jturns In th !the standpatters | Mra to steadfastness of purpos never forgot during the 18 long year , 4 promise not forgotten for a day, no matter how maliciously His public life can be tersely summed “from policeman to gove rnor,”| manhood he political offices » service of his svelopment of th A STRONG, HONEST, ENERGETIC MAN. strong, | personal gain or personal honor; a man who started at the bottom and) v4 ied about : ) re a -//) THE — a SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 1910. What of an insurgent himself sec vigtlonce of eadtit republican integrity, ete, et f mate at the have rly ¢ thowe principle iniquitous de and inasmuch as "1 tate of Washing ton, It ta y Tak Taft adminis w Senator Jone ition of that NM. Piles failure, for the for making @ what the the determina tate thie the repub When the senate voted on this valuation clause, Senator Jones voted for it; he voted with such insurgent republicans as Beveridge, Bristow, Clapp, Dolliver and La Follette. Piles, of cow voted against it, along with Aldrich, Carter, Bu Pont, Flint, Guggenheim and the rest of the standpatters, When tt "1 1 bin placing i tele~ Interstate Comn ve the time the reer Jones entitied . to nelderation ts organs in the telephone insur- ta won. eld by . sted in it being the repub! tandpat state Senator Jones was surgent when he ve benefit to the people ed to make but ew apaperr one of those en voted right, voting right linking of weion of the the istration ratir the idates for th unfort the ins T their was nate ¢ r : tate “ en and ie wtate It would fact ents, party ree dexter wa. sacredness of mere party cople’s attention to the ok after their Inter doing so by rea ta he wa larity and hat, perhaps, er ine that Senat was Olsregarding identally doi what Congressman Poin in the reason that #o Httle Senator Wesley I * bein « about the BE Washington Jones POINDEXTER HEAD WILL BY? 10.1 PARDONED AT SPOKANE TODAY John L. Wilson Machine After Three and a Half Badly Battered in Pri-| Months in Jail, Former maries to Name Dele-| Clerk Is Freed by Gover- gates to County Conven-| nor. tion. (Ty United Presse) | OLYMPIA, June 24—Charles EF. Head, clerk in Justice Carroll's Seattle, convicted of om beztling $2,829 in fee deposits and sentenced to the (iy Calted Pree) SPOKANE, June 24.—In the prt maries yesterday afternoon in the nty and last night in the city, for the election of delegates to the re publican county convention Satur day, the neue, wherever a contest was made, was fought or the ne of standpat va. the progressive wings court at King county jail for four months, will be pardoned today by Gov, Hay Head was arrested and paid back expense last winter ¢ shortage and the Last night the standpatters, con experting bis books He ling the county organization |¥8* & Spanish-American war vet d backing John L. Wilson for | eran, and in sentencing him Judge d to have walked | Ronald said T eball not stain the coon and would | record of a good and faithful convention, 3 to 1 by placing on his escutcheon the from the country | ord ‘convict however, show a 2 to 1/| jail sentence to July 3 A petition all of th oldier s returr precincts, expire midnight signed by practically officers and men of the National Guard and What looked like a walkaway for | rican war veterans, 10 days ago now |asking for the pardon, was 0 even | the governor recently Charles Tyrer, an auditor's office, an Head's, ln now serving a ithe penitentiary greasive fore and the later re city show a decided Poindexter gain has the appearance of an break or better for Poindexter and avsures the cutting out of any how tile resolutions in tomorrow's con vention. aploye in the accomplice of term in Cambridge, M Indictment land has confessed to the murder warrants have b 4d against of Mra. Alice Brown Lytton, whos Glover and as ac-|body was found yesterday with her jen to the murder of Clarence throat cut. They quarreled over an » Waltham laundryman, other girl The slain woman was Hattie Hane, hie 16- (18. She was married when 14, living pdaughter, is acctised of one day with her husband murder. Nerth Yakima--The Farmers’ & Los Angeles. rah Edwards, | Merchants’ bank and t Central hose son, Dr. is Presi- | Trust company wil) consolidate, with died yes-|R. & Wickersham of Seattle as nt was | cashier. while in ~ Walla Walla.-Walla Walla's The body of Leon|less station wa owed yesterday ped from |The offices at Yak Wenatet Chehalis | Everett, Eugene have ali n closed since the government's arrest of the officers of the United Wireless company dent Taft's brother-in-law terday, aged 89. The 1 the guest of the Edwar Los Angel Centralia. Lewis, a laborer, who J river last was found on the river be yesterday Olympia.—The city counell de- clared for a Fourth, an sion. New York Ernest HMuppe, the Sheepshead Bay Wed last night of his ins placed a ban on all dy last night's plosives at in @ race at nesday juries died Cumberland, Md.—Harry ©. No« 1 be John H. McGraw's monument,| Governor McGraw was born 60 carrying his name and his achievements down the years when mcxy| years ago in Penobscot county, Me crumbled back to dust It will be aloft promise fulfilled—a that he worked Irish parents, who crossed. the Atlantic in that fateful time of 1848 His parents were as were all Irish emigrants in those harsh days, and long before the days of his was thrown on his held|own resources to fight the stern battle of life and of his poor that MeGraw his useful life in and fellow citizens; a life ndeavors, successes and failure nd dates will suffice to tell the be read in the history of the eity pommunity, in the Gov nt « Seattle It was hard work from the begin. \ning, with only a “little sehooling to say education would t ag geration, But even as he tofled in that hard, rock-ribbed community jov. McGraw showed that initiative Jand fertility of resource that after | ward made him what we now know well-wishing | | him. fi for| “in 1874 he married May L, Kelly three years ago Goes to San Francisco, He saw the limited meager future he advocated | energetic rode any desire honest, imperiously ov rose again, but always by his own mount on the shoulders of his fellow Head was given a} The Dead Governor JOHN H. McGRAW JOHN fl. MGRAW 15 DEAD AFTER A VALIANT FIGHT Former Governor Made a Wonderful Struggle for Life, | But End Came Peacefully at 6:45 Last Night— Private Funeral From the Home Tomorrow After- neon. , After o valiant struggle of neany four months, John H. Mc Gthw died at 6:45 last nicht at his home, 1104 First av. N Hin end was peaceful. For 48 hours before he breathed his last G@r, McGraw wax unconscious, His life ebbed so slowly as to be imperceptible. For days he had been slowly sinking, bis every hour to be his Inst, but there yet remained in him that strong virile force that retreated gradually before the onsiaughts of dis eane, Yesterday afternoon the physicians knew that the unequal struggle could not last much longer and the family was called to | the bedside. Gathered around him when he died were his daughter | Mrs, Pred Hudson Baxter; his son, Mark T. McGraw: bis nephew Dr. Bugene ley; Fred Hudscn Baxter, Mra. Suteliffe Baxter, Mr Baxter's mother; Mrs. Mark T. McGraw and Gov McGraw's two grandchildren, Harriet Baxter and Jobn Baxter | ‘The funeral services will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock at /nal aseociat the family residence ago, when Gov, McGraw that he was dying, b oral friends and 1 funeral be private all eivie or other doctors expecting rwriters, Lake Wash Man Three w . reservat realized | be r e for a large number of called in sev 5 c rf all elty ked that the \ and exempt from ea that all foral display ate » the ns of seats and swing are the act arers Pay Their Respects. 3. D. Lowman, F, W.| Out of respect to Got. McGraw lL. Crawford, James D./the Chamber of Ce ree, the B. Yandel, Major F Manufacte the Edmund 8. Meany, Le Mercantiie association and the Charities Indorrement committee will suspend activities today he Chamber of Commerce strawberry festival will be discontinued Gov. McGraw's fight for life was remarkable. Four months ago he suffered from an attack gia. He went to the springs for treatment for two weeks, When he came home Drs. ley and Horton found that he suffering from tle poisoning. This was follow ed by typhoid fever, accompanied by severe chills and hiccoughs, Dr dward P. Fick and Dr. L. R. Daw son were called In and Gov. Mc raw was inoculated with typhoid germs. He showed some tnprove ment for a time, but suffered a re from which he was unable to palibe ers’ = ABRO Honorary—Hon. C, H. Hanford C Haghes, Thomas Burke, Re Moran, Harvey W. Seott | Blethen, Col, W. W. Robertson, keny, Henry McBri Hw. Cc. GM B. W. Andrews, C. H. Clarke, Judge Roget 8. Greene, William Cochran ¢. J/ Smith, W. D. Wood, D. B Frederick, John W. Roberts, Frank MeDermot 4. & Chilberg, Nadeau, ( ze) =Donworth | Lord, J. 8 Br Charles W. Dorr, 1M. A. Arnold, B. Albertson, J. 8. Goldemith, Jacob Furth, M. L Backus, R. H. Thomson, J. M. Frink The w ial wervices will be held im the Piret Presbyterian church at | A. Matthews will make the pre liminary address, followed by testi monials from Judge C. M etiiveeiiaces 2 |B. C, Hughes and Judge Thomas| who wa | Burke Ihas dect The fot nettle land ¢ivic fied a desire to memorial services through trustees and be of directors rnoor lapse rally Hanford, ewhere Seattle ay] will lowtn ~ probably organtantic signi participate in the thetr comr ial, sock | a RRR RRR The * oon have been amerce, the eeliy The Star—never! * * * * f & Country There are no shadc » dim * * * * * * * * Rainier cl * club, Commercial Club, | its luster * * * * * club, Arcti University club, Manufacturers’ ax Placing an ad in The Star ts sociation, Seattle M like butlding a fire on the hill ciation, Seattle clearing top atthe Real Estate association, jtle Athletic club, Seattle house, Se it cannot be obscured. Seat board of! jthe east held out for a poor boy,/and with it all his possessions, leav and in 1876 he started for San Fran-|ing him just where he star And Once there, he waited for) this was not the only financial mis no opportunities to call at his ¢ | fortune that fell to his lot durin He looked for a job and got it—|the years he has been in ttle driving @ street car on Market st.| Time and time again circumstances It will be difficult for those wha| have forced him to the financial know Gov. McGraw, the refined and| ““!, but he never quit fighting |polished gentleman, the shrewd, Became a Policeman. far-seeing man of politics, and the| At the time of the burning of his jman with an allembracing grasp | he Seattle was nothing more on large affairs, to conceive of him|than a small village. Times were driving a street car, but that was! not the best, and try as he would his first start in the west, and Gov.| Gov, } aw could not make an McGraw was always proud of It other start for himself. Then he | Fils stay in San Francisco wag | became a policeman, |ahort. Seattle beckoned him, and| The jhe came Here he started out for) those strenuous days |a job and bis first employment was|but a short time when John Me | that of a hotel clerk, From this he|Graw, as a natural leader of men, progressed to @ small hotel of his|rose to the top and became the town marshal, He held this office own, Ju he seemed started | toward pro: y the hotel burned |for three years with satisfaction to cise. small in and it was police force was |to control the nominations and defeat the |has no right to name delegates to ja state convention.” | that lown |declared that the voters wanted a jeounty convention of neural- | jing against the | which has a mem | | committee * | subterfuge and a fraud eee ee eee eae ee wis that the committee SEATTLE ONE CENT fitwa sranne te. REPUBLICANS DENOUNCE TERHUN } | North End Ciub, in Stirring Meeting at Interbay, At- tacks the No-Delegates Plan of Wilson’s Lieutenant —Would Bolt Party if Plot Goes Through. Chairman Terhune to North Side Reput club is a joke. I do not kno ou. North Side Republican Cl Shairman scheme is an insult to the community. Tt ican Club—Your Terhune—Your ¢ committee wants of the people. At @ well-attended | Republican club, King county republican central committ age for its attempt to tak legates to the Taco convention udges. Practically every one of th ) speakers clared that the selection of delegates by ommittee in place of their election by the people was simply a bid for the defeat of the nominees of the Tacoma convention at the polls Practicall akers many of them candidates for office of the North Side night the ' reible ming court and ex that took the floor de all of the s for persons interested ing the nomination of them preme court judges. that voters 10 was selected ine, the will coun tell was pously follows s club that tral committ Speakers wards in they sponsible for the expenses of hold ing caueuses and primaries in their ards. The meeting, however, An Insulting Letter. Two weeks ago the club, at a meeting, appointed a committee of nt to the county cen ttee resolutions protest abolition of the county convention. Last night the (Continued on Page Fourteen) committee reported to the club, rship of 500 re Tina nacrenar a ase (CLE TO TRY TO ation they had received was REALIZE ON OLD an insulting letter from Robert 8 \ "") AMES SHORTAGE erhune, the chai 20 years the city of committee Terhune in his letter said that he | is trying to realize on money shorta, of Willis L. did not know the members of the city treasurer personally, and that he| Af committee of the city considered the club a joke. That started the fireworks. Speaker | lost on the morning recommended instructing the board after speaker strove for an oppor-| Ames when unity to tell what he thought of} The finance rhune personally and of the/counell this committed a body an ordinance works to sell two lots on creek, back of Youngs- which assigned to the in controll these su- on the republican — ticke If the people selves—asserted the are denied their political rights by should repudiate whatever w this committee it is simply bidding done in Tacoma if the delegat for the defeat of the nominees of are chosen by the committe the convention.” Will Notify Committee per RE A committee of by Thomas Mury presi dent of the organization, to call upon the republican central com mittee this afternoon and to notify the members that the four north ern wards—the 9th, 10th, 11th and Sth—will hold caucuses and pri | |maries and will elect their own | delegates. The committee was also | empowered to tell the county cen-| tral committee that the caucuses | primaries will be paid for by | ore of the north end The committee was also told to |inform the county central commit-| Mother’s Plea and His Own {tee that it had better think again land call a county convention The} Story Get Him Re- excuse that there was no money : \Sith whieh to defray the expenses} leased—Arrested Again. | was declared to be a subterfuge —_— land fraud. F. 8. Steiner was loud | Telling a pitiful tale of trying to ly cheered when he declared, “If {t}jead an upright life and of being is impossible for the republicans of | hounded towards a life of crime by | King county to defray the expenses! the police, all because he was once of holding a county convention, We/ given a suspended sentence, Marl | should all move to Tacoma, where | Wray, a Seattle born boy, yester- they do things far better day afternoon secured from Police | Will Denounce Plot Judge Gordon bis release from the ese ‘ocemistion ak 4a ant prison, where he was beld on call on the - republican of being a disorderly ty central comm and it what the republicans . hour later he was the north end think of th a gang of opium subauay te deuaeel of amoke a dirty opium joint on agg pe ye heey a é Washington st. near Fourth av. 8. Stellinger, William H. Flett, Vv.| All this happened yesterday Buck, J. A. Johnson, Harry Kilduff, | ®fternoon, d now while the police Solon T. Williams and Tom Mur-|®'@ Preparing another charge aaa against the boy, who is but 22 7 ceiehities years of age, his mother, out at ileace aiken sie th Seattle, despite the heart vee mg ecatletyrer rendings and suffering her boy has dea! sane eee a sed her, is preparing again to t for his Hberty. from each of the four Sen Sane the north end declared | 4, 7,0° Pitiful story was brought out would be peteonally re- | @Uting the trial yesterda after- noon. With # mother’s love, believ- ing in the innocence of her son in the first offense, a burglary job of which he was convicted in| Skagit county and for which he received a penitentiary sentence, suspended because of his youth, the mother has stood by her son through thick and thin He has been arrested again and almost Capt. J. A. Johnson made ajof publi speech that was greeted with en-| Longfellow usiastic applause when he said: | town ‘The whole move is to control this | city state convention. This scheme is| At most the lots now won't bring an insult to the community and the th veral hundred dollars, intelligence of this club. It is a s’ shortage, it was stated at the The truth | meeting, amounted to about $12,000, is working | nih ats |WOMAN WINS FARM IN WORD CONTEST were (My United Press.) ST. LOUIS, Mo., June 24,— The Missouri State immigra- tion Commission has awarded to Mrs. Mathilde Rudolph, of 8 W. Oak st., Chicago, five acres in Arcadia Valley, Mo., for send- ing to the Missouri State Immi- gration Commission the largest number of words spelled out of the two words, “Missouri Homes.” The winner's number of words was within a few of 500. the entire community. He next be came a deputy sheriff, and then sheriff, in which office he served three years During his incumbency occurred | the anti-Chinese riots, a time to| test the fiber of any peace officer That there was not serious blood letting was due to his courage and diplomacy, There was an element of lawlessness in Seattle at the time that wanted but the slightest} relaxation of official courage to Divoree pp precipitate an outbreak that would|in the superior court never have been forgotten. To this|by Fanny V. Da Lavill element Sheriff McGraw presented} clares that after living with her a stern and uncompromising fr husband, Paul V. Da Lavill, for alx Presented Stern Front. |weeks, he left her, At present Whatever . } Mrs. Da Lavill does not know, may have where her husband 1s. them to his duty was his first Six Weeks This Time. were begun morning who de- feelings ubordinated as an officer, It Sod If youn have money the people you countering of public Jare introduced to never forget your | name (Continued on Page Thirteen.)