The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 6, 1910, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

. its Offer oer, 12, NO, 115. SEATTLE, WASH., WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1910. ONE CENT fkwa'sraxps’ be. puri] IN FAVOR 0 POINDEXTER SURGENTS ARE EATLY PLEASED — TEMENT Reports of What Took Place at Luncheon Bay All Prove That Former President Is of Insurgents — Poindexter Careful to Claims of Endorsement, Although Press Quotes Roosevelt at Length in Wash- Tnsurgent’s Favor. fy eited Press) Jsay nothing regard! ng the conference with ger | Congresaman Poindexter, Roosevelt with «Congressman | today said of Wash “1 will say | was pleased to find day | his past record regarding conserva tion | tion and similar subjects was in hearty concord with mine. “1 did not express to him any opinion regarding senatorial nom | nations, and Poindexter did not ask ater from bis office at the) WM see many sena \ assemblymen | for any. men representing was responsi! opinion,” the! im the morning papers except as || "He dectines to be | have indicated. We did not discuss | Statements ©x-| political questions in regard to the ay aah Takes himaelf.| northwest and we did not touch! , and intends to| upon the Ballinger affair.” {By United Press.) IN, July 6—Politicilans here have had two | the last two days he first came with the On that former President Roosevelt would oll of Washington for the United States Second came today when Roosevelt declared that ‘ was untrue there % much political signif etween Roosevelt and Poindexter at Oyster the politicians agree. While statement the possibility of his openly espousing the cause of for the senate, it is, nevertheless, believed that the of age by the former chief executive will eacnce politicians are reviewing Pwith considerable interest and the Washington in the subject of conv m generally in political a. ater is one E He was one of the nine republicans who voted taker Can the n orable fight against tules comn He one of the principals | committe: he has played an important} insurgent 1 ments. from Oyster | h the official stamp of r — the stamp takes the form of ir not, it is certain, as the politicians he Bio have a A dad influence when the political pot West begins to b ter’s delight fd and the stater Showed that wha more Hill conf Sontroversy and were general, Bay yes Roosevelt's was ud ifie view Roosevelt's approval | ted after leaving discussed at ters were er they touched upon the Washington senatorship, or 4 pretty direct fents here are pleased with the ee’ indicated that Roosevelt is behind the and that he has not changed his mind significance tent lexter is taken to signify here Br president t side with Ba rer An eeceecestc: Id har be consistent with any ap inger and his ies, to put it in the most mild } according t iticians. THE ASSOCIATED AND JOHN L. WILSON AID ABOUT THE MEETING : the A. P. Said |was in hearty sympathy with my Associate or conservation policy tee prises in Jot Mr. Poludexter 14 @ candidate for the Post-I: n.|the United States senate, and is po litically opposed to that wing of the party headed by Mr. Ballinger secretary of the interior. Coincidentally Secretary Ballir ger and rresident Taft beld a con ence at Beverly today, in which they discussed the reclamation ser There Mr. Ballinger denied emphasis the rumor that he to res a smi not quitter, and never will work he been,” he said. hed With the rewult of the ert Bacon, ambassador to ance, and Gilson Gardner, a mag leit looked happy when |azine writer, were the other guests interviewers « at luncheon at Sagamore.Hill today. Was dressed ir The colonel and the ambassador Suit which he sre |fought it out today on the tennis he te at ho court at Sagamore Hill as they Bbrary, he ¢ used to do on the White House Mr. Poinde x tennis court ed pla Other Insurgents to Call. hes had ¢ There have been two tm @ sald neurgent conferences at Sagamore @ Poindexter and 1| since the colonel’s return, but more Political situation in|are coming. One of the most po Sssured me heltential of these is arranged for |® made a statement | ® terview if dext } icance behind the con- Poindexter’s | f the m radi of the insurgent gr up | interview. ‘They | Washington’s Next Senator BULLETIN (By United Press.) NEW YORK, July 6-—The steamer Grand Republic to the ill-fated Generai Slocum, caught fire today through the Narrows, The steamer headed for shore tugs and smal! craft dashed for the vessel and the sioniets aboard were taken off the flaming vessel sister ship while coming A horde of crowd of exeur Fireboats were rushed to the aid of The fire waa under controt at 3 o'clock. CHICAGO, July 6.—Chief of Police | Steward today announced that he would not permit negroes to parade the streets of Chicago upon the return of Champion Jack Johnson from Reno. The blacks have been making elaborate preparations for a welcome for Johnson. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., , duly 6.—-Tommy Kincaid was killed at the motor speedway here today when the National car, which he was driving in the races, dashed over an embankment. The car was overturned and Kincaid was pinned under it Thursday next. On that day five best known and weichtiest » insurgents are coming the ex-presider it declined their names said over the tong distance tele phone “There is so much but Mr. Re fact contained in error of the dispatch from Oyster Bay concerning the Roosevelt. Poindexter interview - that it is hard for me to form a t Associated Pri \s doubtiensly accurately recount ing the information furnished it at Oyster Bay. Assuming that this is true, Col, Roosevelt ap pears to have been misied or is j net familiar with the political conditions in this state. “in the first placn, Senator Piles is not 2 candidate to suc- coed = himesif the second place, Judge Ballinger is not taking any part in the senatorial contest whatever. Ballinger is not the head of the republican is state nor the head of any wing of any party, “Of the six candidates for United States senator, Judge Thomas Burke, Judge John E. Humphries, J. M. Ashton and myself are personal friends of Judge inger, but Mr. B ger is not politically friendly to ‘ol any one of us over any other An one of us.” SEPP ee * 7 MADE NO CLAIMS. * *& Representati Potndexter yesterday # afternoon following his lunch *# eon with President Roosevelt ® It will be no! that Mr. Poin ® dexter makes no claims qf # endorsement, and that his In coincides exactly # with the statement issued by | ® Col. Roosevelt from the office #% of the Outlook today. Poin statement was as fol tee ete eee ee eee CONGRESSMAN } at. e8 POINDEXTER. a ro = =o Roosevelt éud ‘Poiaiextae ~ ® lows “Roosevelt and | have al * ways stood together. He is # still with me, and he assured & me today that he will continue & to be. We discussed politics # in all its phases, and | am # heartily pleased with the col- & onel’s views. The outcome of | our conference is gratifying.” * SRR ERE Re Insurgent Congressman Miles Poindexter was the guest of After Mr Roosevelt at luncheon yesterday departure, Col Poindexter's Roosevelt said “Representative Poindexter and I went over the politi- cal situation in the Northwest. He assured me he was in hearty sympathy with my conservation policy. “Mr, Poindexter is a candidate for the United States | PROVIDENCE, R. 1, July senate, and is politically opposed to that wing of the party tal} e s ” Heap = Ledger thin) Secretar La re ped | so by me Ballinger, secretary of the interior. |morning, in which Mr, W Washington telay sred he G18 political significance of this st plain to a Roo: preseen his faith in the accuracy of | iy The Roosevelt | velt Poindexter is opposed to Ballir jthe report would support Miles Poindexter for i PORTLAND, Ore. July S-— h He added: | allinger. Ballinger belongs t or I'm not publican party; therefore eee eeeeeee | BALLENGER DOESN'T THINK POINDEXTER'S | VisiT WILL HELP HIM) | | Wilson Said Yesterday. The following Axsociat Proes interview with John L. Wilson wa nauihatens Secretary printed non ex Roose must be | anyway Former United Sta Senator J. L, Wilson, who is @ candid t 1 will tell 1 thin, | for the United States senator- though I don't believe the state | Clusi are unavoidable ship from Washington, w at of Was ton wil e end Miles | Centralia, Wash,, tonight. To the Poindexter to the Ur Associated Press Mr Wilson a Northwest, and the president R."} } nothing fer granted from Poindexter. They exchanged views | and, accotding to Roosevelt, found their views in agreement } If Col, Ra®sevelt made public announcement of no more than | | |this it would have been sufficient to remove all doubt as to} | Roosevelt's adherence to the insurgent cause | i Roosevelt, not content with plainly “Mr. Po nited States ent ranks, went further udexter is a candidate for the | Rett ae and is politically opposed to that of the party Doesn’t Know Anything) Mr, Ballinger, secretary of the | About Plans of Recla-| Here is a plain endorsement of Poindexter’s candidacy for ‘ H the United States senate. The fact that Poindexter is a sena- mation Department, ie} torial candidate is well known; there was no occasion whatever Says. | | Roosevelt is ar Discussing his conference with Roosevelt, Poindexter said “Roosevelt and I have always stood together. He is still with me and he assured me today that he will continue to be. We discussed politics in all its phases and I am heartily pleased with the colonel’s views. The outcome of our conference is gratifying.” Roosevelt and Poindexter went over the political States sen tuation | former certainly took stating where he tood | in the inst and said | senate, wing headed by} interior The Optic Nerve Paiidbiued by Johnson’s Terrific | for Roosevelt to mention it as a matter of information, because oor spe : every one knows of it. The only possible reason for reference Wil our own Reginald H. Thom-| Blow in Second Round | to this candidacy would be to approve or disapprove of it, and non be t w director of the U. 8 —Doctors Hopeful. | Roosevelt says he and Poindexter are in agreement rec on vice when the axe. Col Re explicit. He adds the which now to be trembling — ‘ that Mr. Poindext . ani t over Director Newell's head, 4 ica information tha r, Poindexter is opposed wy . (oy Sennen party headed by Secretary Ballinger | A lot of ‘people think so, but you| sc 5 | : Yi y y 6. n ") jean’t get Reggie to say so. luieet hr tad al we eel There avas likewise no occasion for mention of Mr The reporter who went to ask|hourd J. J. ov’ special car)—| . exceppider purposes ol Thomeon this morning, following | S!though efforts were made to kee eee rene rumors from Washington |the fact secret, the blow Johnson | announced bi ' re that’ Newell » in't get | delivered in the second round of! ment that Poinde He | his fight with Jeffries at Reno par R ad tal past the city engineer's door € . | proc at Rooseve opposed to Bal lyzed the optic nerve of the righ ' hy Ball sent In a note : : sleye, and possibly: pertsabently tr al oppon are aligned with Ballin C ‘ou olng to be the ar = a tees . > Doson fant the job? Has Taft of-|Jured the white man's sight ithey are lined up against Roosevelt sped it to you? Would you take| Jeffries made light of the blow| sevelt's interview after the Poinde ir" ‘Theve were some” of the at first, but 1t was sdmitted today | declaration of Roosevelt's insurgency, of his things the reporter wanted to know. | it) re tt tne sight of the ; Ballinger’s so-called conservat So he wrote them down on a nice | * pont - 4 pO aR. ck ees acon. P dacy for the | States senate, Pinchot, Garfield and osevelt. was careful to be bg, Eats 1 to that wing of the ter 1 ! xter lune ” opposi vieht nger and 1 policic on of Roo ‘oindexter’s candi deranged, and the e sheet of paper and sent the ip My 4 rt sinsaogctng wd rtially paralyzed. n to Jeff can see with the right eye, ' t 2 ne note ¢ 10 back ) ove ” oy oma a ne soledeo of the|bUt not distinetly, and doctors are | #PProval ¢ ri no knowledge o |hoping that he may eventually fully | portant pronouncement from Roosevelt move manta x hod reclamation ser ae Bey i Ae { nited Ghates : ae there you are The fact that while Poindexter was dining with Roosevelt Thomson, a friend Ballinger was dining with Taft, while perhaps a coincidence, is Ballinger, bas been fig » J! none the less inferentially important. From what transpired time as due for _ a aga oe | from both interviews it would appear that both Taft and Roose- prea eer Cory Bows dence | velt have publicly announced that they are on opposite sides. on the of sending Thomson Taft renews his allegiance to the standpat wing and Roosevelt to Alaska as the special engineer makes known his fealty to the insurgent cause. Roosevelt will hold a conference with five | of George Perkins of the “ ect hi t| Pomdarrow ‘Col thing in mind for his distinguished lone - rgents is not yet made known, but Roo tacitly fellow citizen ms | et « Il the confe will be held. The result ther the program will be car one De d not » be pr on that" ft has been dis ant to rtance to the Roosevelt ha closed to the light, is still a ques | t¢ ¢ on Ang by every act shown his sympathy with the cause of | tion pe regarded as any pri |and yesterday's meeting with Congre announcement will ement of und be left undisturbed. \the first definite opponents of nited a declaration of panda quite the most ince his arrival in th avis, Jeffries in Oakland OAKLAN July | of Secretary ired for some corre matte evelt of thi admits rence be of vital impc conference will nation insurgency man Poindexter marked | Pe ed WEATHER FORECAST. return to h Poindexter is home state in a sevelt. What Poindexter realize It means that Poindexter will be the next United ~ | Congressman ew d With the McKeesport, Pa John Dalzen, | few days with t regular republican nominee for con- | thi * Fair tonight and gress, today was put forward by The & Light westerly winds ®| News here as a successor to the late HTK TOT RH) Chief Justice Full endors endorsement means the Thureda only too well States senator from this state, |sionary of the CITY AFTER CITY BARS FIGHT VIEWS Seattle, However, Will See the Moving Pictures Unless Mayor Gill and Chief Wappenstein Change Their Minds—Move Against Them Sweeps the Country. in Gill okane and San Francisco the pictures in these Gillett it of San Fran 1 ucceed in of the pictur the pict Atlanta on the South 1 to the Atl coast on the tent cities nger of racial trouble | being « City, Denver and in the 48 hours followi fron no. This the moral argument is used —— Seattle, however, will see the two jser of race riots, and if there were loppose their exhibition. I think jthe people will find them amusing oe entertaining.” CHIC tures Here in Seattle. ties of the Middle West and church aring u where, and | am sure that this sen-| The movement started when the question of ways and means toward 1 have been issued, “It is a shame to put the pictures |! s in Washington, St. |ligious standpoint, {t presents al ther es the matter has been fight.” exhibited, but will not permit l arg is that utburst of race feeling cost 20 sent hunc to jail and left untold hard feelings in its train Whatever the result, the moving picture companies which bid so eagerly for the moving picture rights have sustained a | sien s on the ms, Mayor Gill and Chiet Wappenstein both said #0 today There's no law against it,” said Wap are so lew |we'd have no trouble subduing | them. (By United Pres) Seattle Ministers Will Take AGO, July §—A movement |to prevent the Lead in Fighting Pic- | Jeriries- Johnson pictures is sweep- = _ h the authorities have ordered pictures cannot be shown, “Action should certainly be taken | that followed the victory of the to stop the showing of the fight| giant black man over the so-called timent is general among members | may Houston, Tex., issued an of the clergy. At our weekly meet- | ord xhibition of the stopping this evil will be taken up. cities the matter is J. M. Wilson, Broadway Preaby of such a thing before the American | | Des Moines, Lincoln, Detroit people. Besides being entirely | and ‘Houston most humiliating spectacle to the | brought before the authorities. In white race. There has been already |New Orleans the authorities have Rev. es and blacks to see them at time, and unusual pre- nflame the to ne 1 pt the In the where there is little bitter financial blow in the eres of public sentiment F| f HT j i | negroes here there is no dan- | “Besides, I have no inclination to exhibition of the the country today. In many Rev. W. H. W. Rees, First M. E.| that the f urrence of the rioting films in Seattie, as well as else-| “hope of the white race.” ing, which takes place Monday, the | films. then in many cities terian church: st the pictures have wrong, both from a moral and re-| In Kansas too much space given the prize | de od to allow the pictures to be taken to prevent A. D. Carpenter, city mis. | wh’ Seattle Baptist |the same cautions will be disturbances. church: “| am strongly opposed to the) “ny dis idea of showing the fight films in| In Chicago, Mayor Busse and Seattle. All such things tend to| Chief of Police Steward have con- aggravate the public’s unnatural| ‘erred about the matter and have taste for prize fights. It was bad| decided that the pictures may be enough for the fight to take place | ‘lisplayed. They declare that there in Reno, without bringing the films | |S no reason now why the pictures here. Such an exhibition would|Should not be exhibited here, but arouse the ignorant and supersti-|!{ any reason develops they will tious among the negroes, and in-|Probably take drastic action flame race prejudice. By all "tow | pening ‘Shem the flime here. penrree ov Serer PORTLAND, Or., July 6—There “While the federation of Seattle |'8 little likelihood ‘that an exhibi- ministers is dissolved for the sum.| 0" of moving pictures of the Jeff- mer, | am sure that all ministers of | "i@sJohnson fight would be p the gospel will take the same stand, | '*! eye om ey ue a Long of Police Cox expressed the without question.” n that the exhibition of the eat cae it | s would not be opposed. “In i ngiuioa date ed F he said, “I do not see how h an exhibition could be stopped f we wanted to do so.” Of various business men | viewed, one declared that a inst fight pictures was an m that a number of well in itioned persons were suffering thew , |from an attack of ‘moral hysteria.’ ” ve ir exhi ‘ effrie inter- When the wing the picture show LOUIS, July 6.—The bo missioners annc (Continued on Page Nine.) pietures f the Jeffries YOUTH UNDER BED: tom piece of the UL LITTLE ROCK Finding Higgins wife's room chief John- ,__|living, they w Ark., July h Gibson Viewing tt under in_ his John Pitcock Arka pe youth to death and attempted to shoot his wife today, He then gave himself up and a coroner's jury to-| day exonerated him upon his plead ing “the unwritten law. Pitcock was informed by a friend |that young Gibson was with M Pitcock. He hastened from th prison to his home. When he covered Gibson he stabbed times. Pitcock then fired a sh his wife, who had taken reft a shed. The Pitcocks long been friends of the Gibson fan te VANCOUVER T R which shel return from sing to ac (Continued on Page Eight.) SETS REE AEEIIRE SEER NEMS T IG

Other pages from this issue: