The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 27, 1910, Page 1

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THE SEATTLE ~2»yv-~ THE SEATTLE = te <s STA Resa STA 134 SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1910. | ONE CENT. Siwi"Ntot%? LSS PORTS, "°° tn carom onan on ABOR MEN GREET AIPPEN (IN MONTROSE abor Is Preparing to Make Demands on the Ne BY 41,628 Japanese poputaiion of California January 1, 191 i . makers to Stop Immigration of Hindus and Japs to| By Lisavase Shiidvon aiandite gublle eanesic 2\ 7 SPAR ARRRRARRAEE DE cy z S wae ; the State—Fight of Two Years Ago May Be Re} HTEd Varna. Gunad or Sowirolica by Wnse hy dapaniees to Montreal Star Says London Wife Murderer! — peated—Labor Union Party Has Been Working} $28,000,000 vaiue of crops produced annually on farms 50 per cent of labor employed were Japs Insurgent Candidate for Senate, the Only Aspirant In- vited by Labor Men to Speak Before Them, Scores a Hit. 115,000 acres controlled through leases. | $597,208 assessed value of farm iand owned by Japanese | | ~ Jy Aboard the Trans-Atlantic Liner, But Gives No} Quietly Lining Up Candidates and Preparing a 10,691 acres owned outright by Japanese, Particulars, Nor States Whether He Is Under Arrest| the Struggle. | $174,698 assessed value of city property owned by Japanese — - - 2,584 business houses owned and run by Japanese. $4,000,000 amount of capital invested SAN FRANCISCO, July 28.—The next session of the Califor $16,114,407 amount of business annually ONTREA! tale 3 a j ,| Mla legisiature will be called upon to pass rigid laws against the | Synopsis of report of Jno, 0, MacKenzie, State Labor Com M ? ee : further immigration of Japanese, and other Asiatics as well, and | missioner . , od the Seattio Ms Montreal S* ¢ er or everything points toward an even greater fight than that of two | | Cor " re to a apec invit of the council, | “Dr. Hawley | r 1 re years ago, when an effort was made to bar Orientals from the state. | easier | ney 1 L , P r da te é ttle opponent Se gps wireless «ti » The Star ie t onft ‘ Two years ago there was talk of war with Japan as the result ux of the n Wit ' t Of vote alt | 1 ef tv jectior bt in the counci] and that, br nm ie ri « he first of proposed tegistation which would prohibit the entry of Japan. | me i count 4 t ev aw t € lu ansacted, but was detiet ! who is ese coolies to this country. Theo. Roosevelt took a hand in the J ‘ ath al t by t, B ‘ . r r " « c y to tters of atenwieed fight and succeeded in stopping further action jready large one of Japane I nd ot el 10} he of Hy est to work nd declared that it would r people chor < cure the enactment by , lore the tt@r was! unfair, The league openly charged] fice hay been received | Ip pose E Aldric Star was re @ by some Gener thet Bane pe dlls be q people,” the cone MacKenale, state sary elopment of ¢ great diff ner, has been comy 1 ta r ote te fornia, in order| dates to it " ber ot advance sheets of the v to favor the railroad r, 1) powed fight thi: building have made public ‘ irage , abor on thelr} And the start figures and ¢ r-| section gangs up and ever Ever since the fight, whieh! titanic strugg! was lost through action of the maker federal governme ¢ labor he league inere.Netifien Yardmaster to | She’s the Hit of “The Lily” | | 2 tose. the ie pea ee = G,000 MEN MAY, She’s the Bi of the tat Wy FeHT HAS ~KILLED eee Ps "BUFFALO, N. Y., July 28—The Grand Trunk strike took on a | Pee pader has a hard r¢ ¥ Werious aspect today, when a delegation ot strike symp ‘ un (orders isles notified Yardmaster H. G. Foster, of Bridgeburg, that ne ; IS, Mo cide but tron Dyed be shot unless he ves Suffalo ; o, trangmtt have Yard received was not far hen and their ¢ dentist and the man with whom th ee five tare! to their to get In touch with the Montrose POINDEXTER DATES. eeeeteeeeee +eeee Se EEE [> Yer freight care a boose were burhed during the « for them- Dien the Buffalo division. Railroad detectives are seeking te j tety lost identity of the incendiaries. | s " rolitical ee soly 28.—Four iotieinciiedihiebinien /Union Men Plan Reprisal ies “We Have at Least Done : bs - “ P ‘ | : ” ‘ — — he labor organizations of Se te Durand today, whe paign of Manufacturers #58 ; braskan——“‘No Reason to Strikers Attac onunion | | member While they are not po- gitwation on the Michi-| ond! k ‘ 1 oes tnterest:** Men at New York Dock baw ve He ae ye of the more filiiiics of the Grand Trunk | exter supporters , ls acuw. . ome : ' ct and Police Fire on the! Se that om 60 of infantry from ae } ri “i o 80 per cent o n will sup- oe te (iy United Prem) Go Oe tay 30-08 | LinconN, Neb. July 2s—win.| Mob. while it Ja, siataed teat te ates id is one of the cen- iy United Prees | PORTLAND, Or nless | . rht aimed that in some Ben the Michigan divi) OYSTER BAY, N. Y., July 28—/the teamsters' str the me | moet ‘ lam J an to? sued u forma ineaiainelcaioen jof the unions he is the unanimous he Grand Trunk system. i= sine n Col, Roosevelt perused the | chanics’ walkout and other labor | | etatenseint : waleieait (ny Oniind Beeend | choice jean platform adopted by the | disturbances in Por 4 tued | = | state 1e county option fieht In| _NEW. YORK, July 28—One un-| “We admire him for his inde- Deny Peace Petition. ention in Ot ts only com-| . it is highly probable that) J e Nebened fe ‘lidentified man was killed, four|pendent course in congress, and O, Ont., July 23.—Strike | indted, in-| every labor union in the city will} 4 og eres persons were shot and a score | particularly for the interest he has Noday angrily deny state- rr have become involved in a general | pars : “The failure of the democ beaten in a riot at the Brooklyn |taken in labor measures,” said C. officials of the Grand| After finishing the reading’ he re-| trike before autumn. Eight thou ; . = state conver to endorse county | docks of the American Sugar Refin-|W. Doyle, business agent of the vallroad that the strikers | marked sand unionists would be af € a option is His "i ing Co. today. The riot began when | Central Council. “Speaking for to be taken back “I have onthing to say now, but | py a general strike order q | Bryan, “Still the 4 t strikebreakers started to work myself, | have been especially grat- me ralimoed officials say that| probably will let you know my ) sting of a committee | “ in vain. It ba elpe ‘ under the guard of special police-| ified at the stand he took in re- Was made at a confer.| views in a few days.” n@ Central Lador Council) : | declarat . > th ative | men. gard to procuring freedom of Presidents Lee of the| Maj Edgar Mearns and Edmund | jagt night the plan of calling out ree * A crowd of 800 ¢ rs and their | spegch and political action for gov- and Garrettson of the | Heller, of California, both of whom union after another until all 0 out easary {friends charg m the strike-|ernthent civil service employes. and President Hays |accompanied Roosevelt on his were on strike was considered. It . n¢ sbmitt e| breakers, 1 drew He has made a favorable impres- President Fitzhugh of the | African journey, were visitors to-| was practically agreed upon that |next legialat m4 ‘i ” the nonunion | sion here, and the fact that he was day jauch action might prove ryan We ret cu : er ime. The mob savag invited to address the council car to the company, the as - las a protective measure on the part tion @ gat v beat t « akers and watch-| ries its own significance.” tak back lof the unionists to protect them JULIA DEAN. assembly tr f emo- | mer al as sent for the “Andrew Furuseth, vice presi- to retain thelr 0 LY DEATH WILL Iselves in the campals being ’ conve , had 1 | re ar police r rves. dent of the American Federation waged by employers and the busi] Rolagco's tar nd somewhat, }aat. season. 8 1 appear in | county wo ave « police arrived they /of Labor, who was in Seattle re men,” President Hays is IT ness concerns to make Portiand an} suenty play, “The Lily,” owes |mont America jes in the plece [nated the necessit : re stoned and beaten. The mob | cently, told us that the only hope Bhave told Garrettson and MAKE FRYE QU ms shop city. me of its cess to the ast the " anon, A play of re paler € f " gaining the upper hand when | for the success of labor legislation apply as new employes. | In summing up the situat hing bea of lia Dean, wh ife ix being made for her for the | reas why any vote for 2 an order to fire was given The |in congress lies in the success of y has hired a number of lie stands at present, William wed} hit in t plece | following mn , pt that of governor, should | police drew their revolvers andthe insurgents or the democrats 1 food faith and cannot (By United Press) I president of the Oregor ‘ nfl by the candidate ndiscr ly upon their! While not mentioning him by them to make room for STON, Mass, July 2%.—Sen-|o¢ Labor, said attitude on y option. sal men fell at the | name, he d that we had an in- The strikers will lose! William P. Frye of Maine has The ‘bankers and merchants | “I bel the democrats have the first scattering volley and the|surgent representative from this z apd bes : Ph are (noe intention of f oe vag toe ple! have token. a ha a Ae " a| advantage in the discussion on na none broke and an for cover state who was deserving of much 1 ° a one we agues, Eugene Hale and | against the advance of 2 tional issue Every islat hree of the wour nen consideration from organized foom for, except those | Nexon P. Ald hn and ret from | day asked by the T if nm candidate should be ‘ ably w < fo: may re-| labor been guilty of violence. public iife F secretary, Wil-| that we feel that it is time for the port the candidate r nator ¢O of the oi shot were | Sailors for Poindexter. fers assert that the alleg-|liarn Sands, v for the state-| yarious labor unions to take a hand | receiving € ‘ote r strikers. A number of strikers, “| amy peepered te pay: thes wan ings at the conference | ment that Frye will remain in the |jn the matter. the Oreg plan, thus eliminat trikebreakers, police and watch-| nembers of the maritime unions of Wilfully misrepresented senate | _ the option questior selecting amen were ten. Many arrests ttle .s as aloo ate Tailroad official to weaken nator says he will resign Th “ A " Seattle are practically unanimous cia . @ senator saye he enign GUS SAYS: enator. The demo o were ma¢ in pM ka yoo their 5 rt Poindexter,” Of the strikers. y when he dies, Sands. ~ elect a senator. There i ewe sistance aia Pe m4 ‘oin r, oe business agent of tor Frye is a power In New| “You'll find out « discouraged and lose int the lors’ union. “We > | eng and polities, and the report that ef you investi- | (iy United Press.) I pany, and also of the interurban is “ EUGERE DERS Fegrege 3: Hive <4 ee ee he would retire was widely discussed | gato that the TACOMA, July The ttle-|aware that no franchise would be - didacy. If there is a single mem- here | piker owns a| Tacoma interurban trains y be| granted unless he agrees to con ih enak kin Ae we seey, «Te aes ae net pinaster js home and has a) stopped at the T aa city limits, |cede Scent fare, so he will refu : who ts y 28 “liza | : garden of his| 18 ka from the present to apply for the grant, announcing not for him, I have not met him.” i PORT. AND. oF yaly [FBomce Sore suhile the (if the city commission star that the interurban trains will be ‘The Marine Cooks’ and Stew- eth, queen of Roumania armen wee a ‘ Good feller is liv- |on its resolution passed yesterday, |stopped at the city Hmits if the onde enlon dy: for i te Oe Sylva), will come ortiand J Peon a hall bed.| The Interurban company has no |coupell enforces tts resolution robably in = te er nile e elt of 1 om: } its will be dus eaoet of the Better room and stand-|franchise in the city of Tacoma said Leonard Norkgauer, of that organization. “We have watched in’ hie landlady |but comes in on the track " where Citizenship Association and will 1 1 coun’ ards did shrink participate i in a national anniver off for the rent.jallied company, Th or atreet 1 nay area his course in con and it suite us, 80 we are going to give him : cal wtree ’ ate orywhere “The weather) an effort to bring the local street y |sary meeting of the organization car company to terms on the 6-cent ? y drop rink jaceording to announcements made a op our votes “We admire Poindexter for his fent Mariner itoday by the general secr . terurban concern 10 days po Pi day. Light west- {ing the interurban concern 10 da fants make their most rapid independent fearlessness and for his fighting spirit,”, said Paul Mohr, = ee » winds.” in which to apply for @ franchise. | growth between 4 and 6 in th Queen Elizabeth expects to make se a | Manager Bean of the local com: | fering. ys dele to the central body from union. “He has been ae : a tour of the United States n in congress, and we ice A has " t zo down the line with Bs eaan on ae him a Union men in Se his cai] as h 7 by ’ ine a 1 actically unanimous in oo ie pporting him. T never saw mem therm oo % ers ganized labor so nearly held at the « al ‘ imc in e support of any, up wande t jcandidate for any office WM by Patrolnen ‘cys, Southdowns and Dob * brushed, mended and revamped by|Esmonds? Of all that great Thack-|yet Mrs. Fiske makes us sorry Plumbers for Him, O'R “eober-tip drunk BY T. J. DILLON, % ei ys, & a legion of critics from New York|eray genius, we have nothing today! when Becky comes to the finish of| “Poindexter is very strong with MAN'S genera! appearance Of all the characters that Thack |Ding oe congeuity she to Moclips and Hudson Bay to Gal-| of any popularity save Mrs. Fiske's|her gay an@ contemptible car workingmen generally, and will ed |eray drew in “Vanity Fair,” Becky!) 12,95 to, Anno Domino 1910,| 4 | veston Z he only decent thin, t | crystalli ation of Becky Sharp—|as come she must, to meet the end|get a great many labor votes,” belon| oe z to say is, “Go and see her Becky, who ix like to be co-existent | of morality dramatized. said George S. Bowers, of the sbt | Sharp © only one that has e% | to obble skirts and willow . 3 wha " so cepts Bar utations i oe bridge whist and poker, Sy | Becky will furnish intellectual! with Gamiet But what's the use If you care | Plumbers’ union, b r known as caped the anschronising mutat plumes, | socy ‘courts and. ou! |food for many # day's nourishmen That Mrs. Fiske brings all her/for what is worth while, see for|the “Cowboy Plum ‘Most of of time and manners. o bankrup’ = |when the larder is starvation-| wonderful art to the portrayal of | yourself and ther y to the the-|the union men of acquaintance . ‘ale tadede eda, to Reno and Pittsburg, ‘i \ 1 y to the the inion men of my acquaintance Becky is with us, fresh. today, Hundreds, to Reno oe i satomo: |bare with “successful” comic op-| this character 1s wasting words tolatrical gods that they will send|are for } and will a = oe ry jc Bory ast be . " 4 } eras and melodramas y Her Becky is the elementar- | Mr Fiske back to us next year| Poindexter will sweep the city | thought o Vhen the las rat bile i Z You will marvel that a sup ily simple and infinitely complex. with no “mode ealism” t | unk i ot ownin 2,000 me | " - e ca ied or went t mp an I I modern realism” but with | unl I am very much deceived but his steed re! drama is written and the last cur The rest of the caat died or y edly intelligent and discriminating | She wants to live largely and well,| Becky again the support he will receive ed bin omeone, somewhere |out of fashion about the time of aly pI cel PM tried to tell where it w tain goes up, someone, somewhere | out of fashion a an Z public would give a cigar store|to be of the social elect at any from the members of preanised was se playing Becky Sharp andthe crinoline. There may yet be : ie. Would sive, whieh ‘ , . gy Rey a | from ft od Boerne think that Purdue 1 net Me itfler cad. Var,|isclated, lachrymose Amelia whose coupon to ¢ Salvation Nell,” |cost, and she is willing to pay for/ $500,000 WORTH OF labor,” said J. W. O’Brien, of the a ous her st ‘ t - 4 redolently realistic of the slums|what she want relate union. “He will get ero ram F #uf-| cheat—Becky, the contemptible, heart is held by a hu ae Segat it E uamcramic sew whats ae Fo Ree GRATITUDE FOR HIM hSgg pena A ase Ei Through a splendid phone system you are abl communke your want The Star from your h place of business and to ha them placed before thou of Star readers at no additi al cost than if you brough ther the office Ten 10 cen I « Maly (By United Press.) dope is Fair ynight and Fri-| fare issue, passed a resolution giv eee ERR RE EE eee ERE ER ee eY able adorable cart is held by a husband, celew Dr. Bourn 0] lovable, — detesta pf a stage set “below the line” for|enough to trace, but the shading to any candidate in this t Bourne y “ kaa, * enough cynical common séfis : F Mquor about 1 n ky, the virtuous blackleg, will h “ee a. nie . op ay the benefit of sight-seeing car | details of het composition are con (By United Press.) ; an tay’ oie OB I9 an Elk, and this after. | 0% the force of Me astiatio tnier-|wear becoming black in public; i bie ben A posed A oh Sieb EACH: Bae, aly, Soreniaren ‘ - : loca) F1 ft wtart type, be carrying to artist 4 . ; . | William Makepeace Thacker of decency we should ha cast upon the waters several |i H tof as bike will an ine | such veneered York-|the modern Steynes do not pay in ‘ H 10 Giscover his identity. | "Nee ome suc Crawley,|advance and the billiard shark of is, of course, woefully out of date abhor Becky and we fly in the| years ago returned to W. W. |for a They are going “shite 7 hire buffoon ae mesces rer de aay pony needs have more wit lly ci wT now, thou in his day he was | f of common sense when we do Miller, a local street car motor- ac t line for him to a ome Pune . sya Pickwic ty il-'that poor, lumbering Rawdon he jsomething of a best seller himself; |not spurn her, yet we have a man, in the shape of a fortune n, as s ‘ord in is on « some * prin poor, pe a | . « n iration for ie even ° 7 " rn ley, som ie “ ; Gediey and the|Crawley was ever guilty of. But |he is so far out of date that he is|sneaking admiration for her, ever f $ 00,000 4 f na pee Bee ‘- “eg uffawing sartor-|Becky—your wife or sister can untly printed and holds the| when she loading dice, weeping In 1903 Miller, then in Atlan 1 i “Poindexter will est of the loud guffawing sarte je 4. ws , sect y ; on the bosom of he iended J. F, Curl h ee t said Hs i et ot iition that tax the credu-|point out @ Becky for you on Sec t dusted section of the library; |mock tears on the bosom of her befriended J, F. Curley, then 1 Harry Kil it abeusdiies the i ny hour of a sunny after is preserved in deckle edge | husband, half sentimental ass and and out. Miller nursed | d te organt or the Order | ity of today 5 ee ond ay. any r jand artistically severe covers; het card sharp crook ) through an illness and gave | of Re 1 “Union men Becky la modern, ef today Ont to | Reem ail of Mis. Wiake's Becky 1s is in well-bound, consplcuou 1 all her many-sided soul there| him money to get to Seattle. |: where are for him almost to morrow, Becky 1s ieee aineition|not tair-to Mes. Fiske. All that \desuetude, and no one pays the|is not one clean facet; even her| Yesterday he received a letter iat speech here tonight, he eminine ambition| not fair to Mra, Fiske 2 Of-la tue is vicior ror Seattl Oe re ecord oor wins pooh oy a ified for all time.|may be said about character por pathetic Major the tribute of ajactual courtof-law virtue 1s vicious} from a Seattle lawy aying rd puibe gaye dye toltrayal has long since been said,| tear or gives Pendennis a smile, | below vice, She verything that| that Curley had died in Dawson ' ‘ a fe having a|it {# only posthumous decency to) trays “4 ‘ Vanity Fair seems long and with.{a woman should not be, and noth-| and left a fortune worth $500,000 |courage and fearless independ "Ohio. LT" € e w tly or unjustly; the stock of de ; the Litters. i aygvert: hae M ‘the ‘Dardaorea, terition oy been pawed over,! MRS. FISKE, out turning; who cares for theling that a woman should be, and| to Miller, beat the bors, seven oYs, seve 4 born in Seattle yesterday is enjoyin’ ence ) wuz renamed Cry

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