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SEATTLE, WASH,, SATURDAY, AUGUST SILENCE FOR BURKE BUT 6, 1910 WW GARFIELD LOST ils HIGHT IN ORD Star Correspondent, Tells of Double of Friends and Machine Politics Which Beat 's Will in Taft’s State. rae Ds Colo. Aug _ of having murdered Mre & coal bin in t today te partictp Mrs. Wilso band upon bis eral days ly before braska. a BULLETINS Aug. 6.—The body found,in the cellar of Dr. H. iH at 8 Flilldrop Cre Islington, was that of a acrording to the declaration of Dr. Popper, leading London toxocotogist and chemist for Seodand Yard The remains @re thove of a middleaged woman and | Bellingham Applauded the Insurgent Candidate to) oii. inet tne spokane Ineurcent who was large the Eclio—Cool to the « as informal reception here last and of a robust type td Dr ebper today night in a hotel lobby, and it The surgeon made his report irrespective of pollee direction and Judge. I pla that will only after he bad conducted a careful research fe npport in Bellingbam and The description given by Dr ot | com county Elmore Crippen, of whore (By United Pres) Poindexter | BELLINGHAM Auk 6—-Al lelty and a though Miles Poindexter is a long | mont park way from home in Whatee asion Of Belling! that he is not unknown here the clovest attention but | given teous LONDON Crippen's home woman receive strong Pepper murder corresponds Dr to that Belle Crippen \s accused peaks tor 6 dienkyo MI Catherine Wil: cellar of the Wilson home here, tion in the killing was found strangled tc eturn from a journey Misanaga the murder naga, a Japanene, accused | and stuffing her bedy in partially comfeased h county or G. SHEPHERD. 6.——James R. Garfield had’ just reached o in Columbus, 0. when I saw him and © progressives’ { and made ¥vidertt yesterday when with on the plat to hundreds of peo iret atcom MYSTERY OF DEATH OF MAYOR SOLVED (iy Cnited Press.) ROANOKE, ing @ stick of dynamite in his lap, Mayor A. H. Bousman, of Ridge way, deliberately lighted the fuse with his cigar in order that his death Inst May by her hus She had been minaing for who was employed by the Wilsons, fed short was discovered. He was captured. In NO Thomas Burke he spoke kathered of the amua Axsocl reached the grounds dexter wak spenking. The Spokane wan paused, shook hands warmly with his Seattle fival for United States senatorial honors, and then proceeded to tell what insurgeney4 is and. why he f* an insurgent Burke rpoke in the evening and |heavy insurance which he carried, way answered remarks of according to detectives who The ment aniong vestigated the mysterious ex »ple was evident, for | plosion on July 24. Boveman was Judae ov form, ight defeat in at w Bay, the| County fon, Burke| while Poin at the progressives didn't get a chance to acy for the governorship. The spirit of our s, the Guggenheims,, the Aldrichs, the privi ers of the people, was on the job. } got as faras he did the lesson that the people must run not their own politic hance to say a word one me = - <tiaiitian Va, Aug. 6 LAPP eee ee ee ey oe the despo ANOTHER THEN.IT- HAPPENED STORY, By United Presa) WELLINGTON, Wash, Aug. 6.—J. 0. « in the mountains near here, carefully hole rds a lighted a mixture exp ld drive the animal’ out But before crawl out again was overcome himeelf by He was not discov or several hours, and died him. The sooms ‘to have escaped un Jamieson, a rancher crawled into a the fumes of didn't ea the fight Je a tremendously strong sentiment in favor of govern. By the people in Ohio,” said Garfigid. “I discovered it during campaign. its strength surprised me. The only that, under our system, the people don’t have a chance themselves tke Ohio fight was only all-over the « Mors of b way or an coyote’s whieh bh in a Potndexter ithe country p n Poindexter arose to speak be greeted with cheers and during |bomb thrown by an hin speech was warmly received. |tectives found he was When Judge Burke spoke he waa debt. The Taft Raft in Dangerous Waters as enemy. De deeply in tee eeeeeeeee one battle in the great war betwe a ROSES S AR ER Ut nOhd tk ELSA RAES FO eH His Candidacy before” the con decided to make gubernatorial can-| progressive platform. paestatement which was} over the state, pif a progressive Poghe respouse was im all over the f to delegates to the % support Garfield. | im turn, declared} ‘wand dy Garfield ion was so im-| “$9 general that the) of the people of | who make up her! y proven.) yotérs of Ohio were, large majority, for ‘his ideas. P these people speak? faay way for them to de before the con- bus? Took Charge. the comvention | Bosses began to take Various county dele minute matters be- fferentiy; the people, igates, began to sink ound. There was} head of the Cuya} delegation, for in) almogt certain that} Yotes in this county for Garfield. But| let them go that e Six.) PATTERS py QUT IN 5 FAVOR Mil four of the stand eandidates and run! for re-election 4n | the hope of ste mming | of insurgency through the detascrenip-visteriee-inblow York and-Massachusetts wave, the Taft raft ie but starting on its perilous trip up Standpat river. jen to write progressive planks into the party platforms. There is danger of a democratic victory in Ohio, the president’s own state. Indiana's republican efforts are for Beveridge, the progressive. In the Middle West, Colorado and on the racitic coast, insurgency and progressivenees are presenting reefe and wave billows oat reaction, while the whole country is waiting breathless for the word of a well known hunter. RIE HAT ron ats ae wRECK ) ‘Canada’s Premier Suffers women Accident in Head - On|" eee Alice Rodaevelt. Long Collision Near Winnipeg oy .ccc or not “We'd better k Jand girls in Washington let Allee’s folks take Mre. Margaret B. FP president’ of the W. ¢ been ® big | king tn tht The insurgents | PILOT TAKES BLAME FOR: | ENTERS NOT enforeement of the law tn our ewo But | rg It’s Bad, All Right, | Why Single Out Alice, | St gps They Ask, When There |» Robert Guage | Are So Many Others. rh Sy habit Gr wnslilleeecnsintants at 2 do ver to atte . wat the target usiness tatingiahe Ie Detestable Habit. “igiiret smoking ts « most detestable have | 1 Mrs! “I have no | t. smoking as a| it in which etre WRECK (By United Press.) JUNEAU, Aus. The , rein reached port. at jon in| 7 “ with the remaining passengers and WY fepablican circles and! seater a open ne th of the discovery (Crew of the wrecked Princem May ¥ night's meeting |A few were brought bere cartier, in completely |the evening No one received #0 tieal fabric In| much ae a scratch, Pilot Richardson, at the. wheel | 4. collision neat Pense, Saskatche when the steamer struck, today de- | Tiered that he was reaponaiie for|W8m, Jate last night, Sir Wilfred the wreck, but refused to offer any | Laurier, premier of Canada, who ts explanation. Theoship was far out|making a tour of Canada, her course when she struck | sughtiy injured about the yefing 12 knots an four, she hit terrific force and was driven |his hands and face high on the. reéf.« Photographs |broken ginss. The taken. yesterday at low tide *how train was killed jthe way to her entire hull out of water, Ship- ly violated taken back to Moose y with the| ping men believe she can be raved. The passengers are all quarte | Gets Bad Example. at local hotele* The . steamer |dead fireman and injured premier.| “Alice Rocrevelt Longworth's ex Beatrice, due here tomorrow night, |[t 1s not thought the premier’s in-| ample has been pernicious in ft» has been offered to take them | juries are such as to interfere with | influertive on boys and girls, but the! his tour thing for us to do ts te 1 on think ft i ont place out Mra. Lo h by tho: anti-cigaret agi- | ovement (My United Pree) MUBK(C Okla Avg Senator Charles Curtis, of Ka appearing before the congress investigating committee nied the charges of Sen of Oklahoma, that he is interested | men oF women,” An-lin the J. C, McMurray Indian con drew, “and anything that can be |tracts, concerning which ged done to prevent it i @ good thing. attempted bribery charge } been Whether Mra. Longworth should be | made 4@ the object leason for all in a difficult question to s ewer.” { aan ined crim- | Worth,” anid ition. | the wihttter into! but deel Seattle ° o 5. steamer | Sentes a bs midnight &. los whether T one th smokes onal the either (By United Press) WINNIPEG, Aug. 6.—In a head k after the boys| state of her,” tt, and care an a says state Thursday “port that Humphrey, having ing of insurgency, d to announce that me of the district will only ibis one more time he never or Uncle agai Beet tereeey 1 have never been int the McMurray cont testified today. “I a the? Inc has eane legs andj on Mra. F were cut by | ¥ ked fireman the | inal code, a # ality of th The train was on juestion, until now Rattleford, and The k in tt ringing the anti-cigaret law the law 1 was st Roosevelt Le “ who in Washington, to have her nam open-| “Is @ to single out one |woman and make such a public | L. | mpectagie of her, I saw a great deal lof Mre Longworth last winter, and | thins whe charming man and At the Chevy Chase club, We went to (Continued on Page Six.) ant le “ire Alice ed ir an «islature woman ember vn now McM far as I er met Jacob re sp onatity affairs vote tor member I have ne Hamon In April F desired t was} esident Taft « Vice myself, td he President St testifie House to ns Be many bareaine in Classified co! * * BRR hat Meeting BY T. J. DILLON. the bragvart claims of the standpat senatorial candi Sday night's meeting in the Grand Opera house berating answer; a thunderous reply, the echoes of still heard the farthest corners of the state, pro- the end o/ reactionary domination.and the begin Politica) { wherein ev ery man shall vote as his ‘conse ic old guar. B that th: of the it could ® Curtis ne. White where nee to “(Continued on Page Six.) + account was taken of the feelings dnd hopes of those present in the capacity of candidates; there was little of the formal respect that is usually accorded to men who hold high office, for the office’s sake; the very frankness of the audience was at times almost brutal; very nearly cruel once or twice; at all times its attitude was unmistakably insurgent. bred to the belief that nothing could beat organization founded on patronage ; they shook their heads yesterday and mournfully admitted “not a chance, not a chance.” THAT'S WHAT IT MEANS; STANDPATISM HASN'T | A CHANCE IN WASHINGTON THIS FALL, NOT THE} | SHADOW OF A CHANCE. THE DAY OF RETRIBUTION There were young men and old present ; men wh had been |driven with party blinders for years; men who had never worn| AND EXPLOITED, JOBBED, TRICKED, BOUGHT AND \a political bridle or chafed at a machine’bit, but they all have| SOLD, UNTIL EVERY LAST VOTER IN THE STATE vain | free rein now and they showed it by bolting Thursday night. |KNQWS HOW IT IS DONE, BY WHOM AND FOR Poin- | | WHOM, THEY KNOW AS WELL AS THEY KNOW not] THEIR OWN NAMES THAT THE TARIFF WAS DIC- TATED BY THE INTERESTS THROUGH ALDRICH AND CANNON; THEY KNOW THAT THE PHYSICAL VALUATION CLAUSE IN THE RAILROAD BILL, THE ONE ESSENTIAL FEATURE, WAS KEPT OUT AT THE| nm ‘ DICTATION OF THE INTERESTS THROUGH ALDRICH | meeting ; it was megaphoned from 1,500 throats and they know | any) CANNON; THEY KNOW THAT THE POSTAL SAV- about it in Wall Street and in D*C., today and | TGs BANK LAW WILL BE MADE MORE OR LESS IN-| perhaps even a faint whisper reached the Rhode Island abode| QpeRATIVE AT THE DICTATION OF THE INTERESTS of Aldrich as well as the Danville bailiwick of Joe Cannon, | THROUGH ALDRICH AND CANNON; THEY UNDER-| What does it all mean? You had only to stop on the |STAND THE FAILURE TO PASS A PARCELS POST streets yesterday and talk confidentially with the shattered | LAW; THEY UNDERSTAND THE FARCICAL MAKE-UP remnants of the “old guard,” politicians of the old school |OF THE BALLINGER-PINCHOT COMMITTEE, THEY} tate the its smarting pride with the s packed by the friends « The meeting was If it was packed the “general demand” and their | acquitted themselves 1 If these standpatters and their ory del the unmistakable e—least of all themselves: ention which lifeless thing; this meeting with the mock cony | preceded it a day in Tacoma, ‘The one a stagnant the other fairly with enthusiasm; the one an assem | blage of hired men requiring barroom stimulation to do their or dered task; the other an outpouring the people, spontaneously lactive and intensely earnest. It was no writing on the wall this cause Compare ven packed reap as nm te shington, n its every aspect was an eloquent fore- it demonstrated, as only actualities can » the temper and mind of the rank and file of ¢ people who have the votes and who will use Ht w Was a meeting unique in many respects, almost at times in its intense partisanship. Little CHEERS FOR POINDEXTER. most cor | What } and in fact that he te the favored son wa bl | | | j Hold. | emily might reap the benefit of the| in-| supposed to have been killed by a/ ONE ON TRAINS AD NEWS STANDS be CENT. RED LIGHTS 10 GO OUT TONIGH | Judge Gilliam Issues Restraining Order That Will Put Restricted District Out of Business Tonight and Keep It Closed Until Monday, When the Petition for a Permanent Injunction Will Be Heard. strains the o« restraining « »¢ heard city, of the n the dis- derly pure when the WILSON TELLS SMALL CROWD BOUT MY FRIEND ALDRICH” Senatorial Aspirant Assures Sixteen Candidates, Two Reporters and Sixty Voters That Republicans Never Promised DOWNWARD Revision. Bey two bh uty-eight persons last n Junction hall ars in Bal ght heard John L. 4 Wilson talk for Included in the 78 auditors 16 candidates for county and legislative offices who came to it votes for themse newspaper reporters were * after Wilson also among finished the number. his talk, Wilson Two was * game, however, and for two hours he orated to the 60 citizens, the 16 candidates, t od those present with some étartling p elared that Roosevelt was ni he reporters and Theodore national conservation policy should bave been claiming credit for it when it really belonged to leveland Grover Bo Roosevelt of the serted angry the wa: for de credit due records hin Cleveland made the erve, Kinley velt had After showing Roosevelt up Wil json added a new political epigram jready large cteck of Wil- Harrtson the third the made the nd that four Wilson riving Cleveland he as show that would first forest re Mc Roose Wilson jvoked | wildly exclaimed: | do not believe in using you can use a stiletto. Afte t jquieted hi He aid s de is eudi | man out of the lhe did not |dexter was rig | Cannon. purpose Wilson downward as his ¢ repul the t jean party as power to do so eved ting ration discussed the He said: revision vision of the tariff. demand for tariff upward. the “The republi can party never pledged ‘itself to a of the tariff. They pledged themselves to a re | believe that at no distant day there will be a revision of the The tariff after al! nd A “in politics n axe when tariff is only a great tax measure.” tha conspirator onto all bi was going to tell the about He, howe Pinchot through the repy them ver, very and ex left pose this vf the business after saying conspiracy Poin against had for that very » empty chairs. lest that has ever turned out er in this hall Wilson furnish- litical Information. He de t the father of the present ignant that Roosevelt $n ha was with | when the tariff bill was up in the senate during Wilson's term, “1 d to Senator Aldrich, ‘You write the tariff for New England and (lt write the schedules for Washing- ton.’ Aldrich said, ‘All right, All right, John,” however, ing to Wilson, did not escape of the mighty Aldrich until Wilson pe personally and alone had blocked all legislation in the senate 'i for two whole weeks. Wilson concluded, by saying, “God knows | don’t know what's going to happen, but | hope it don't happen to me.” 5 The meeting was held under the auspices of the North Side Repub- ean Club, and after Wilson's speech the Club gave him a vote of thanks for his speech. RRR EXCITING vee, FOR GIRL. at pres (By United Press) SAN DIEGO, Cal. Aug. 6. Miss Blanche Stuart Scott, of Rochester, N. Y., a Vassar student, who arrived here yes: terday morning in an auto which she had driven across the continent on a dare, late terday afternoon made an ascension with E. M. Roehrig in . his Farman biplane Roehrig and Miss Scott were he alr several minutes and flew a mile and a quarter. eee EERE ee RAH HRAEEEEEREEERE ee ed 1 know Mr. He to ¢ S Be¢ 4 His Good Friend Aldrich. To sho quainted w how with nat well h 2 story about hi with N h Aldrich invariably John. As the story was told by Wilson, ' was ac leaders he atorial ex Aldrich addressed ng destroy ee WEATHER FORECAST. Fair tonight and Sunday; light westerly winds. eeeeeee * * * * * in | & es Five deaths were recorded Im Seattle yesterday Was Packed as the Whole State Is Packed TAKE NO MAN’S WORD FOR ALL THIS; THEY KNOW IT FIRST HAND. THEY WILL ACCEPT NO MAN'S SAY SO THAT IT IS ALL RIGHT; THAT IT IS FOR FHE BEST; THEY KNOW BETTER. THEY KNOW WHAT THEY WANTED AND THEY KNOW WHAT THEY GOT. That is why they cheered Poindexter in the Grand Opera hooted at Senator P him ad their ide: \ house, ditional hun iles until common humanity t }18 AT HAND; THE PEOPLE HAVE BEEN PLUNDERED | house until their throats were sore ation of a public servant their conception of an employe of privilege man who attended this meet with the n vention in his min that P senate there at heart, restraint success ndexter emory wa of the popular that is why they jeered and pade them sp man represented the the other represented One ng in and dried the dead hoice for th Other candidates were present and treate: but stif to th ind « ompletenes Poindexte such of the band | The sole attempt of an enthusiast to bring one the attention of the pitiful in the And the was a mad § ting resulted in a ghastly fail wagon ¥ is the cont