The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 13, 1910, Page 1

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THE SEATTLE . 2z- THE SEATTLE HOME TAR: ere STA Fe © SAM. OOo ‘Vol. 12, NC SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1910. L CE Cia) BEARDS Be LUSH FUND OF HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS IF STANDPAT CANDIDATES GET TOGETHER © BTA TO STRANGLE "*"" Soon So" GAYNOREN 7 WOMEN ST ANYTHING TO BEAT ISERVATION MEETING. 2, "aocivenyr bth’ MIKES POINDEXTER bPut a Blanket on Anti-Ballinger-Anti-Taft Senti- ment, President Will Come to St. Paul Labor Day, } : 4 and the Politicians, With the Use of Troops and the , . spite General Alarm for Not Giving Adequate Rumor About Big Fund Coming From the East if Labor Day Parade, Will Whoop It Up. oe ad Blood Poison-| Protection to People. Interests’ Candidates Unite on One Man, Sets Fol- <p % lowers Enthusiastic for Plan — Will Pay Mam- rr pce > ~ (By United Pree) q BY GILSON GARONER. ‘ , M malar S Avs, 3—Fer re- moth Campaign Expenses. T. PAUL, Minn. A 13—For ¢r e than a month, yes, for § aed 4 ia HUROKEN d F two months, « silent, secret struggle has been waged over the| hee Mayor Gaynor’s condition wa | 39 policemen were suspended today + improved today, and the patient|py Chief of Police Carter. The va-| joked with Doctors Arlitz and Stew-| clncies om the force were filled at as they dressed his we nd once, over 100 civilians volunteer i al and confidential “letter® to Dear Mr. were co signs of infection. | ing to be sworn in as. patroimen, | Asht t that a big sl} f t East is available shout “exy ska” for the Morganheims, seemed to be apy . fa now be that the] The policemen went before Mayor | {« ‘ the fiot ‘ t re th actionaries will & public rea asmuch as Roosevelt was to speak, his . bs danger of blood poisoning has par | Marshall yesterday and announced ; : and even the absence of a protest on his part would add force "on 3 ed, The mayor's family retired At) that they would refuse to ride on| adsault upc erism. What to do? The first overt attack ai + an early hour last night, after b the cara as protectors. The reasons} is being of- about six week », when an effort was made by the local com ae ing been told that they were not) they gave were that ‘grocers and | { the erst ' ed that “all the WM fevise the list of speakers f jteeded and that no danger threat putchers had threatened to boy hey t é t - led, while z ened the mayor cott them and that they would be eo ator t t 4 “any sunt AND EVEN JUDGE HANFORO. ' ‘ Seeretary Adamson called unable to get provisions and discussed official business with ‘Wea like Brar Madison of Kansas and Pix-Gov. Pardee of Call M ithe mayor | ? ‘ S thing like that Were cross a P were gxested such ene ‘ At 21 o'clock Doctors Artitz and (ty 0 S le s Bol conservation as na a congressman Mondell and Stewart inaued the owing | COLUMBUS, Oo P ' t ntage 1 ign in a friend ‘ n 4 o ingt | “The mayor's condition ie gratify-| lowing the wounding ! t sefore the conser iste—the crowd— refused. jing. slept eight hours jastiand a Little r ‘ t « ‘ d begin to the mittee feared that the “business interests night | when the po fused t Rl wat titty 01 \ with ies le tongues and bring Miesitate to put up the money nee to run the congress if plain | The condition of the mayor at 2 F : was planned This is Taft at the golf links at Provincetown, M: Wille flesh : | eae Gale afternoon was sill ty fF well, then the congress would be moved to some town with i ther improved, acec ng to a bulle tly h " Serves its Purpose i . this on the conservation res r ite h rt hearted business interests scalars pecans pan alibi ee ace rat jtin immed at that hour, The pa aue Great Northern railroad and the big iumber Interests of St “== i tient spent a comfortable morning | poll n efused | eb * “ od t nis i t big , “eth | rishment.|to protect : sughou gad Minneapolis, pulling their strings on local banks and others and took considerable 5 trik r z. it t pe t . nheims aad ie presaure for the sterilization of the speakers. But It was no He was gaining strength steadily.|it is expected ¢ ¥ . #8 Span - ‘ . i } " nh The Pinchor ple were determined, so for as poss! to whoop | His temperature, pulse and respira) missed. loyalty of € of p reat : nt Ballinger or Taft, or the con ton were steady |, Disorders, whic ical workers and ¥ lar |" a ¥ local for conservation, whether it hurt cay - . os » threatened for al da ro) y men chan of Jim Tawney or what not : & Gay met « s capnot under- & counter stroke. “Let's Invit: Taft for Sept. 5 and start a tee out leet might J al 0 tempting a prize held) 101, : c of petting a6- ration the first day of the session that will blanket any * * | strikebrenker, ts * ¢ t before them, the mouth in t vit. teateia . in the remaining days oo WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE. # | shot and wounded Mrs t men have begun to water. 100, They bs sone ry per prt *%) Kelly, ber daughter ple eee tige contig alien SS cae ney urge that the primary Was the plan, and hence Senator Murray Crane was sent out = aot by Ot 5 te Sl souk ceetk « aearat Gaeeiees, deere he. mot Ballinger i sa Water will be sbut off on #! Mrs, Charles Hart. The street corner and cros is in the aaa polek ta te pedhee, Bogs gr Hill, son of James J. and the bankers and the “prominent Likeview boulevard, from #/and child were standing at @ COT| «tate the necessity for some kind rupting the legislature. i interested in lumber and water powers and such, then he ne pee Béwont av. to East Garfield ®/ ner, when, it is med, Brady sik dieiteatias “oaneaimant ae 7 Gr oeveriey Ana then mime the fublic anuouneement of the| /WO Million Made Homeless and Starving in Japan by |# #, on Monday, August 15, #/drove up in an automobile and) “This same enthusiasm for elim tha eeattlo: of Haphoneeen ae a acceptance of the vitation to speak at St. Paul on Sep Floods—Great Buddhist Temple, Crowded With from 9 4. m. uatil 6 p m Wlordered the wonlen (0 move ON-/ ination is reflected in the bosses,! onsin and Lorimer in Iinols over * | They complied, taunting Brady and|ang in several quarters steps have | |} ptpelar wil Tot P : < t ak aay fi ; ’ we ne po ‘° Refugees, Slowly Being Undermined by Swirling |* ** * * * * * * # 8% % % # | calling oi nnn ay eich | titeady been taken toward an elim) ments the local standpatters have . Mex " ination contest or agreement replied legislative candidates Waters. his revolver, ordered him to drive As there @ ore hired men in P y is managing Taft's second te campaign a he has 4 eee away and escaped. Several cars| yy, mi ‘a me Wileos are —— the <a satan eg, aly at Se a “va lige a ' overwhelming numbers, and t be ignited when the accepta ; # ‘What do you want to buy {were damaged by explosives and | cam Burke on aroused public sentiment will tremendous activity among old guard others were stoned. | “ 2 lid "i ¥ pales aes vies r, gone down the line that ¢ man wil | (By United Press.) & Rwad the classified columns aan ie will be held today | MUPPOr solidation of | temand that these pledges be car #6 do his part to efface the memory of the frost which gr TOKIO, Aug. 13.—The high wall and endykment and|* 9M today's Star, It adver: % | 1, “Gecide whether troops shall be| ae tae we ae up.| red out when he was O. King Jim Tawney and} moat surrounding the western or upper half of Tokio is threat-| , called vorters, ev Vilson fol Give Up Fight. the tariff bi ! pst over ened with destruction. The eastern half of the city, injgy peewee ee eee ye uyy se * While an organized effort to pre that Monday, September 6,.is Labor day, is not overlooked : ; > oyna . ns een. Oe 4 t io eho never encouraged it} the lower section comprising one-third of the city, the homes In some cities a foving cup is . i 2 »|vail upon legisiative candidates ed by people who never encoura Ome milf the world ite satis. | given each year to the citizen who | a suring tt didate, tt ot to take the pledge has been its parade a whopper. And the labor |Of 600,000 Japanese of the poorest class, was destroyed when| that the other } t know | has done most during the year to| for le6e 1 n progress for weeks, it has made regular troops from Fort Snelling and | the river Shumida, dividing the city, overflowed its banks. how it Mver better the town esen lead his « 60 headway that the local . r le have been consulted as to how | The government today assumed direction of relief and See 3 apse fa fc ‘ ctionary leaders, almost with- militia and regulars in the ranks of the working people does | out exception, now ready to ad- me ordered troops from surrounding prefectures to concentrate — Sppear. The main point up to now seems to be that the brass | 4 : ee that wh a te antes the flag and the amile will be there. And so President Taft ia| their efforts to relieve 2,000,000 homeless in the country dis-| F ne Use : f Funds : ‘ vine — p Aagrps — the first day of the conservation congress all to himself, and/tricts surrounding Tokio and Yokohama. War vessels have| ; ; S would be | dately 1 t the order of the day | rhein ae paso And their best plan, they think, ration of Taft's popnlarity will be | been ordered by wireless to proceed at once to Tokio and Yoko- will be made to the great judicial mind and the com- | hama to operate with the military authorities. The prostration r their campal es | 8 to get together on a single can- His party regul will be extolled, his power lidate with ample financial back- the vast array of beneficial laws which he, single | of land communication makes the work of relief and care for the a oe tn ” ng to enable tham to win te m reluctant senators and congressmen. | shelterless and starving pitifully inadequate. : = eeecern primarie A great Buddhist temple near Takasaki, the Gongendo, a AA On EAE? POLUEAREEY: crowded with refugees, is slowly being undermined by the/ portio hich could rightly be game Taft smile is to be put on exhibition at its best. Noth will | swirling waters of the Tonegwa and is threatened with destruc-| Property | Owners + wa ag) loned " cla y J rke, Burke's ~ AVIATORS not oe orate — + cram fare psn oe oe . ™ tion. The great stretch of lowlands between Tokio and Shid- Y oa alsvorgyne wy ng a ee eed tn faeces. | Zuoka practically has joined the sea. The government railroad fer for Five ears Pr ossigobeset Rapocsnegh rggeiatte. : . sy iM overlooked and the returns from Kansas consigned to forge hn $60,00 nt on which trains were operated, between Tokio and Kobe is} Tenants Move Out —) been tet sir poaggae ficult thin te His will be a tryout of the Taft popularity—the (inary rally | washed away and all the smaller stations along the line are Bes Par aay | 1 tx along the strec on's outlay, since It ts in Gmgressional fights this fall and a f ~ t for 18 " submerged. Northward the Tonegwa is a swollen flood and be- Alter Taft leaves town there is to be a real conservation congress. llated reports from Karuizwa, the great Japanese summer re it the railroad interests are pulling those strings by which | . t r renta " ‘» cha 4 to camps Work a number of Western state governors and are pulling them | sort, indicate that the lowland towns have suffered great} That the boar , . pe oriee: . - as boycott on the congress. But that is another story. It will be | damage. | ah - recomment the cit tly er ft at] cows aareine fox A 7 ‘ Pa in due +) xe = sbandor é p " : ble : i ied . (By United Pre and the torrential rains bave fallen! : \! } . } What Ashton Spent came out in full force and declared] TOKIO, Avg. 14.—Hune for many days without ab re ing. (By United Press.) elves. Probably the most] persons are wee , n-|To the southward, as far the - Sens : raph en by Ge 8 : a t democratic filing was|tombed und aved ank tajeye can reach, the lowlands are | ine heard and the cuties ' . f , t his| MEZIERES, France, Aug, 13.—De- that of Charles G. Heffner, who|or pinnione , timbers in| muddy marshes or vast sheets Of |that for five a thes ' : € es V i er f zt rricane that fairly bent will try to represent the 40th sen-|the path of tt k a | rotled water (1 ouss ’ is property tines ‘ * nd t ree he earth, Aviator Le the city ‘ Railroad t ay ppeared ota would mile cross | ato district in the state senate,| one-third of ef : C Oo pe t i t t j sent Stone 4 sted that 2,000,000 per- bankment Wild rumors cireulat-| «treet for five ye thie reo 1% " a erepert ty agen € r and fo 1 7 miles dis- 1 Mary G. O'Meara, 1823 12th av., “ e surrounding country a ed throughout the city today that | grading ts comme , e the a tf eRe 1" expense t r € uit at 5:05, 4 on elter or food, and are a train load of persons near Can . t off ‘ . r t been less than 3 regard for his life waited too long with her candidacy | with ittiful r A Pittiful Story ‘ »,000 marve at has per- for superintendent of schools. The | starving aya, on the government ratlroad, ‘ even fe ' f heclartion appeared five minutes}. The Gongendo, a great dyke on |had met destruction in the surging! ‘The property owners told a pitit ‘ : Some of t ) oulk f ahin hawe before closing time, but inasmuch|the Tonegawa river ix in danger | waters, after having been stalled |tale, They decia : . : ‘ the consolidat 5 the 1 ‘alcon.” His as it was unaccompanied by a cer-|of collapse. The author! are since Wednesday night without | property own és he 1 inetd the t V semnbt. today: dare ied ae ly without shel ear we. nent arwulient tte Ene or na ‘ 1 ‘ nt | tre f ur ssimists tificate from the superintendent of | using ev means at hand to pre-|food and practically improvement . schools to the effect that the ean-| vent the great dam from caving In | ter The number of the dead aboard | e—— upon Burke i c ‘ ed easte ne and ome time for didates to fe didate was entitled to run for this|and releasing millions of gallons of \the train is variously ¢ timated at whose pal for el A . true to his nick- Mee clock 1 with 381 vag 500 to 600. Megiro and Shinagawa are under!to tnundate the towm © Mayor|slush fund ly ex ‘ . t by cl a n aiethe saa tee x 4 refused.| water on the already rain-sodden | from 5 » 6 ‘ eat imbing ffice, the declaration was refused. | wa J water, and refugees declare that| Yukio Oseaki today issued a call| erence for his retentic e ra r ‘ . uchine rising ions of to run for ; 4 B. F. Shields, of the Spokane | city lias t ‘ , 1 Every except! grain company, filed & a demo} Conditions in the capital are a Supplies to Refugees. Iscores perished when the na-|for subscriptions of food and cloth-| While no information has cor 1 - s carried swiftly - for cratic candidate for sheriff worse than during any great flood) The Physicians Optimistic, De- 30 Policemen Suspended —_-_—. | traction company from the strikers ten congre he » September 5 to 9 tionary ree The old guard R velt conservationists control ein! That nt chapter in the Taft administration, the Bal t ' ' romir t ke, Wilson and see ee eeee TO OFFSET THAT TAFT FROST. “eee tee labor | peo Appeal nund eg: » government today made des-| gawa overflowed its banks in the! ing from the wealthier residents | regarding the sources of ush few, ¢ 1 by the seud- gee) Kt ia ohh ott cei nd M perate efforts to convey barges of | night and swept everything be-/and volonteers to carry supplies |fund, it is assumed that it ld fandidate t« cod himnaelt of recent times In Japaty i ttiood. supplies to Hoshinji, where 800/fore it nto the stricken country districts,|be contributed by the big selfi a ee tunty clerk tO nk aaa wabitanta without food persons have taken refuge in a] The Jowlands surrounding Taka-| Nothing has been heard from |i ts most concerned in Poin i ' s morning, started wot this 1 tt a ye ee anything 90 tin- [00 and the inbamiants vate at temple. Shimoda and Shiduoka|sakt Nave disappeared under the railway engineers reported en-|dexter's defeat. * ater, « ) find the gale too strong feveral re; c the weather has been late-|or shelter are in despera cle have been deserted, their inhabl-|flodd, and the prosperous capital of tombed near Karuiseawa when the Among these are the giant trusts chee es Ciao qk Opposit ge Rained for Days. tants fleeing to higher land. The|Gumma prefecture is virtually sur- River Rokugo overflowed, and it is; which Poindexter has fought in| wi ri further empts today dem axusitiets ather continues stormy,’ villages of Shibuya, Honjio, Fuda,! rounded by a lake which threatens | feared they have perished congress, the privileged inter ; DENT TART IS WILLING TO THROW DOWN ALL HIS FRIENDS 10 WIN INSURGENTS OVER (By United Press.) that would make St possible to insure a republican victory. The! of touch with progressive ideas may find their leadership slipping Ste MAND OF CHARLES NORTON, 13.—'That Senator Winthrop Murray Cre ident has had many conferences with Senator-Crane; and when| from them. : ‘ : sc ent him West, it was believed by politieians that Crane had been It $a reported that all these leaders have been particularly anxious to (By United Press. a place close to the president in political councils have Ballinger deposed. While there has been no doubt since the: first ' nt ti authoritative report today, The authoritative reports that Secretary Ballinger has prepared | announcement that Crane's mission was to ask Ballinger te itis] that Halling netics een forced t tire, that Aldrich MP the report that Speaker Cannon |s to be-eliminated from the | hig resignation, and that he will leave officg about September 15, and | belleved the reports emanating from the summer capitol yesterday were has be atibe e Chan’ defended, ia atid Bpublican cou slong with Senator Aldrich and Secretary |that Senator Aldrich, in an interview with Taft yester repeated|as authoritative as the administration will give until the Ballinger areal ae 1 ithe i attri |hix former assertion that he would not be candidate for re-election, | Pinchot investigating committee's report Is made publi ited largely to the influe « A orton, secretary to the that Speaker Cannon will no longer Hitehcock, it is declared,, lost standing with the president in| Pr a party leader, has given rise to the bellef that Crare political matters because of his loss of prestige for the stand he took tn day when the senate ler ca i repe ne béld as chief political adviser the Ballinger-Pinchot controversy Tl dench deve cand’ st acai tie Siiieds veacenatoace ceeded Postmaster General Hitchcock WASHINGTON 1 In officialdom repe m Beverly sident, That Taft 1 t ed Senat Aldrich yester When the United Press first announced on high authority that |together with the further report Mission of Senator Crane, on his mysterious journey to St. | be retained a pre Was to demand the retirement of Secretary Ballinger before has taken fhe place Hitchcock i campaign, it was intimated that President Taft had decided The removal of Ballinger and the retigement of Aldrich and It is believed that Aldrich’s visit to Beverly yesterday, after his foy the reception tendered the Rh ake’ I ic measures to reunite the republican party, and assure Cannon are only part of a plan, it is beliéved, which is intended letter to Congressman McKinley denying the Bristow charges, was It is reported that Senator Aldrich planned a long stay at at the polls in November. to appease the insurgents and coax an indorsement out of Theo- made in the hope that Taft would endorse the denial. That the ' f , . ‘ha : dore Roosevelt, and insure victory. Just what the next move will president let the Rhode Island senator know that he would not en the summer capitol, but the formality of the visit, which amount be is a matter of speculation, but those close to the administra. | dorse the denial and that Aldrich then promised to retire, is the ed to real chilliness induced him to change his plans and leave tion here say that others of the regulars who are considered out belief of politicians here. speedily. Dresident is said by those close to the administration, has that the democrats and, Insurgents would con-| as been considering, it is declared, moves

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