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s Hot Off the Wire ‘The Star's telegraphic news service covers whole world, If you see it in The Star NO. 164 ~The Seattle Star WASH., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1910 Tell it to the :pedpie’« | for sndmn, * Have You Got a Kick? The Star. The Star stands for ; ghjs, and, lan’s, afr four men and 11 women, gtriking cloakmakers who attempt ‘ea to parade Fifth ay, today, are in| “Lazarus had a right to eat the ail charged with disorderly con-/ crumbs falling from a rich man's @uct on the complaint of members| table,” cried Samuel Rosenthal, the a they were “being disturbed.” INSURGENTS {Wow of a million dollars. The suits were filed because The Star 1 na charge of conspiracy in USING THE MAILS TO DEFRAUD. ttack, with a quarter of a million damage suits, is an attempt to MUZZLE The Star. gregating iiman’s art Hillman’s wants this paper [ it h BUSINESS are sai He wants to “fix” The Star as other newspapers have been “fixed,” Now, then, Hillman, here’s what The Star thinks about your attempt to procure IMMUNITY FROM NEWSPAPER CRITICISM: You have ceased to be a mere private citizen in the affairs of Seattle. You are an institution—and a bad one. You are an element in the community lhe Star called you a SHARK, Hill- man. The St th repeats the assertion of millions wa earners through You have You have been, and you are a dangerous one You area SHARK. chemes, by sharp practice, by all the tricks o, “Business is business.” wi s built up by that enable a man to prey on wage come d today, on the danger line that has the DOOR OF THE PENITENTIARY ON ONE SIDE. You have, thus far, been smart enough and shrewd enough and rich enough to dodge that What time will bring h remains to be seen. The door is still there. Your riches have been piled up by the men and women who toil. You have taken advantage of the de ‘ort door . attle Star for damages yrinted an article telling of He KEEP QUIET about him unless complimentary things, or things ADVERTISING HIS sy that The Star means that your pile The Star refuses to be MUZZLED by quarter of a million damage vertising, Hiliman, uits, or You say ina morning paper that The Star has “literally crawled” to you to beg |damaye suits. That is a LIE, Hillman |to an institution like yours—-or to any other |KNEW THAT A FEW HOURS BEFORE YOU MADE WHEN YOU MADE THE ADVERTISING COLUMNS OF THE STAR. TRACT WITH THIS NEWSPAPER, jnewspapers have defendéd you and probably w ‘ | patronage, but The Star refuses to give up its 1 gerously close, at times, despite your millions, to being caught in the net of the law.|" ge, ae aN £ I Che recent charges brought by the government against you, something of the extent o with you Hundreds of person | your institution Furthermore The Star hereby calls on all per If there sire of every honest American man and woman to have a home, of their desire to own a little tract of land| phone to this office ance where they can raise enough to escape the life of the factory and the shop re You have published “blind sgutsing the real motives behind your transactions Of the poor man, as a bene asa philanthropist. For all the ind other reasons, The Star says you are ashark and a dangerous clement tn the community “AND CERTAIN COUNC 85 STRIKERS ythe Cloak, Skirt and Union were stopped by ¢ near the club, and Inspect Cluskey ordered them to dispers JAIL (By Unlied Press) EW YORK, Sept. 1 mak —Seventy of 300 N the Knickerbocker Club that} strikers” leader Why saould the rich object to our eating our own LAWSON SAYS TRUSTS EMPLOY ALL KINDS OF SIRENS! \ NEW YORK, Sept. 1—in a hat shot cannonade embodied in a telegram to the world and printed over hie signature, Thomas W. Lawson says that not only red-haired sirens, but black-haired and fiaxen-haired ones as well were employed by members of the “System” to debauch public and priva in als that chance throws in ‘The 200 marching members of WIN IN IDAHO (By United Peeve.) Ida, Sept. 1 —There ia no | ho bas join Although over the “System's” path | for congress. Ha- | The telegram is a reply to | ent incumbent John D0. Archboid’s denial that practically a titian-haired woman or any iy, running particularly w other was ever employed by Habo pant a In southeast representatives of the Stand Idabo, Hamer's stronghold, the ard Oil company for political ent candidat ontinued his purposes. ws over hin “stalwart” oppo-| The insure te assert that overwhelming tion that voters atism and or- Brady, who is probably will PICKPOCKET TO BE TRIED FOR MURDER: the n southern Id | The police today completed WIN WITH | samsaation of Frome Porter, het BIG STICK’S AID) here as a pickpocket, as “Sait Lake Speed,” who is wanted in Sait! j Lake for the murder of William BUT WHO ARE THEY? | Costett. Porter is alleged to have | killed Coslett in a quarrel over a woman in the Heidelberg saloon in Salt Lake on August 5. (My Uolted Press) » brief visit from her Porter was started back to Utah YORK, Sept. 1 Henry Mitet | this morning under guard of a dep-} loved, it is beautiful to will grie the few j uty sheriff to me he added I realize I have made a ter ACE SUICIDE =“. eased 66 | nonfan congressman pulled into Cashmere F. M. DAVENPORT . . A plot alleged to have been hatched and financed by the mana- | From its inception the Poindexter campaign has been free gers of Thomas Burke to stampede the labor party convention in (ies taieh at Gdoe fe dies Hyepie favor of Burke and to buy organized labor votes was exposed before n the taint of searda ta dolfar has been spen oan the Central Labor Council last might by Harry Kilduff, delegate from | not been t e. He has not hires workers, t t 7 the switchmen’s union pape nor does he anything remotel mb! Ne nd According to Kilduff, Charles H. Miller, former democratic ean: | ctush fund. H has Meldcinimiatilately clean: th mony | of th didate for congress and former candidate for mayor on the labor party : ig. ay 1 ye ty led| ticket, the “go between.” Kilduff charged that Miller offered | C4™paign of an hones! a she . him $500 to get out and use his influence to get Burke votes. | Poimdexter's public record is clean his ca Dev. . The Central Labor Council, which last spring enthusiastically in- | From the time he was a prosecutor in Walla Walla te fi Wen y dorsed Miller for mayor, last night denounced him vehemently as an | iournment of the last congress his record has been ¢ “et vent enemy of organized labor, a traitor to the cause and a “scab.” The |} litical hae : “ay ekg poee in f council made earnest request that publicity be given to the fact that t on al enemies have made mies of earch {Kc lie Miller In his eupport.of Burke in no way represents the sentiments | slightest flaw that they might magnify it to suit their ends, t fen he ft of organized labor. @rganized labor is unaiterably opposed to Burke. | their search has always ended in failure. Poindexter stanc _ ' Kilduff’s exposure caused the wildest sort of excitement in the ltoday the only clean candidate--the only candidate whe warm fc labor council. The delegates to the council had always been friendly A ; ‘ ri 1 bl ; Presider to Miller and some of them were Miller's stanch supporters in his |OPCN the book of his past and invite the public to read . campaigns. This friendship was changed to bitter enmity by the dis With Judge Thon Burke trying to | his w nto t ey leoure last night enate; with John L, Wilson, the author of the infamous “lie Aidn't got ‘ wyer with of-|to get $500 for his share in the| and bill,” trying to do the same thing, there is no alternative le Song T. | ; t 43 New York block, was) work, $150 down, $150 in a week, |for the people of Washington but to vote for Poindexter “an a and became |and $200 when the plot was ripe Kilduff exposure of ethod ) be enoug! ae tet nt in organized labor, H The negotiation Kilduff said rhe Kaild | f methods sh uld ity an organizer for the | were {ed on r’s oftice in | to forever brar rke as a man unfit to hold public office, ‘The | Federation of Labor, and|the New York block. A week ago|Congressional Record has branded Wilson for all time a MARK j hold withdrawal card from the | Kilduff told T , ervant of the interests and an enemy of the public torney in the New York block, and ; ri , E Ison and © i oth tarred with the same inter Ltr a filler, according to Kilduff, out-|J. A. Johnson, who has office Ww n and Burke are b ar { une inter #n }lined to bin to steal te ross the hall from Miller, that ck. It hard to say which is the worst, Burke prostitutin Nelle 4 Habor party cor » by packing | Miller was trying to buy labor le the electorate with his corporatic sid or Wilson with his black wae he galleri { men andlers to support Burke, M ecord of ng the Northern I millions of dollars t Amn ti At dorse t of Burke d Johneor tched th ont : to his being all nied to $22,000, Kilduff was (Continued on Page Five.) here is but nt car ile Vera Fitch, who « pted | increase * of }to take her life t the Ho-|although the char HONOLULI Sept. 1 Accord GREET POINDEXTER Kent candidate has ar a report by Gov. Frear there ran @ directly after hin ng tendency toward race) EAST OF MOUNTAINS) inceting, as a big mass inecting n Hawat le death been arrahged for him in ncrea ly in pre CASHMERE, Sept. 1—Miles|natchee, heart of the Eastern n toy rth rate| Poindexter was enthusiasticall ashington insurgent movement, % of greeted at the railway station here tonight Last ye 61 over | today when he ved to make a We're all for you,” shouted one th ious year,| speech on the tle against Can-| big farmer as the train bearing the from day among Turks befall the You pose as a friend | affair Ve are going to tell the people o igainst you, f have rhe Star, however, -even in a business way Hillman, hay to be Furthermore, YOU KNOW that it is a lie THAT STATEMENT YOU IT, YOU HAD BEEN KICKED OUT OF ubsidized by your ad- ou to “let up” with these The Star doesn't crawl revealed to The Star your operations, and as a result this newspaper decided it wanted nothing to do Did or did not The Star CANCEL YOUR ADVERTISING CON- Hillm Does that look like “erawling” to you? Other Seattle ar | continue to do so, in considerat tree felt the wield, Hillman, when they } be BLUFFED, BOUGHT OR BUI ons who have a griev: yainst t} he ob, nce ag you, will undertake the in additi le of Seattle what sort of an institution you are peech for dirty dollar Hillman, to call m, or of preventing more persons from having griev- the other matters in connection with this on of your big advertising s, Hillman. ave had a grievance against -LDOZED. or write or , Hillman. NOW COME ON WITH SOME MORE QUARTER-OF-A-MILLION DAMAGE SUITS. HUNT FOR DYNAMITER ILMEN ARE GETTING RICH the prophet tk eee tx ee TOMORROW. North End Day 8 Bee the t buys In the End in Friday's Cla transfer e villapri caus he og the United P ANTINOPLE, leaders of who fear that if harm should depc the of would re ee ee eo DANISH COUNT VERA FITCH NOW SULTAN IS _ANXIOUSTOLIVE MISSING - * * * * * + | j NEW YORK Sept 1—F. | ‘One man, John D. Connors Augustus Heinze, copper king, an tulad near the pani his bride, who was Mre. Pernice veral Golden Henderson, the “Var | Girl HEINZE WE One Suspect Held. left today in a private Mont the frst An unapy nt to Heinze © of a summor and¢ in the suit of Mrs. Lillian He eal sine | French, @ recover $25,000 in se curities, alleged to have been loaned GE IW difficuitios. | informed of Heinze’s marriage. She \@ clared she no inte it in ™ 7 — |ehe says she loaned treed r of for lait Hataae’ wt evel ot Masiveiy (2at fires, each he cs Macca According to a message received | (hy Vatied Pres) yenterc by D. P. Sin f | NEW YORK, Sept. 1—Re- | fire n of the Washingt ; | ferring to the deniai of John O. est Fire A mm, the e | Archbold that the Standard Oi} | Snoqualmie b D pr ly ex j Co. used women to overcome tinguished - 4 nearly | its business rivals, Mrs. Lilian | fire fighters will be | Hobart French eaid today day. A small fire is } “Ask Mr. Archbold if he re fe haeuser timber, near ¥ | members a Titian-haired beauty bu not considered dange | that the ‘system’ sent to |¢ The ins of yesterday | Butte during the copper war to | Were a fic jo reducing | inveigle secrets from my Fritz e ‘ 5 a | She did not inveigie worth a | Th cent, for she fell in tove with we | Fritz and all the Standard’s | fshtine B ~ chy money could not make her be th ac “ tray ‘my lord and master.’ In " cg Butte they called her the ‘veiled ss hs 4 Die “4 lady,’ but she was red-haired alt | ? pally Ag age rahe present danger from fire is at at “| want it understood, how. ae ever, that | never wag a Titian haired seductress.” DO YOU KNOW? That IN TACOMA 6. TACOMA, Sept 4 the a $4 $8 ame of Olaf Ha t fag lay that Count Olaf ¥ T as, M < s E id ‘ 1 le t being ANCE | the Ur States flag f the king of I \ Tacoma as a ¢ That there are said to be ‘ ling t M M t foreign waiters emp sy da Red Hammer) that New York i 1 the ns A e7 ttle,| That th of a ol === BURKE—POINDEXTER—WILSON When John L. Wilson was a United States senator from Wash ington in the 55th congress, he turned the trick with his “lieu land bill that gave millions of dollars’ worth of property to the North ern Pacific railroad at the expense of the people Wilson introduced the bill, which permitted the Northern Pa. cific to trade off the land now embraced in the Mount Rainier re serve for an equal acreage of land anywhere along the road. The Northern Pacific took the best agricultural and timber land it could find in Hiew of the almost worthless land on Mount Rainier. The Northern Pacific made many millions of dollars by the deal; the people lost the exact sum the Northern Pacific gained And John L. Wlison did the trick On page 5633 of the Congressional Record issued June 8, 1898. Is found the statement which convicts Wilson as a traitor to the people Senator Wilson: ‘If the senator from Montana will yield to me | ask unanimous consent to call up senate bill 2552. IT IS A LITTLE BILL that passed the senate twice. The “little bill’ gave the Northern Pacific one million acres of the best timber and agricultural land in the United States. Ty the president signed the bill Wilson’s term expired. The dely known as the “lieu land bill,” and is gen of the biggest steals that ever went through erally recognized as one congress AND JOHN L ED STATES SENATOR ITS CHIEF ADVOCATE PRESENT AUTHOR OF CANDIDATE FOR UNIT. THE BILL AND WILSON WAS THE ELOQUENT AND FETCHING. TECHNICAL EXPLANATION Assistant Hditor—"Where th Hamilt ! le mile | reman today?” th fy fini Police Search for Man Who Placed Explosive Under Lyons Building—Hundreds of ‘Windows Broken— discover who planted a dynamite teing constructed at Third ay. n 11 ast night, breaking 11 o'clock for a block around, and seriously estern Union Mneman, was cap after a fight during which at him. Connors is being jor shots at a discharged workman may have take revenge on the Stone-Web- about $3,000. Other The explosion attracted a large crowd, who made for the Canadian Bank of Commerce, where at first » explosion seemed to have oo Among the first to reach bank was Chief Wappenstein and Capt. Willard An investigation quickly at no attempt had been made r the bank, dynamiting vaults, as was at first supposed Then the investigation led to the asement of the Lyon butlding, in the bottom of the ele- vator shaft, large holes were found, 0 the showed to the where, d the cement wall opposite the had been completely blown o The first and second floors raised by the force of the ex- plosion and holes blown in several of the columns supporting them. » estimate of the damage can be yet, but the police believe at it will amount to several thou- i dollars Great damage was done to sur ling buildings, as follows: Collins building, every win- dow on north side blown out. Charles Knosher, dry goods store, Second and James, plate glass window destroyed. Delmonico cafe, 210 James, part of wall falis across lunch counter. Loss $200. Paxton hotel, Third and James, plate glass window broken, Panes of glass broken in Wolf's cafeteria, Third and James, and at Chinese restau- rant of Tien Sien Lo, Crown building, patrons showered with glass and plaster. Every front window on James between Second and d ave. { Wappenst sent 50 pa- olmen to the scene, while fire- , ‘om several nearby stations helped hunt for the man who com- mitted the outrage. Three suspects were arrested, then released. chargd Employe. Chief Wappenstein stated last ht that evidently a long fuse had been used, He believed that some (Continued on Page Five.) GAVE AWAY HIS OWN GRAVE ST. PAUL, Minn,, Aug. 31.-—“The indest old doctor that ever lived,” this elty says of Dr. A. J. Stone, who has just died. He received immense fees from he wealthy, but he gave so much and money to the poor that was almost ed penniless when he chief delight be t penniless working w service and medicines was able men, and s at eave hospit wh expense. To him. the was a one of the ex- is grew H always The as his own in Oakland cemetery. he doled it out to the Beside the graves and chi the a dozen the iren are misfits of lied ed that so filled th . oom doctor to to his discover ot was nid the father implored the you rejoined that’s why