The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 5, 1910, Page 1

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TO STAR READERS WHO HAVE LEGAL GRIEVANCES AGAINST HILLMAN—Call at The Star office. If you have or }| have had a real estate transaction with Hillman, wherein his institution has committed fraud, The Star will help give you a chance to re- f cover your money by starting suit and THE STAR WILL PAY ALL THE LEGAL EXPENSES. Hot Off the Wire ~ HaveYou Got a ee Si carer oe thems b me ae ol ? 3 SEATTLE, witli Windies, cbcauaan 5, 1910. Whee at ONE CENT. a FMAoe A? WILSON GETS THE POLITICAL “LOOT Quite Different Indeed BURKE GETS “COLD BRICK” LA-DIEES ANO GerrTLe- Nan BenoLo My soon, MY KINO FRIEND INSIDE FACTS OF STAND PAT TERS’ SCHEME T0 Juoce Burne, LAST WEEK ‘Tis TRUE, a IT CALLED Wim vice NAMES. ’ I Picrurep iM A CHARLTAN A BARTER AND TRADE THE PEOPLE $ VOTES BRIBE GivER, A BOODLER, BUT AT REMEMBRR, WAS LAST Wer * R > *. If I get what I want from back yonder I will announce tomor ie "vee Qerrenenre, Gotta row iy whthdrewal from the senatorial race,” mld John Le Wien | Wilson thes Traded Your Votes to Burke $000 strong, repre jast Saturday | ane oe ak in 8 IFFERENT, you Know. On Sunday Wilson's withdrawal was announced. John 1, “got | John L, Wilson has sede Bis, The tuflesness and rewards of Wel a? L what he wanted from back yonder.” |trade and is out of the senatorial) st. are too many to mention. Them It was What John L. wanted from “back yonder,” according to polltt- | race, his “withdrawal” marking one|there is to » clans who are closest to him, was assurar or party leaders closé enough to him to m Promixe that he, Wilson, would be “consulte considered the os from President Tatt |of the chilliest chapters in, cold| recompense of Judge Burke, for th © delivery certain, the | blooded polities. judge is no ingrate, even if he be * on all matters of fed Wilson's swan song was calculat-|a good trader. To put it truly all day it was for most ee men who do Seattle's work, the men togged out In gala at eral patronage and federal policy concerning Washington, just as | ed reate the impression that he| if inelegantly, Judge Burke assured ,to celebrate |t Th were though he himself were senator. Thin agreement, it is claimed, | made personal sacrifice of his own|ly had to “come through.” of all kinds and colors. “goon” for the rest of the Taft administration if Burke is elected to | ambition for the benefit of Seattle, | alos confined themselves to the senate. at the same time making {t plain| S'cccmeint, Whet have ne ons. Others wore RICKED. y 4 na pa saat or apr ns bere wore BURKE GOLD-BRICKED. }that William Howard Taft had a |to say about all this dickering and of their trade. Some and trousers of bright ecb organization had it» distinet fm the way of clothing. ‘& vanguard of policemen, wf march started at 10 gf at First ay and Blanchard, me hour and « half pase- point. With maces gma” the policemen were ‘ecort of honor, for ev feeagn good bebavior. La- t town, and it was In short, Wilson, by his superior strategy, has saved to himself | hand in the immolation. ail the emoluments of the office 4 that, too, whether Burke But—what inducements were of- | trafficking? is it any of your buel- elected or defeated. Burke is left bolding the sack fered to John L. Wilson to “make | P86 who gets elective and ap Burke, it is claimed, declined to negotiate with Wilson along | this great personal sacrifice?” Taft|Polntive office? Have you any ine Hines involving the distribution of patronage. Wilson, it Is also un- | and the interests of Wall at. have | terests at stake? derstood, refused to negotiate with turke,along such lines, feeling yout Poindexter for! It appears not, Mr. Wilson, for confident that Burke will only be defeated, and never able to d ‘along time. Taft had a grip on Wil-| reasons of bis own, has seen fit to anything. Sut the intervention of wtern financial leaders and on because Wilson's brother is sink his “personal ambitions,” and party leaders clone to President Taft ndered negotiations between baisador to Mexico. If senate you are supposed take notice ac the two standpat candidates on there ters unnecessary. The ne seeking Wileon did not obey the| cordingly. Mr. Wilson, for a con- sotiations were conducted by the igher-ups.” behest of the party chief the offi-| sideration, would have Judge Burke The representative of the “higher-ups” in the negotiations was | cial head of the Ambassador Wil-| United States senator, eo that all Jamés D. Hoge. For weeks Hoge hax been in correspondence with | son might come off. Taft, with the| you who have listened to Wilson Eastern financial leaders, “close to President Taft,” and with busi republican patronage, could also| must now hearken to Burke. WiL- ness men and politicians in all parts of the state, touching upon the | hold out alluring inducements, nice| SON TRADED YOUR VOTES TO Proupective outcome of the senatorial contest, This correspondence | choice appointments and the like | BURKE. lemened from loca! leaders and repor the Eastern leaders that . with both candidates in the race the success of elther wax impossibl The prospect, if elected senator, and that with only one of them in (l was highly (mprobable. So th ing as a messenger boy in Eastern leaders ordered that one candidate be eliminated and that the senate for Wilson and his big & dempernte effort be made to nominate the other business backers Fotiowed the negotiations, the attempt to trade away the sen- — » and to deliver the voters of Washington, bound, gagged Bi x labeled, into the camp ef the financial plantertnens | resource grabbers and other power =| ful financial erests, both in | Washington and in the east, plenty of money with which to finance his| “Brother Harry” Wilson is to be campaign, and the concession from retained as minister to Mexi sa ag Page, ge oin ex er’ Ss €c ion stand-pat republican leade that | where. ay bs seer F merican financial . In white suits, the Sign |be is the “real republica andi- | powerful ae w toria! Painters and Painters | date terests he and “Brother John L.* 4 Decorators made claim for art, | A quit claim deed to a perfectly | are in a position to demand political steam fitters, plumbers, glaz jsound gold brick in the prosp of consideration. Jobn L. a to be “consulted” om Miron workers, moulders, brick- being defeated in the primary elec machinists, and building la _—- oe ~ | tion by Poindexter, and eliminated federal patronage, if — 4 disputed th . “0, | from Washingt litios. elected senator, eastern finan 2 e claim of the} wi) &. Humphrey, of “God Hates, Revelle and Bryan have agroed to ,second chowe vote. He thought| ,Thestraw vote {son in full blast Dreamland rink. Besides Poindex-| “rhe yrrepect, if nominated in the | representatives trading in on the teams dtew great floats,|* Coward” fame, is in a bad way.|speak for the other for second the people would think that he was) " A vote was taken on the steamer (ter there will be five other local! primary election, of confronting a dea} an agreement to “handle Pree e choi onda | St least & “neartnsargent.” Then , Speakers. Thursday night from 8| searching legislative investigation | ident Taft” to this end. Banners waved from thou:| There is gloom, great gumbo choice. Revelle will ask his friends fe yan und Revelle gor together and | Ma@anapolis, which Weft Tacoma at (OCC ereeuman Poindexter will ear ink,,oxislative, Savestigntion |1devitson is to be left tree, to dies the policemen came Members of the Stere mmion, then the Printing and it's «a question ing out the papers today f who's cooking the dinners? | Cook's union came next. | hundred members, all work-| read the manner of the union. But they're not The support in the senatorial fight of the big land, timber and today. built Seattle? We did.” M the Carpenters’ banner. “By | Tic. teak on Kona aon fal }gobs of gloom, around the Hum- to give Bryan their second choice | took away. whatever second choice |7 Glock this morning. There were hold a reception in the Seattle |Jated the primary law and corrupt tate local county, state legis an honest price phrey headquarters in the Arling votes and Bryan will ask bis friends | votes Humphrey imight have had 41 voters aboard. Of these 21 were hotel jed the electorate of the state pees tb-rserr ye A trons jon hote! ‘o @ same for Reveille At the same time, the standpat | for Poindexter, 17 for Ashton and | o = baa rea . ni tiers 28 = will + ng age ae Ali because the insurgent candi-| And thus, in one fell «woop, are voters who hate “a quitter” turned |3 for Burke = SWIMMERS RACE AT ReKdEHRHROERETR RARER EES RO me Herbert &. Bigelow will de.| cates for congress, Revelle, of King, the props knocked out from ander|/on Humphrey and now Will E.| A poll of Stuck precinct was ST. tg teh TODAY), * ithe big specch of the day and Bryan, of Kitsap, have come to oe y's hope ; who tried to piay both ends against |taken Friday, before Wilson with-| ST. LOUIS, Mo, & Forty: | # Wilson's withdrawal has clarified the senatorial situation. *& B. Bolton is grand marshal of |*" SsTeement—the worst possible Ren Humghery deserted bis ol ithe middie, © whigenued drew from the race. The result /four of the best swimmers in the|# His support in grange and labor union will come in a body to ® perade. There were six di agreement for the Marine League sopaiving leader Cannon he Nobody loves an ex: ‘Cannon man | was: country were scheduled to compete|® =m Many Wilson leaders throughout the state have come to & behind him in the tine. The | Vl thought he could get the Insurgent |and “God Hates a Coward, Poindexter 520. this afternoon in the national 10-}% port since Saturday, and my election Is assured. I will # Men estimate the parade cost | * - Burke 92 mile championship aus- | & erce county. Ashton and Humptrigs and Burke will # . Wilson 74 pices of t r Athletic as-|w divide the standpat vote. King county will go for me, and we ® | b Ashton 11. sociation over a course in the Miss-|% will conduct a vigorous campaign in Seattle and Tacoma * DO you KNOW? | Polieater will hold his finaljissipp! river extending from the| tag the present week * ad rally In Seattle Friday night in Chain of Rocks to Fads bridge * MILES POINDEXTER. +. | pe ERGR EYEE AE SEES EF AAS NES EE That the ‘ -_——_— RRR hasn't got that name all to himacif?| One of C. D. Hiliman’s newspa-; much as mine * : ‘ | There is another Alan Dale, famous| per defenders prints a letter of en-| Ly gy Fo ‘ dk ind 6D 5 nat pee gy pow ft Day parade this * CIGAR MAN CALLS TURN ‘ for c. orsement for the ‘estéie ¢ “Mr. Manning” mentioned Is|* morning Iman, with his customgry effrontery, butted * ne co sche ti So \2 rsement for the real estate shark.) Wittman's bookkeeper at room 3,/% into” the line of march. As soon as be wan observed'by the That 17 apartment houses ip Be) it is signed by L. M. Woodcock. The} building. Thi Hiliman’s| marchers they began to hiss him. The hiss changed to * ON BRIDE AND GROOM attle have roof gardens | first paragraph of the letter reads He lives at 2316 80th at. N.|/% shouts of “throw him out.” Grand Marshal Doyle was attract. & That 40 per cent of Seattie’s peo! Dear Mr. Hillman | |® ed by the nolse. As soon as he saw Hillman he d him * | ple eat at least two meals a day 10] | have read of the attacks made| L. M. Woodcock i¢ Manning’s|# toot out at once. Hillman left the line of march 4 st av. & They were both young and good | quickly moved on restaurants? " on you by a disreputable paper pub-| father-in-law and lives at 2311 59th) ® and Virginia st, with his wn and the crowd ring him, * Loren Of the girl even more T went up to the comp }__That there are more regia’ | lished In Seattle, and 1 want to say/ et. N. * ~ |might be said. She was a dream. |troller's office and learned the jSmusement places in Seattle o this for you ne on with your endorsement.| 4 eR ENN HERE ERNE RRR RR Re ee | They 1e into the eity hall and | whereabouts of the lcense clerk's (oy Gees Poeun) any other city of like size in the; | » known you persor f Hillman, Get one from Peet, one | seem stood in the corridor, looking about | office. A mome later they ap- PAUL, cask & ee OR 12 years and was your neigt from Hargis, one from Sutter; dig ual peared smilingly at the cigar coums . Sep That Timothy 0. Sullivan, balf)s number of years at Green Lake.| up an old one from Forrest. That Rain Delays Meet LONDON, Sept sie, the genial cigar | ter, and the young man’s hand wen to the National Goapares | owner of the Majestic theatre, gives) 1 pougnt ht lots of you at Greer Cincinnat! Masonic Lodge” ought HARTFORD, Conn, dept rid cham ted them at once down into his pocket pt : “ oto iy 0,000 year to the poor of NeW! Lake for $30 each and t« to h you; the Clarence Dayton | Rivulets of water twisting tt h jceded to be the he called Give me some of your best; it's rae York city are worth at least $1,00 Bond company of Minneapolis might | the sticky mud of the famous Char- and valued at $ r need his way.|on me, all right.” —~ m hall today. That Martin Beck, head of the) This dows not look to me aid ne of your St. Louis friends|ter Oak park track today caused Walter Jeffries, 1 get what answered| “They can’t get away from me,” sident left his train} great Orpheum cireult of Vande-| dealings of a “shark.” My and even some horse owners in|the postponement until tomorrow lieved that a clot ¢ stor of the:tair one ahiwered Teasle, on ay aine tek prote Aw, you know what I mean,”/a box of big Havanas, and the lanewered Tennie, and the couple’ blushing groom selected a andfuly onged the streets ville theatres, was a waiter 10 &/ bors, Mr. Turner, Mr. Hutchinson, | Cd - : rado and Kansas might find|of the opening of the grayd cirouit |{rom a fall was r After sporadic | heer hall in Frisco before he went! Mr uke and Mr. Manning, ali|t to write a testimonial or twe. meeting here de of the an 3 yped from thé into the show business? bought of you, not only at Green| Come on, Mr. Spencer-Dayton = Srowd was silent, and the| “Thee R. A. Ballinger maintains | take erty has increased fully as Griffith-Hillman SXecutive passed through sev- |» adquarters in a fashionable down-| _ sini 7; $8 Mitares, the curbs lined with! oy, “family hotel”? . . People ‘That the Anti-Saloon league was CLOSE GAME AT nt watched the Labor | founded by Rev. Howard H. Rue . eee ine 7 “marche a passed |" That the first brewery in Ae rs DUG on bf hat, ° . ng stand silently ited States was established by| 5 Wattle started the scoring In the B70 many in the audience at the ee ee eae in 1627? That has NOT happened yet. J) orning game at Dugdale's park . 3? Opening of « nservation com |" Si.¢ eg Kennedy, proprietor of againat Tac when in the sec 5 Arch land’s invoca| +4. Kennedy hotel, began the hotel] Ali the Wilson supporters set up| ond inning Seaton singled and Akin ears significance. | i isiness at the age of 16 a8 @ bell-lan enthusiastic how! for Burke| brought bim home with a three-bag president. His) nop? when they learned that John L. had| «er way ofttimes lice force of New| withdrawr In the sixth inning the feat was A ar from which viet neue oory resident $3.38 a Every little boy in town is just) repe Kelly bunted and Weed ~ - seecemnnicic e 4 Mrs. Cathrine Crosby times is lost haps ¥ tickled to death because school be-| came through with a two-bagger dom to do|7ert an inventive electrician has | gins tomorrow In the first half of the eighth ATOF WASHINGTON plenty of water at all times ¢ g these lots f purpose.” | it @ generating plant small Bound volumes of “Hattle Creek’ | Schmutz, for Tacoma, ma clean cat NTY OF KING When informed of this fraudulent representation made by Hill- zur lelivered the | ee i a be installed on an auto-| Post's letters to the public were dis-| home run, leaving the score, Seattle Mes. Cathrine Crosby, 511 } man or } ents concerning the condition of these lots, I immedi- iB add pose A tributed Labor day prizes at For-|2, Tacoma 1, at the end of the| 7t ma Seattle, Washington, be : yt U t r with Hillman, being then in the belief that > Ty, Tha jel Jones, the real estate| tuna toda inning ing duly sworn, on her oath say rm een mistaken himself omg . ae Veer Loe oowenan park to Col. Roosevelt was met at the de Seattle tied the game in the I hase a contract with ae ar bs Mr. Hillman personally or any of his agents denied that YORE With Old-| park board? |pot in St. Paul by a delegation of) ninth inning—3 to 2 in the month of November, or é ed use A by waters of this river or creek, or maybe It Ail R b the atar| ‘That Willlam Hickman Moore] Anti-Pinchot eonservationtats | At New York. tharenteuts, in the year 1908, for ey described as a natural slough. In fact, ong of the fers of tt eee \was once a Missour! school teacher The Seattle Electric Co. paid ali] Morning game R. H. w,| the Durchase of two (2) tots in ; cred it a great Joke an@ shamelessly laughed uproarious ton Beact aon ee wt | “That records show one set of trip:| its employes overtime for today Philadelphia 27 1 | -Ailantie City, desert as lote | | }¥, when I made my complaint. He promised me a jot in his Dawam expected ternoom, It] tm are born out of every 7,000] cause they were unable to have a| New York 5 3 4] ANd BODlock 1, Hillman’s Atlant \ | ish addition in exchange and I agreed to accept it, Fearing, hoy Pa ab ne winbat holida madenitany “Mtbbens py-| Gity, The lots were kuarantoed tc ev At this lot might have been located In the Duwamish rivers a sts . gert and Livingsto Dono | be high, rolling land and dry made @ thorough investigation and found that it happened to be dry g Tikka k ek kk hth tke kw) hue, Ford and Sweeney [ paid on the same one hundred land all right, But I never got the deed for the same. After putting ft le * forty-four dollars, ($144.00) in in | me off time and time again, Hill aan finally flatly refused to sign the WH : NO l% LOOKING AHEAD A BIT. * At Boston atallments before my husband | deed. He suggested, however, that I take land in the Birmingham W lt #|° Morning game rR oH could tear himself away from addition tead l@ NEW YORK, Sept The #| Washington 4 9 work, as a dill distributor, to visit I tried to pick out the lots in the Birmingham addition for my N PD Ale winner of the Lang-Kautman * | Boston 1 § og] the place, He found that although | f, but Tillman's agents had evidently been coached to raise the ABO U rf % battle tonight probably will #| Batterios: Walker and Becken-| the Hillman sharks had described } price where | was concerned, and no matter what | picked in the fe mest the winner of the Lang- *|4ortf; Hall and Carrigan the lots as located within three o Birr ningham addition the valuation placed on the same was always eanette bout in four feet from the car line, t more than he scheme was to get more money fro ‘ Come t Star office with your story. The Star ' Picaron sigue Neanetee Es Don ge rr werd really situated in an unim Even if I had the desire to give Millionaire Hillma y Bp fa afte k institu and The Star means to stay Bie er 90 and the “bone w]q, Morning Bame ae | proved portion of Atlantic Ci my hard earned money 1 could hardly do i poor Wome * ver ' : vce to the people. YOU CAN @ crusher” 168, Both. negroes * 5 m. rhe 1 § 81 about a mile or #0 from the and all the money that I can put into pr I ve out of my j BLP. confident and are said to * yt des é. Ht Pe station where the car topped | earn as a day worker. I sh 5 yea 1 to w and my Ir he Star office, telephone Muin 9400 Jy ee eee otient condition erie: Ray and Kiliter; Wil] je aiso found that a river ran the | earnings are not steady or cer SHlicdan hea! ennosonan. ter: hit és or Ind. vou ¢ I write to The Star. Shhh nA AA RR at Dat y md over the lot 1 shady transactions in taking $144.00 of my savings, and that looks H a millio und he will use his money - | At Pittsburg exes of a small ‘ | like a pretty big sum to me, fe all that | have saved in the last freely k institution, He ie after the poor NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept | rning game R. H. B.] than ten feet, on which stood | five years. People and after him. General Ellis H. Goodyear, 82, rub-| St. Louls 8 10 barn fenced in, evidently erec | MRS. CATHRINE CROSBY ber inventor, first cousin of Charles | Pittsburg ‘4 1| by the agenc Mr. Hillma MRS CATHERINE CROSBY d and sworn to t 1 day of September, TELL | T TO THE STAR Jr ere cts | "onttertes:‘itarmon’ and Pheipe;| "Yossbip angiber vicim af he who had waited in'valn forthe ver | 30 ioe eons cial rubber, is dead |Lelfield, Maddox and Simor odry up. Whether the river is ut high tide or low tide, there is |N I 1 and for tt ton, residing at Seattle, }

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