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at About It? Until a few go the state owned all the shore lands about Lake Che! Che Hill railroad interests wanted them for water power rese r purposes, A “little bill” was sneaked through the 1 ature, authorizing their sale at an ap ised valuc state tax commission was called upon to ap ise them One nr yoted for a alue the tax com or a value of $1,000,000. 0,000, the he The other two Political pull was exerted upon value was fixed at $25,000 The peoy ashington, in addition to losing control of @ vast water power, were looted of not less than $225,000, The Hill interests are for Burke, Three years ago certain water power in Spokane wanted the water power rights on the Pend d’Oreille river, in a forest reserve in Stevens county Mining claims were filed on the shore lands, and the persons filing those claims, bD. T. Ham ‘of Spokane and associates, applied to congress for a grant of the water power 33 A “little bill,” giving it to them, was passed sureaee con- eaphed Senator (then Congressman) W. L. Jones. grabbers am, in campaign, was a Wilson standpatter until delivered to Burke as a Burke standpatter. : The Guggenhcims are building a railroad up the Copper river, in Alaska, with its water terminus on Cordova bay There is but on able location on Cordova bay for a termi gal system and townsite, and that is in the Chugach forest re But Senator Sam I Girecting the secretary of Sam Piles named in iles put a “little bill” through congress f the interior to patent to three friends the bill, 3,000 acres of land on Cordova bay for $2.50 an acre. And to preserve their townsite monop oly, the same bill dire the secretary of the interior to re serve from all forms of nt 2,000 acres more immediately ant has not been perfected, but f Sam Piles will be in a position #0 “make terms” wi Guegenheims for the only townsite on Cordova bay sui rminal for their railroad " Sam Piles says Judge Burke would make an ideal senator. Some th the Guggenheims wanted a piece of yailroad ric Maska belonging to and occupied by another comy x to take possession of it, a phys the Guggenheim repr es. The federal officials started to prosecute the 6 rers, but before they had succeeded an order came fr Vashington ing the prosecut Delegate was issued at appointees must be conti to procure their nf ation the ¢ to have the vo f 1 Washington : The Guggenheims are for Judge Burke for senator, as wit- ness the activity of C. Hughes. There has be exploitation of late about the the Guggenheims to its of high-grade a ington, which have been ¢ p Four years ago Presi Roosevelt lands from entry and included the area in ‘how! went up irom the coal grabbers, and a hurry-up res« Was jammed through the legislature declaring great injustice had been done settlers” who wanted to gettle there. The withdrawal order was modified, and the coal Wind crabbers, including many of the leading citizens and stand epublican leaders of Washington, proceeded to grab coal ysits probably worth millions > This is not a’history of and Alaska. It rely a It is merely an illu: urce grabbers such other in gent car t >. it is an illustration of what the special interests have to and what the common people have to lose by the election of such men as Judge Burke and Will E. Humphrey to public re surrounding the grar when it is three of t which murder was committed by dismissing the officers conduct r d in congress that the order instigation of the Guggenheims. The new med by the senate, and in the effort nheims are determined embers fre valu Alaska, and the But there are great depos Whatcom county, Wash al in + them ur noses withdrew a forest resery tion that a tat state “poor grabbing in Washington w specific in vate reasons why va an a Whitewashers | Are Busy Today | Billingerites on Probe Committee Rush to Rescue of Mor- ganheim Cabinet Member—May Yet Escape Condemna when the vote was 5 MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 6—It is be-| ing e vote ¥ Weved that when the committee « breaking the quo masts tomorrow morning the anti omorrow, ft and ©} Bailinger faction will be in contro! by 2 ratio of five to four framing » * solutions man Gra ng be pre a new . the Glavis the |and P’ ot charges and condemh rs of ing Ballinger as unfaithful to his kely trust. This report, it is declared to t tomor i day, will receive at least five votes alt in & tie vote unless one of the | at all thm and will be submitted t a minority verdict if wer supp “ Genator Sutherland an Man MeCall, wh aved Ballinger TeMerday on a technicality by bolt BLAST KILLS 3 ON BATTLESHIP NEWPORT a., Sept. 8 An ofl barre! “ the the battiesh Dekota os today hor Mat is belic hu eath thre r gh support report the majority maelf oa Find Skeleton in Woods While walk ening wi I kes, a Of Youngate Containing on of a Tevealed t D feet aw It ig tho mee of ar Meked hin » 880 and ther ably thoug Yoman, anc LET PEOPLE COL LECT THE BILLS Hi Gill, Mayor Re collection of light give the com chance to col hy not bills? I think a number of people 1 like to collect them for hink | 1 want a job, and mig cer WM, ¢ FALLS FROM Otte Vo Geneva chur hin back Jawt Vaek porch of feet to th ROOF Me ground poy a his head KRESS ES SESE EERE EEE ERE HE Ee HESS SESE ESSERE EE EET Oe ee these coal} € A} VOL, 12, NO, 170, ~— 1 Tera pi oe | | | ing to Others. | STATE OF WASHINGTON, COUNTY OF KING, #« might keep some poor strar | Kennydale, King county, Washing | ton, and that here is a little history | of their dealings with the Hillman} dues; yet it seems that jadgment institution. for an unjust thing is sternly de | gun . About six years ago we sold our | layed. }home in Missoula, Mont., for several On June 9, 1904, we bought ot! hun 4 lese than we should have! Hillman, and after he had received after reading a glowing advertise} fourteen hundred hard-earned dot ment tn the Seattle papers about | Hillman’s "Garden of Eden You ted all three of them, which were | mined to have our home, and has at |we were what he calls “suckers.” | all paid in advance, as we had, by | Qifferent times kent his agent, who iis | We came to Seattle and fell among| watching his crooked deals with! tiege here, with men who are sup FREEPORT, ili, Sept. &—Theo } thi nves. who beat and robbed us of | others, ex cted our day would) gosed to be buyérs, and has offe dore Roosevelt today emphatically all that we had ‘ome; but neither myself or my hus declined to sit at a table with Sen. | Our trouble, of three years’ stand-| band ever said one word against ator Lorimer, of illino: Pomel ben ecome a chestnut to many, | bh ri o 4 < nett | | ing. has become a chestnut to man him, but if on any point we could} quet tonight, to be given in Roose: | | That James B. Dill, the great cor |poration lawyer, got his first | Soe Sanding, and ts mie cong ts Toe dvecuat’ cod seal task of certain legislators alleged to| yr have been concerned in the matter That the first savings bank was On earning that Lorimer anded by « § » clergyman just would attend the dinner tonight, e Roosevelt said 100 years ago That condensed milk made In Se WOMAN CAUGHT IN | HILLMAN’S TRAP | Tells How She Was Hounded, Buncoed and Even Insulted by Owner and Agents of the Shark Institution—Sounds Warn- | but I am tolling my story hoping It] standing all this or from | and begged to Hillman to take } belng robbed. Why, I can see Hill-| money on these contracts, but b a ats Hannah Arey, being first} man now dashing madly about {| sternly refuses. Three years of de-| a cee ie ond laces duly sworn upon her oath, deposes| his touring car with the stalned-|Sression ie past, but no word of| issue jand says that she is a resident of faced tourist strapped in, but to aid the Panama-Pacific Ex in His silence has followed him, and j believe that he witl meet his just re from us on the contracts, he for The Seattle Star [lattitin SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1910. ONE CENT ON TRAIN x aT Da Be CLOVEN HOOF IS REVEALED “The sanity and safety of conservation were never called into question until conservation began to be really embarrassing to the ee and effective to the public interests. I’m nog a soft pedal conservationist, myself ifford Pinchot. (Dy United Pree.) world the preaching of righteous-| ST. PAUL, Sept. 8—In his ad-| ness in general terms has been con Seivatton take never’ chee into dress before the delegates to the | t¢mplated with entire equanimity | question until conservation began ta siitinel gennervation dxnagsens in men who rise in violent protest | be really embarrassing to the grab« the closing session today, Giftora | V2? Melt own particular privilege, | bers and effective to the public ine graft or @ tion. “Conservation has now passed in: to the stage of @ practical fighting | tic attempt to get things done. It has | « antage comes Into ques-|terests. I’m not a soft pedal cone servationist myself. “Sy long as the political domina of the great interest endures, upt control of legislation will Pinchot, father of the national con servation movement in this country, delivered a scathing arraignment of the grabbers who have attempted, to steal the vast undeveloped. re- |2@9Un to step on the toes of the|carry with ft the monopolistic cone sources of the United States from | Beneficiaries and prospective bene-jtrol of natural resources. That is the éontrol ot the people Fielariee of wnluek privilege. what we face today in the effort ta : oaths he demand from the opponents apply conser fon, ne of the es part, Pinchot said is not that we shall abandon the |first principles is that the natural During the first part of the agi-|principle of the greatest good for|resources belong to all the people tation for conservation, conserva-| all of us for the longest time. The|and should be developed, protected tion met with little opposition, for |soft pedal conservationist merely|and perpetuated mainly for the it interfered with no man's priv asks that conservation shall be/profit of all the people and not profit. From the beginning of the | safe, sane and practical mainly for the profit of the few.” a — - = (By United Press.) ST. PAUL, Minn., Sept. 8.—The resolutions committee of the National Conservation Congress today, by a vote of 43 to 3, adopted a plank in its report favoring the federal control jot power sites. This is a decisive victory for the Roosevelt-Pinchot conservation policy and a jslap at the state's rights scheme advocated by the big interests, Ballinger and the rest. —=s Pass $5,000,000 | Ah, This is a Sad Story- Bond Law for Big | No $5000 Heart Balm Panama Show | see our way clear, we sald a good wor! for Bim. All at once he turned | Kartilleries upon us in the shape! of bie element, and the stench there (iy United Prem) SACRAMENTO, Sept. &— frogh in awful and will ascend tii!) the assembly today unanimous. time wil} be no more. Notwith ly passed the consticutional we have prayed) amendment permitting San Francisco to amend its charter Ourb or our counsel makes any tm position. | The assembly unanimously | adopted resolutions endorsing Qne year ago the 22nd day of last] the administrations of Pree! Hitman brought us into court.) dent Taft and Governor Gillett. We won the case on our home place » which Hillman did not appeal, but it hag been impossible for us to secure a deed, although the Htigation has cost us $1,000, He ts very deter e ‘e ] si wihiiaaienpe pression on the Hillman Investment cothpany velt’s honor by the Hamilton club, | of Chicago. | Lorimer’s election to ¢ongress jand subsequent charges of irregu: |larity resulted in tegisiative and jeourt charges, some of which are} | “Lorimer represents the antithe leis of what | represent in politics. attle’s suburbs is consumed on the cattle ins of Argentina? (Rg Calted Prem.) Taike With Girt. lin justice to myself | cannot sit | That the public playficids of Se LONDON, Sept. §.—Dr. Hawley! tie conversed with Mile, Leneve | with him at the table. | attle cover nearly 63 acres? Crippen, the American dentist | wile the trial waa in progress to-| “Gentlemen, | can't do it,” he de That Jacob Furth was once a used of the murder of bin wife, | day speaking of the discovery to |clared with determination to the member of the city council and the | Nelle Elmore Crippen. was plainly | het The girl who fled to America |committee sent from Chicago to MISS MAE ARONSTEIN Peete or Othe “common user” | *sitated today when the hearing Of wig the doctor shows signs of the | meet him here today. clause? his case was resumed in the Bow | gin of the trial and her answers| “If Lorimer is at the dinner even,| “lam going to keep on fighting,” orable to the fair plaintiff, 1@ 4 ,, | street police court ae short and whe seemed to pay { ttend,” he con.| said Miss Mae Aronstein at her was announced te 1 the suit . Frink once led a Sight wee short an noon) pay] 1 must refuse to attend,” he con he sul ba TEen Car Ncdene saver alot oe idently the announcement that | jjt4 » attention to the whispered ut-| cluded. home, 1514 Bellevue, this morning. is dismissed with prejudice, which ine ' chemists for the crown had dincov-|te¢ noes of the accused man { “1 am not satisfied with the trial that Miss Aronstein canno® } tern ered evidence of hyoscin in tie mu Pal fall 1d will carry th to th ng n o | 1s one of the few aless the crown should fall to and will carry the case to the su bring his action > heap ager ogg page a ng Aa body dug from the cellar of | gut stantiate the evidence of the preme court. |! am confident that 8 | of ¥. Ss, cities t ted States inde | the Crippen North London home, tinting of th . M i in. As far as M ng is I fr P sever ny Fasano > refuse & Mbrary ing of the poison or the d Thi Brid Will W can wir s far a r. Lang is any, and = _- - “ye oe refuse a library) ana which is alleged by the govern: |i» “ble to Gisprove It through iS ie Wii ear concerned | could have married the [ es that she jfrom Andrew Varne ment to have been the body of Mrs. 7 ed that him any time if | would have con ‘ A a . | Murphine, who is ma ~ owe experts, it fa believed that a y 1B mm a street 6 That Baad men i Bebe os - ~ Crippen, has caused the doctor! staggering blow will be dealt Crip a $60,000 Gown ust sented to a secret marriage. ca Aronste clares that Mor eee ‘aited ta . hile | much anx He was startled pep's case. His attorneys showed ’ “My witnesses threw me down Lang aske three or four times Ing coun stner vy will’! Tuesday by the announcement that | .io t t h 2 and I'm going after them next.” € Lang, and she final- un cigar stand e corner |)" signs of the gravity with which ed going a a no fina tee en ety laugh in all, hin | ®P@ today he was worn and hag-|fyi attention pald today when Har The decision of Judge R. B. A igh te? ssi , . gard looking when the ring was bertson ir breach of promi t ma? e resumed. {Continued on Page Three.) (ty United Presa) uit for § : t F " go That County Auditor Case NEWPOKT, R. I 8.-When |S, Lang by M M Aronsteit sal to be one of the best amate Mi ne Sherman weds Lawrence 4 jball pitchers in sercadcrdos Whiteside Seat Sale On. W. k S U ; L. Gillesp tomorrow noor |years ago? orker Ques UNION | jh. ic he most expen RRR That Viet Zedole me | P wedd ROB POSTOFFICE * BANK CLEARINGS. * ning for the leg la 7 Manager Carl Reed, of the Moore| The Seattle Carpent inion | ey oul The * Seattle * 43rd distr ine new eatre, fs making great prepara-|and the Washington Ben nt as-| dress | rin ivle of AND GET $1 100 % Clearings toc $2,066,806.57 papers nding for the opening of the legitt-| sociation were yesterday made de-|jyory sa it cost $60 ’ * Balances 46,393 ute dramatic season, Walker nts in the superior court, b The place at * Tacoma. * That Shefer Bros. got thei Whiteside, sent here in Zangwill’#| Fred 8. McCullough, for $25,000, al-|the home of | the parent y United Presi.) * Cle Pil ‘ * many years ago bY, peddling NO) Hig play, “The Melting Pot,” opens |leging conspiracy to suapend him | Mr. and Mrs. W. W she VALLEJO, Cal, Sept. 8.—Cracks-| ® Balances 69,534.00 % tions In Kansas at the Moore Sunday, and the first|from membership and deprive him | on Ochre Point men “ { the yst- | Portland. * Ves. Seaste, overs _* i curtain wi eal a lot of refurnish-|of bis livelihood. He was suspend ‘ tel noma * AY... $1,806.337.00 | tory than the ¢ 4 oe ‘Mal po the | nsing and redecorating work in the) ed pending payment of a $50 WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE hort be uh . *! a 17,823.00 & Tees Jutee somr © ae , h Water will be shut off in George- | ¢ 1 $600 ir ha any 7 Spokane * superior court, used each law t sale WIDOW NOMINATED. town, east of Duwamish ay,, Friday, | w $500 a aped * today.. .$ 807,918.00 % at the University ¢ reg y and showed that a lot ASHLAND, Wis., Sept. §—Bf a| september 9, from 9 a. m 1 The robbery wa when | ® ances 98,799.00 before he was nted+ to ple are glad to see fall vote larger than the combined pw ithe office was of Cee eee ee es vench by Hay 3 | open of her two male opponents, Mary M. | . orc: be. That there are three toothpick} Archibald, a widow supporting s mills in Washington eral small children, was nominated | Portland, Ore—John Robertson, | at the primaries for treasurer of @ @ TACOMA 8.-Five fruit] driver of an automobile which cap: | Agniand county today. Her nom-| ealers, cha . jolating the| sized after its occupants had ination equivalent to her elec-| pure food law, we srreated and |ed a road house, was late today 1 mA | fined upon warrants sworn out by|not guilty of manslaughter in ce | City Food Inspector Esther All-| nection with the death of one mer Atlanta, Ga.—The fact that Cha 3 0 ber of the party, Mr Fe aly forse, the banker confined in| the fed } penitentiary here, wa * ia t kay fos Infract n af profit by political « 1 n et in sec conclave in the office I \ 1 Seattle rules was made public here today || Frid ht, and sele la ca late ‘ 10,0 t by Warden William H. Moye jtast + ay . t citizens of | Washington i 1 H te Geo son, & building cor Phe « i ‘ lis Judge TI Burke, a man v ation to public life has tractor residing at 6734 2ist av.|been a ese e anda 1 of great corp A blazing trail of red fire will lead fr econd ay. toDreamland |N, W., was badly burned by an ¢ I f th n men pulline the atria ' rink tomorrow nis ight the fol urgency on the way |plosion of creosote and tar at 9 ‘ 7 : I ; u nfere to hear Miles Poin in his closing rally In Seattle. It is intend- |ofelock this morning, at 24th av hide t h, prot pe ! 1 id, the ed to make this the biggest itical meeting that has been held in |and Washington st. The injured | Gt enhe } We the tariff ent ' € } Seattle for many ye I peakers will be Congressman Poindex man was removed te his home | , } stere vies " : i ter, Ole Hanson and Hermon W. Craven. George H. Walker will 1 | Anan Intane ws Lineataniale “ts 7" 1 as Jae scam Gal, Magl 4.—Thel? I , inter have for looting the : na sebiegae: ~P) Poindexter arrives in Seattle thi at 3 o'clock and | tate convention of the prohibition; Which Were sgoken and the deals that were made ! ht rtly afterward will be at Poindexter hed rters in the New | phrty of California met here today|ed in myste Even the nar the conferee heir pt York block. ‘This evening he speaks in Columbia City and Georg and @ temporary organization was|lication increase the SiRiGie’ bie ccintacaimechaua es kat town. Others speaking at Columbia City will be Hermon Craven, effected by the election of Rev, ¢ affect the a re : ‘ : , : | Otws ardee and ‘Tom Murphine. |P. Moore, of Oakland, temporary fs In H t th fen 1, hiding the dentity under the darkne 1 ave said to The speakers beside Judge Poindexter at Georgetown will be {ehairman, More than 150 dele-|the people of the ate John Dore and Ole Hanson | gates were present “We have selected Judge Burke as your next senator.”