The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 14, 1911, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| THERE ARE JUDGES AND JUDGES, IT SEEMS ~ ° here are judgesa nd judges. | Judge Main’s opinion of such an argument is|future. Jcourt at an ¢ r who in tha Sor y over two years agoa contempt of court} hown in his decision, which read: | “T decide the cases tried before me according to! proceeding ‘ ease was brought before Judge John F. Main. A news-| “I have read the articles published and the affi-|the laws of the state of Washington, after hearing the “The effect of the: spaper publications is ta 5G davits and records on file in his cause. I refuse to ad-| sworn testimony of witnesses upon the w tand.|embarrass the court in the disposition of that case | mit that anything that any newspaper publishes or any “The contemnor is discharged.” And I don’t know whether when the case (the Duwam« . comment that any newspaper or magazine may make,| On December 17 Judge Mitchell Gilliam, in hand-|ish injunction) comes up for final hearing before me, le the case was still pending prejudiced the] whether true or false, whether malicious or with good |ing down a decision against the editors of the Seattle| whether I can properly pass on the issues that are in judge that he could not render a fair decision, {motives, has influenced or will influence me in the|Star, in a case exactly similar, except that it was the|that case or not.” Eight O C O'Clock at night (In New York) le the late press 1s a mighty small bit of money to pay for a time for the news that appears in ti Pink newspaper like The Star; especially when there ition of The Star every night. Don't forget is something of interest to every member of ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE i a li db te SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1911 3 . ONE CENT. 0%, TRAINS AND NEWS STANDS be paper had commented on the Sullivan case. The law yer who instituted the proceeding argued that any com ment Ww OMAN ADMITS SHE KILLED HIER SON COUNTRY 1S 0S" 2 Made Him Drink eh Re Se \ Y ‘ 1 Melber, confessed mur ee We ecove Congressman Who EXCERPTS FROM HUIDEKOPER STATEMENT d : “ ts caloa't : cs 1 . na Uncovered Startling Facts The American army today has only enough infantry ammunl- ag giorno at Request of Seattle Star,| tion for one single engagement. The field artillery does not pow. Z ny tonight if her cond ‘e Presents Additional Facts. sess enough manufactured ammunition to fight so much as one \ € fi ao battle. (By United Pres) sa WASHINGTON Jan. 14.—Con How long would our 30 regiments of infantry stand against gress » James MeLachlan (Catt the 200,000 troops which Germany could land on the Atlantic fornia), who opened up the whole coast, or Japan on the Pacific coast, within five weeks after the matter of national defeases at the| declaration of war? AZ request of The Seatt tar, today —-— : ALBANY, N.Y. Jan. 4 presefited tathe house a criticism | We Americans think our militia a wonderful force. Nothing the present state of the national| could be further from the truth from a military standpoint. bought carbolic acid at the Lewis drug store, and then went’ to the swamp,” she said. “My mind was in a whirl. | did not know what | was doing. | wanted my boy to be happy. | did not see how it was possible to make him so. Everybody seemed against me. & thought if Georgie were dead he would be better off. | did not take time to consider the matter twice.” e repeatedly de was in the way , \ < Y r or him she fen: oY : Z i } « fo in the ad mg in the ‘Tee criticism was written for the War used to last 100 years or more. Now it lasts one year A e ja United Berets by Frederick Louis or less, and preparation must be made beforehand. ! | ymar rought today from t P ory that the Huldekoper and declares that the - e L ochest 1 we hi F the aue country ts now practic: lense The location of army posts is most defective. The war de : I hing for a mam Jess and at the mercy of Germany partment has tried to abandon posts worthless from a military a = ts 1 cin, ) eft Scher at Japa® or any first class power standpoint, but has been compelled to countermand the order, 4 : | P { carbo ‘ im . Melber did Congressmen say that the state owing to political influence. “ 8 body was foun ught a ticket for San Francisca, —=> ment contains information similar — swamp n chenectady The it is asserted, and the Kansas City, 3 to some included in Secretary Dick- Never in our history have we been prepared for war. A good - Mre. M told the. police, s authorities were asked to intercep® inson’s confidential report. reply business man cannot be made in a day or a month; neither can : 2a a strug to find a home for him ‘Ming to the McLachlan resolution in- &@ good soldier. lad gave him poison. The bo: Mrs. Melber is said to have told fring about the nation’s prepared-} sane = = t ° # tired and thirsty and asked for! many conflicting stories concernini st . His mother told him thejherself and her boy to people of SHINGTON. D. ° « sad he Schenectady. To some she said ge Rage ae stricken mother He be-| own, but that the boy was an adopt. ae.” sal Neved me and drank without ques- ed child. To a Schenectady plumb : goers wine ° ° ° ° —- a tion er, to w it was reported she Vienna and 1 Wanted to Marry Again. was engaged to be married, she sai@ as et : The police assert that Mrs, Mel-/the boy was her nephew. He was een yf a i Em murdered her boy to get rid the son of her dead brother, and, onal Military Series. 1k has been him in order to marry again. | she was unmarried, she is said to ow oar cranes," “"*! Seattle ministers are taking up|taine building, diagonally across | — os intth toe tenines Coat” tae thee on the fight for a complete registra-| from the city ball, and register. It mel — oe — = The statement prepared for the/tion as the best method of defeat-|is votes that count, not good In | 5 United Press follows ing Gill and cleaning up the city, | tentions. | | (Copyright 19th by the United Press) In a stirring appeal, Rev. Jos. L.| Remember that every politician | e By Frederic Louis Huidekoper. [Garvin pastor of the First Chris-|in Seattle has registered, and all The American people should know |ii4, church, and president of the|his friends are doing the samé ? that thelr army {is in a lamentable | \iinister’s Federation, has issued a| thing. Remember that every man except the navy, are virtually nil | city urging them to point out to ted by voting for a clean city The reeent Loy, above hecret. Ty | thelr people tomorrow the import rnment, has registered. Re ——$—— of war was made in consequence © of the issue. Dr. Garvin's let-| member that every saloon in this “We'll have to block the iat Sn the ladtiletiors.” a resolution introduced tn the house | 1. “sojiows iar ue & codiar tor Yurreling tad pi a bi k ped ri n the : gislaty MET Scat IEE al a (oe de oie oa of representatives by the Hon. Jas. |“ \ixigTERS OF SEATTLE lining up men to register. Remem ris was the decision of the disheartened and desperate Gill forces la wht. Today { The Municipal league, 400 strong, |eas instead of electricity, that he age yee ~ ype —_ ae | “Your opportunity Is before you|ber that all wide awake, progres f the best legal lobbyists the Gill machine can get are in Olympia, getting ready for a big|at noon today endorsed George W roe gh of power to supply thal nia. It disclosed a condition of af) +, od work for the wel-| sive public spirited men and wom-|fight when the me or v Mondaymorning Site tee anes dak teak we section. fairs so disgraceful that it bas beer fs Bye ga leied ct Pan sant len bate wireahy registered, cr arei' © “If il comeg up.. Mon One: ; vowtiea tions caplet. UP '® | “Was Shown to Be incompetent. suppressed, under the excuse that af o Saka aeati re = i ot sour | ondaer Coker greg Node: we can make them u stickers when they ve the ( men ar at the meeting | committee report which denounced! ‘Phe report said that Arms Was , d influenc ¥ ourself of your| going tomorrow to do so. Remem-|, _, pdf j / e ; ‘ ° it was purely “confidential.” Mr seaterabin From your pulpits, at|ber the warning notes utered by |!ast night, “we may beat them, But if Dilling’s name ¢ gets on that ballot we'll never beat | the administration of R. M. Arms a class mate at college of Hoyt and Dickinson's report probably did notitocn morning and evening services,|The Daily Star. Remember that|them in the world 8 perintente at valle ning ne nr, guy aw Gartner, and well-infor lege ral- | t al push to ge ; ” 7 “ rine charges at A s | po! c athe nas a ost nae bath ‘the Taited tates | Sxrene te privileges of the bel-jout in th final push to get thelr) best public sentiment of the city swing solidly against ther They have d the énjunction, | judgment, that his neglect of Bal-|of a deal with the Seattle Blew iad cver the werd. : ap pty liane Ei ogra snd bamapaalipeinaed i but the injunction has been dissalved, TI tt d the petitior ie ah tition has|iard had driven people there to use! tric Co and over 4 i. ose <8 , n, to go this week to the prefon-' “JOS. L. GARVIN.” | 5ut the injuncti nas n ave ey hav a 1 the pet , the petition has | lar peor During the war o! 2 our legis: | si ae ee - stood the attack without a mark, = = = = Iators did a lot of boasting that |= ces f There is no fair minded man in the city who does not believe that the petition is all right HE HIT THE PIPE roe ee aed that Pr ocgcne | THEN IT HAPPENED [y**¥*¥ 444444 ¥ HH | That twenty-five per cent of the voters of Seattle have legally demanded a new election. ‘unteers and militia could do the| Po REGISTRATION IS BOOM? *| This fact is incontrovertible, The people are after Gill. He knows it. He can only hope ONCE T00 OFTEN business.” What happened? In| ING |to win through technicalities in the courts. | 1814 the United tates called out The total segietration up to Gill isn’t fighting. He's dodging. Gill is mighty afraid of that record of his. Gill isn’t out a | fo less than £25,839 troops, but, not 5 Delock yesterday was 20; *) .. the stand defending his deal with Furth by turned the city light plant over to a is i an loyal to the plant's bitterest rival Gill isn’t defending his action fn turning ntown Seattle over to the vice syndicate to be RR ERE RR ER KEE EEE EEE REE EK GIVE EMPLOYES A CHANCE TO VOTE. nployers of labor employes one hour loyers’ expense in register for the ¢ primary election The executive of the Citizens’ Yommittee at a meeting yes: day afternoon passed a resolution urging this to be done. The Citizens’ Commit tee consisted of about 170 business men and represen tative labor men (Our Daily Discontinued Story.) withstanding the size of these forces, Americans suffered the hu-| Judging from the registra millation of seeing their much-| tion at the spring election in vaunted plan of conquest vanish in 1910, which was approximate the smoke of a burning capital.| ly 43,000, and estimating the ‘There is no man #o blind as the present registration should Yman who refuses to see. True consist of 60 per cent women patriotism does not consist in brag-| the registration this year ging about one’s own perfection, but should be in the neighborhood in ascertaining the real condition of 65,000, of affairs and in rectifying the mis Yesterday was the smallest takes so far as lies within one’s registration since the books * |= — ca == ower. ere opened. Only 1,443 vot upon ending his earthly career | Pe president Tat in his apeoch at § qualified ! } DO You KNOW 52 BELOW ZERO "When taken betore’s lunacy com-| e dinner ven nission this 0} c d “{ ‘ra bf International Disputes, on Decem e WINNIPEG, Man. Jan. 14— I|siayers had disappeared. —-—_—| Sot of whiskey every day, and bes ber 17th emphasized strongly the| RUDKIN DECLINES. | That comets have been regarded| Intense cold from the Great muchee plipe,” he said sides got away with half a gallon fact that some nations are begin OLYMPIA, Jan. 14.—Frank 2. i a he the ignorant and superstitious Lakes to the Rocky mountains : jot Hquor every week, He boasted to be threaterted with bank : ot ina Wenklanton wate as t runners of some great| prevailed again yesterday and jthat he drank enough to pay foi Petey by" thote tonmuanene. ama | | supreme Nae anit cottes |” A conainaly devised. arvangenentiameeieal commotion? lastnight, and to sunny Al. |HOT WATER ON AN INTRUDER. |the saloon across the way from his ments, but that the United States, | President Taft that he declined|by which common mineral wate | That on the Pacific coast 4,467| berta again falls the record of PR SA > ansoescg Srocery store. So states the com- being confronted by the existing! with thanks the place offe springs were apparently converted }@arthquake shocks have been re-| the coldest temperature. At KANSAS CITY, Jan, 14.-—-An| plaint for divoree made by his wife, conditions, must maintain its milf y on the federal bench in into immensely valuable hot springs }eorded? Edmonton it was 62 below zero [antidote for pie in the face is|who asks for alimony, care of thelr age patio tment os ge go ' y Hecate anake Feskst by iy alleged by Fred_A. Young, ina] . That the human family is subject| on official registration, which hot water on the head—as estab-|children and the appointment of a stantly increasing preparation for death of Edward Whitson. Judge|suit before the cireuit court, to re {to 50 different government has not been equalled since | lished by Mrs. Morris Leskowitz,| receiver to run thelr grocery store, war will probably never cease until} |Rudkin has just been elected to|cover a judgment of $42,500 against| | That one-quarter of the people) Christmas evening, 1879. Prince | the wife of a storekeeper at 25th a lo » ei pefore the age of 6, | d Holmes sts, this morning.| the nations of the world are willing very careful and not do any-| another term of 6 years on the su-|C. H, Belcher lon the earth die before the age of 6,| Albert registered 80 below | an m tis morning Cold, Freddie Says While Jailer Roberts was busy dozing at his desk last night, count: | ing the days until ayday, a wild exploited. eyed Chinaman dashed into the cor Gill is just dodging. He's afraid to fight. ridor and beat upon the grated) But that recall is coming, Hi Gill. The courts won't play into your hands. Your paid a eed: salon Un! bs eineeeee | |lobbyists can’t stem the tide. “whatcha want to. be locked. up} THE PEOPLE ARE AFTER YOU, HI GILL. or?” asked Roberts. | AND THEY'LL GET YOU, According to the Chink’s story ENSEEEEE EERE ER EEE EERE | | | | | something like 50,000. Cele RAAAARAAARARAAA RARE were at his heels, each * * * * + * * * * * * * * * HESS SEER EE EEE EE EEK 1 , §, and only one About 11 o'clock a ma a faded | aaer raw d the hs ae he pypes thing to soll your clothes, Claudie,”| preme court of the state. —— -seceg Ler Mer mayo at oa zero. pe epee gente yey 4 ad d Wee) tis docicien, be fodared jsaid Mrs. Clambersome to her son 179 ARRESTED. HO ee of 657 ’ I'm hungry,” he said. “Give me as a parting injunction when he left ; That the expenditures of the Unit It Doesn t Pay to something to es BY FREDDIE THE OFFICE BOY MMM NNN the house. Clandie clambersome| jyealth Commissioner Crichton’s HE DIDN'T ASK PA */ea States for the Indians during The pie was forthcoming. Carrie Nation Breaks Down. #| always had to have & parting {n-| report for December shows that 179 Rd * | 1910 were over $15,000,000? L k T E di “Pie!” the man exclaimed, “ It may be all right to some extent +4 KANSAS CITY. Mo, Jan. &| junction when he went anywhere,|mmin were arrested during that DAYTON, 0., Jan. 14.—Love *| That the lowest point in dry land 00 oo Erudite I want whisky!" |alscovering North Poles, also thas # 14—Carrie Nation, of saloon #| because he was of an adventurous | month for expectorating on the side-|* 4 first sight may be alright, */ jn the United States is in Death oe | Whereupon the custard went | Ing out Srosen "watgs es, but has # wrecking fame, was brought *! disposition and there was no telling | wax, and thus far 20 arrests a day|* 8° far 4% Miss Alice Johnson *|vailey, Cal,, 278 feet below the sea| CHIGAQO, Jan. 160-1k doce’) ee en es: tet ee ee et ee eee # to the home of her brother *| whether he would come back for an jg the record for January is concerned. But she demurs * | jeyel? , Jan, rey doesn't upon the features of the astonished | Weather lately ‘ i G*#here today suffering from *| injunction if he didn’t take it with to marrying until her parents &| That the English language con-|PAy to look too wise. Arthur Ghar-| Mrs, Leskowitz, She leaped to a| ‘This morning when obecrvele %& nervous breakdown. Physi- #| him. | OLD MAN SUICIDES, give consent. Walter J. Ware, *| taing about 600,000 words? rat, & stove works employe, learned | stove, upon ‘which 8: pall: uf water] were taken ty the cisgcaer ure W cians said that her condition ®| On this day Qaudie saw a bird's — 4 wealthy young business man, *| That the arrest of counterfeiters |that fact yesterday when he was | was boiling. ‘There was a splash, a|'t Was discovered that the tempore # Wis not dangerous, and that *|nest under the eaves of the sum-| NORTH YAKIMA, Jan. 14.—C.|% had won her heart, got the *| numbers about 400 yearly? arrested on & charge of slander, pre-}yoream from the man; ‘and he ran} ature was19.. This has it over last # a short revt would affect com- *|mer kitchen, So he climbed up on Hessey, 60 years old, depressed | ® marriage Hcense, but when the *| That the number of domestic | ferred by Mrs. Bertha Gleason, Gos-| from the store. year, but In ae oe a Pe taste cure il the aoft soap barrel to reaclt It by failing eyesight, after placing|% tlme came for her to say “I */ money orders for the fiscal year|sips stated that Gharret was wont| ‘The police are looking for him, | 4oWN to 12 and hovered around that a Bott soap barrel itp betwixt the|$2.60, all he had left, on the door will” before the probate judge #1 1p10 was 76,018,068? to look exceedingly wise when asked | mark for about 10 days, much to ee ee ee here she lost courage ? if certain stories were true. This the delight of the fuel dealers, In BAND CONCEHT |peeved Mrs, Gles mightily, and BAND CONC vane ,.|1907 the temperature dropped to o band at t . Se outa Alnabe eee Waxner's band at the Bon. Marc seen: RAR Fag ARNE nla Keeeee EE EERE EEE EEK ome - | soft soap barrel and the bird's nest, | step of a friend, leaped in front of a BAND CONCERT F | children Northern Pacific train and was in nes Bon ne to HE END. ntly kil JUST 11 MORE DAYS TO REGISTER TO BEAT GILL ~

Other pages from this issue: