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These Washington rains are a pretty good test of citizen- ship. The man or woman who goes down to the Prefontaine building to register for a chance to vote Gillism from the city, ain, is a pretty good citizen in a pouring rt of Yesler and m bureau fur Last Day for the Contests Under Uncle Jack's Aus pices Is Tomorrow, The Youngsters Are Drawing Pictures of a "Girl's Head” This Week. OL. 12, NO. 284. MAIN MAY GET PLACE Rumored That King County ry Judge B May Be Named for Supreme Bench to Succeed Rudkin. John F. Main of Seattle may be named by Gov. Hay to the e bench to succeed Frank H. Rudkin, who was promoted to the United States district bench by Taft This was the rumor in circulation today would name a Western Washington man ge Main was appointed to the superior bench by Hay to fill a vacancy. He is a graduate of Michigan \ and taught law some time in the state uni Versity. He is about 45 years old. ‘DEATH FOR 24 _ JAP SOCIALISTS Judge Hay has sald that he versity (Dy United Presa) were liely ¢ ned and the TOKIO, Jan. 18.—-Sentence of| prisoners had no opportunity to ob @eath was 5 d he 24 of the | tain 1 A be wspape der arrest for the | we ment that t Alleged plot which aimed ath alt @t the assassination of the mikado. n prot ed appr found guilty as the alt th charg ¢ Teo we bong privon sentences , ng of t Prisoners Calm the re-sentenc When the death » band of & sts, there was a pre passed this afternoon fn cou city, At ce phases c Denj oka, the f the case three and bad: the soctalist. band, calmly signated wapaper rep mitted to thi mistress each other and their fellows fare ings, but th arbi Well, and the whole b: gxcluded at c & chorus atin the court and were, in fact, not pres principles, danced frengiedly before ent at the hearing of any of th the throng of spectators who jam-| really important testimony—that of med the court secret agents on whore oaths the| Sessions Secret. government depended for a verdict In the first tribunal » of guilty 2 RACED See (By United Press.) (By United Pree) é Prone SACRAMENTO, Jan. 18—That | ASEINOTON Jan. 18.—In 80 | no anti-Japanese pro-labor bills will 0 have the present congres or considered until pass a tariff commission bill, Pres ai thc Pannen wanna dent Taft's influence was brought w om settled at to bear on the house ways and perc maga ten us Means committee today. The pres! standing amc here dent recommended a recombine vs of the Dalzell and Longworth SEVEN REUNITED ua ROCHESTER, N. ¥., Jan. 18 GRANTS 115 DIVORCES. |The seven adult children of Levi EVERETT, Jan. 18.—A total A. Strong were reunited here after | 115 divorces were granted in an absence from home of 30 years. this county for t Superior court of Year 1910. HOT NEWS ‘That bh PLAY GROUND BILL URGED 18.—For the third NOT happened yet. OLYMPIA, Jan time In as seasions, n bill The Ministerial association has| was introduced to compel the ap © endorsed Gill jortioning of one-tenth of all newly Wappenstein has joined the Wel | dea ated plats of land for play league ound or park purposes. Repre Beceb Furth has arranged to| sentative Wright of King introduced Stump for Dilling. it yesterday No more candidates will come out! It » tor counct! of 19 sed by th nd Gov. Mead was legislature vetoed it Arms has increased the profits of | It was « introduced in 1909, but He light plant over last year \falled to pass Strap hanging has been abolished| Austin Griffiths is here work ‘by the 5. Eco. ling for the bill. If it passes it will Crawford has fired all his boun-| be the first of its kind In the United core adel the Renton line. | States. - STORIES OF ATTACK ON AMERICAN GIRL BY JAP indicate VICTORIA, B. C., Jan. 18.—De the hostility falls of the uncalled-for assault on United States Vice Consul William-| fon at Dalny, Manchuria, by Jap nese fish mongers, which was Briefly reported by cable, and the Story of an assault on an American |Iincidents against foreigners. | The publication then went on to advise the nese to ain their feelings against foreigners for policy's sake, if for nothing “cor ore.” Se I i ee ie le ie ee ee od * * ® JOY RIDERS, ATTENTION! * BYR ed * * iy United Pres.) & OLYMPIA, Jan. 18.—Rep- * 8, Jan. 18 ntative Wright today fn. * Persons, injured by derai * troduced a bill making it a ® of train No. 1, on the Los An. * felony for anyone to drive an ® Pedro * under the ® N brought to|* It was ro *| Los Angeles on a special train to * the commit * @ay for medical treatment. EF * * Passengers and five members ofthe #*¥ eee eee Re REE HH fain crew were injured } t Helps Taritt | NO ANTHP BILLS Taft Helps Tariff | | nish a good examy “We've been trying Jexplained, “But there had the right b to every to get 8 been j when women down on February 7 to vote ag down in a farm wagon.” “We have grandchildren g SE ATTLE, WASH, No, Cynthia Can't] Help You to Get Out Injunctions Dear M that y v wo I can job Grey notice able mu Beem ybody who {s per would like to 1 me where I can ot of injunctions cheap They must be quite fashion b as they ar mentioned frequently in th papers and I thought they woald Pee eee eee eee eee eee eee ee ee ee eee eee ee ee handy to have in the he My neighbor's dog barks too meh, and I could restrain him (the dog) A woman whom I don't lke }® has a new fur coat. I'd like to restrain her from wear it hen the weather very of s hot sult me. I could number of In weather man Stee eee eeeeeeee ee eee eee it might be « entrain anyone faxor May pistration fror r living uring a good size of tions for me. I one for Thanking you in advance, 1 am, Yours Truly, MRS. A BOWEN eee ee ee eee eens eeeee ee ee one in attle. ‘And while the old couple helped each other up t | JUST 8 MORE DAYS TO REGISTER TO BEAT GILL ¢ hill, the} autos in for some time,” the woman es pecbist was Higering on the routing of its a Boeke and These women « cour ast a vote for GC The % ‘ ne Placing « vill workers. | ministration t c er against the respectab sickness in the house. 1 voted For the Gill forces, rendered desperate by the sweep of|and decerit women of Seattle to perpetuate Gill's misrule . efore, in 1889, and I'm coming | public sentiment, are working now, all right | You must register this year in order to vote against Gill, ainst Gill if Dad has to drive me | Women of the underworld are being rounded up from| Last year’s registration won't help. You must register thi |semi-tespectable hotels and from the restricted district itself,| year. The booths will be open till January 27. Tomorrow ani rowing up in the cit sid the | Friends of the Gill regime and the men who have become rich for the rest of the week the books will go to the suburbs. in keeping Seattle decent }because Gill let the town run wide open, are furnishing the DON’T FORGET TO RE TER | The Seattle Star ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN _SEATTLE WEDNESDAY, JAINVARY 18, 1911, MISS VIDA SUTTON, YORK |* 9840 Arrowsmith Av Here ase The b 's y an % Rainier Beach, Seattic, Wast ones in the suffragette | accessory s Miss | 2th, 19 | Sutton. ‘One whose wife is ir |® Jan. 12th, 1911 sinhethe finitely — stror than , himself eee eee eee eee sSuftragent | He Ja. atra of everything, even and uffragette, ix Stetson Faction them, and you may be <7: of Amert erste ag ale developed intellectually Not in Evidence (Me Unit YORK, Jan, 18—At NEW te ary aband ent of the fi rs of Mrs. Augusta regain control of the Ever Hear of an Insurgent Chink? (Dy United Press SPOKANE, Jan. 18—To demc strate that they are not apirit of insurgency, | Mongolians will inaugurate a } local ke | from the |warm revolution against the tm |perial edict issued last June, di recting that all followers of Con |fucius decapitate their queues Feb 2, the beginning of the Chinese ow Year, by refusing to obey or | ders ‘CENSOR - PLAYS OLYMPIA, Jan, 18—Ropresenta tive Buchanan, of King county, to- introduced a bill providing for a board of censors for jally moving picture board member must be Other bills introduced we By Collins, King, allow to own land By Ghen, King, plays, espec shows, One jens abolishing the fellow servant and the assumption of risk clauses In personal injury | laws | By Buchanan, King a grand |jury to be called once in every county By phens, Spokane, for licens ay real estate agents WANT MORE JUDGES, OLYMPIA, Jan. 18—-Two bills were introduced in the house yes terday for additional judges in King county. The first wa Repre sentative Hastings, who asks for |two additional judges, making nine in all. Representative Ennis intro Iduced the second bill, which calls for three more | po YoU KNOW |) @ woman.| morgily mc righ t Mtteal tr coming ere an t ir clubs, social a eats, they are fast # of another sphere oir hands when she first at a n also the scrawny vartet Husban(d)ette (pronounced | ¢ F Sy with “d” silent): A feeble, tu. | rom their husbands tile, terrified and helple “The husbandette ts thing, sometimes wrongly |common and hop | | thought to be synonymous with |owm fault If a woman | “man.” Found in email and | huabande He should be | inconspicuous corners Use, | «ated to the divorce art if to pass tea and pay taxes [husband « [SRR ee White 0,000; Leblan: * \* * |® PRAYER MEETING IN * | OF ahha * HOME WHILE WOMAN * ve mee * 18 KILLING CLERK ® * FORT WORTH, Tex, Jan. * NEW YORK, Jan. 18 * 184-While Mrs. T. M. Brooks * pris distributed durin ® wae killing Mra. Mary Binford * Jamounted to $940,000, acco e MEE Uspiied debartanent etove & figures compiled by th Ae ® yeaterd afternoon women * jot France. Nine birdme % of the Firat Methodist church * jmore than $200,000. They * at Mrs. Brooks’ home * | Paulbam, $70,000; Latha * i @ prayer meeting * * * i* * ee ee Catta $30,000; Ch: 000 ytain Dickson, $25,000 Wynma 000. LODGE WINS LITTLE GIRL “ELOPES.” ASTORIA, N. Y., Jan. 18.—The te lice are today searching for} BOSTON, Jan, 18—Senator Henry Helen McKay, aged 11, who is be-|Cabdt Lodge today won the republi jeved to have eloped with an actor jean nomination for a return to the |** no appeared here last Sunday. | United States senate, T t |tleafly means his election and re PINCH PHILANTHROPIST arn to the coveted seat in Wash BOSTON, Jan, 18.—Victor M.lington, Theodore Roosevelt Weil, who gives annual free outing mm here the past three days in an or children, has been arrested, effort to help Lodge’s chances ng fak ng to p charged with promce companies Sensation Promised (My United Press) MARSHFIELD, Mo, Jan. 18 Sensational testimony, the stance of which Roscoe Pattersor | That it takes the city council over three hours every Monday | evening to transact its business? | That the municipal government of the District of Columbia ts vest-| chigf counsel for the state, refuses od by act of congress in three com-|to reveal, is promised in the trial missioners? of Walter Dipley and Goldie Smith That the net cost of the British | for the murder of Stanley Ketchel arm for 1910 was $138,800,0007| pugilist | That the U. S. army costs us| The selection of Jurors begins $100,000,000 a year? morrow That the largest number of ths returned for any month in A ARMED | 70,0987 | That the distance from Sandy PASO, Texas, Jan, 18.—Dis- Hook, N. Y., to Queenstown, Eng | patpnes today from Chihua land | miles? hua, Mexico, state that, alarmed by That in 25 years Europe has | the progress of the Madera revolu:| pent 29 billion dollars tm armies] tion in that state, the government and navies? | has decided to retire Gov, Terrazas That 16 centuries ago man was|and to place the state under mar |considered old at 50? “tial law In Ketchel Affair, af Ellen Terry Has a Message for the Women of Seattle Writes About It for The Star look It on Page 4 Today. and Don’t Over ON TRAINS AND NEWS STANDS Be ONE CENT, ROOSEVELT AGREES WITH STAR STAND CHINESE COURTS OPEN _ IS FREE TO CRITICISM After deliberating throughout the night, the jury this morning re at 1 « ns are sacred things bee turned a verdict of not guilt | seople t or comment on gi the case of Ho Bak Guie, charged ‘: ‘ f ted : ir . nt on gem h the murder of Chin Gule Ote s v in the statement quoted belo f i noon untll 6:30 yester | 1embe isn’t Eugene Debs talking, or Emma $ listened to the summing | I atement quoted here was made Friday last ee ey ni cece eaat in New York by a man who for seven years wag was generally expected | ¢ the United States—Theodore Roosevelt. Here’a Chin Gui Ole met his death as aj what he thinks about the divine rig of judges « Novem ber 15 “Congressmen and judges should each be praised of ng joint in a local blamed according to their acts. It is foolish to make a fetich! of a congressman, an executive officer or a judge “When I think that a judicial decision should be attacked I shall attack it as I have before, and every American who | worth his salt and who hasn't surrendered his rights as amg American citizen will do the sai same. AND THE WOMEN PRESBYTERIANS URGE ALL TO REGISTER Ren and w Here’s Dilling and unmistakable: His Platform) »» srs « ve WHEREAS, The Seattle Star has fought, and is still fight ing for the cause of the people of this valley against thd tyranny of the said Stone-Webster monopoly. WHEREAS, We be e The of the S r has ren the publica become & the pr at we, me | menace liberty and RES( YLN ED, Th Tukwila, a an's Suffray January, 1911, and do 1 the said RESOLVED, That*we will do everything in our power to assist in securing the enactment of new laws that shall take away from the judges of this state the arbitrary power to | punish for constructive contempt MRS, A. M E MRS. PB. G RTI MRS. A. HIGMAN, itions Cor LABOR TAKES UP : CONTEMPT LAW R, H RUP, Res littee. GEO. W. DILLING This communi and @ law the duty of law an far a delegates to the OLYMPIA, Jar state a eldates maber t 1 be my ob Federation ¢ h sen for ples of the ect, to the abjlity, to! here this s being cot red by their cree the Ie ean Goat the ns committee today Sy is eet ed a s pus mite, bg gh t phere h to } 9 . >! punishij under no elreumstanc ee ed a law cock ance or encourage infrac ne drawn up bring at t ideal conditions, bu’ = = == —= feel ¢ ure that I can bs ta con executive hae | Hellenic Dances SCORE HURT Ject r to the stat cyqotinantcsit'betist's) for Dear Seattle? INR. R.WRECK iy reggae tr ht Ray Duncan, the young Sar ; to be wasted <-sasnton Franciscan. ‘who bas Started. 6 (By United Press.) TORONTO, O Ja 18.—A founding of there is;movement for the no La mn wae a Ryne should | Schools for the revival of Hellenic | sc of persons were injured in @ Jnot be sold to private parties. 1] music, drama, dance, gymn wreck yesterday afternoon on the shall do all in my power to carry |hand crafts, 1s in Seattle and is|Canadian Pacific railway on the lout such a policy and to have the | Planning to give a ser f lectures |Owen Sound branch, between Mom lighting dep as well as all|in the near future {roe and Bolton other departmen of the city, ef = fictently lee ted “son's Pretty Girl Burglar ~ CHRISTIN SCIENCE Laughs at Her Fate TRENTON, N. J., Jan. 18.—Jean|said. “Guess I'll have to stay here t Mitchell, the pretty year-old girl|a while, though, unless I can burgle a |turglar, who confessed to numerous | out BUTTE, Mont., Jan, 18—Mrs. Nel in Providence, Camden,| When told of the death of Thos, lie GR. mberg, a leader of! Iphia and other cities, was | Wandles, her partner in crime, Misd Christian Science in Butte and for to the State Home for Girls | Mitchell smiled. years first reader of the First{here today. The comely little It's all in the game,” she said, church, committed suicide in alprisoner looked around her and)“What is life without excitement? lodging house yesterday afternoon. | frowned. Tom was a good burglar and had © body was not discovered until I'd just as lief go to hades as/lots of nerve. It was a pleasure tO is ay to an institution of this kind,” she {work with him.” — Miss Mitchell, the police of sev Woman, a Miss Hayes, Yoko- | jeral sites declare, has more nerve ama, by a Japanege reporter, are | thar ever saw a burglar dis @eived here ere ’s e or 0 a an 0 a a i ion 0 ea ea into the muzz le of revolver One Japanese newspaper, in com C. Levold, bookkeeper, 65 | Justice Levold should be the prac-jas he alleges, the land where these | time,” he sald, And though people| at the trial, For suddenly the lease A fine business investment this, | Without a tremor. One time a police * Menting on these attacks on Amer Id. ‘liven’ in a Mittle room |tical owner of this two blocks of| costly structures stand, pasa from | laughed at him, Levold held sturdily| was allowed to lay Proving that | But Levold, the man who GOT THE |™an shot at her but miss ans, ways | years : 4 house on Sixth ay rich Jand; worth a million dollars of | his hand |to his belief Levold’s idea was good, a new lei IDEA, doesn't profit by it. Other Laughs at Bad Bal to be regretted that such jst ® louging | corner from him he|any man's money It {6 Levold's last stand, For| The land belonged to the state|—for 50 years this time—was is-|men are getting rich off of it. Or] “Bu penny target,” she yelled. pony 2 Pony room the Smpres-| For Levold, who sailed from Nor-| practically all the money he ever iyersity, Levold went to the re-| sued to James A. Mc millionaire | rather, are getting richer. “You certainly need it.” Then she can see from the room White bulld-|way before the mast, and who still | had, and all that he might have had, | gents and got a 30-year lease. The capitalist, and he in turn trans-| Levold doubtless will have a bit-|laughed and continued on her wd CHURCHILL MAY IT one Ww: abt 4 ilding another big | retains the sunniness of the land of | is gone now. It's been eight year terms were more than favorable. Le ferred it to the Metropolitan Build- | ter fight e people who hold the Wh he Passtac poilece question. jing, the Cobb fed by one of the|the northern sun, has had his fling} It was some tim that Levold | vold arranged with Stirrat & Goetz, | ing Co land have lots of money. In a pre-|ed her she yawned and told them mame j building oecupise OF sapee | inance—and lost | got his BIG IDEA, The land lying | contractors, to put up a big buildir A mighty fine piece of land, A| vious fight which Levold made and|they bored her. She must stay at lo ity’s newspapers. At night espec-|at high fini |e t r I x EBDON, Jan. 18—The resigns le ee yl om up high and im Well, perhaps he hasn't lost. For| between Third and Fifth and from |thare, The dream was coming true.| lease so good that other business |lost an attempt was made’ to com-|the home until she ts 21 tion of Winston Churchill, home sec. |lally they a tr sky. Levold is fighting sturdily, dogged-|Seneca to Union sts. was part\| ‘Thon it happened |men have offered to deed their land|mit him as insane, The attempt Fate’s a funny thing,” said the Tetary for England, is considered | pressive st to be drawing the rents |ly on. | pasture land, partly a baseball field| For this hardy Norwegian sailor's! outright to the state, if they could | failed. | girl, after she had beooms, ettied in Probable as a result of the recent| | “I ought to be Claw tg co oe he| For in a sult filed tast week in| for bare-legged boys, and was part-|{dem was good. Good by every canon |lease it back on as favorable terms| “What will you do if you win?" | tho home, “Wo can't Mehange it ey st. battle, in the heart of) from these,’ Level oat thy nis| the superior court, Levold asks |ly occupled by various small build-|of the business world. In fact 1t/as the Metropolitan Building Co. | Levold was asked. Just have to take what comes, even London, in which 1,500 police, some | comes wearily Hone Ut |something more than three-quarters | ings. | was too good for a simple sailor. |got. (And Levold’s original lease| “I'd like to see the old country,” | though one of the things is jail. hundreds of firemen and a detail of |one room on % many people wholof a million dollars from Stirrat| Levold believed in Seattle. “That) Justywhat happened and how {t/was even more favorable to its|/he sald, slowly. “I was just a boy| And then she hummed a little ps Boots cerry data eel _ PE Peg re tn who say that in all|& Goetz, for damages, for letting, |1and will be worth a million some| happened will doubtless come out| holder.) | when I left.” tune et suspected anarchists. ne Ve ' 5 aca Brel lel: is SPs itis ca kl