The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 20, 1911, Page 1

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Speaking of Speaking of Those New York kids or urban | who've seen no That tr ash—say, ngel, not a bandit. “it's right,” says ow but In a z00-—there’s many a quart of The Seattle Star | ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE vol SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1911 ONE CENT. Sitws Ane HILLMAN CITED INTO COURT AGAIN he, to steal your cash, That's “simple when you called mitk that neve saw a bov understand it Ne, too a. on i | Whether you believe Hi Gill or George W. Dilling whether y believe in w ' f § {suffrage or are against it, The Star es t ake it solut clear to eve ‘ - | jin S ¢ who reads this, that is urging eve € ter 4 a | That is the most important duty bef Seattle people today . 4 oura fey Stat Special.) | rh st battle Im. the tong war The Star stands squarely for Diiling and ency ; YLYMPIA, Jan. 20-—The recall wan . oe of ec The Star stands eauarci aie pa 1} © af ture tha cityot Geattls 5 Dill, which enables George W. Dil ro a. { : on tal tands squarcly against H > oe ee pore? oe ; 4 i, ling’s name to go on the ballot in Bot S aon toe ¢ looted » the vice syndica ‘ « 1 men d womer Be / ti the Seattle election, was signed by itt th rning ause he cared so little for the city's light p! s to turn it over to a Seattle Elect Ce 7; i Hay this noon, the first law man d man, who, without word of reproof fi the t ther fr ir ¢ or be-] nt session t the order th ard | one ate this morning, after a} Rummens, who ‘ pa wee rks in which Pinchot we the off board press That is The Star's position | | f were grilled, passed t inst the sheriff after But more important yet is the duty of today—which is to register. Let Hiram Gill be| 4 asking congre . ervee other at-| tried in the balance of a full electorate. If Gill is right, let the whole city say so. If Gill is| ‘and Bast i a gh _ mg: o wrong, let the whole city say so, Whatever the decision of February 7, let it be the decision | against it pare ref : of a majority of Seattle voters. that Alaska was T b - r of From the standpoint of those who believe with The Star in D € € . id . i eagle ete meade el: ican flee ard granted Rum engerous part of the situation toda that every Gill man and every Gill an ¢ the territorial legisla mens at $500 for his f 4 or hike replatered ure e with the . . 1 i aaiies nate t They've got to. “The forces of evil in Seattle know that they can expect no mercy, no} t Soggy | special favors from George Dilling. If Gill goes, they They are in a fight for life. | ; . newer to as | hey'll register—and they'll vote # ‘ art this ¥) Let the tizens rally with the same zeal to the registration boot} G y ' ee Corrupt Seattle ; | HERE'S HILLMAN. J to ie wome isa ral iss aign, clear cut, uf * at tah 4 i You're th y men tm the * Sate te nt A « be a h and ra WHAT HILLMAN SENT t Sache hk ede Go thet edtalinned : “om en in t et 1 t ar t to exe TO THE JURORS ® Ce fo mga » Years, ond was begua by "REGISTER TODAY oo ae 4 v for senator er to them 5 papers, a8 re | a certain ® ganizations sent in every ® ee anyone ® ss. People # | what they & . expended | and not by 4 Var er| ave done, has bought of w sand ® . every way, ® S. B. Smith, his # who 1 do the right a mes, or see C.D. ® HERES EEE EEE EEE EER RE ee ee ere AN UMBRELLA jeandidates may be p - “ * t : OOWN HERE COMMEND THE STAR. | day wy : uate Hi personally [CARRIE HAS Buty | le Saeed at i$ iat : ie y 8 y, of * | Will be ext to « HERE'S ANOTHER - i M. E. ch anned t *) The failure } n of PATHETIC TOIUCH % * J 5 lowing resolut at thei ® hoe wh ed t Ae 3 q COLLAPSED A aay r ting held yeste Wi Wiaations to ot C. D. Hillman started in on 4 : iy fternoor + a newsboy, being an orphan & a SREKA SPRINGS. Ark tan or SENATOR WHALLEY Pe idgpe sr wi h a at nee he *| oor mye a ogg ay bo é 2 Ark., ew - Star mmen fe all his life. He has e . Mrs. Carrie Nation, the Kansas ° NG CO. FATHER oF the stand that it has rab * dar oh kind of work built up * saloon smasher, suffered a nervous| \ THE RECALL BILL. editorially and otherwise for * his present business. He has ® 4 \ oe a Poovar Bn Bg | * e pasar one better city ad 4 the best bank references in & expressed the fear that her career | = oe * MRS. E. F. TAYLOR. »| (Staff Special.) organiser. vice presidents Seattle, alee belongs 0 Se as tempe ecturer and active * Corresponding Sec | OLYMPIA, Jas on ere "Pr Hudson of Be t th fotos, i at oo wane enemy of inyxicants is ended. * i # | Case of . wham, W. J. Coates ar ; fhe ls antriog teancaee aa S NDAL SHOD YMOND HAD H T | of Spokane, J ew ants arrest He is a married man with five ® A =) ee ee ee | Dromident of the of and t will be small children, and is one of @ 4 and Harry Bolton of Henretty was chosen ate organization at the the largest taxpayers in the ® state.” * * sworn to and executed election da if the se mea referred tc t to cast their ballots jot Labor. Charles Tacoma was chosen secr €. 0. Young was the choice for state | na NO HURRY 10 SAVE TIME WITH A COP IN PORTLAND ention, GROCER PAYS $3 - - - ee eee eae dietitian aetna aed . (iy United Pree) - . (By United Prev ! © the depot to ke ‘al o — 4 * nave | feet encased J ndals, bt ning penig' dwellers e pour = peen cite » appear for contem| ' She country two weeks ago, have| leet encased vn se ee , city, With sour demeanor * CLASS, EH! * of court before Snags Danna been developing very slowly, accord-| exposed, and ina thing . turn! , The poll have b ed } - ty and poised ¢ Cameron blocked * Returving from a pleasure * The police ha a 10 o'clock Tuesday morning on the ing to a canvass of the towns where) which looked like a sne Raymond | his way | Tk # trip in Southern California, * Mrs. Bilodeau, who lives o: a [charge of att ting to influence the government is exp AINE! Duncan, disseminator of th What sort of * James D. H president of * route No. 1 help her fir the deci jurors that would with the new system, Hellenism,” ran into the rank mod-| frum?” asked Cameron * Uni avings & Trust * mother, whom she has not seen for | probably be drawn to sit as trial lernist in the person of Patrolman I'm an American, sir QUINCY, Mass, Jan. Pri|* Company, states that there * eight years. Mrs. Bilodeau states | jurors in his case, which takes place }Cameron. There were words. To Then sumpin's wrong wit ye. 1\gay the 13th” was heard in chorus|® *T@ many Seattle men spend: # that her mother placed her in @ January 31 day Chief of Police Cox js in recelpt | have a notion to rwn ye in fo’ wear-| among th be spectators | * {28 the long green down there. * South Park family to board when] jiiman, according to District of a letter from Duncan, mailed|in ‘what ye ain't got « on Sr + week When acl te . te nothing hy ewng noe * (Staff Special.) she oe ‘ YOuts . 016, Pog wend orney Todd, w pushed the from Seattle, in which Duncan ac-| Duncan explained that they were! Kriston, @ Mish grocer, paid a{% Seattle men to spend $1,000 *| O1yMPIA, Jan. 20.—The ju-|Peared. The name of the mothe cont. circulars thisuah. ae cuses the policeman of a breach of| on thelr way to catch a train fine a kiss be didnt | 1 & day in the Palace Hotel * | aiciary committee this afternoon re-| i* *lther Mrs. Lizzie Crepps or Mts. | postoffice to all the probable mem he laws of on goog All right then. Go get in in San Francisco alone . ported adversely on the police pen: Pbsceano jbers, three of whom have already haem Accom pani by his secretary,/ sure you don't rememb: is 40, m ed, ony ONO Oe OY OO i the communication. They 4 BERLIN, Jan. 20.— Forty Duncan was plunging through the | back,” sald Cameron } 1, always smiling and . Ree K eA RH KK KR! OF Dotectives Charles Tennant of —~ aanenaeeenl miners were killed today in a Po fire in the Casimer mine, on the Russian-Silesian frontie ? according to dispatches to pr: Smith Girl al T. RIN. C. [Seeacce ire ee Ton es eee ving | TWREE BARELY | 20 years ol eof his own vo ESCAPE DEATH vate parties here. No details of * the accident were given. tified she was ing { BAKER, Or., Jan. 20 Witnesses Assert) vrscoitiin's Cin, an-in ion tow trate ide o"can}, tame 2 of service of his own v« rabld coyotes into the That haven'e been published yet Roosevelt will visit British ' r n resisting she tripped a ine United F » PP nted dow 4 shot eve rn ee « rowly escaped 4 ch yeotara af. BALTIMORE, Jan. 20—Capt earn meat Cal Jan. 20——~| dia in the near future and fell and later had Karl turned whey B. Ne ~ ncn ek + What Every mayne et we rn caved ‘. onestory aa ‘ Xs . F . ~ , ed to come over to the eon a ¢ e « ime they coun . ca ee now.” y ram Char pit, | ernoon 7 es 5 Ipeae Emerson, the bromo seltzer | Testimony in the trial of Dr. Wil-| He bas been invited 7 bs =a r Be Ot iid be found on the streets today,|* HELP MOTHERS REGISTER areata “an Sotenates of a |dWwelling at 211 Ninth av. N. cob King, has filed suit for divorce, ac-| lard P. Burke, when it was resum ab a little late history in Ses , |lapsed and completely covered the The young g class of the side split sure St. Methodist chu ‘ jumped from thé shovel have a novel plan which wi just as the house started Fire from the steam shovel enveloped the mass of de bris, but was extinguished before Sets 0 * Fevert corrent ‘is od totay, sxorecd the cons"et| Graft Charged |aissks Road Minstrel Killed | Burke is accoused of having dy mited, is sane. Lena FE, Killlam (By United Press.) : : f Madame Melba Ill 1a w the Smith woman in Portland) eacRpaMENTO ‘ _ March 15}. NTON, Ark, Je One “Max Wardall; His Life and His Works.” By Charles Wilson W ein. A of work and encourage thers to egister Saturday. All m who live in the districts of uae was killed and one negro - - . * . * * . * KSREEEE EEE EEE EE EE EK Mrs. Laura Farns-|nouncement wae mw take the stand |that the war department's Heged polson-| tion that the Wreck of the M HONOLULU, Jan, 20—Strongly | Probadility th supported by the local Japanese} worth Schenk will press, Japanese employes here on|in her trial for the LONDON, Jan. 20.—The L n| By Rev. M. A. Matthews. A very|and then spending the money for Times today prints a Washington |short, concise exposition of the|liquor, Last night he got drunk 4 |splendid officials now governing | again and called President Taft an forbidding the wearing of\* tinction of being among the ts which do not ¢ pota- tod ne | sl me six inches |* few American women who 1 with uld be raised on February 15, th low the knee. The bill does not |% have intimately convers dispatch saying that the Uni ieee | in 1897 at @ training school and #8 | ee ee the atate n : ‘ad | soeatty francisco. She . man and twe negro women were | * 60th ay, N. and 65th st. and ; , So bhowsl: wae *Aeranadl 3 PARIS, Jan. 20—Madam Nellie hee reoentiy 16 | in Francisco, She | ers’ office, set at rest thr post has beehiinyired in a race riot here last |#* from 14th ay, to-14th av. N. candidate f¢ |the sk E irae Woe se visting Sends is te) Se ago, accusations of Theodore ection of the | night following a performance by |* and who have ig children ‘ re Bons al Roulevard. Malesherbes, is seriously | "57, ite, who for 20 years was a text book yng PI forthwestern rail-|, negro minstrel organization from |#* may take the children to the re etiaee y cute litt HE CUSSED TAFT on ee minister, testified that the Smith | "4 yer ow gr soes sng bet 56 ealiee to be Wen eee onieant % Methodist church, where they #| tee of politi gees I ret ae make = iste a . e press will be probed into nnecott, the tert of th iho eaten cate of. Barta story on the experiences that 4 - 4 NEW WOMAN PASTOR. | woman in his opinion, is sane Gender by a if acted committ line ice President J. H. Young |* kann naenareanle bi ote apes ee se encountered on the road to “out _ Because he railed at President 4 { STAFFORD SPRINGS, Conn. the senate, appointed y by announces that the road will be LADIES HAVE GABFEST Pts gana alka will nina be followed Taft and said that in his country a Jan. 20.—Miss Marian H. Jones of Lieut-Gov. Wallace completed by March 16. \x WITH THAT KAISER *|% on February 7th “Resignation?” By Richard Achil-| they killed men like him, Joseph if Hartford was ordained recently as/ Woman May Testify } |} BERLIN, Jan, 20 Mrs. © | mr, § les Ballinger. Only living authority | Billows will spend the next 16 days ; pastor of the Congregational church | a canal RAISE MAINE NO SHORT SKIRTS. % Dattimovitch, wife of the * Jon the subject, Interesting, sticks |in the county jail. Billows was &r- 4 t in Staffordsville. (By United Press.) ON 13TH ANNIVERSARY, no }% Russian consul general | hEMF, trots and to a lot o1 other things.|rested last Monday for beasing i ‘ v7 ” HEE / 20.~| WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.—An-| BOSTON, Jan. 20.—Representa-|% who was Miss Jones of * RECIPROCITY RUMOR. from Father O’Brien, rector of the 4 ‘ JAPS ARE “FUSSY. WHEEL! i Md nagtg ae today |tive Arthur Tewksbury filed a bill|g fornia, today enjoyed the dis- % “An Ideal City Administration.” |Church of Our I of Good Help, * * * * * plantations, w ‘ { her millionaire husband, | w cag omagpteainy pgntnd gerne Mig fd und arsenic lessened to.,13th anniversary of the disaster, |exempt bathing sults nor does it|# the kaiser. es and Canada have fully agreed | the city, by a man who knows. Don’t | unprintable name in the presence of : 4 sumed, could not be realized fix the age limit rrr aan a a a a a ae aa reciprocity treaty miss tt |Patrolmen Donjan and Jones. the trial waa r day when the Filipinos 1 NEWSPAPERS SCORE ANCIENT CONTEMPT LAW |} . The state préis is watching the progress of the contempt Iaw in) there isa serious principle at stake In the arrest and imprisonment never antagonize his court rulings jlate attempt to throttle a newspaper in a civil expression of thought, is he state p ith profound interest, Instancing the feeling of news of The Star editor that should not go unnoticed by any serious He is ancient in that he recently brought into requisition a law the legislature with profo' ates courts more than a balf century ago, in| Here comes the Sunnyside Observer, Hal 8. Smith, editor, in the abolished in United a d the ¢ 6 Star is printing today a few comments| thinking citizen. If a precedent can be established in curtailing | papers around ro erred ane po Re eon Fo of muzzling the news-| free speech and free press, we certainly are on a dangerous road. | arresting and sentencing the editors of the Seattle Daily Star for/ following trenchant editorial < which have reached this o1 0 b That is the very thing that is tyrannizing poor Russia today, The] criticising a ruling | The legislature is considering a “contempt” law modeled after te what the Kitsap County Herald, Peter Iverson, editor s/Star cites the California law, which would have guarded against The state of Washington has allowed the ancient law to remain|the federal statute, which prohibits a judge from punishing persons lere’s at the Kitsa oun ‘erald, son, ‘ onstructive contempt.” The agitation growing out of the punishment of the editor of The Seattle Star for editorial criticism of a ttle judge on account ing manner upon the statute books, and which served the purpose of the court. | for ‘ abuses of this power, in the follo able and il] 4 e lege: hat cannot be too Judge Gilliam holds that it crime to criticise a judge. But}|The Star editor had to go on the altar of its unren | Free specch and free prese eré Bag en serviions should al-|if Judge Gilliam were a judge in California he would soon learn that} timed logic, probably for example and to intimidate the press of the escrealy guarded. A tendency to curtal tl lit is not a crime to criticise a judge, And if a Judge Gilli nit- | commonwealth. of judicial action has borne swift fruit in the crystallization of public ways be looked on with suspic yor had the editor of the Seattle |fornia should take such action as Judge Gilliam took in a Anyhow, the editors of The Star were humiliated and con- |e ntiment against what nine people out of ten throughout the state gy a. yg lig or pen “The r ase is called contempt | few weeks ago, that Calffornia Judge Gilliam would be committing a} demned for the courage displayed in arraying themselves in oppo- consider an act of flagrant judicial usurpation . : Btar imprisoned for criticising a judg © ave a dange rous power! crime. sition to the rulings of the judge, and their offense was committed | Judges of the courts of this state are not less public servants than f q of court, and s judge in this state seems to bave ® ‘ For In California it 18 a crime for a judge to punish an editor or} outside the court room, from their own office home, into which a |any other officers, and even as other officers they are entitled to the ee sp arrested and put in Jail. He hadJany other citizen for such an alleged offense as Judge Gilliam laid] tater law forbids such insolent entrance. respect of their fellow men only when their acts are jpst and upright The editor of The Star was arrested and pul it vv gonable in-| against the editors of The Star, For the people of California a full] In an Ohio test case not long since the final decision was in A. judge whose every act is based upon the principles of right 3 } criticteed: the- fudge out of court, end abe maa {ree spocch, he had| score of years ago passed a law to curb any Judge Gilliams who might/favor of the appellant, the gist of the opinion being “that there is) and justice will have nothing to fear from the fullest criticism. if terpretation of the principle of a free press an : California bench no constructive contempt,” and technical guilt can be only when the| Any other kind of judge deserves the severest criticism, and Is, about the case e (as a lang phrase goes) | perchange get on the & right to do this, but it seems that va Oe A eer ts thie matter, act actually obstructs the work of the court of all men in the world, the last to be trusted with the arbitrary q has it in for anyone,” he has a, to down any citizen who might The Medical Lake Mail, Frank 7, Sheppard, pablsher, strikes Possibly"Judge Gilliam places an “eternal weight” upon his court) power to charge, try, convict and sentence a man on any pretext j eit pase Pi en “e anner. eo: out from the shoulder as follows lopinions and likewise a “constructive” phase. The Star editors have| whatsoever. his is taken fro iticlse him in any man » lives cient judge 6 Gillam, He hold led, and Mr, Gilliam may be searching for another dusty code Mata eever. oug atep tu advance when. thie powel Ja:Salmaauans he editor of The In Seattle lives an ancient judg His name | i olds appealed, y e e lusty 7 B avons , The editor of The Herald does not know the that it 6 a erime to criticise a judge, and especially must newspapers|by which to prevent this act of privilege, if we are to Judge by his) the Judges of this state by specific legislative enactment, P \ Star, nor does he know Judge Gilliam; but it appears as though

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