The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 10, 1911, Page 1

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DT? gar of corm ~~) w bite yd bE gy fall to see The Star tomorrow. The names of the ‘Don't fail to ree winners of the cash rewards will be announced; and another serie contests is on for next —— findainanad ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE week —— 304 TT VOL. 12, NO. x . SH BRUARY 10, 1911 NE CENT. 2xy7"AmS, A"? WH STANDS Be ROOKED BUNCH,” Dilling Will Take DECLARES WITNESS Mayor’s Chair Hillman Salesman on Stand Uses Strong Words: More Testimony About the Alleged | | grat ©. D. Hillman’s ay gents were |parties. He sald that Hillman had}at ston Harbor with a capacity most corrupt and ¢ coked “chicken ranch” advertisements tn f about 30,000 shingles daily, and} he had ever run up against,” |serted, referring prospective buyers | that it could not be operated at a| hag come to\Seattle to to him (Deyo) under the assumed | profit. He said he found no actual u } George W. Dilling will take office as mayor of Seattle at noon Of the rottenness of the nan Day,” that many had come |saw mill machinery there | \ tomorrow ‘ Punch, was the substance of | te swer se advertisements,| Wm. Thompson, cashier of a Ta | 4 | Mayor Gill, who yesterday announced that he would retain of- ite and fe testimony ‘of Chas. ©. se ta and that under Hillman's in-}coma paper, identified some of the] fice till Monday, February 20, will relinquish the place as soon as white He questions by counsel for structions, had tried to sell them | “chicken ranch” advertisements, | Dilling qualifies tomorrow : in Judge Donworth’s court | something elee testified that the advertisement ‘Dilling can have the job any time he wants it,” said Mayor Gill Hiltiman told him, Deyo said,/and had been paid for by Hillman. | ’ ¢ to The Star tod 1 don't think he ought to go until the 20th, but atc Our" Tactics ite up your own ads and put| L. H. Blair, auditor another | \ if he wants to take hold tomorrow, | won't make any fight on as strong as you can |Tacoma paper, identified similar] Gill's decision was not arrived at until after certain of his pollti- Kelling, receiving clerk for jads. They were not ¢ xamined. | cal advisers had made their last desperate effort to keep him in paper, Identified classified | Mrs. Rose Henry and Mrs. Leona | | office and defeat the will of the people as expressed in Tuesday's isements turned in by Hill-|B. Epler of Tacoma, R. W. Gay of election man or his office foree, showing | Des Moines, Alex M. Hauck of New There is an interesting story of political scheming b: that the alleged “chicken ranch”|Kamilche and O. Frederickson Of ae i | mayor's final decision tonay: Apes Z db soallenstsr= would in some instances run|Adelaide, identified newspapers | 3 t The morning after the election, Gill, beaten, announced to The unchanged for nearly three months ontaining alleged “blind” advere} | Star that he wouldn't oppose Dilling’s taking office. “I was fairly Dead salesmen orem, | Othe testimony showed that/tisements, and declared that they pest | licked,” he said. “1 take off my hat to the winner.” into Ullman had paid the paper over/had received them by mai if - me But before night the men who had managed his campaign got ofter nd} $22,000 for advertising during the| Joseph Selm of Seattle, testified = their breath and many secret conferences followed. The usual pri- than the price » the | past five years |that he had sunk $110 in Bostor 7 : mary provision, covering ordinary elections, provided that a new that this was the uenal| A Bookkeeper Without Books. [Harbor and that when he ived | " mayor should take office the second Monday after his election. That of freezing out” new sales/ R. H. Hensley, whose testimony |the usual F. A. Anderson letter he | gave them a loophole, despite the fact that the law governing a re- | was continued this afternoon, sald | felt that “it was a scheme of Hill a ae \ call election is that a new mayor must qualify and take office within oc hghard can, as much a | that he had paid §: own on & 2\%-/ man's to get more money out ¢ £ \ z : 10 days. 3 so you get the | tract at Birmingh: on the | me % \ i So these men got very busy on a plan to keep Gill in office till eh oo "it don't make any dif ise Of A position as bookkeep-| Thomas J. Smith, a carpenter, \ the second Monday after Tuesday's election—that is till Februar ‘what representations jer at Birmingham; that he had gonetold of having paid $260 in install | ‘ . 20. This would help them three ways. ¥ fake a0 long as you don't | up there and waited for a month, but| ments for Boston Harbor property | \ y . Firet Gill would hold office till after the 10 days required by them in black and white ound no office supplies, and got no|that when he demanded his mone the recall law for Dilling to qualify, which would leave the office ‘were C. D. Hillman's in funded, as per contract, he was - vacant and W. H, Murphy, as president of the council, would become fo & salesman, according Moo! & Tacoma saw |transferred toa Birmingham five-| . r} y . acting mayor. r j sail estified that in Sep- tract, and that he had paid Second, it would leave two Sundays between now and February fo bad answered a ch _ or t he found a shingle mill ‘another $100 on this * . BY 20, and below-the-line liquor dealers figured they would be able to lsement, and was to’ za recoup some of the losses they sustained in the election. that he cc - Lastly, it would help the old gang in the council in their fight fi 5 . pa , neil i ir fight fo ured . , wor The plan looked good. So Gi sued his statement of yesterday . ‘ n . \ ‘ a . Zz that he would withdraw as mayor—ON FEBRUARY 20, fe said. that FIRST LADY OF SEATTLE Lip onlin - ‘ | FOR DILLING TO QUALIFY. TOO LATE wiated that an electric F | i : a But some of the real friends of Mayor Gill got to him this morn- iM come in from Eve fe se St a NO ing, and as a result, Gill withdrew from the scheme and definitely & Here's the new first lady of Se resolved to bow to the people's will that new sale amen attle. yor A f,” he said, was aes of “Girl Who Didn't Care” Poort by Ma % Dill ‘Pinta was written to tho last |om bin emotions >, But Sunday nigh e the . ith § progressive, and a lehapter of the life of Garna Gil-| tolled and turned ov nny | climax hether ¢ 4G | a f time personal friend of the jlette, chorus girl, today when a|he cowld earn. Not learned that she was false ” . gwd He is a candidate coroner's jury returned a verdiet | good for the girl he oled point blank to marry him wil 4 for the council in the coming elec that she came to her déath at the did not love hin In the parlance | never n Someth aust | . om hands of James Viasos, who after-|of the chorus girl, Viasos was a | have the rn re < wi ward sent a bullet crashing through | “live one,” for he fired three bullets into her i ei a his own brain. Ax far as the offt Tried to Get Rings. body. The witnesses who appea ® elal records go, there is nothing to One witness etified that Garna before Deput oner W n .: » reveal the story of woman's cupid- | Gillette tr get Viasos’ diamond | Borthwick today told more th . y, AN ON JAPS ity and man’s blind devotion whieh | rings after night she went relations wh existed between led up to the tragedy last Sunday | tovMis ap little room at 1428\ girl who didn’t care and the night Fifth-and-a-half av. and cajoled and | who loved. : (By United Press.) The girl's own mother did not ap-| pleaded with him. Vissos always missing rings over wh are : SACRAMENTO, Feb. 10.—Three pear at the inquest, What she knew | wanted to marry her but the gial a bubbub was raised belonged j niming ast Japanese, Chi- |concerning the relations of her|was always ading delay. To 1 What became of them | ¢ i other ities, reviving daughter and the Greek who killed her friends she poked fun at the | witnesses could not tell estions that two years ago her is not known. trusting Greek, declaring she never The Grim Comment HERE'S JOE SMITH. threatened the peaceful relations of But witness after witness told | would marry | “A product of the life they lived ————=|the United States and Japan, were what he knew “1 Hate, Women.” was the grim comment of Deputy|* ¥ yx #4 x ¥ eM HH Hy H|NtroduCed today In the legislature by Senator Flinn, of San Francisco, One 1 provides for the segrega- tion of Oriental school children in buildings separate from those occu- pied by whites. Another enables municipal or county authorities to restrict Asiaties to certain localities, NEWS ITEMS FROM THE HICKTOWN SEE broid- and wildcats are b plentiful was evi Morning when Attorney Aust came into the aud Magsering under the cougar and wildcat near Cedar lake was shot by Aust, but ee W. Dilling and little Helen and D t's ™ et Dillir Margaret fe 5 ach re es = rr os | nd ttle iiten hed just passed 2. And it was a sordid story "I hate women and like men/| Coroner Borthwick today e filed ae - e ode "2 They are three citizens who were| Vlasos, simplomminded, trusting,| logs,” was the cynical epigram |the jury's findings in the official CHEAPER MARRIAGE t fn 17 Wildeats po PRbger | intensely interested in the late re-|!oved the girl blindly. She worked which often fell from her lips ‘records of the county coroner. LICENSES Monday, which broke the| i }eall election. They are the new - == OLYMPIA, Feb. 10.—Repre i bes. is wae | mayor's best friends. . Stent tlasiven: eink ees asp bassin ve : Pte tea OCG cjorettate| HATPIN PRICKS; sentatives Cariyon and Dem rites, of ‘North | fan I suet what happens tomorrow. . But 1 GIRL 1S JAILED. |* ‘3%, bot from. the Olys fa five cougars and) [ : | Margaret is greatly interested tn x eet q coma fe Bil | the big event. Mrs. Difling, a home: VIENNA, Feb. 10.—The firet ar-|@ lideasen trom $4.60 to $2. Thin loving woman, waited in a room ad Ehlers ng Sataia law han|® Wane cae & nel eee 27 ; |Joining the Dilling headquarters in : rest un¢ ecm ci, rd ex be ae a hea ere re county records.| > f ‘ the Seattle hotel on election night ———_ eon made, andy) suc agro get 9 pana $20, for} [89 trendy t to stand by her husband if the| When Jesse W. Anderson and/rising to her tiptoes so she could; { the prisoner, a|% uclné ss sec ts and for wolves $15.) | jelection went against irvag the | 4 he Miss Sarah Jane Wright shied up “rae, eee Fa young WOMOD.|* ee ee RR RR RR Feats, ae a ake cam ame ie far no Wolf bounties bave the first to congratulate him Mito Marriage License Clerk C. F. - 1S one Oe pth will carry the| the Academy of Music, because ‘a won. up to the PLAN ROSE SHOW. a Kin Hubbard has got a Mr. Di won, and his first|Gage yesterday and blushingly tote and the disappointed near | aye he fecal st court of/ Arrangements for a rose show : boards, Including | |move was to tell his wife. Then|asked for a marriage Heense the bride listened to the heavy voice ; ged ; AT HUNDRED | loverybody had to tell Mrs. Dilling|latter had grave misgivings. lof the law. Even the consent of . A mereito be held next June, will be the tee eee EER EEE And then the indignant bridegroom Be. the con man walk-|chief business of the Seattle Rose lhow glad they were, and the head-| “How old, Miss Wright papa and mamma, which was pres oo oe 7 s MAR. PILLING "AND THE | Guatiare Waa the scene of @ pretty| “Fourteen,” sald the young Indy,|ent, ayalled nothing 7 gape lg alt Prater s a 7 M IN Pl AGUE . CHILDREN. 'party for the next hal: hour 2 —- oe Prater | |W ® #/ merce this evening i . Pea: t ede ae eo hatpin of a girl} COLLIER RECEIVER. trifting # t ——— ‘WOULD GIVE UP HIS WIFE Who's Who at | rositoat ct tticm, facia untae il ets WMO 8) ESPs pg society at the Chamber of Com noderate southeasterly winds. *| elzed hen and too! TT ot mber company, bond being| § s, and will be pleased to show were those of Moding victims of the } hours in jail Thep she hired ® Four hundred and | (By United Pree) who is one of the leading member yer, and Herr Advocat ay deaths occurred | pealed “oe on OROVILLE, Cal., Feb. 10-—Suit| wishes to give up his wife to a Ia January, according | tor divorce entered in Chico by Ira| young man who has been a star y ; | health statistics. The | pocraft shocked t United Breth-| boarder at his home. Becraft, it is } | | Geily rate is 40. The [ren church members there today | said, deeded all his property to Mrs ij Hi ol | Esporte 400 deaths, in- | when’ it was od that Becraft,|Beeraft and sued for divorce ) | | | | two French sisters of WASHINGTON, D.C, Feb. 10. land case, was made today by Sen-| of an administration | z ator LaFollette of Wisconsin In an | W. Diliing « " 0| Sample ballots for the primaries;If the voter votes for more than : 4 Jopen letter to the president, given | (ity United Press.) Fealize the {mportance |to be held February 21 measure e, the ballot will be thrown out ; out here today | OTTAWA, Ont. Feb. 10.—The Work? What kind of a| inc hes and gontata the pernta etre All persons not having meaieares é LaFoilett s letter asserts that it | Canadian house yesterday after. | candidate O nic v f j p has been publicly stated that two|noon began the debate on reci Interested in knowing, |the largest number of votes will be|to register again, The boc , i bills introduced in the senate by|procity agreement with the United 6 today |nominated. At the election on/the registration bureau, Prefontain snator Nelson “have in some meas-| States, Minister Fielding declared ec | March 7, 9 of the 18 will be elected. | bullding ure received your support.” In| that parliament should put through io IUT-OF F NOTICE | opening, LaFollette says the measure without delay. 86 to the shut off the x | “Phe first is a special bill for a] Mfearday aod os: THIS WEEK'S BEST WASHINGTON YARN h. a i ee FRIED LIVER | (iy Unired Press) | ningham case from your hands to | be & searcit wate penveemreneerner ee ‘or Smithson is another one! the court of appeals of the District | | Belts of the intermedi-|| WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—When there's a good bunch of dem. of those who “cam k.” Hel of Columbia. | | mains in the Madro oerats gathered in front of the big mirror and shining glasses they || was in the house of representatives| “The second is a bill providing KILLS GIRL! Way districts and points tell a story about Representative George 8. Legare || Mack in 1893, and managed to stay |for the transfer of the decision of | * of South Carolin:-ABOUT Legare, not ON Le out of the legislature until two/all Jand cases from the executive gare. years ago when he returned as &/to the courts and authorizing a “ . The Caroliniar congressman 1s a democrat, of ||72eTt MOT with a full grown] trial in all ctses which have al-| ....n, (BY United Prose) S course, but he and Senator-elect Townsend of b He changed his mind about| ready been heard in the department PORTLAND. Or. Feb. 10.—The Michigan are graat pals, When the sun beats |lthe beard since the 1909 session,| of the interior victim of | ptomaine poisoning down terribly hard in South Carolina, Townsend || ut left a moustache. If he come |" Lavoliet Fe sary | te rel, 6, dang hter of Thomas King Mary Hadicy wears a takes Legare up to the pleasant woods and cool back again, he may cut out the! “after assuming the responsibil “. bik: Bel Hams sy, dled. t0¢ ay. seeover linen collar—bis lakes of Michigan, When the snows still He |! moustache too, or should we #ay|{ts for patenting or withholding |All membors of the family becume qtention? ; three feet deep in Michigan in April, Legare takes ‘out off”? from patent the Cunningham claim |e eee eet which teed lwen Max Wardall is writer up || ‘Townsend down to Caroliny to bask in the warm But then he's president of a bank| entries, do you now wish to be ré eating ¢ nner a ; w ie b tr ri Iver eal Mewspaper man as a sun or two in Ellensburg, and is in the| eyed of it? Is it your desire that | ¥#% ™e principal article of die ® Monthly magazine for Well, this was last summer and Legare was || farming and stock business as well,/at the eleventh hour congress | ‘ 2 taking In the coolness of Michigan in large lumps and runs o hardware establishment. | ghonld take from. your hands juris New England club of One day Towns ’nd motored him over to Jackson So, all things considered, he can do| diction of this ease, a jurisdic tion | Rearly 1,000 members? where there is a state penitentiary, They went to the prison and |/what he pleases with his own) you volintarily and publicly assum wd dyshe Hubbard, at the Or-| sre the southern congressman ma the bie day ante beard and moustache. od? it a0, upon what Srounds of og ught do’ yuse as he never brought do 2 public policy or public benefit? pet, has 600 people gon a dows the hat speech did the trick “Burope bolds a lot of our socuri-| PUPlle Pe : : MEMPHIS, Feb. 10.—Two rod pi y Pirie had gathered the convicts into a big room, and |'ties,” MARRIAGE NOT A FAILURE, men were killed and 15 injured © Morton, at the Me-||. Legare wan asked to address them, Stepping on a platform, he “Invests ber cash with us, eh?” Marriage may be a failure, but it] In the collapse of a three-story . {8 a municip faded a sea of stripes, and began: “Not mu York, besides being || “Fellow democrats”: (By United Press NEW YORK, Feb. 10.—Mrs, Paty Vir as so risque that even ye New York wouldn't take it. The “| play was sent to the storage house, with ‘glory this last time she wa nd Mrs. Campbell went back to America, Her play, “The Fo: : | London. ick Campbell didn't cover hers ‘om by marriage.”-—Loulsville Cour-| men from that very thing.—Charles-| ing to a report at police head- ___}| ter-Journal ton News and Courier, quarters, ii - } | | | cash. Gets most of| hae saved a lot of European noble: brick warehouse today, accord: |

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