The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 16, 1911, Page 1

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Cary EDITION| _ 13, NO. ONLY INDEPENDENT SEA E, WASH,, TUE DAY, MAY 16, The Seattle Star NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE 1911 ity EDITION | JOKER IN THE OIL TRUST DECISION JUDGES CROWN THEMSELVES AS DICTATORS OF PEOPLE SUPREME COURT JUDGES NOT ONLY FAILED TO KILL TRUSTS, BUT ARROGATED THEM. SELVES ABSOLUTE AND ARBITRARY POWER OF \ by ew y F the St . ( be refined a t ‘ were al r A an un seems to be the reasonable limit $. O. can be e “} ble , to be a trust, a spirac a re on trac y othe m + | at t toc itte hoge But supy wit € every trv k ad eggs of trusts; s e trade € estrair a pet tion as free r—and the de « e of these et the price paid would have been toc FOR THAT DECISION HAS ENTHRONED THE JUDGE AS THE SUPREME GOVERNING POWER OF AMERICA. Wi 1 Li bench said t Justic ten to wh } in his dissen Spee ilies. OAS DIAZ | 4 MN EL PASO, May 16—P Mexico hinge on th of Provisional Pres Madero, according to ; fal, peace representative dent Diaz. “The only thing dajal to the United gu “that will block peace negotiations 4 will be some impossible and arbi trary stand by Gen. Madero. I think | Mt is certain that some definite ac-| tion will be taken within the next! 20 hours. The preliminaries are | past and we are now dealing with a Seer pee int attitude | seiseo | adge Carba-| of Presi said Judge Car Press today, | concrete proposition. The answer | from Madero must be either or no.” | Lieut. Col. Eduardo Hay, chief of Gen. Madero’s staff, has escaped fiom Chihuabua, where he has heen a prisoner since the battle of | Cases Grandes. | They're off those Seattle | beauties—on the lap of the (By United Urees teased Wire.) ] beauty ice DUSSELDORF, Germany, They're running for that th May 16—Count Zeppelin’s big | jast diamond ring The passenger carrying airship. the | give to the week's prett Deutschland It, wi destroyed Taking the lead today is a pair here today. of beauties giving clas» and distinc riously hurt Denounce ee ee ed * * (My t Leased Wi * WILL OBEY COURT * WASHING] M That | % NEW YORK, May 16.—M. #| all is not pee nd in the #u * F. Elliott, chief counsel for the # | preme court of the U. 8. is clearly % Standard Oil company, in a #| seen here today, following the dra % statement Issued here today, #| matic delivery of Justice Harlan's % declared that the Standard #|#eparate opinion in the Standard % would obey the decree of the # | Ol case % United States supreme court, *| speaking before his wife, whose # and would at once take steps * eves encouraged him, trom. the a to dissolve. * \tront seat of the court room, Har * * | ian erly denounced hi a TTP ee eee ee ee ee aring that re |clate’s action in dec straint of trade must be “unreason able” to come within the meaning of the Sherman law a | Justice E | court 4 preted | known t President |W hite to the chief justiceship was It is well WASHINGTON 16, |* severe blow to Harlan’s pride, but Harlan declared that the had lexisiated, not inter the law Ta May untl his Standard Oi! o or a8 The house today unanimously | Unt! his Standard Oi opinion was passed the Stanley resolution, | aooiiy the slight had struck hon ‘ ordering a sweeping investiga. With his wite silentl pa omar LF ilon of the stoe} trvet, jing the Jurist in his address, there | — BOYLE UP TONIGHT PEACE cHON, LAST LAP IN BEAUTY RACE MAKING LAWS. “There are many things in this opinion, “which may well alarm the country It does not rest with this court by a process of judicial legislation wholly unjustifiable to read into the law words not written there. pean “The opinion today means that the courts may by mere judicial constr end the constitution of the United States ” said Justice Har lan, * uction ar and amend the statutory laws.” € } h Ase rh t was asked te r ' 7 poly in every ' pr ¢ ' } whe r ent upon ben rt If it is t th cost a th s time re than it worth Ar f not a vict we have 1 a net tof allt ' gger, the trust ta as ever € be the guardian of your and the ell, -As . » the Ne York ex ge of t er the de cision Wall Street is week promised the keenest competition | Friday — this The contest and th eatest collection o' closes Saturday and the result will attle beauties be made known Monday, when the Such an avalanche of-photographs |ring will be delivered and there'll has been received for the week that be another Seattle girl with tang it may. be necessary to select two ible evidence of her superior beauty or three pictures each day, for the and that it is appreciated uty Editor and his a e Girls, get in race! The run facing a hard job counting out ning fs fine, the diamond is worth many is worthy of the race the seeking, and your pretty face Pictures to be received until| is worth the prize The wreck resulted from a high tion to the finale. Th uphold the wind, which drove the Deutsch- prediction that the ¢ week land against ite hangar. Three sec-| = tions of the airship were destro Eight passengers were reme “ ‘Wif H J ti H Bight pasecnners "Sinewae se| Wike Fears Justice Marian pring ose DMP f - ATTACKED (By United Press Leased Wire) WASHINGTON, D. C,, May 16 Justice Wright of the supreme court of the District of Columbia today appointed a commission to deter mine whether Gompers, Mitchell and Morrison were guilty of con tempt of court Justice Wright i® proceeding | under the decision of the United States supreme court. According to him, the supreme court's de cision left open the possibility of Wright himself ordering contempt proceedings against Gompers, Mor-| rison and Mitchell for their failing | to obey his injunction | It was held ‘that the court had | dismissed the jail sentences on the JUSTISETARHAN. |ground that action had been was a little play of tense heart in-| brought by the Buck company, and terest in the highest court of the|in such an event only a fine could land, such as probably its walls had | be imposed. The feren Justice never geen before | Wright holds, was left by the su penne | prome court's decision, that if 185 right had taken the initiative the | WHEN TIGERS LOST MR. BUCK 32's'2"""s°s: i different John H. Boyle, deposed fire chief, Justice Wright named Attorneys came into the council room this GREW ANGRY. DIVORCE J. J. Darlington, Daniel Davenport morning. ? dak sa atags! and J. M. Beck, all of whom were “Are you going to be at the tria ‘ counsel against the defendants in : tonight?” he was asked. (By United Press Lenned Wire.) jit as an ordinary thing fairly well,| ¥)., original contempt proceedings q What trial?” came the question.| DETROIT, Mich. May 16—"Too| but when the cellar champlons| “Your own trial, your hearing|much baseball” was the verdict of took seven straight from the Tigers | before the civil service commie | judge Murfin here in the divorce| /#st year, both Huck and his spouse elen.” Lipase of Sava: Wael: M, Rtick, wilds | ter etericine sroen the eecoe, and “4 don’ idn’ | ot old K ‘h the way home from the game, an fonts demas 1 mer eee against her time William has not} Burled with the body of a suicide got that | a decre there was going to be any hear- rea” f husband, Wm. H. ing,” he replied and walked away. About 100 witnesses may be used| The Tigers and the fn the Boyle hearing before the|!t. According to Mra Civil service commission, which {s|the home team lost, Browns did Buck, when they endured that seen by his lady love, After the decree, Judge Murfin sine been signing said | adjourn who shot himself and dropped into the lake off Mount Baker park May “Sheriff, this court will now |4, after writing poems about Evelyn I want to see the game.” Stone, tobacconist at the Stevens . |hotel, {8 the mystery of his Identity. to up tonight. Boyle will) === bly ask for a continuance. | KILLED BY CAVE.IN. attorney, William Martin,| Charles E. Dyre, 38, who was appealed to Mayor Dilling| fatally injured in a cave-tn of the} yesterday to drop the charges and|roof in the nowth trunk sewer, o Teduce him to the rank of captain|the University campus, Saturday, fn the fire department, Dilling re Set at Seattle General hospital yes- _ ; divided with| Hundreds viewed the body at But- Dining car tips are the car conductor, says Mrs, Mabel White, wife of one of them, who asks a divorce in Chicago and says his share of the tips more than terworth’s parlors, but nobody of- fered any tnformation tending to prove who he was, Interment was ordered by the coroner when tt be came apparent there was no hope of iden ation, double his $90 a month Here’s “Sunny George” . e _ Wanting Something | lAnd That Something He Wante Is a Home, Because George Is Only \ 5, and His Father and Mother Are Dead. THIS 1S GEORGE. This is Sunny George ) rm her owt c. She b | Sunny Geor healthy and t hard to ¢ h ® | time, but he oung to bear 1 be hard for her |ROW to make his own Iving In this ' but she says ford of hard things must. She cannot support f jes an orphan. Mis father died | and the boy, too. So she war several years ago, leaving a widow | Star to find the yw A Rood with three children. The widow—|home. § his adop true mother—-worked day by day for! tion by a fa Y 1 her brood. She kept them as weil | to rear him as-she could—unti! she died. That] If you can give Sunny George a was 8 year ago. A widowed friend 1 home, write to The Star hermelf burdened, took charge of th It may not be a part of a news three children. She adopted out the | paper's or policy to snppl two girls, but kept the boy homeless children with homes and Then the other day the second | childless homes with homeless chi! mother to the boy was taken away. \dren, b The Star nevertheless Sunny George was left homeless ee a lot of satisfaction in doing motherless, but not friendlers Aj some of this kind of work, especial daughter of hix second mother took |ly when a Syearold, like Sunny bim in her care, but she is forced “ Wi fetees George comes. alons oe JAIL REFORM NOW CERTAIN Ordinance Putting End to Corbett’s Reign and to Police Bru George com tality Introduced in Council. Jailer John Corbett will. go. No prisoner shall be detained in But that is only an incident in any city jail more than 12 hours the sweeping change to be made after his arrest out being taken im the city jall. asa mit of Coun- before the police justice or other cilman Griffiths’ bill, introdaced court for trial, or other public pro- yeuterday ceedings by such courts. The ordinance is the direct re No prisoner shall be confined sult of The Star's long campaign any dark cell, nor kept in solitary against police brutality in general confinement, nor denied proper land Jailer Corbett's cruelty tn par-| food and water tieular. It comes after the mayor and the chief of police have been Bill Will Pass given several chances to settle the! ‘There js hardly any doubt as t question without the interference|the adoption of this ordinance of the council, But the mayor and Councilmen Blaine and Haas are the chief fatled to grasp the ithe only two members believed to chances. So the council had to act. yo opposed to It ‘The bill provides for three jailers and assistants and three matrons| Another step in the direction of And assistants, to be chosen by |Jall reform was taken yesterday civil. service examination, Appli-|¥hen Councilman Wardall intro cants must be below 40 years of duced a bill ordering the board of age. That leaves out Corbett. Other public works to prepare plans for sections are @ juvenile detention home. Thi “The keys of cells where females /means that Juvenile offenders will are kept shall be kept by matrons not be thrown tn with hardened only. criminals. a ae " DENIES HE’S DEAD This Ou ht to CORDOVA, Alaska, May 16 g Clearing the mystery of his disap C r nee from Portland, Or, Geo. Dy son of a millionaire Ww Cheer S. O. Cow fir serie icant | while working his way on the a os steamer Edith on a tour of Alaska WINNIPEG, May 16.—Willlam | nye d he did not know he wa: Whyte, vice president of the C. P.| “mi until he read in a Seattle Ri, announced today that it has] paper that some thought it was he been definitely settled to use ofl) who jumped into the lake after writ og engines through the timber} ing love poems of a girl. He said country. he was merely out on an adventur Two reasons were mentioned Because the present fuel ¢ sw/FOR 10 NEW OPS because Councilman Steiner yesterday introduced a bill for 10 more police: men, This was in accordance with brush fires, and, secondly, a fireman cannot stand the strain of a 130-mile run firing a big loco- motive. TOBACCO TRUST T0 GET IT NEXT WASHINGTON, May 16.—After aking the Standard O11 decision yesterday the supreme court ad. journed vnttl May 20, which will be the last decision day of thls) court to advance hearings to Octo term. It ia believed that the de-|per of the Stracey, Hyde and m in the Tobacco Trust cas) Schnoider coal land claims | be rendered then, a” Alaska, men in the Rainier valley, two in the Madrona hill district, two in the Wallingford ay, district, one in the Denny-Fuhrman addition, and three in the Interbay-Fort Lawton district. WASHINGTON, D. C., May 16. Acting in response to the ¢ dova “coal party” demands, the govern- ment today asked the supreme a request of Chief Bannick for two| Judges Put New Words Into Law Wo Court Itself eertad the Into Anti-Trust L Trusts. Combinations” a Loophole for | } |t te ee ke ek tt * | * \* WHAT THE JOKER IS IN STANDARD OIL DECISION * REAS ABLY rest ed trade, as a monope Ps \* UNREASONABLY t € Th me hat eve * * oly must dard Of] case * ' future es eee the te \* prove th € REASC LE, they * i* * \* REASONA! he ro |* th bh the e¢ ongress te * * * © word REAS BLE. Just le the * * * * * RR at tht th tk SGTON, May 1¢ A ernment officia day stated nal 1 f the 7 « follow the * of l State eme t « ng Standard Off a trust A General Wickerst er th er soon. Pow | sibleec € ecution ¢ f he z ‘ c the statute lof t whic he officla ee € to claim | immup € governme f tions are tuted } y y r ntinued ite | WASHINGTON, May 16.—Dis-| the boc will prove spasmodic or gruntied with the decision of the e beg « of a big supreme court in the Standard Oil | ye cks. The most notice case, an informal conference of |able th on the floor of the ex progressives in the U. 8. senate te ount of day decided to urge an amendmen to the Sherman anti-trust act read ing ng No combination in restraint of| It w |trade shall be regarded as reason-| the able under the terms of this act.” | decision th i at the open down that as court's e Standard ald be more valu eorganization of its com United Pres 4 Wir NEW YORK, May 16.—Insertion 1 y of the word nreasonable com-| pletec mpanies © are ndar@ arb mar ent to 676 last night the last 2%. Prac red today. acco opened at 467 7 st sale stock with frac a point in transac- to 4 bh nos was 7 opened strong ins running te the market tional 8 the majority of tions killed terday read es cireuit court, oll trust as @ WASHINGTON, May By a decision of tb White, the rendered in St, L¢ Oil trust is urt ye tice decision of the on November 20, dissolution rman anti-trust White read his decision before an audience of lawyers n who packed the supreme court chamt at with ath waiting the word which would scotch the $5 ),000 com- greatest in the world chief justice | The went over every |lower court should be affirmed ex- Jangle of the case from the time|cept as to minor matters concern | when John D. Rockefeller, Wm ing which we have indicated that | Rockefel Henry H. Rogers and | the decree be modified. Our others a eged to have formed | order, ther will be one of af- the conspiracy in 1879 to capture /firmance w ctions, however, the oll trade of the country by a/to modify except in accordance comt ion as ruthless as it prov-|with this opinion, the court below ed to be successfu to retain jurisdiction to the extent the legal aspects of the Necessary to compel compliance s of its history—were set forth, |°°7S*: RES but so vividly did he portray them ae gg bald that 99 OCre that even the dead facts took or he lower court as the time lite and his hearers thrilled with Within which the Standard Oi] com ne Oa , newly ith a Pany should be forced to comply interest as Re proceeded with: ® » law, was inadequate, and apse heshnsigtd age announced that it would grant six Our conclusion is Justice| months in which the Standard Whi said, “that the decree of the. should arrange to dissolve. : CERTAINLY WAS ONE GRAND i DOINGS AT NEW ORPHEUM Judge Burke explained one thing | means surprisingly beautiful. last night that probably has puzzled} There were about $200,000 worth ai of tecnha ah iath jof automobiles in front, a white ak peop : oved policeman at every turn, 18 said All work and no play,” he makes Jack a dull boy Then he went on to explain what pounds of r tiaras and things, laundered open-face al diamonds, quarts of about 200 newly shirts, several this meant hundred square feet of bare arm That is to say,” he continued, | and shoulder, and about 3,000 smiles that all normal individuals, over-|in the audience. harrassed by es find themselves in and spiritual reerea Mayor Dilling for the cit Burke for the Chamber of merce and ex-Mayor Miller burdened and and difficulties eed of mental for the tion in order to preserve a healthy |theatre managers, made speeches, equilibrium,” | Mr. Considine in the second box And the audience, pleased at hay-|left slipped behind the curtain, and. ing this point cleared up, cheered, | pretended to be out writing letters But that audience, which filled; when they called on him for a every last seat in the new Orphewm | speech theatre at its opening last night Was a Good Bill. was in a mood to cheer everything.| Incidentally the opening bill was From John W. Considine himself, | exceptionally good, Master Gabriel, who greeted hundreds at the door | the cleverest youngster on the stage (pretty nice, eh, to have the owner | today, and Isabell D'Armond, Tom of the theatre, who is also one of | Edwards, ventriloquist, kept the the biggest showmen in the coun-|crowd laughing for his 20 minutes, try, shake hands with you when you|and Cordelai Haager, and George go to his show?) down to the last] Moore, and in fact all the rest of was | them went well Of course there'll be a lot of peo- usher and stage hand, everyone in good humor | Buliding a Beauty. |ple during the first few weeks will As to the building itself, it'll save| go mostly to see the new house, time to say that It’s as good as they | This week they'll see some corking nid it was. It's a blinger, which good vaudeville to boot SHE LIKES WINE, SAYS HUSBAND. ¢ that his wife, whom he TAY TO CLEAR, LUODIG Contending that the council vestigating committee had no right to administer oaths, Attorney Wil- bur F. Cummings hopes to secure years ago in Wisconsin, |the release of Ludovic Dallaglo- natural appetite for! vanna by a demurrer to the infor. Fox this morning be-/mation charging perjury. Judge for divorce from Mary | Main will hear the arguments to- A. Fox, They have six children. | morrow. The wine habit, Fox ‘says, was begun 20 years ago, She has spent money he da given her for the family si » he mys, for wine, Alleg married 7 has acquired a ‘ wine,” A, M gan a sult” Mrs, Druscilia Crego of Aurora, IL, won divorce and $7,000 by pro- ducing & pholoerenh of the bieck eve bar buab ; % q +

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