The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 5, 1911, Page 3

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OTHER'S SHAME SON TELLS M . TO CON NEW YORK, June §.—A son ex- posing his mother's shame to the eyes of the world and denouncing hiv father, whom he blames for her downfall, ts the crue! termination of the mystery surrounding an ab leged affidavit signed by a certain Eleanor Davis, in which tt Is sworn tlmt Mrs. Andrew W. Mellon, wife of the Pittsburg nifiiionalre, was seen In a compromising position. This Eleanor Davies appears to be Mrs. G. S. Dorr, who, last April, claimed to be the widow of the late Gen. Thomas T. Eckert, the ‘Western Union magnate. James A. VICT HIS FATHER orr, her son, has placed her in a |sanitarium. He then made’a pub |e statement, in which he de |nounces his father, who, he says is a rich banker, for leading his other astray, and living off her earnings afer forcing her to a life of shame. , He says his mother had deen married to George 8. Dorr who was killed in the Battle of the | Wilderness. She married his fath ler in 1872 and discovered that he | wasa bigamist. “This nearly drove her to nity, but she still re | mained under his father's spell, be alleges. | CARRIER OF BRIBE CONFESSES (iy United Pree Leased Wire.) COLUMBUS, Ohio, June Chas, W. Kempel, clerk of the house of representatives today ad: ted he had tsformed the grand that he had carried a $100 ribe from a lobbyist to a legis- lator who is now under indictment 5—| He said he had told the na\ of an Akron loan agent who ¢# |@im the money, of the lobbyist seeking to curb boan agents and of the legtwlator who got mon He denied that hy ew at that time that the purpose of the transaction iMlegal. WHAT A‘DIFFERENCB’ SAYS SENOR MADERO | .;..; (By United Press tensed Wire.) ZACATE@AS, Mex, June 5. ‘The special train bearing Francisco 1. Madego, Jr., and his party, passed through Zacatecas today, and is scheduled to arrive at Mexico City tonight. A tremendous ovation w given him here. At one little station, com- posed of a few adobe houses, seven women and twelve chil- + dren, led by an aged blind man, stood by. the side of the tragk, where the old man played the National Anthem on an ancient fiddle and sang in cracked voice. The pitiable group waved corn tassels and cheered as the train pulled out. Madero was deeply touched by the demonstrations along the route today. Turnifig to the United Press correspondent aboard the train, he said, “Yesterday I was at }San Pedro, my bome' town, from | which I was driven six months ago disguised as a peon. What a dif |ferencee yesterday. Little did 1 |think in those dark days that in leo Short a time my poor enslaved leountrymen, for whom my heart | bled, would be able to shout freely THE STAR—MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1911. olf Sends a Mash Note, and Osgar--Tee Hee!--Intercepts It ‘WONDER Wrar SHE oO wT wHAY WHY D1 BILL TONES GET US AT THREE O'CLOCK, ANO MUSS UP THE ATTIC GIMME A CQUPLE A Dozen Rigi for a man opposing Dias. There! are 200 armed men m three cars Jahead, but after what I have |yesterday and today, I know will not neo@ thetr services.” NEW MEXICAN AMBASSADOR MEXICO CITY June 5.—An |nouncement was made today of the transfer from Vienna to Washing ton of Gilberto Crespo y Martinez as ambassador to Mexico. Manuel lde Zatmacona, who succeeded Leon lde La Barra in the Mexican em- lbasay at Washington, will return | Ito London a# Mexican financial) ‘ agent s SeCHINUAHUA “ ATLANTIC OCEAN inoue NEIGHBOR'S PIANO 1S TOO MUCH FOR HIM NEW YORK, June 5—That neighbor’s piano, on which t@e dear little child praetices so marvelously, has resulted in the death of Frederick Stout, 20, who had been an invalid for some months. The little 10- year-old daughter of John Roth, a neighbor, practiced on the pi- ano across the hall from the ick room. It wore on his His fatner tried to have it stopped. He appealed to Roth, He asked Magistrate House. The girl continued to play. The nervousness caused by the piano playing brought on insanity and the boy died rav- ing of pianos. Funeral of Southard The funeral of Frank 8, Séuthard, of the legal firm of Morris, South- & Shipley, was conducted in imple manne: cording to his expressed wishes, at the Unitarian urch yesterday. Members of the Harvard club, the Henry George club, the W. 0. W. and the Moun-| |taineers paid their last respects to| him. The body will be shipped to| Marysville, O., for interment in the family burying grounds SERRE % Domestic Unhappiness Too for Aged Minister. LOS ANG Rev. Alfred Baptist Evangelist, is dead at his home here today, a gas sulelde, He left a note which explained that poor health and unhappy domestic affairs had made life unbearable. His wife. 42 years his junior, left his house Saturday, threatening Graves said, to sue for di voree, es "Georgetown trimmed the Colum- bias by @ score of 6 to 1 in a well | played game at Georgetogn yester \day afternoon. Both pitchers twirled good ball, The batteries |were Wilson and Sweeney for Co lumbias and Miller and Guessner |for Georgetown, SESSSE ESE EE EEE Settee ee ee eee ee } been settled in bis new office. BOW TO MADERO (By United Press Leased Wire) EL PASO, Tex. June 5.—The legislature of Chihuahua hag ac cepted the resignation of Governor Ahumada and elected Abram Gon. tales, the Madero candidate. Gonzales has notified the Ma dero office here that a movement against the Lower California insur- tectos will begin as soon as he has He goes to Chihuahua Monday. Gen. Viljoen will be dispatched from Juarez with 600 troops to advance on Tian Juana. They will be gent by train through the United States, { farrangements now being nego tiated with the state department to permit the transfer are made POOR OLD TURKEY. (By United Press Leased Wire) CETTINJE, Montenegro, June 5. —War between Russia and Turkey seems measurably nearer today. Lo cal newspapers print an interview with Czar Nicholas, in which the Russian ruler says hostilities are inevitable if Turkey continues to menace Montenegro by driving the Albanians into Montenegrin terri tory. An institute of religious edu cation will be given by the edu cational department of the Congre gational Sunday school and Public society in Pilgrim church Thurs day and Frida. IN THIS MANNER = SH ieinv Gow? ) Seu wast paver o-moos /@ — Down ANO ROUT OUT THE NE ma CARER —— = GRAB a'SPALE ‘Two More Sue \ ‘Two more suite have Jagainst C. D. Hillman, convicted | millionaire real estate dealer. John |G. Anderson wants all his money back, which he paid on what he represented to him as in the Navy Yard addi discovered after making payments for two years, that they |were only parts of lots and that they had been previously sold to | Theresa Whitney. | his $105 paid Hill Thomas Lando wants back, which he says he |man on land which he red belonged to the - ™ AND HIKE OUT BEHIND THE SHED U. 8. gov on AREST } (Dy United Prose Leased Wire.) COLUMBUS, Obio, June 6&— State Representative Owen Evans indicted for bribery, today pleaded guilty to a new indictment retura od this morning, charging accept ing a bribe in connection with bill Neensing and regulating loan agents, The indictment was re- turfied 10 minutes before the plea wan entered. Evans threw himself on the mercy of the court, and announced he would go before the grand jury | this afternoon and make a full con-} fession. Evans was fined $500 andy coats by Judge Kincaid, Upsets Canoe in Fun; Drowns PITTSFIELD, Mass, June 5.— lArthur W. Piumb, 17, nephew of |County Commissioner Plumb, was | |drowned in Pontoosuc lake while canoeing. With Allan Babcock he! was paddiing in shallow water, They intentionally capsized the craft, but Plumb's body was carried out Into nine. feet of water, and he| sank Uke lead. j ‘ | NEW YORK—The steam yacht Ive Is undergoing repairs and will be placed {n commission about July Rhtkn CONDEMNED MURDERER MADE GOOD UMPIRE RENO, Nev June 5 Patrick Columbus Casey, * awaiting execution for + * » * eeeteeeeeeeeee mur & er, in the state prison at Car & son, {6 a rattling good umpire, * according to his fellow con- * viets. In a game between rival convict teams which Ca sey umplred, not a kick was registered agaist bis de elstons. * RRR hh | DICK HESITATES | (ity United Press Leased Wire.) | SAN DIPGO, June §—Dick Fer ris, elected by the insurrecto sol- diers at Tia Juana as provisional president of the provisional repub- ‘ie of Lower California, is still |“considering” today. Although it was reported that Ferris bad ac jeepted the pesition, he says tha! later dis-| PORTLAND IS EXCITED TODAY. Words by Schaefer Music by Condo | lens» Sou | * * * hk ttm POEM A lot of this trust busting Ain't worth @ tinker'’s dam} A person who ie reckless | Might call it Wicker-shame | | | I never nursed a dear gazelle To glad me with its soft black eye, But when it came to know me well, And love, it wag, sure to die, ‘MOTHER OF 4 CHILDREN LIVES: Shark Hillman) AFTER FIVE ATTEMPTS TO DIE After five attempts to die Hattie Sittle still She is in the city hospital today with a bullet wou above the heart. She shot herself, but missed the vital organ, and ber fifth at tempt at suicide, like the four pre vious, has thus far failed, It is believed by hospital authorities she will survive. Belief that her friends are perse cuting her bas driven Mrs, Sittle to try to die, according to her hue Mra lives. band, who is a tailor with a shop at 1415% First av. Sittle told the po- lice that his wife had been drinking, as a means of forgetting her trou She had tried to take her four times previously, sald aittle, The fifth attempt came whem she entered the room of John Tur- ner, @ roomer at the Sittle home, 1512 Ninth av., snatched a Tevok ver and shot herself. Mrs. Sittle is the mother of four children. bles lige =e (By United Prees Leased Wire.) | PORTLAND, Or., June §—Indi- cations in the elections this fore noon were that a heavy vote would be polled in the municipal election jtoday. Mayor Joseph Simon is run- ning independently for re-election. He 1s opposed by A. G. Rushlight, n primaries nominee, and H. Thomas, democratic Both Rushlight and Simon favor the commission form of govern ment, and their platforms coincide on other principal points, making it a fight based on individual fok lowing. The business interests of Port land have spent thousands of dol lars in making a campaign for mon, It is expected that Rusblight will iget practically the entire labor vote. The steamer Victoria, one of the first vensels of the season to seek its way through the ice floes to | Nome, sailed yesterday, carrying a | passenger list of 700 and a full jeargo containing everything from Steamer Takes 700 a to Alaska food to mining machinery. On the shore as the big ship slipped into the stream were more than 2,000 relatives and friends waving good bye and good luck to the voyagers bound for the Far North. WILSON “RESTIN (Dy United Press Leased Wire) —. Wh |the speech made to the troops yes. --THAT’S IT “The greatest possession a boy | can have ie the English language—| to be able to stand on his own legs | fifid say things,” sald Benjamin Ide eler, president of the Univer-| sity of California, speaking at Queen Anne high echool yesterday | afternoon. He also declared in favor of Eng: lish football and spoke of the U government of the Philly one of the greatest achi in the history of the, country AMUSEMENTS. GRAND OPERA HOUSE EUGENE LEVY, Lessee and Mar First Run Photoplays aod Vaudeville. Admission 6 and 10 cents. Resérved Hox jens, 26 conte. WAGNER'S BAND CONTINUOUS PER Mothers Can Cheek Thi Roth Phones 4g Tonight All, Week. Bargain Mat. Wednesday “THE SWEETEST GHRL IN Batistying F ° 8 18s DIXIR” 11 for the use of Jacob Scsiff. The lIsis, belonging to J. T. Spaulding, bas been chartered by Schiff for the summer. The Rose Festival The “Mardi Gras” of the West JUNE 6 TO 10 Everyone Should See It. None Should Mise It. EXCURSION FARES Seattlé, $7.50 Tacoma, $5.80 | PORTLAND and Return TICKETS ON SALE JUNE 5,7 AND 9 Northern Pacific Ry. ‘FOUR TRAINS EACH WAY EACH DAY TICKETS AND FU MAIN 1430—Corner First Av. an H. N. KENNEDY, Gen. Agt. SEATTLE GOLDEN POTLATCH duly 17 to 22 7 LL INFORMATION d Yesler Way, Seattie—IND. 3300 J. O. MoMULLEN, City Pass. Agt. A, D. CHARLTON, A. G, P. A., Portland, Or, | “Tacoma Carnival of Nations,” July 36 “Astoria Centennial Jubil | Aug. 10-Bept. 9. Low Fares From All Stations, © 16 £ |LOIS THEATRE TTiviing Melodrama this Ween. ° Phones 6106 THE NEW MASON & KEBLER “In and Out" ‘This Week=A Big ONE | WHERE gD) | AAYESTIC even xtrat! EDMUND STANLEY & CO. In the Operetta “A ROYAL ROMANOK” COLISEUM | Playwright terday did not include an accep-| NTON, N. J, 5.—With | tance, but that he is still “consid-|_ 7 pied arabian |Gov. Wilson’s return today, he rg al th Jeompleted his 9,000-mile swing| DAUGHTER ILL. | around the circle and brought to| ed Frees Leased Wire) | 80 end his personally conducted COLORADO SPRINGS, June 5—|tour of the country. Gov. Wilson | Mrs. William Bliiott, daughter of|and his presidential boom stopped | David Belasco, is se-|over in Washington yeSterday for | riowsly {ll at her father’s summer| what proved to be rather a stren- | home here wus “day of rest.” | sormemmcemeaaell Birdman Flies to Trial , } (By United Press Leased Wire.) LONDON, June 5.—Grapan Gi- mour, one of England's leading avia- tors, Iterally flew to his trial for manslaughter Friday. While driving an auto recently Gilmour ran over and killed a boy, for which he was indicted. He ascended in his plane at Shoreham and flew to Salisbury, where the court is being held before which he must appear. AllWool Clothes About 500 Suits Prager’s $15 and $18 Clothes $10 CLOTHCRAFT THE BEST SUIT VALUE EVER OFFERED M. PRAGER & COMPANY 615-617 Second Ave.—BOTH STORES——-819 Second Tomorrow morning we place on sale about 500 men’s and young men’s suits; our regular $15 and $18 values at the spe- cial price— , . These are all three- piece suits — coat, vest and trousers— and include efery new fabric in both the, smooth and rough goods, in all the new shades of browns, tans and grays. All sizes, 31 to 48, Nearly all of these suits are the famous Clotheraft All-Wool Clothes. Ave.

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