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DOSEVELT DENOUNCES LABOR HATER OTIS (By United Press.) NEW YORK, June 15. 3 the article Roosevelt directly answers editorials of Gen. Otis 1 on the McNamara arrests, printed in The Outlook, whic He then quotes the following as Otis’ reply to him: recognized labor leade in the Los Angeles Tim r, es. Roosevelt refers to his ori; ‘ —"Certain capitalist newspapers of a st mpe for more brutal utterances than those attributable to ay agunend lanes loader,” cape Thaghore eaveets is os editorial in the current number of The Outlook. The editorial i Ahk: stg gone sodbrerer headed “Mr. Gompers, General Otis and the Dynamite | nal h, he says, wa@ only a personal plea gr a fair, impart®& tr “If the Times building was dynamited, says Mr. Facing- Both- Ways, then those who did the work should be punished. The aes EDITION Played County for Easy Mark The county paid $5000 to the} has | ma Western Washington Fair associa jean money ne Cline tien in 1909. Jr association, regu But there was mo county fair heid| the money for the re f th 9 | building offices. Clise first got $15 bar" rl was done with that) onth, later $35 | ja m i money?” inquired Vivian Carkeek, And, too, while McGilvra was not} who, with Thom A. Meade, are| paid his rent to of ing Fred W. Kelley in dn/ $7,000, the fair association ha teas hove the county commis-| charged up to the county m t sioners restrained from paying out| the sum of $ for the Mad ‘any further money to the private| park grounds enrgarotion. | The testimony thu fe required money to keep up show that MeG n the organization—we were keeping | of the Seattle Sper the salaries,” was the answer] tion, rebated $ 4 by H. 8. Upper, treasurer of | lease of grounds from the fair association | associatio: that it only Owes $7,000 in Rent ligtter $25 a month rent According to the testimony of| months tn 1910 Oliver C. McGilvra this morning, But the county was a# fair association did not pay a month { the same reat from June, 1905, to June Overdrew County Money. that it failed to pay up taxes} In 1910, the association overdr ea years that no rent approxi $2 the Footy paid for various other appropriation 1 amounting in al) to ay arly 1 out of nt of the arly received pre an amount fur t an y <iway montt in 909 on ade ate 000 for the it county And, in 1911 sioners already ment of about appropriation A levy had ween made f which might be ava unty fair purposes, bu the ty cor the h made $18,00 But Clise Gets His Rent has been But the rent of the associa @ffices in the Globe buildin where Guy M. Richards, the s¢ Wary, drawing down « $200 salary | has yet been taken “from the county, publishes his| The present sait Ix to tuine “The Horn and Hoof,”| this expending of $15,000. n Count’s ~ rersed from either: 3 American Wife Has Two Rivals yet ox plains, “are of no in for ‘i am a Russian and a memver of the Russian church. Under [laws no marriage is binding unless it ts celebrated before a priest of the Russian church. My marriage with Miss Frothingham was so cel lebrated. the othe not L | The first of little affairs’ occurred 18 years ago the mont was infatuated Piorta |Corlat, an actress unusual |heauty. They were married in Lon bs lived h n Paris for two likes and drifted apart maw wh with the stage, the court in fresh adventures Soon wards he met jand won again. This time the }ine of the “little affair” was Jackson. Another wedding ia: And another separation veral years intervened before the jeount made a third and what he —ESUNT ESS meee | calls a successful attempt to find UNTESS TOLSTOY. connubial bliss. After his m Count Alexandre Tolstoy, nephew} with the New York girl, 19 ‘of the late Count Leo Tolstoy, con-| his junior, the count was made esses to having married two other | aware of the fact that Floria Corlat Women before he ied . Miss Mary | or the rea} Countess Tolstoy, as she sham, daughter of a wealthy| claims to be, is still alive. Paris Street broker, to the altar in| courts are trying to solve the Rus 1911. and not being di-' sian nobleman's matrimonial puzzle we wooed hero- Jalia after anybody to know If nobody was there? The question cannot be an swered oO. B. “Buppose a ton of dynamite were | set off by electricity, out of every-| bo hearing—say in the middle| sive library of scientifies such a styled ne = p Schaefer and others, I find my} Thi : s sorrow that an explosive set off by iat Is the question put up tol wiectricity, out of hearing, would i readers by “Old Constant | o,f Weve ox make jess noise than a pair of pur inted a run of | yle socks | ome for the blind Answers to the question, and still it|”'* "°° ma ae E , isn't answered Here's the finish The Noise Editor Dear Sir: = W Would be a noise man does not happen ing distance is no sign that it Rot a noise. If I should have a fight with a chum in some out-of the-way place and no one knew any thing about it, except us two, would we have the right to say we never had a fight? Dear Noise After wadin ugh an exte To the itor A noise affects the sense of hearing. There is no} course it|#ueb thing as a note that does not Just because | Produce @ sensation of hearing to be in hear J.P. P. of was Dear Editor When mothers fryin donuts I can smell em out in the yard and I no I'll get sum, even if I ain't seen em| yet. if | wuz to far off to here an exploshun but seen it I'd no thare wuz a noyse. any kid ud no that.| WILLIE R W. R. BALC Daily Star Editor. Dear Sir: When the was in the White House four years ago we all he even caught the echoes trom and have been bonvbarded ¢ since. You ean bet he'll be no as long as he lives, whether an. body listens or not Big N thr ard it Afr or] We NIAS. Editor Daily Star. | Sir Once I got into a suffrage meeting by misfake, It was ALL noise. You couldn't get me into anything like that again by saying there's no noise until I hear it, I Two HEADED NOISE. know better SUFFERER, Dear Noisy Editor Not v0 you could notice 0. To the Edltor: Certainly not Poise is the impression made upon one’s ear dram. Where there is no it ROOT. See eeeee Pee eet jare \d yond thi VOL. 13, NO: 67. LITTLE JANET WASN'T LOST AT ALL, ONL VISITING CHUM ~~ Y a LITTLE JANET why eet, her ae night, that is and fifteen neighbors and policemen searched through parks and woods from 6 o'¢ last night until early this mor Janet his morn! he web of the eh hing of Janet's she found ny and she x Mrs ho knew abouts 8 dren Janet t whip b the didn’t and would not id beside that 1 such naid know of anxiety it men te thaught Iw could thing he ne of ‘BOMB EXPLODES playtog S06 spent a why five the lock ning trad any and Mrs my know what glad have NEAR PALACE OF KING ALFONSO (By Cnited Press Leased Wire.) MADRID, June 15—A bomb exploded today in the Plaza Orient adjoining the royal palace. The entrance to the cathedral was dam- aged and other buildings in neighborhood shaken. So far the a learned no person was injured by the explosion. * Ahh thnhhh han POOR LITTLE BOY my t TORONTO, Ont, June 15. Suspicious that John Daita thirteen-year-old son of tea merchant in Va had been murde dispelled at the *e The evidence boy who foun had, been lonely, the the family, except being in Chin had always t bange others the The une ted him kind! was hhh hhh hh SHOP, DESK ANP FACTORY CALLIN VAIN FOR GIRLS; CUPID HIRES AS HOME MAKERS ices le is the big boss just now. The less imp straining every effort t ranks of wage god who I in at be voids in the ear caused by the chubb scores of girl workers from His o hampere ev day rat work laund and other girls are emp 1 Business men coming to the morning find their phers gone, housewlve kitchens deserted, and p of store 4 clerks mi explanati red | girla have gone n the the June bride Employment 4 fewer girls are & just now than at any the year. On the other ands for female help supply, they telephone aid asly stenc find ‘oprie ing only m to Jc net ching for other th hand are a local chief operator always a dearth of girls he June. We have about 150 working fn down-town office over 20 of them expect to lea At the month.’ The same plight Is deseribed almost every employer @f fem! labor. ‘The want ad columns in press send up one loud, } er girls, The business world ix ried But the girls have more impo’ work to do than answering p ear drum, there is no noise. See? To the Editor: How do you ex tt * * k, a n od inquest showed that the a, of father * HBOS fill the ners res ries k in mera their tor work of th in wink and thi b nine a the y fo ant new lis somewhat dif butecesteseeeeneen | (Pimes feels that the ‘if’ is upholding the cause of disorder and is a tistinct aid to the villains who incited and procured the mur- der of twenty innocent men and the destruction of $500, “Gen. Otis, in this article, has t + Roosevelt continue: when taken by labor men. “That i the purpose of my article was to protest agair worth of property.” en the very position against which alP good citizens should protest it assuming before the trial what it was hoped to prove or disprove ‘at the trial, and, in this way, Otis is guilty of conduct which could not be too severely condemned if the offender were a labor leader, andwhich, therefore, annot be too severely denounced when the offender is a violent opponent to organized labor, a consistent enemy of every movement for social and econognic bettermen—just as he has shown himself a consistent enemy of men in in California who have dared resolutely to stand against corruption and in favor of honesty.” The Seattle Star ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1911. HRRHRAR ARREARS CHICKEN A REAL AVIATOR ASBURY PARK (N. J.) June 15—-Prederick Megili of Farmingdale has a local repu tation ax a wing shot, which bi this morning when he brought to earth a hawk whieh had stolen of his chickens and ot aloft The chicken, released by the hawk, spread wings and d to earth unharmed tn a ries of spirals that aviate have imitated, Throughout the t of the day Megill says the ‘oamed the yard crow the rest of the flock sustaine seeteeeeeeeeeeeees | ken SRR ERE REE TRIPLE WEDDING My SAN "DIEGO, triple wedding, the result at a sudden determination to make an ordinary automobile trip a bridal tour, was performed here at noon today, The three copies, all from Long ch, are Lewis T. Wells and Mrs. Maud Perry, James Albert Dunn and Mra. Grace Moranvilie, who © @ sister of Mrs. Perry, and William Joseph Damron ry Miss Phyllis Black ee ener eee aeee WICHITA, Kas—To make ertain of a decent burial for himself, H. E. Hutchins, a {aurant proprietor, has de ited $75 with Coroner Mc Allister. Hutehing t* enjoy ing the best of health, but ex plained that he wanted make ¢¢ ot a funeral Ae Btn St ected de dtd * * * * oy * * * * * be ressrsisi | pat ceeeeeeeeeee JEALOUSY RESULTS IN OHOOTING doe Crescenva, an italian, this morning shot at Julius Rando, an- other italian, when Rando, it is al leged, found Crescenva in company with Rando's wife. After the shooting, Detectives B anchi and Majewsky found Mr Crescenva wandering on the Rainier boulevard. The trouble it covered in Rando's bom 8, Creecenva door and locked then that Creseenva op bis atm was por Ra the police, but the’ pair breaking a board in the shed Rando ix the mother of five dren when the dis behind 16th ay to the in, It was ned fire, but | » wotified eneaped by Mre eb occurred alles w at stole ished 1 up eee eee eee eee ee! WINS GAME WIT *) BURGLAR; KEEPS SILVER. «| HELENA, Mont, June 16 +. Whaning a Kame of seven up *| played with a burglar to see ® whether he would carry out ® Bir intention of robbing * Rome after be had entered it, # Mrs. Charles V. Holn today as all her silverw Pee eee ee eee | ga RN Ever Stop to Think How Many ‘‘Consolers” There Are? f-atricken, afflicted, cant them m of with them are down, ready laugh with that laugh and to weep with th that weep, the universal solace those that yearn to pour the story of thetr troubles Into an ear that wii not turn away. Who? Weill Barkeepere Turkish bath rubbers. Cigar store clerks Manicuriats 5. Barbers 6. Hatrdre The avers, the gr the that Consolers aympathizers cheerers of re to 1 2 4 bartender is what might be called a real public ser vant. His in the Job of dispensin not only liquor, but spiritual conse lation. The bartender probab’ hears more sad stories in a single week than the average clergyman does In a year. He hears the the down-and-outs perous and Lup-in-the-world And he probably has plenty of troubles of bis own at that. If so, no on ms to think of it or no visible evidence of a canker gnawing at bis heart ever appears per's exterior Turkish bath rubber n student of human nature. hod of showing sympathy nt from that of that if occasion he will cheerfully 4 luck stories of | woes not only of | but of the pros the barkeep, in seems to require relate selling ribbon, Cupid, th has hired them to make homes, jhind a narrow | happy ston, big boss, |few promises, but he can hire most He|any working girl SANDY ML, writing letters, sewing cloth, or says nothing about wages; he makes | down-town job. his own. He does thie in order tc thow how completely he {* en rap-| port with the mood of his customer. | The Cigar Clerk Thirdly, we come to the consid eration of the cigar clerk ax a foun-| tain of sympathy and a wellepring | of consolation. The cigar clerk's | situation is not unlike that of the} bartender. He is hemmed in be counter, and has only a few feet of leeway on either side, 80 that he cannot escape very far from the individual who is un until he bas told someone | bia troubles, It is the manicore’s business, coldly put, to trim and polish nails, but, as is well known, !f lady mani cures confined thelr — attention strictly to finger nails the profes ston would be by no means as pros | Derous as it seems to be at present ‘That Barber. The barber is another propos His sympathy is what might be desert! as agressive in con trast to the passive kind furnished by other public servants in his field, He is not only willing, but even eager, to condole and console. He simply bubbles over with sym pathy. True, the average tonsorial artiat’s sympathy is commonly sus pected as being mercenary, but he belongs among the solacers just the same And the moral is, the public will have matter who sells it that no of course, sympathy, | cel | | | away from her | yesiating the | protesting against wearing the | as» provided | ployes 15 days’ vacation besides ONE CENT. ON TmAIne nhwe wane oe “Believe Me I’m for the Parcels Post,” Says Freddie the Office Boy FIVE-POUND PARCEL Postage Seattle Ta Distance 37 rate to sa 60 cents miles HI \ ' FIVE-POUND PARCEL Postage 60 cents. rate Distance Nicetaion to Berlin 7,569 miles. Freddie With His Percels, One for Tacoma and One for Berlin. BY FREODIE, THE OFFICE BOY.) I don’t know much about this par cel post affair, but I'm for it strong. This morning I took two five-pound parcels down to the postoffice. One parcel was for a man in Tacama and the other for a fellow living in Berlin, Belleve me, 1 prised, as tney say, when I found that the postage on the Tacoma par that had to go only 37 miles was 80 cents, while the cost on the Berlin parcel, which would travel was sur nearly 8,000 ents. miles, was only 60 I asked why, and the postoffic clerk said it was because Germany has the parcel post. The editor says we would e@ parcels post here if we could boss our express companies, or if we could keep the express tr from bossing con gress. Anyhow express tru year off peo parcels adopt the understand it, the kes millions every have to send mngress doesn’t parcel post scheme. as PUNISHING STREET SWEEPERS Supt. of Streets A. L. W sweepers Iters is for unt street street forms. At least the sweepers. He has weeks’ vacation 80 say the two which practically all city employes get every year. He says he has given them Satur y afternoons off during the sum mer instead. But tnat is only 13 | half days instead of 15 whole days, by the charter. And besides, the half holiday is a result of @ new state law, All the other departments are giving their em the denied them half holiday. Vhe department efficiency com mittee this morning recommended to the councll that next year's levy provide for cleaning and maintain ing suits, worn by street sweepers, Other cities will be communicated tain their customs. In rmany 20 street wear uniforms. Will Retry Wap Ww the indicted ex-chief of po given by Judge Main this until June 21 to plead to indictments to asce Berlin. sweepers Charles Wappenstein, eight times lice morning the t was four issued ainst him The retrial of the first bribery charge against Wappenstein, which resulted In the jury's disagreement on its first trial, will take place on June 26, Both the extortion charge, which was to have been tried today, and the $2,500 bribery charge, which was to have come up on June 26, will be reset to some later date, eeeeeenemmes GET THE PINK STAR TONIGHT OR YOU'LL MISS A GREAT FEATURE. ane KEEPS iF TOD ARMED OFFICERS (By United Prese Leased Wire.) VALLEJO, Cal., June. i5.—~ Fred Melville, boy bandit, al- leged to have robbed ten sa- loons since his escape two wecks ago from the Preston re- form school, today engaged in| a desperate battle with a posse of 150 men. Melville was surrounded on) a hill top between Vallejo and} Benicia. At 9 o'clock 150 shots jhad been fired. Has Three Pictols. The fight began six o'clock. The boy is said to have three pistols and one hundred and fifty rounds of ammunition. For three hours he stood off the posse apd o'clock* reinforcements were asked from Vallejo, Benicia and Lenoa Melville took his stand in | thicket at the top of the hill. On ait | des of him the open hillside gave him a good view of the movements of the posse. Although they were} concealed in bushes at the foot of | the hill they had no chance to rush the young bandit's stronghold. | Melville was believed to be witb. | out provisions and water and he must surrender. They kept their fire and Melville retur volley for volley. aisle 2: Melville escaped two weeks i from the Preston reform school and. | since then has frequently been seen io the neighborhood. A number of saloon robberies in the neighbor hood of Preston have occurred and jit is asserted by the authorities |that Melville has been the person who held them up. Tries to Escape. : Later in the morning Melville ate empted to leave his stronghold at the top of the hill. Sheriff Arthur Veale of Contra Costa county, who in a motor boat off Glencoe, saw him. He fired fifteen shots at | the lad. Melville ran back towards | the top of the hill and disappeared among the bushes and rocks. ‘MINISTER BEGINS PRISON TERM (By United Press Leased Wire) EUL-NE, Or, June 15.— Rev. Géorge Burbank, a Methodist minister of Coburg, who was indicted by the grand jury for contributing to the de- linquency of a minor, today be- gan serving a sentence of one year in the courity jail. Hi will also have to pay the costs of prosecution. Burbank was sentenced by Judge Harris, after he h plead guilty. Burbank’s arrest and conviction caused a sen- sation in this district. % at was VLMOST LURED TO DEATH FOR GOLD (By United Press Leased Wire.) OAKLAND, Cal, June 15.—Lured into the barren wastes of Death valley on the strength of a lost gold mine, guided by a roughly drawn map,a legacy from a dying miner, three Oakland men have just returned to this city, forced to re linquish their search. They were driven back by lack of water. The men are Harry D, Parker, Chas, F, Burnham and O. A. Towsley, mem- bers of the Charros club, They will return to Death valley in the spring. The excursionists say that the map they took with them was found to be exact save in one importan? par. ticular, the location of water ap tede tale tae tte ee ees * WOMAN BEATS MAN FOR *& 7 TRYING TO HUG HER. & RARER EKER KEK PORTLAND, Or., June 15.—One on woman, name suppressed, threw W. D. Lewis, a real estate man, into the street, for attempting to hug _ he then turned and thrashed her own husband because he failed to do the jeb for her, ac cording to the police records toda! According to the pglice report, Lewis stopped a business acquain- tance on Second street last nigh! and “tried. to hug the man’s wife After he had been trounced, the report states, Lewis retired to the side of the street and chal- everyone to a battle, with of the woman. He opposite lenged the exception | was arrested, | io Sana ee ee es * WEATHER FORECAST. * * For Seattle and vicinity: ® * Fair tonight and Friday; light * * southwesterly winds, hererereetcerrey