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THESE “SACRED” ’ udge Daniel Thew Wri orrison for contempt Next Monda: pers, Mitchell and of Judge Wright. One would think that bape g judge would hold the scales of al, and Wright the judg . Vol, Not so. Once before a similar situation arose, 3, page 456, Appeal Cases District of Columbia. A lawyer named Elliott being called as a witness declined in the habeas corpus hearing of a man whom he himself had|mere man? Did this judge, who considered himself offended, court, justice as between Gompers, et Not Wright. It is reported in t will try Gom-;him to answer or go to jail for contempt. Contempt jail and brought a habeas corpus action. The lawyer chose enough to wake the people up Wright heard the habeas corous proceeding and decided |tytanny of the courts. ht would prefer that some other | against Elliott, sending him back to jail / The district court of appeals overruled Wright and set Elliott free. | The district court of appeals also, in passing on the case, characterized the procedure of Wright in acting as the judge to answer certain questions, claiming that to do so would jailed as “a simple travesty on justice.” But after all it's a fine thing to have these offended judges violate his client's confidence Wright, being the judge, ordered Ba sda, ate cece EDITION! OVER 300 INDREWS) HERE'S G. A. AND NILLED BY AUTO Well Known Business Man and Golf Expert Victim of Fatal Accident. White going to his apartments at the Hotel Washington from the Beattie Golf and Country ci at Aight, George Robinson Andrews, | manager of the Burroughs Adding Machine Co. and one of the best known golfets and autoists in the city, was thrown from his machine } } and instantly killed about a quar-| ter of a mile south of the club buildings. Andrews was riding home alone from the club, where he had been preparing for the golf tournament, which was to open today. He had entered for the qualifying rounds. Four other automobiles followed him shortly after he left. Found Lying in Road. When the others reached the spot where the machine was stand ing beside the road jammed against a log, they looked for Andrews and found him lying ahead of the car, dead. One of the tires was punc tured. The conclusion was there- fore, reached that the car had swerved after the blowing out of the tire, striking the log with such force that Andrews was thrown to the ground. His neck was broken in the fall. The body was taken back to the Country club, whore word was sent to Dr. Van J.C. Marma- G. R. ANDREWS duke, manager of the Washington. Andrews was unmarried, his relatives living at St. Louis, Seven years ago he came to Seattle from Portland, and he had been a prom inent member of the Seattle Golf and Country club. Haywood Is Here Tonight William D. Haywood, ex-secre- tary of the Western Federation of Miners, made famous by the trial @ few years ago in Bolse, Ida, ar QUEEN (My Calted Pree Leased Wire.) WASHINGTON, July 13—In a speech bristling with invective and satire, Senator Robert M. La Fol- jlette of Wisconsin today, on the ifloor of the senate, bitterly de- |mounced Canadian reciprocity and its sponsor, ident Taft. He |flatly accused Taft of not having kept his promises, of having added | betrayal to betrayal, and of having sacrificed the progressi olicies to Aldrichism and the reaction. PETITIONS Asking for the removal of the city engineer, the following petition is about to be circulated all over the city: To the mayor and city council, city of Seattle We, the undersigned resident. land electors @f the city of Seattle, | betng convinced that City Engineer |R. H. Thomson is not conduetin his offiee in the best interests o the whole people of the city, and that he is largely responsible for unnecessary and excessive grades, and that he has bound ers, and that his administraticgn of |the affairs of the engineer's office ig a menace to the continued wel. THE 106A 1$ TO wir THe BALL rived in the city today from Bel-| Mngham, where he has addressed labor bodies on the topic of union fem. He will speak tonight in Eagles’ hall, Seventh and Pine st Hf Hicktown belles ‘awn from soglety while ir Ma's pat up Ja te hin print pul any Hotei new wall-paper in rooms, it |e rumored Funny how a married man likes $0 read that speech of Pat Hen: About give me ibert death, Late Watertower We confidingly te woln rave all the front | | | Tiddiede-winks champions from | neighboring cities are in town to |day for a round of that grand old game of golf. | Out on the emeraldine links of |the Seattle Golf and Country club these visitors are preparing for stern battle, | Their weapons swished and glis- tened against the sward today, and cries of “fore” resounded through the bosky dell that Hes abaft the Country club's buffet. Our war correspondent was busy sketching some of the moat fero- cious of the combatants, and didn't OUT FOR THOMSON’S REMOVAL {“Reduce Duties for Standard Oli." ) | “Tie advocates of Canadian rect- procity,” he said, “promise to re |duce duties for the benefit of the |people, It will reduce duties, the Jeffect of which never reaches the people, but it will reduce them for } the millers, the packers, the brew eries, Standard Ol! and the coal companies who are already grossly protected. It is nothing that it pre tends to be and professes to be nothing that it is. It fe a little brother to the Payne-Aldrich bill, the greatest legislative wrong in ASKIN fare of the city, respectfully ask | that he be removed from office, and lin the event of bis reappointment by the mayor, that said appoint |ment be not confirmed by the city | council.” This petition is the result of res jolutions passed at the meeting of |the North End Progressive league ‘uesday night “Four of every five of Seattle's voters will sign this petition,” sal |Couneilman Goddard today. “The re-| feeling against Thoméon's reckless} when the jury in the case regrade schemes, which have many Seattle residents, is so strong that, when, once released, it will |aweep everything before it.” rules of the game may be Anyway, it’s a golf tournament and there will be some very hefty trophies for the best golfers The playing started today, In the “qualifying rounds” the poorer players are eliminated, leaving the |adepts to fight {t out among them- selves for the championship. A big delgation came in from Ta jeoma today. There are also play lers here from Everett, Portland, Victoria ‘and San Francisco. The male Bob White always ‘gives his wife the best of food and both call the babie Lee ‘0 dinner. Nok Just suppose, for instance, thinks Gompers and his associates have offended his dignity|thing look about like that “divine right of kings” to a real threatening evil The thing is just rotten; And getting the startling answers to these questions, what the| would these eighty-five mi Why, they would do just what free thinking ion people do? Americans that this “sacred” judge who|could be expected todo, They would make this judicial dignity should send them to jail, At once about eighty-five million of|did some over a century ago. our ninety million people would sit righteup and take notice “What!” they would ask, “is it | las his offenders?” actually sit as judge upon the men whom heshimself accused IN The Seattle Star ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1911. SEATTLE ONE CENT. King Edgar and Queen Daphne in Every Day Attire. Photographed Today for The Star at Jacobs’ Por- - tral LITTLE GIANT 10 TAFT fitcted on the American people in half « century.” La Follette said that in his cam- paign President Taft had prom ised a downward revision of the taritf, adding: “It is an interesting study in po- litical prychology to observe his campaign devotion to Roonevelt and the Roosevelt policies. The people elected Taft in the belief thet he would hold fast all Roose velt bad gained, and not that he would revoke his orders and re ‘verse his action.” Pardon Napolitano, Says Vicar General COVINGTON, Ky., July 15 ” believe Angelino Napolitano should be pardoned,” says Vicar General | Ferdinand Brossart, at the bead of Wovington Catholic diocese, during |the absence of Bishop Maes, and speaking for 78 churches with 60, |000 communicants, “I cannot um derstand how the Canadian govern- ment, which Is so just and its pro ple so humane, could permit this | woman to be hanged.” SMOKE TRUST HIT RALEIGH, N. C., July 13.—The }“tobaceo trust” was hit here today of the | Ware-Kramer Cigaret Co. of Nor- [heavy burdens upon the home own-|caused the loss of the homes of} folk, Va., against the American To- | bacco Co., awarded the cigaret con- cern $20,000 damages According to the “table damages” section of the Sherman anti-trust law, the plaintiff company may now recover $60,000 from the trust FINER HOME FOR PAULINE, COW WASHINGTON, July 13 If plans of the district superintendent of public butidings and grounds are followed, the little red brick stable where Pauline Wayne, President Taft's cow, is housed, will be torn down, It is planned to erect cost: 1 buildings where the present White House stables now stand. HOLLAND, Kan, July 18.—All records for heat were broken here Sunday and there is evidence of {ts Intensity Mrs. Enright went to Gypsum on Sunday, She had left some eggs in a window, where the sun got on them and that evening when she | went to use them they were cooked | hard as if they had been boiled WEATHER BUREAU IN A HOT WAVE CONSPIRACY. For it's always"hot weather When forecasters get together, And fix up their tables, While their shirts are wringing wet; But what care we whether We all meit together, If a stein's on the table |take time to find out what the|pad example for humans to follow.| And the fan is whizzing yet? | Tn pT (iy Calted Press Leased Wire.) COBALT, Ont., July 13.— More than 300 dead by forest fires in the Porcupine district of Ontario today is the record for holocausts in the Dominion | of Canada. | Damage to the extent of mil-| |lions of dollars has been done, thousands of acres of timber jhave been devastated, many | mines have been ruined—and stil the flames rage unchecked. More than 200 settlers with} their wives and families, who | had clearings in the fire zone, are missing and most of them are believed to be dead. In the Porcupine district alone fully 200 foreigners have perished in | the. various mine workings | where they were employed as| Haborers. In some mines prac- tically every living being was scorched to death. The known dead in the Porcupine are: At the West Dome Mining com- pany's shaft—Assayer Buit and wife, Manager Robt. Weiss, wife and Syearold deughter, Chief Car. penter, James McQueen and wife, Captain Jack Hamilton and 27 laborers. At the United Porcupine mine ‘The foreman and three laborers At the Phjladelphia mine—Five haldren of eGorge Dunbar. At the Dome mine—Thirty labor ers, They were cut off in a shaft and smothered to death. Spokane People Drown. Drowned in Porcupine lake—Na. jtean Hass, Andrew Larne, Marvin | Stra: ~ bby Moore and R. F, Mon due. of Spokane. Ten Mines Destroyed. The following mines were totally tuined: The Dome, North Dome, Vipond, Foley, O'Brien, Philadel- . United Porcupine, Standard |Impertal, West Dome and the El Dorado Porcupine. At the 8. Preston East mine, survivors of which reached | Porcupine today, many miners Ctawied into an untimbered shaft, @arrying with them food and water, and managed to live, almost roast- ed, until the great wall of roaring flames had passed them by. Oth- ers in the same secijon took refuge In creeks and lakes, standing in the water to their necks and duck ing their heads under the surface until the flames roared past Checks tMob With Revolver, At South Porcupine, while wo- men and children were being bur- fled to safety on the steamer Gold en City, a gang of fear-crazed for- elgners rushed the boats moored at the wharf and threw the other pas. sengers overboard, Joseph Gardi-| a druggist, rose to the occa: | sion, and with a revolver backed the foreigners away until the wo- mén and children were safe Dome proposition | It was fine for us that a certain king in 1776 was juet-ad@ j1911 just as rotten | might all soon be the enslaved crime to offend a judge, a) rotten as he was. Else we might still be subjects of a king. And it's a fine thing that we have some judges this year they are, else who knows but that we subjects of a judge. DEATH IN RAGING Fi DAPHNE, ALSO THE KING FLAMES LEAVE TIGHTEN NET O FIRST PICTURES OF YOUNG Mrs. Nettie Coble, Bride Ag ed 18, Who W. Asleep. HERE'S THE PRIZE United Preee Leased Wire.) LEM, Or., July 13.—When Rev. P. &. Knight last night performed the marriage cere- mony uniting Hugh 8. G and Miss Nina Mack, tab- lished a record. In 1888 he married Miss Mack's parents in this city, and in 1868 he mar- ried her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. M. N. Chapman. SORE EERE EH A COSTLY BATH. A bath had disastrous re * sults to G. B. Dwyer, 713 See * ond av, He broke both wrists *® when he slipped and fel! in the * tub as he was about to get out * He is now at the Providence *% hospital. KEKE Kae * * * * * * VANCOUVER STRIKE STILL ON VANCOUVER, B. C., July 13 meeting of the executives of the Trades and Labor Council was held }late yesterday afternoon, when the the building was again com pri strike existing in trades In this city sidered, The session vate one, and when It concluded, newspaper men were tersely.in formed that the strike was still on, was a it North American Indians and their music are vanishing, so the government is taking steps to get records of their tunes. If the cat race should die out, do you sup- pose they would record those little serenades which wake you every oonlight night? | te SEATTLE \& New York . & Chicago & Boston *& St. Louis . ° | “ | tk kk tT ttt Ok tt tt! ‘Today {s Seattle's warmest of the season, the official temperature at noon exceeding that of the next warmest day by one degree. It was eooler in the Kast, but a glance at} the above figures show how badly \Seatlo has other big cities beaten for summer climate, ¢ when the | brand of weather here is compara: | tively hot. Its just warm enough to make things look and feel like real summer. Ce ee ee ee * WEATHER FORECAST. * % For Seattle and vicinity: ® * Fair tonight; Friday fair and & * cooler; Nght easterly winds. * * Temperature at noon today, * ®, 76. * Al ARCHIE B. COBLE. | RUMORED GATES 18 DEAD | NEW YORK, July 13,—From |W. Gates here there has been no rumor that Gates died in Paris to- | day | San Diego patient is suing doctor for breaking his ribs $5,000 | worth, while treating him for di- abetes. If you want good: strong jmateria medica, Southern Call- [fornia has ft. = a Another American Girl Exchanges Riches for a (By United Press Leased Wire.) PARIS, July 13,—Through the wedding of Miss Lawrence of New York and the Viscount Courtels de Merlement, a sclon of one of the oldest and richest families belong ing to French nobility, which took place here today, another inter national marriage of great import ance ts added to the rapidly grow Rk KARAM K Rotten Title ing list | The new _yiscountess Jdaughter of ?fr, and Mrs. John |Lawrence ,of New York, and a niece of the late John Lafarge, the jcelebrated artist. She was baptized in the Roman Catholic religion |shortly before her marriage, the jceremony taking place. in Rome |following a syecial audience with jthe pope. is the Yep—It's Certain Every- body Will Follow the Trail of THE GOLDEN GIRL |the business connections of John | confirmetion of a stock exchange | MURDER SUSPEC Man Held for Murder of Young Couple Makes Contradictory Statements, RAINIER, Wash. July 13.—Did the same degenerate criminal who slaughtered William Hill, his wife and two children with an ax im Portland on June &, send Archie Coble and his 18-year-old wife to death by the same means } aieaty ne m0 8 Monday Sheriff Gaston of Thurston coun- ty has arrested Arthur Pierce, and he may be accused of the murder of the Cobles. He had a quarrel with the young wife, it is said, and thad vowed vengeance. Pierce fe rather half-witted and Mrs. Coble had teased him. $1,000 Reward Offered, With a $1,000 reward, offered half by Thurston county and half by the state, for the capture of the | murderer, Sheriff Gaston and his |men are scouring the county for evidence against Pierce Before I heard of Pierce in con- nection with the murder,” sald Gaston today, “the people in Te- nino told me that he had been acting strangely all day. I thought his mind, always weak, had been atteced by hearing about the mur | der Contradicts Himself. ‘On hearing more from Rainier hat Mrs. Coble had taunted him the night before the killing, T ar |rested Pierce and cross-examined him. He contradicted himself con- |stantly, first saying that he was not in Rainier, then that he was, “When I asked him outright If jhe killed the couple, he looked at met shrewdly and said, ‘Well, if I id, you can't prove it” But the authoritigs for another man, who worked { here, murdered couple were found. He | didn't even call for the wages due him. | . The Hill Murder | Wililam Hill lived at Ardenwald, a small station six miles out of Portland. On the morning of June. 9 a woman neighbor dropped into ¢ Hill home, but could find no one about. She stepped into the bedroom of the home and was hor riffed to find the bodies of the man and wife and their two small chil- jdren. The four had been murdered as they slept. A heavy ax, with which the murders had been ac- complished, lay on the floor deside the bed of the children. The unknown slayer had first struck the man and wife a swift, |fierce blow on the head. Then |the children were murdered in a |like fashion. | The Crime at Rainier Archie and Nettie Coble were killed in a like manner, The heavy double-bitted ax with which the bloody crime was accorfiplished lay beside the bodies of the victims, One blow on the top of the head had finished-Coble. He died with- out awaking. The noise of the blow probably awakened the wife. But a swift, fierce blow from the ax—on top of the head—brought |death as suddenly as it had over- }taken her sleeping husband. She had time to crouch a little lower into. the bed-clothing—then the bloodthirsty fiend above her struck. Nettie Coble probably had just time enough to see her murderer when the bloW was struck, Then the slayer pulled the coun- terpane over the bodies and left the house, ‘The awful crimes were the work of a criminal degenerate. A re- ward of $500 has been placed on the head of the slayer by Thurston county commissioners and this will probably be increased to $1,000 to- day. Woman Finds Bodies. The bodies of the Cobles were found Tuesday morning by Mra. William MeNett. Mrs, MeNett was the aunt of Mrs. Coble. Both were about the same age and were “chums.” Mre. MeNett who first |noticed that the Cobles were not about their house as usual on Tuesday morning. The MeNett family were next-door neighbors, @ | “I wonder where Archie and > jtle are today?” remarked Mrs, Meg Nett to Olga West, who was v ing her, “Let's go over and see. | “We went in the back way, says Mrs. MeNett, opening the | kitchen door and calling. There | was no answer, and I had a feel-{ ing that something was wrong. |We went through into the next room, which was a dining and bed. room combined, The curtains were: drawn, We could see the bed in the corner apparently undisturbed, as if no one had slept there, I was scared—I didn't kngw what but I was awfully fright | JUDGES BE A BLESSING IN DISGUISE AFTER ALL Fee the men who offended them Ty _{WEDITION] ©