The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 15, 1912, Page 1

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‘Te A Hii tof actresses keeping their iH same after marriage is a good i oe frequent changing. Ss : Against Appointment of “Lame Duck” Bench for Life Sent to Taft and Senators Fol- t Meeting at Dreamland—Speakers for and gharges of in. = “When a meeting is called to pro- of Con. test against a particular man—" ay to hold) §=Someone In the rear finished the | wae the bomb sentence for him by saying Meneen at the bi Then he must be rotten, fold at Dreamiand Call for Ole Hanson. ‘ the ~ The crowd began calling for Ole en’ ican | Hanson, and when he mounted te . standpat the platform he was greeted by _ moons cheers that amounted to an ovation. coi many at-| Hanson said that he was not with | tacking Homphrey because be ts a ‘eppedition to | #tandpatter, but because he was not # fit man for judge. “t would rather be federal igi 3 2f th Ls f wil S| vhrey, but ended up by saying that | personally he preferred some other lawyer for the job, iad Kelley said: “The last time I spoke here I got arrested for protesting against a decision of a federal The time to protest Is before the federal Judge ts appointed. There's going i for we must get the right kind of mee before the people will really bene Smith said: $ “This is a protest against the a) pointment of an unfit man. But (4 & larger sense it is a protest against system of misrule organized by &reed for private profit. And the remedy is to «mash the system, to Testore the government to the peo- ple, to reserve to the people the |. | Power to recall, not only their legis. ve and executive officials, but also their judges. “What manner of in ie i Vonashoan? man is this Will & trimmer and a trickster, In the law incompetent and a failure. As corporation counsel! a traitor to bis : |Constituents. In congress « retriev. er for tariff barons, a messenger jboy for ship subsidy grafters, and |& petty larceny treasury looter in the votes he cast for mileage PERZEE ton, Rim. to the tact} our time G. F. Mather also spoke for Hum rey. KE. R. Cheadle, a resident of Seattle for 26 years, spoke against Humphrey On the motion of Ole Hanson the meeting adjourned, to reconvene if the president should appoint Hum the day Bord phre y notwithstanding Seattle's pro- the lame dnek | sirnlbnieamidatheetd live offices in *# AH k&RARMRRA RH de On Beattie.” | * Rain tonight and Tuesday; *® | & building |* moderate southeast winds. # there |* Temperature at noon, 46 * fo sperk | * Ah kkhenh ek hh hale HANGED HIMSELF Dangling at the end of a rope ry hitched to a brace of a billboard ed John-|at the corner of West 47th st, and of Humphrey, Ballard av. the body of an unknown i friend |man was discovered at 10:30 this B democrat |morning. There were no papers He sald the of nny description to indicate the ‘be been tn |identity of the suicide, and in the Against | trousers pocket one lone penny, The in Mich-|man was probably 42 years of age who didn't and of medium size. His clothes either. |were rather shabby and he had @ Justice of \flowing mustache. Position that! Peter Bellenger, 902 Went 49th st., o the law | discovered the body of the suicide. law partner | PORTLAND, Or, Ji Mar- tAIE defense by |ket Inspector Joe Singer arrested compo. | Guiseppe Vanjealas for selling tain’ He said |ed fish. “The smelt smelled bai its, popu. | h plained to the police judg pe |“The smelt smelled good” declared reviled, rey is be ~ ae he is going Seal judgeship, and in be at Hum, ie Canjealas. “Singer bas a cold and cant smell,” Case dismissed. VOL. 13. NO. judge |dren were injured in ¢ | hours and. pay are cut by the en- me! Taft May Favor ONLY ~~ 4,000 STRIKERS CHARGED BY MILITIA URWRENCE, “Moses den, th — ined Pema of militia and the artillery were arm ed with rifles and ble-quick to the the factory, smashing windows and Gemolishing fences to secure pick- ete for clubs. 2 ammunition wagon with ten cartridges for each soldier was rushed to the scene of the riot. After the strikers had swept the police aside, the militia arrived and charged the rioters with fixed bay- onets, Fifty men, women and chil charge, and the strikers fed, carrying those worst Injured with them, or der to charge was issued only after the pollee of Lawrence, Lowell, Lynn and Haverhill, the four — about the milis where the strike is in progress. The police were stoned ‘and forced to retreat to the yards ‘of the mills, where they wert held prisoners unttt the militia arrived. New Law the Trouble. oecurred tn Lyon, Lowell or verbill, the workers in those cities have the sume grievance as the Lawrence workers—that their Two Puppets of They Startled Wi nm They Eloped : ployerw’ application of the new state S+-hour law—and it is believed that before the week is over grave condi tions may prevail throughout the en- tire region. In a bungalow beside the Nile, it jan atmosphere spiced with the loves of Cleopatra athe Pharaohs, Horace Wyle, Washing ton society man, and Mra. Philip Hichbora, wife of the son of Rear | | Admiral Hichborn, are living a love | Federal Telegraph |". that has few equals eave in United Press Leased W: | Defying what the world calls Wramineren: Jan, .16.—That | right, and trampling upon tradition, government contro! of telegraphs! Mrs. Hichborn and Wylie, wedded and government ownership, per- and the parents of children, found haps ie a Taft policy was made ciear life vain and narrow. They loved here today following a conference ach other with « passion that between Postmaster Genera! Hitch. parsed the understanding of society, In a Bungalow by the Nile Dwell Recwrned oe Bape to be & revolution In the judielary, = In polities a trader, | cock and the president, following |Hitehcock’s announcement to that) The statement that Hitchcock | and the president were not at odds came officially from the White House following a report that Hitch. cock had been “called upon the car-! pet” to explain his advocacy of the | “#8! Wappy Case Up Arguments the conviction of Charles W. Wappenstein, former chief of police, on a bribery charge, | will be made in the supreme court | tomorrow. Harold Preston has been | jcalled into the case to assist Hill H, | Morris and Silas M. Shipley, in pre |paring the appeal for Wappenstein Prosecutor Murphy, with Deputy Hugh Caldwell, is handling the state's case, It is doubtful if the supreme court will make {ts decision | immediately, (FRANKLIN CALLED LOB ANGELES, Jan. 15.—Bert H. Franklin, charged with bribing | atid attempting to bribe jurors in the McNamara case, today was sub- poenaed to appear before the Los Angeles county grand jury, accord- ing to LeCompte Davis, his attor- ney. The order was returnable to- day. Ce a ee al %* Read Cotterill’s platform on *) * page 7 today. *| * * ee end a —————= * | turning from Honolulu, got her sult and they cast off the yoke and sought contentment in @ faraway jand. Somewhere in the land of past glory and summer tourists the WylieHichborn dove cote houses | the lovers, who eloped, separated to! test their love, and then eloped in. it is « year since Wylie and Mra. Hichborn first eloped. Washington gousiped for a time. After several months Mrs. Hichborn and Wylie decided to put their love to the su. It Wasn’t an Aid to Temperance OEEMPIA, “Jane tee Revers Reversing the Snohomish county supertor court, the Washington suprex court today held that the “origin package” referred to by the local | option jaw means any pockeas usual to trade in which liquor Is} shipped into and delivered in “dry” | territory. The conviction of @ man | who filled gallon demijohns from | barrels and shipped them, is set aside. ‘The court says that manufactur crs’. packages were not meant by the law, and to compel a man who waned a quart of whiskey to buy a whole barrel was certainly not an ald to the cause of temperance. “NO USE TO YOU” SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 15.—Mar- garet C. Winston, Loa Angeles, re case mixed with courteous Charles Rexfor Frantic phoning. “It contains,” she said, “trinkets—and —wéll--they’re of no. use to you.” The Seattle Star INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE THE STAR—MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 191 : : For Brief Moment We Thought the Long-Looked- ONE CENT. gi0i"tii3 1 = The baby carriage still remains the] most successful vehicle for family pur- HOM 1 Noe be For Roosevelt Statement Was Coming GIRL-HEIRESS IS FOUND HARD AT WORK Fifteen-Year-Old Chicago Girl Preferred Love of Young Waiter and Poverty to For- tune and Luxury Alone. (By Unites Press Leased Wire) NEW YORK, Jan. 15.—Infatuated with a waiter and found working as a $3 a week nurse girl that she Might be near him, Violet Buehler, the 16-year-old Chicago heiress who disappeared Nov, 26 and for whom the skyscrapers of the Chicago loop district were searched, is today held here awaiting word from her rela- tives. For a time it was believed the iri had been kidna; This seem- @d to have been borne out in a mye terious letter which fluttered from 8 window of an upper story of an office building in Chicago, It was signed with her name and said she was being held a prison tain office. Search failed to toc: her. God of Love by to Test Love Wrote to “Jack” Last night Miss Buehler was dis- covered working as an attendant for Miss Britt, an invalid in an East Side tenement, under the name of Belle Rows. The police found a note address ed to Jack Clewne, a waiter, which read: “Jack: Don't give up, Hun, I must go. Will write as soon as possible. Bye, bye--V “P, 8.—Stick to me, Jack. thing will be o. k Admits infatuation se = Miss Buehler admits her infatua- INO HER CHILD tion for the waiter. She denies, " however, they are married. Put pot or Rag toturned to thelr | i. emphatically deciares ahe wil not return to her relatives in Chi- By: Sasa. en ne Tad the |€aRo unless taken by force peace and satisfaction his nature| “! expect to marry Jack Clewne demanded Something was missing. |When | am a little older,” she said. When the longing bocame unbear. |“Ot course | love him. He used to he made over the major por-|>¥M around Chicago with my gang. tion of hia fortune to his wife and @ fine fellow. They say I'm children, resigned from his clubs, |feotish to feave home and all that turned his back on the world and | $100,000 to work for $3 a week, but for Burope, i! can't see it that way. | don't aa. Hichborn was not received |think I'm foolish all. 1 would ‘by her husband, because her moth. | rather work and make my own way erin-law interfered. She remained |here than be rich in Chicago. My at her mother's home until Wylie | foster mother there treated me well departed, and jast November joined [but wouldn't let me go out, and | Every- ie |served three men skulking near the him. The lovers had convinced themse!ves and each other that they lived only that they might be to- couldn't have any boy friends. What She Calls “Dandy” “I suppose now I'll bave to go back to Chicago byt I will return SSTMETe: eee eens filing of a divorce sult bY to New York the first chance I get. Hiehborn has reopened the door of Other girls without money are al- speculation, but Washington isn't | iowed to go into the world and gonsiping. The openness of the) noxe their own way. They can happiness hunters made Koss) UM nave sweethearts and do as they necessary. The very daring of the | ease =~ think that's perfectly couple silenced criticiam, and there dandy. 1 enjoyed doing something are some who sympathize with |). for some one else, and I felt them that I amounted to something. Ip *hicago I was the one taken care of, and I didn’t amount to anything. Yow I've got to go back to it gain.” Leaps Into His Arms SOCIALISTS INDORSE WELLS OVER BROWN The soclaliats held a meeting yer | terday, and endorsed H. M. Wells for) ties Buehler was arraigned be- mayor by # vate of 185 to 47, over tore Justice Olmstead in the chil- Dr. Rawin J. Brown, who filed of | dren's court on a charge of being Saturday. C. J. Jacobs and George under improper . guardianship, Moltzner w wndorsed for counctl- Leaving the courtroom she oo Miebrand for COMP-\Ciewne in the corridor and break- troller, ©. tis aa are _|ing away from her escorts leaped Tligre were no filings for any of- jiity his arms and tried to kiss him, fice ‘tite morning. Nomination P*lbut the police interfered and © ut by two counell- pereid pousibiiiticn however, |Clewne was arrested on a technical A meeting of the commitiee of 4¢)charge. He was soon re police declaring his relations with hendiivg the algn for Cotterill | will be held tonight and elect a man- |the child were perfectly proper. | ager, | G. A. R. HEAD HERE Judge Harvey M. Trimble, com-| manderdn-chief of the G. A. R., is in Benttle to pay an official visit to} the department of Washington and | Alaxka. He will leave for Spokand this afternoon. He delivered an ad- dress to the old veterans at the armory at 1 o clock this afternoon He has just completed a visit to Caltrornia and Oregon. He will go from Spokane to his home at Prince- ton, Ill. of the Children’s Aid Society until her foster mother arrives Saturday to take her back to Chicago. Renee Great Clearance Sale Continues Girls, leap year girls, if you please, how would you go about and what would you do and say when you pop the question to Sir Admirer who seems just a trifle backward, perhaps, about king you to share his fot in life ‘That's the question The Star boldly asked Saturday evening, and it’e asked again today. And the in coming right in to | To make it interest- | fing, 12 fine theatre seats will be} given away to those girly suggest ing the best way to propose to @ fellow. The letter of proposal must GIRLS, GET BUSY WITH THOS not exceed 100 words, and the con-| test is strictly limited to the fair sex, For the writer of the best pro-| posal received by Wednesday night four orchestra seats for “A Fool There Was,” at the Metropolitan Thursday night, will be held, and} two seats for the second best letter. For the writer of the best pro- posal that comes in by Saturday morning there will be four seats for the opening performance of “The Deep Purple,” at the Moore, Jan. 21, and two seats for the next best. Hurry up, girls! Here are a few of the first let-' E PR Men's Suits, 18.00 values ... 10.50 $20.00 and $22.50 values. $14.50 Boys’ $4.00 Suits and 0 OPOSALS rv) vercoats Ne + $2.05 ‘The whole store 1# involved in this Clearance Sale, Everything is reduced—Hats, Underwear, Furnishings, Separate ‘Trousers and practically all other lines, ters: I love you. You appeal to me mentally, physically and spiritual: ly, Wilt you marry me? “ " MRS. D. P. Mr. For some time pai have anxtous to make| my feelings known to you, but have not had the opportunity of doing so. I therefore think it best not to de- lay any longer, but 1 wish very much husband if you tht happy with me, Wi other so often the lant two y that I am quite sure I should ne like any one but you, and your heart is . Af thie in a married the better. TERESA F. M. ne Shafer Bros Ani | | | | | saw) eased, the} Violet was remanded to the care} : | THUGS AS WIFE PHONES WARNING California Legislator Murdered After Desperate Battle With - Three Masked Hold-up Men—Wife Was at Telephone to Warn Him of Danger as Fatal Shot Was Fired. (By United Press Leased Wise) = {Looking up, he saw they were SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 15.—/armed and masked. Two had their Fighting desperately with three features concealed by red bandan- masked holdups who attacked him | nas, and the third by a white hand- in his satoon here, John E. Mullally, |/kerchief. The latter seemed to be jassemblyman from the Thirtieth | the ringleader. California district, was fatally shot; The two in red masks took sta- early today. He died soon after-|tions at the door and the one in ward. white advanced toward the bar. John Craig, who was in the sa ‘Hands up,” he commanded In a loon, was shot through the thigh in| gruff voice, emphasizing his order & fusillade fired by the bandits aft-| with an oath. jer Mullalily fell, The thugs e Mullally huried himself upon the caped, bandit. With one hand he sought At the time Mullally was shot, | to seize the pistol and with the oth- [his wife was trying to telepbone!er to choke his jlant. In the him from their home to be careful, | first strug, the gun was dis- as she had a short time before ob-| charged, byt the bullet went wild, The thug, « powerful man, |house, as though lying in wait for) wrenched his pistol arm free and jsome one. Mrs. Mullally called up| fired point blank at Mullally. The jat the very moment her husband | bullet passed through the abdomen, |recelved his death wound. Mullally sank, groaning, to the Noor, | In the saloon at the time of the | Wife Prostrated. |holdup, besides Mullally, were hie! Mrs. Mullally was prostrated by jbartender, Jack Tierney, John the tragic death of her husband. Craig, Jack Gilroy and Oscar | Between sobs she told of the effort | Grouse, working men. |she made to warn her’ husband. How Crime Was Done. |. “I was unable to get central at Mullally was preparing to leave | first,” she said, “and when I did, Another Pastor for home when three men entered cei thing had happened.” Arrested, Suspected of Murder (By United Press Leased Wire) on Miss Eisie Coe, aged 28 years, PITTSBURG, Pa. Jan. 15.—A| his private secretary, which result. case almost parallel to that of the|¢d in her death. Rev. C. V. T. Richeson of Boston, |, (it 0, rewilt of the jurs's findings confessed murderer of Avis Linnell, | a statutory charge has pan, ouch, | developed here today when a war-| and he is being sought by the police | rant was Issued for the arrest of the | of a dozen Eastern states, Rev. W. F. McFarland, aged 60| According to the police, the min- years, pastor of the United Presby-| ister performed two operations on terian mission at Greenville, Tenn.| the girl at her home here. It is A coroner's jury today recommend. | alleged that the mother and sister ed that the minister be held pending |had no kuowledge of Mise Coe’s ‘ondition, believing that McFarland was a licensed physician. SS —=——_= |HE’S CIVILIZED NO —— SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 15.—No longer is Ishi the “untainted aborig- ine.” He's thoroughly civilized. Be- fore an affiliated college crowd he started to sing, then suddenly sto-p ped, borrowed a silk hat from a pro- fessor and took up a collection. an investigation of charges that h performed two criminal operation = es OE COPS FELL FOR IT (By United Press Leased Wire) SAN FRANCISCO, Jan, 15.—Po- lHceman McGee spied a fisherman in Goldén Gate park. Fight. Both! in aqua. Drags prisoner out. Voice from the greens ‘ery realistic, officer. We wanted a good moving picture. Thanks.” i ee 2 2 a ae kee eee EMPLOYERS’ LIABILITY ACT DECLARED CONSTITUTIONAL—HERE’S WHAT The employers’ Nability act of 1908, the constitutionality of which was today upheld by the United States supreme court, is &@ measure passed by congress to determine matters of com- pensation to employes of public carriers engaged in interstate commerce, and is designed to supersede various state laws on the same subject As originally passed by congress, the act was declared un. constitutional by the United States supreme couat, for the rea. son that it related to intrastate as well as interstate commerce. » the Intrastate clauses were deleted from the iT The purport of the law is that in cases where negligence exists as the cause of the accident contributory negligence on the part of the employe is not sufficient to act as a bar to action for damages, provided that the negligence of the carrier was at least as great as that of the employe. 4ESERE SEES HEE ESE DEES AAEKESERRARASHEE EERE E ES Crue! Husband Runs Away : ‘ With Cash and Other Woman AMR MR HH HH HK) COMpAnies * ® that he * “You'll never see me again, *| * I'll never come back alive. *| * Tell Nicolich I don't know | * nothing about his wife—she w® ain't with me. Go to your * uncle in Austria—he'll take * care of you.” take eae a and friends estimate must have taken at least $10,000 on his Might. His note to his wife indicated that he would never return, There is another side to the pres- ent tale—the Nicolich side. Mrs. | Mike Nicolich disappeared a couple jof days before Bussanich left, with $1,000 of her husband's money, In | Spite of the denial in the letter, it is considered certain by the desert- ed husband and wife that the couple are together, The fact that Bus- | Sdnich knew she was missing is con- | sidered ample proof. It is believed that the runaway couple will go to Austria, their native land. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 15,— Ptomaine poisoning has today caused the death here of Abraham Stern, a prominent banker, secre- tary of the firm of Levi Strauss & and son-in-law of Bugene Meyer, head of the Lazard Freres bank, New York, He is. survived by a wife and one son, * * * * * ERR E KERR A scribbled note, a hundred do) Jars and past recollections—with that Mrs. Matt Bussanich and six small children, living at 128 First ay. W., must face the world. Bus- sanich has been missing for the past week, and when his wife re. ceived the note yesterday it con- firmed her fears. She and childron were deserted, practically penniless, while her husband had fled with the family fortune and with another woman, Bussanich was a fish buyer, and had been employed by the New England and the Occidental fish

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