The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 3, 1912, Page 1

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“The think they are cultivat- been GUN MEN” PORT WEN ra | wire) plowed. ONLY VOL, 13. NO, 290, DUEL IN TONG WAR Sin Suey Ying man, was overpow- B—En- ered by Frank Peterson, a plumber. sing of one two 2p ing 8 ie about down view hide Fong, who assault to commit murder. ty Sing Foy asked why he had risked hia life men to stop which in wait from the of our white boys the other day of| Both prisoners were charged with When Chinaman, Peterson said: Over a $300 Slave Girt, ‘One of these Chinese shot.one at and | think {t's time for os to pro ‘opened tect “ourselves.” The addition of the Sing Suey Yings as participants in the war, whieh ie raging up and the coast «as a result of of trouble which started three days be- ago in San Jose over a $300 slave @umerous girl whom the Hop Sings had im. docen ported from Seattle, makes it a ‘by the quar five-handed battle. ga their feet, The foud between the Hop Sing ‘the China and Sucy Sing clans was reopened sight of at the same moment bere and at ogee ‘Was arrest: fatally wounded, Ab Joe. Dark Revenge s Behind Kidnaping Pal j who disappea Aes threw San Jose. Three tong leaders were Ab killed last night, and two others Chinatown ts greatly excited over the feud. jmanded from Antonio's parents, is the mest diabolical case in recent , Would police history.” bere | Antonio's brother Michael HER HUSE TO DISCUSS TERMINAL, The first public expression by each of the port commissioners on the socalled terminal project will be made at the mass meeting to be held r the auspices of the so clalists tomorrow afternoon, at 2 pm. at Dreamland rink. Gen, H. M. Chittenden, chatrman of the commission, and Commiasion- ers Hridges and Remaberg have each accepted the invitation to ad dross the meeting. Ray 8. LaVarre will preside, and the “only other Speaker announced today will be Judge Richard §, Winsor, soclatiat momber of the school board. The latter ts & vigorous opponent of any agreement that will give the termin al to private interes! Stilt at” Work. This morning, Port Engineer R. |. Thomson was tn consultation with Harold Preston, counsel for the commission, over the details to go Into the agreement with the pro- moters of the terminal, for which a send heyy of $3,000,000 may be submitted to the people at the elec: ton on March 6. ‘The port commissioners have met every day this week, working out a gp sera which, it ia claimed, wih property safeguard the inter ests of the people from a waterfront monopoly, The terminal teat wiht be submitted together with a proposed band iaaue of $1,100,000 for the general development of Seat- Ue's harbor, along the lines for which the port of Seattle was orig- Inally created, Jr, emali| Which leads me to believe that re-| Gen. Chittenden 7. venge is behind the kidnaping. This | ctatement ‘that Sesii ulnons wes ver authorized by the port com- minsion to effect an agreement in ita behalf with representatives of lead: | peared recently, after a year's dis | terminal syndicate. Gen. Chit p parents to give time that he had been murdered the agents of the Riack Hand, and an | S0lng ‘a appearance. the Biack investigation on this theory was| p the case to made by the authorities, jer his return home Soon aft sald fs dead suddenly, and it was generally be we can Meved that he was potsoned by ene- been de-, ates of the Maggiore 4 Treated Marriage Too Lightly, Judg e She knew him but four days when she married him. And she was 50. He was about 60. They lived to [gether for only about six short Michael died | fre tt tenden points out that he had even It was thought at re attempted to keep Calhoun ‘oat Kast because tl t com miasion needed bis advice. os ‘its attorney on other propositions be- t that time. ALL WOMEN CANDIDATES ARE BARRED first guests of New York. weeks, And Mra. Matilda Lane ap-| Here is a solar plexus blow for) INDEPENDENT NEN WORLD'S PRETTIEST WOMAN ANDESAYS SO Duchess of Counaught at Gorern-jone ment House after their return from/tiful She is Mrs. Charles Dai } tle ’ g MRS. CHARLES DANA GIBSON , Feb. 3—-Mr. and [ed to'name the 10 most beautiful | Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson were the women in the world “I dare not “I can, however, name thom 1 know to be mont beau 1 pame her for it pute me The tamous illustrator was ask-'rigdt at home,” Sta PAPER IN SEATTLE FEBRUARY 3, 1912. Oj GOTTERILL | FREMONT TONIGHT George ¥. Cotterill, progressive candidate for mayor, will be the chief speaker at a big rally In Fre. mont tonight at the Odd Fellows’ The meeting place can be [reached on Fremont-Ballard, West | Woodland, and Phinney ay. cars The meeting begins at 8 p. m Cotteriil will discuss the Issuer of the campaign fully, It will be his only speech tonight, and the | Fremont people will not be treated [to @ fiveminute colorless talk Cotterill, ws usual, will speak di rectly and to the point, discussing the affairs of interest to the peo- ple at the present time, the city lear ine, the telephone system and lother public questions. Besides Cotterill, De Cora 8 Eaton, prominently identified with the woman suffrage fight which re ceived its chief assistance from George F. Cotterill, will also ad dress the Fremont meeting, Ivan 8, Blair, a prominent insurgent who was one of the chief speakers In the Poindexter campaign, and James T. Lawler will also speak. 10 ARMED MEN FIGHT FOR GLAND (By Unites souTH BEND, Determined to hold possession of mining claims they staked out the ranch of John Ellsworth, ne. here, 150 men and women, who are armed, are camped today along the South Fork river, despite the ef- forts of the sheriff to dislodge them, Early tn the woek it was le: that a valuable vein of gold bear. ing quarts had been found ow the Ellsworth ranch, There Was an limmediate’ rush for the locality | from here and other towne Elleworth interviewed lawyer when he found prospectors squat ting on his property appealed to the sheriff who sne- cooded «In dislodging claimants, but they returned as soon as he left The colony is being added to by Before Nine o’Clock; The Registration Books Will Be in Your Precinct Near Your Own Home Until Star Urges Every Reader to Register Now; Many Important Issues Will Be Put up to the Voters THOME EDITION Lots of men are yelling “Stop thief!" who ought 2 N@ > i! to be running. THAZZARD CASE READY FOR THE (Special to The Star) PORT ORCHARD, Wash., 3.—There will be no ve in all prob: jbegun yesterday afternoon, are still The case will go to in his final speech to the jury. At- torney E. W. Gregory spoke ali morning in behalf of the defense, following his agsociat who finished yeste Dramatic The scene in the court room pre- sents « dramatic tableau, with |Dorothea Willfameson and Dr. Haz zard facing the jury and eagerly watching every move and listening to every word, Miss Margaret Con way, the Williamson family nurse, who was most instrumental in bringing about the prosecution, is also occupying a prominent plact jin the room, On each side of Mrs, Hazzard, her husband, former Lieut. 8 Hazzard of the United |States army, and her son, 8. Bur. | eld sit. The court room was so | crowded all day, with an audience jeomposed mostly of women, that the court ordered the room cleared in order to make way for the jury when recess was taken, Gregory arraigned the prosecu- tion as having been maliciously in- spired by physicians who did not agree with the fasting theory to cure aliments | Four Verdic | Four verdicts are possible un ‘der Judge Yakey’s instructions: First degree, second degree, mai ana Possible. JURY TONIGHT slaughter and acquittal. The law does not make it a pub- lic duty to supply food except where one is in the relation of phy- to patient. If you believe the endant was conscientious in her belief that her treatment was per, then you will find her not was one of the instrnetions. ¢ court, on the other hand, lemphanized that the state did not jhave to prove that Dr. Hazzard by {her own hand withheld food from Claire Williamson, but that she |committed an unlawful act If, tak- ing advantage of the patient's con- fidence, she advised an insufficient diet. Prosecuting Attorney Stevenson began the argument for the state yesterday afternoon, and arraigned Dr, Hazzard asa bird of prey, send- ing seductive iterature to the weak and lying in wait to pluck the feathers from ry pigeons.” Argument for Defense. E. D, Karr made the argument jfor the defense, in which he re jferred to the prosecution of Dr. | Hazzard as inspired by the fact that she was not a member of the “regular school of physicians, with jthe X. Y. Z, aftey their mes.” He |read from Dorothea Williamson's | testimony, and also from Miss Con- | way's, to show that Claire William- | son suffered from lifelong ailments, jand that her death did pot result | from starvation. | Mrs. Hazzard, who had appeared | haggard and weary when the state's rebuttal evidence was going in, cheered up considerably whee the state's first argument was over. “They won't hang me,” she said, laughingly. “The muscles of my |neck are too strong.” r, LA FOLLETTE ATTACKS — THE “KEPT PRESS” (By United Press Leased Wire) WASHINGTON, Feb. 3—Senator The lawyer | Robert M. La Follette of Wisconsin | w! isin bad today with Eastern news the mine paper publishers, following a vit- te: Nace denunciation of he termed the “kept press” at ‘WY ban- |Quet of newspaper men in Philadel. | were controlled through that in- | terdependence of investments ‘hich ‘thes the publishers up to the jbanks, advertisers and special in- rests.” La Follette said In part: o expect this kind of control, sooner or tater, to reach the maga- jtines. But more than this, 1 now Ol SEN TELLS HOW CHINAMAN WAS MURDERED PORTLAND, Or., Feb. 3.—"Lift | her rooms carly on the morning of 1s to the skies, Pray to| December 19. |piied yesterday for a divorce from} women candidates. Some one was, Daniet Lane. ungentiemanly enough to dig into | “He told me he was welltodo, | the city charter and find a provie- jbut he compelled me to live in alfon, which, it is claimed, will dis- tworoom shack. It was filthy | qualify all women in the present ifrom two years of bachelor Hfe|campaign from running for office recruits who are arriving from out side points on every train. phin inet: night. | want to warn you of a subtle new je Arriving here, today, Senator La) peril, the centralization of all ad- Follette went to Providence hos-|vertising, that in time will gag you, pital with bis daughter, who under-|What has occurred on a small scale went a slight operation, and it was in most of the cities will extend to |Feported that the “baiting” he en-/a national scale, and will, before HOCH’S MESSAGE After they had has in the 4 Settle the which for weeks, Remzi, Labor ot the the dis- ‘& meet- of ali | to de- STATE Ot ston” will the ¥. M. IN YOUR STORE You Live Up to It.)- iT ANY b NO SUCH THING. ESE 1S“WHOLE MILK” Teaeet sia get: all: the"voles’ which + CONTAINING ALL THE THE cow GAVE - AND NO HERE 13 “SKIM MILK” Bonesty—o0 Of Seatt) “full cr Well if the without once being cleaned. When | There are two, Mra. Kate Sterling I tried to clean it up, he remon-|4nd Mrs. Syivia Hunsicker, who are strated,” after counciimanic jobs. Judge Myers denied the divoree.| But this provision says that a “People cannot treat the marital | Candidate for office must be “a qual) state so lightly and expect the |!fed elector for four years courts to take them seriously. Four !9« the election Now, it i# ar jdays’ acquaintance, six weeks of | €0¢d that four years ago nd woman married life, between people of sich | ¥44 # qualified electof, because t! ‘advanced age, certainly does not right of franchise didn't come to} recommend itself as a proper case | em until November, 1919. jfor divorce.” ° ° Tammany Chief Dies (By United Prees Leased Wire) — NEW YORK, Feb. 3.—State Sen-} GREAT DAY FOR’EM | ator Thomas Grady, a former presi-| PHOENIX, Ariz., ent of the Praternal Order of antes since an a cyclone | Eaxies, and for many years » power |23 years ago whisked their shack | in the inner circles of Tammany | #4 4nd dumped thom rode apart. Hall, died at his home here today. Senator Grady’s health had been ‘declining since Tammany chief. tains denied him the presidency of | the state senate, although he had been the leader during the yeara| when the party was in the minority in the legislature. This, his in- timate friends assert, broke his heart bi } the problem up to Corporation Coun- sel Bradford, who must give | opinion before the primary ballots are printed, i | ] | | here today. Each though We rogret to announce that Doe lawkins, the celebrated political — o- economist and chairman of te ba mittee on truth, is critically il). TROOPS ON BORDER ' Doe was commissioned by The Star (Ry United Press Leased Wire) [to lineup the political situation in WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—BSecre'geattle. He approached the task tary of War Stimson ordered Gen.| with his customary enthusiasm and Duncan, commanding the Depart ‘avidity, The article appended ts ment of Texas, today to utilize the ine product of his virile pen, He troops of his department, totaling | was evidently concluding the last 5,000 men, to maintain peace @O08 | naragraph: when he fell from his the Mexican border and prevent) chair in a swoon. Bill Banks and firing across the Rio Grande by | prof, Snitz, his colleagues on the Mexican revolutionists of Mexicat | committee on truth, were hastily federal troops. Gen. Duncan #25 | summoned, and the stricken man positively ordered to permit no was conveyed to a hospital. This menace to American Ives OF | orning’s bulletins state that if ined s Doe recovers he will probably live ‘for quite a while, but, on the other hand, if he dies the chances are lstrongly against ultimate recov- ery. | On the One Hand After a car survey of the sit- uation in Seattle I am forced to the conclusion that Hi Gil will [win the coming election. | Indeed, I have the word of himself that he can't be beaten. He proved his contention with facts and figures which a trained prog Snosticator of political events ix bound to regard as fina) and con- were given him in all previous elections. Aasuredly he may count on those votes again, In addition \thousands of voters who were inst him in the recall, but who re now convinced that he is @ mis judged man, will rally to his ban- | Also, the women, whose in- nse of right and fair |play enables them to pierce the | fogs of polltical chicanery and mis- | representation, will vote for Gill. Bearing these facts in mind, it is Star proposes it for|plain that Gill has the mayoralty There's nothing unhealthful about |cinched, The ot candidates are eam’ —but the label is a lie. The|nowhere. Unhesitatingly 1 give (ruth is told, him 35,000 votes out of a 60,000 | {3 jner. | stinetive ain woy Th up your e the Joss for forgiveness and say it is a lie,” shouted Lew Soon, Chinese saloonman of San Francisco, today, as he faced Oj Sen, the Chinese woman who accuses ot Sancta es $i Sam of having mul Se Bing, whose body was shipped hesfrom here to Seattie in a trunk. “You do the same,” retorted Os Ben, who, with her alleged fetiow- Comptroller Bothwell has passed |conspirators, is charged with Seid's| murder. Neither paid any attention to the interpreter and attorneys or detec tives as they hurled charges and counter-charges at each other. C ters ang sald nothing. The Chinamen are their stories. IT’S ALL SETTLED NOW—DOC registration. And on the Other Hand On the other hand, Gill can't pos sibly win, He stands no chance at all. He might beat Cotterill or Wells in the primary. But the final will be a formality necessary for the election of Thomas A. Par- ish, and the public might as well recognize that fact now and get to- gether and make it unanimous, Parish ig the inan beyond a shadow of doubt. I am in the fortunate position of being able to quote Ole Hanson as my authority, Parish, says son, will draw both from former Gill supporters and from Cotterill Gill won't get one-third of his re- all vote. The rest Paris! In addition, Parish will get 85 per cent of thé votes that went to George. Dilling, recall can- didate against Gill, which will run lthe total up to 40,000 out of a pos- sible 60,000. “Honestly,” save 800, can’t see anything but Parish.” This looks to me like good po- tical horse sense, and I here set it down as my considered opinion that Parish will be our next mayor, Ht i | m and amiling, Wong sat near! i | O1 Sen asserts that) Utah, to Los Angeles wa: d and F. McMillan met| Wong Si Sam and Lew Soon made | here today by Vice President John. |for a Philippine exhibit at the 1915 it the otha combined attack on Seid Bing ln will go to! sympathy keecked bim unconscious with a hammer, she says, they cut his thapatethen sent her over to Wong's roam to stay while they packeg the ima tronk. She now say abe did pot participate in the matter at all, Although the woman's wearing apparel was found in his room, Weng denies he ever met her. Lew says he knew her, but that he never met Beid or was in her rooms when | Detectives | the murder occurred expect all three will break down sogn and the real truth regarding the affair will develop. FRESNO, Ci Feb. 3—B8ep \the window of detective headquar-| the report from Los Angeles that the Denver and Rio Grande rail sticking to’ road was to build from Marysville, made son of the Missour! Pacific. Yet, bearing in mind the changes and chances of political warfare, and purguing the quest to the very fountainhead—to wit, Manager Kennedy of the socialist campaign Iam bound to admit that Parish doesn't stand a ghost of a- show atever happens to candidates, Parish, at least, will be eliminated at the primary, obliter- ated, annihilated, wiped out: Mark you, the socialist in the re call election polled 5,000 votes. The socialists then had only 120 members’ who were paying due: That war a year ago. Today there are 1,200 socialists carrying cards, For every socialist carrying a-card there are ten voters with soel: " itive vote of 12,000 to begin with, It could, not possibly be less. The influence of 12,000 voters, all solidly pledged to so- claligm, is bound to attact at least 1200 more, giving a total of 24,000 out of 60,000 registered votes. This will give Hulet M, Wells first place in the nomination. Hip, hip— But, of Course, if— In attempting political prophecy, ever a difficult and dangerous task, makes a pos! ; Feb. 3,—Denial of | HAWKINS PICKS NEXT MAYOR the other} . |helped them to get itt FROM KARSA Former Gov, E. W. Hoch of Kan- sas made a stirring address at the Y¥. M He gave “A Message From Kan ans,” and pleaded for the enforce. | ment of the law. | “In my mind,” he sald, “the great est question confronting the Ameri can people is not the tariff, or the labor question, or the race ques- tion, but the enfdéreement .of the law.” He said a public officer, who is derelict in this respect, should \certalnly have to give up the office SAN FRANCISCO, Feb, 3.--Offt jeers of the Panama-Pacific expos tion today received cables from Manila that the Philippine legisia- ture has appropriated $250,006 gold fair here. I never allow myself to surrender to hasty enthusiasms and prema- ture conclusions. The cocksure prophet is unreliable. The careful prognosticator must stand upon a pinnacle of gloomy isolation’ and from that detached height weigh the pros and cons, Only when he has viewed a problem from every je and studied every phase is he Justified tn coming to a definite and final conclusion. Which brings me logically and gracefully to the contemplation of the chances of George F. Cotterill, the progressive candidate. of, that George F, Cotterill can't lose. It's no good blinking facts. Cotterili will get all the votes which were given to Senator Poin- |dexter when insurgency swept Se- attle. That was less than two |years ago. Insurgency since then jhas progressed by leaps and \bounds. Who is not a progressive these days? Think of the “band wagon” progressives who have jseen the light since 1910! 1 ven ture to stata that the progressive vote this election will run up to the 30,000 mark in men voters alone. Now, then, since 1910 the women Jhave got the franchise. And who Who was their foremost champion? Why, |George F. Cotterill. He will get |the women’s support. He is the only one of the candidates who can at this time show a certified list of 100 women workers on his com- mittee. Therefore, out of a registration of 60,000, Cotterill will get a ma- jority, not only over the next high- est candidate, but over all the other candidates together, In conclusion, | stake my reputa- tion as an expert that Gill js bound to win, that Parish can't possibly lose, that Cotterill is as good as elected already, and that Wells— C. A. auditorium tast night. | And let me state here and now, | with all the emphasis I am capable | jdured at the hands of the news- |paper publishers in Philadelphia jbad so unnerved him that he need- ed medical attendance. In his speech at Philadelphia [Senator La Bollette alleged that |many of the country’s newspapers long, close in on our magazines.” During the latter part of his two hours’ speech Senator La Follette was constantly interrupted by the diners. At the conclusion of his speech, early this-morning, he was Jeered and hissed, ‘YOU KNEW WHAT Sibyl M. Chartrand got a divorce from Felix Chartrand. One month tater she remarried wim. Yester day, after about two years, she again applied for a divorce, charg- ing cruelty and abuse to her chil dren by another marriage. Judge Myers denied the divorce. “You knew the step you were jtaking when you remarried. The jcourts cannot treat marriage |lightly as some people do. cannot get divorces and nullify that court action within one month, and then again ask for the same di- vyoree.” | | ON BOGUE PLANS Oltman’s hall, at Rainier Heights, | Was packed last night by citizens to |hear George F. Cotterill, progres- [sive candidate for mayor, and for- orer City Engineer R. H. Thomson discuss the Bogue plans. Mr. Cot- terill was given am enthusiastic re- ception and discussed the plans as they would affect (hat section of the the ke * * WEATHER FORECAST * * Light rain or snow tonight * *® and Sunday; moderate easter- * |* ly winds, Temperature at # | noon, 38, * * * RK KEENE YOU WERE DOING) as | People | = MEETINGS TONIGHT. Cotterill — At Fremont, Odd Fellows’ hall. Parish—At Columbia, Hill- mar City and Dunlap. Gill — At West Seattle, West Side hall. MEETINGS SUNDAY. Dreamland rink—2 p. m., terminal project to be discussed by port com- missioners, Socialists—At Labor Tem- ple, 8 p. m. RHEE * * * = Rev. M. A. Matthews will & % speak on the coming city elec: ® * tion tomorrow night at the & * First’ Presbyterian chureb. & * His subject will be “The & Soft Pedal—The Devil's Plea.” #® * RARER KR EK SUNDAY MEETING Anna Maley, a socialist oratot from Chicago, will: be the chiet |speaker at the Labor Temple to- morrow night. Addresses will also be made by H. M. Wells, ‘socialist candidate for mayor, and E. J. | Brown, chndidate for corporation counsel, The socialists invaded Parish’s hame district in the uni- versity last night, at Maye’: and drew a bigger aud the standpat candidate did in his “coming out” party Thursday night, Cc ON COURTS IN CP. articles zine, w! der the will be Courts.” Ing law: ing of with th turned lecture ican league. ONNOLLY WILL TURN SPOTLIGHT LECTURE TONIGHT Connolly, the magazine writer, whose on “Big Business and the Bench” are now being printed in Everybody's Maga- ill speak in. Arcade hall tonight, un- Repub- Mr, Connolly's subject tonight “Tragedies and Comedies of Our auspices of the Progressive Mr. Connolly, 20 years ago, was a practic. yer In Butte. The buying and sell- judges, however, so disgusted bim e legal profession that he quit it and his efforts to the magazine field. His tonight will be the first of its kind ever delivered in Seattle,

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