The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 13, 1912, Page 1

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| The Seattle Star firinn poison of human life,-- IH Just when politics is getting hot we'll i ' — ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE i) probably be thrust into a red hot south} Home; Will Go to Frisco (My United Press Leased Wire) | VOL. 14. NO. 10 SEATTLE, WASH, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 48, 1912. i oe etewiiad i LAWRENCE, Maes, March 13— ON THAINS AND NEWS STANDS Se HARRY WHITNEY TREAT PLAYS SOLO ON PLOW FOR “CITY BEAUTIFUL” ONE CEN Wi bik he Py st 5 Robber With Club and Then Shoots | ith Dead Man's Gun—Disastrous End of for Outlaws. N MAN 'Amandsen to Start Soon for STRIKERS seni HAE the passengers, One of the bandits covered the engineer and the other covered Trousdell, ordering the messenger to Open the mall sacks. Catching the bandit eff guard, Mew senger Trousdell seized a wooden matiet and struck the robber a ter- rifle blew on the head, death re- sulting instantly, Trousdel) then took the dead man's gun and whee the other bandit approached, shot him dead. a the em The engine and care were re two lattached and thé trata bandits | to Sanderson with the two dead rob- loot bers aboard. The express car car HOMSON SAYS fT RESIGNATION | pon. who announced. the other day, his intention of, the commission, today gave The Star the {for reaiguing is that # vacation ia needed to re . it seems almost incredible that this | tirdiess euersy should seek rost at this Ume in reer, Se be was asked aboct It. gihing to read between the linex in your resigns one Wires March 13. to rod peas por cover. the DagKase this morning. gay anything.” he replied re been treated with every courtesy by the port @o uot Want me to resien; that they are try- ‘Out honestly and sincerely.” Say that the terminal proposition will be ta deat of pressure brought to bear to rush ; some of it has been from sources ‘and honest in the belief that to delay would Bi the city, or, rather, the port, should operate the ey erittet for spending money, but I have never The end of the great strike of Law- rene textlie workers come at 11:30 & ™, today, when the strikers’ sub- committee announced they had ac- cepted the w. increase offered by. President Wood of the Ameri- can Woolen company. it was an- Reunced that the strikers gained Practically-every point for which they contended. Here Are the Terms Detailed figures contained in the American “Woolen company's offer which reenlied in the end of the textile ntrtke bave just been an- “ Lan some instances the ‘wotkers: are, given 20 per cent in- The votice of tnerease to will be posted In the morning, The notice ou formerly receiving 9 ty receiving 10 and 11 Feceive increases of. Ypcents , ind those receiving 11 and 2 eenie receive inereaner of 114 Kmployes receivini gents to 20 cents an hour facroases of 1 cent hourly, gre} A SEATTLE MILLIONAIRE AT THE PLOW—CAUGHT IN THE act At. 10 o'clock this morning the; auspices of the Seattle Garden club, ;in time Seattle would be the bright large. vacant lot the New Wash hotel, on Second av., was a wilderness of ash heaps, tin cans, barrei hoops, old corsets, broken bottles, broken bricks, mor- tar and stumps. At noon it was nicely plowed and poreawed and ready for the plant- ng. The hero of Marry society man, who played a solo on a plow At noon came & cessation of agri cultural acti workers get & flat cent. Overtime for at the rate the occasion was Whitney Treat, millionaire! beauty spots were nic which ts organiged to further the “elty beautiful” idea by converting vacant lots into luxuriant gardens, The Washington hotel management has undertaken to hep the garden irrigated and in order. Among the speakers were Gover nor Hay, Mayor Dilling, Mayor-elect Cotterill, Treat and others, They took turns saying that while, on ithe other hand, ugly spots were not (Loud cheers.) indeed, nice. tured to hope They ven they went est star in the Star Spangled dia- dem. (Tamultuous applause.) Mayor Ditlt claiming be was brought up ot farm, took a whirl at the plow, and did pretty well unti) he struck a hidden stump. He split his shiny black glover. A distinguished party of ladies and gents had seats in a nice new | Breen wagon with red wheels, and applauded feats of plowing. Meanwhile the real guys—certain oratory and ‘husky persons in. overalls, whose and a purely |so far as to aay they believed that |names must not by any chance get ornamental and useless, but pleas | the ty bewutiful” idea would | into the newspapers, were doing the ing, ceremony took place under the | spread throughout the city, so that, setu: ork, KILL 1,000 HERE ARE TH 9 _N BATTLE) ==FOR THE INAUGURAL (ay Oni ‘Wirey ROME, March 13.—More! the time: Monday noon, March orchestra’ will lavish a’ bit of mnurle than 1,000 Turks and Arabs| 4g. during speechmaking spaces, were killed by Italian troops| phe piace: Those who met this morning yesterday in desperate fighting} pinee;. Grand apere Weuee Awacas Mayor Dilling, Mrs. Zamora y i itt Ces ett That's when and where the big/¢ Cautfman, of the Women’s Com at Benghari, Tripoli, according) inauguration of the uew mayor will/ mercial’ ¢lub: Sylvia Hunsteker, to official announcement by) take place. A meeting attended by | Council of «Women. Voters; Mrs. the war olfice here today. ‘representatives of a dozen civie or-| Edna M. Vining, W. C. T. Ellen The Italian loss, the war of- (eee ean" void in yed ie ~. Federated Women's clubs; : 7 or" ce # morning, de-| Max Wardall, president of the coun- victims, The fact that the cara|fice says, was 29 killed and 62] cided in favor of the Grand opera|cil: W. Le Gnatct!,, srediaent of were heavy steel believed to! wounded ‘ | house for the inaugaration cere-| Central Labor Council; C. B, Yan- have the only thing prevent- The Italian commanded re-| movies in preference to the Dream- | dell, Chamber of Commerce; Gerald ing heavy fatalities. ported that his troops captured land rink. The committee also de-| Prink, Manufacturers’ association; Sc ane ee et Purkist ocd ln ge’ te: cided upon speeches by George W.| E.G. Shorrock. Rotary club; W. W. > : CGEM sdE We sets ‘ ead Rghtiog: pos } Dilling, the retiring mayor, George | Wilshire, Seattle Commercial club; ~ ' He declares the | FP. Cotterill, the incoming mayor,|J, P. Marlott, Ministerial Federa- iepalite’ And are they badly dressed? Are they © PL PLAYED TO ASYLUM #/Arabs and Turks, defending | 4nd Judge J.‘ Ronald, who will | don J. France, Munietpal and xnod nce, An Eastern woman, * NS YORK, Merch 13— #/ their posts, sallied forth time aparaietee the oath of office. An| League. ge they « im the following letter: wa i a wile cine hardy me ile Fiand again in desperate charges, | Seeress CT RS, Ts conpquntinne dua peuiretll Sires than water snd’ one of #|during which they were swept) MYSTERY-WOMAN, BROKEN-HEARTED, OE oss resent a ® Broadway's long-distance piano #/down by hundreds by the con- TRIES TO END HER LIFE ‘ Np ex sab hag Meng duty for 24 ®/centrated fire of Italian ma- 1 have always read so much of the re, was the cause of the ®) chine guns Sadie Cawthon, living at 504 Stew. “May God watch over my dear 1 had automatically been led to be- j art st. tried to commit suicide in| and pA orphans, T ot no wide * commitment today of Mre, & poo i Ei . ® Harry L. to the #/ ih courtesy and goed my first visit te Seat-|* Rivercrest sanitarlum + TOP PLAY wise ent at about 10/longer live, as 1am too. broken 4 | thought to be poison. CAPT. ROALD AMUNDGEN LONDON, March 13—-News from; fean port. Hobart, Tasmania, today, states; The South Pole discoverer re- tat Cpt: Amwantown, dsooverer ot |SE"S osaithon, bat be Ws besily oo wa Pole, will leave in a few | gaged in writing « magazine article. His rine * and crew are in first tase ton. @oliar unless, at least to myself, | have hon feal precision, tha: it would produce more than ix plers, as in the ‘gentlemen's agree to the port, are too many to begin with?” [@artest’In thelr desire to have these terminals opposition when I favored the municipal system. ‘or immediate action in the harbor terminal rh See } have been working continuously for 20 ‘two years I have feit the need of a rest. | am pot fee! that | ought to go through the worry of iy be Involved in the terminal matter. In the near Myde park today, when the ormck train was derailed, five cars bg fe sd the Hudson river. ‘five cars went through twenty inches of ice and wore *ltheee quarters submerged. Their Many of them in their night hea, were imprisoned in the water until they broke the tar windows and crawled through, being aesisted by the trainmen and the a@lajured passengers. Women tore their clothing into strips to make bandages for the wounded, and Dr, Warnbals, bimeolf badly injured, rendered first aid to the} WHAT ONE INDEPENDENT PAPER DID (EDITORIAL FROM THE LOS ANGELES RECORD) ro Rigen, that an Bloodgood woman, and this bet! what she hearted, and ft is too mach for me the contrast with the East has impressed Da Weebawakeves Instead of to face this wide and wicked world warrant. Yours truly, * getting hold of poison she drank a aguin. A WOMAN TOURIST. Mayor Dilling, acting op the re-| bottle of peroxide. ihe was re- Addressed to The Star by & oman visitor to) a eecteoentmeeaetae | id Di s Fi [port of the censor committer, has | moved to the city hospital and was; b> muy there be some way for fe Withheld for obvious reascns. lee eee eeneeenee oi TEN Vie IN FIVE | put the sia on “The Giri From released again this morning as the ™Y dear babies thar ‘they may baile indictment, which #t least should aronse |» * B T | LOVE you j 4 ‘ tor’s” at the Seattle theatre for the | doctors could find no symptoms of ever lead the life that I have led. WRONG DOT OVER THE “I” Pra th | MITCHELL, N. D., March 13.—| patance of the week. Manager Ed | aliment. “Oh, God, do provide a way for SAN FRANCISCO, Mareh 15. Four children of C. Jacques were! prew will apply for an injunction; Not much ts known about the! my darlings, as I cannot bear the of thix city as to whether it fs true im any|@ 108 ANGELES, March 13 */ vou have a panch in each hand, | Buried to death today in a five) thip afternoon, to permit to produce | Woman other than that which was awful Idea of going in this wax, Wor the dots over the “t'#” in gem #& | and you are some kicker, but I love which destroyed the Jacques fart | the play tonight. The censor com. learned from the letter found in four long years | have looked for- tine and counterfelt certify #{You, all the same,” sald Arthur | tous three miles from here. Mrs! mittee today, by a vote of four to|her rooms, which she evidently | ward to the time when { could live Cates of residence, Yee Yok #| Francis Rosstan, son of 4 iniltion [Jacques also wax severly injured. tnres, found the play unfit. Uniess | Wrote just before attempting her a pure and decent life. Now’ that ; | Faeqnes escaped Drew gets 'a restraining order, “The | death. The letter reads ax follows: It is all ended, T can no longer see.” Lun, a Chinese, has been or- #/ aire architect. when he met hin wite ‘ i ‘ dered deported by United # In the office of hor attorney. You A Girl From Rector’s” will not be seen LONG TRAMP |=" SANTA ROSA, March 13.—-Har- States Commissioner Van # | pat me in the hospital, and 1{ vey Thorsen, the Ukiah youth who} Dyke. # thought you'd drive me craay, but Yee Yek Lun, to prove bis #/|I'll take another chance.” He aban- alleged right to be in the #|doned bis divorce sult against her. United States, exhibited a cer- jis walking from Mendocino county | 4 Press Leased Wire) has a bride today, but before the ceremony performed his tiffeate of residence ito New York, arrived here last) WASHINGTON. March De native shrewdness saw to it that the following agreement, signed For a while the document NEWARK, N. J. March 12. w MME and left for San Francisco) spite a flood of protests addressed y. Mrs. Henrietta Scoveronski, 63, his prospective bride, reposed baffied immigration officers, Semdat Winterton of Key # | Sfoot this morning. jto its members in a safety deposit box: but they finally decided tt t, N. J, holds the world's # |, t¢ has a letter which he will de-\tion of Mahlon Pi 9 |, the undersigned, am going to marry F. A. Goehiert, 1 bogus. They showed that in Fort tor’ parent nttendanca liver to Mayor Rolph of San Fran-jsey to the United do so with the full understanding and in consideration of our genuine certificates the gov exe wd perfect attendance | cisco, and he also has one for May-/eourt, the senate today confirmed|*® 20 that if | should teave him for any reason (get tired of him), ernment used what was at Sunday school. Next * | sr Gaynor of New York. He plans |his nomination by President Taft. |% | Will not and cannot claim his property, or half of it, before his known as the “diamond” dot month he will complete fifty * | 19 cover 25 miles of his Journey ev-| Pitney, in many of the protests|* death. HENRIETTA SCOVERONSKI.” over “t's,” ang that in the consecutive years without ab- # | ory day. lagainst bis appointment, was al document exhibited by the sence at the First Baptist Bun, #} ‘Thorsen is an athlete, and he/lleged to have the “capitalistic defendant the “dash” or day school there, Prepara- #| says he -will reach New York all| mind.” Hitter opposition to his se- tions are being made for suit- | right and will greet bis friends | jection was manifested by labor able observance of the event. #/| gn the way back, as he ex-| bodies from all over the United eR RR Ke ee &| pects to walk both ways, States. le of the elemental facts, and will be glad) ¢ ity readers may be inspired to send it. * MAINE” BURIAL WEXT SATORDAY HAVANA, March 13.—The en- gineers having charge of the raising of the battleship Maine decided to hoid the burial of the historic ship Saturday. Details of the ceremonies are being ar- ranged for today. it is probable that the Maine wilt floated out of the harbor at 3 o'clock in the afternoon for burial at sea. | le. will first =i" Another Victim esi" of Speed Maniac SAN FRANCISCO, March 13.— Run down by reckless autoists, who rushed on without paying any at- tention to their victim, Charles ght: Might «| Sheftron, S@, was found in a dying Temper. {condition in the street today. Al ‘| mest every me ed ge poet pod +h: was broken, He died without mak- ee © ‘albgl * * ing a statement and no person saw si the accident a * i |e eek RRR i* OH, YOU CAUTIOUS BRIDEGROOM! o Coast : PITNEY GETS IT q LOS ANGELES, March 13.—F. A. Goehlert, 50, of Pasadena, 13.—A yer.) the re dele -€ ja and! Mi by made by Sen. Bue the pres!- in the re it to Walter ign manager. Portiand tavt th Dakota. was pub- Houser SRS EERE eeeeeeeeeet eee es tek aeeeeeeaee QUANTITY OF CIRCULATION reaches all classes of ‘people and is what ae a eeeeeeeeesteeeeeeees “hyphen” dot was utilized. * RERRRKRARAERRHH eenenenen rere " * SECAST * Tharsday; * “The Girl From Rector’s” ts distinctly a person. She is not—er—| evil genius in New York, and learns that he is bis father-in-law-to-be. | nice. Indeed, she is so far from nice that it Is difficult to discuss her | Tiere are, of course, the usual complications and misunderstandgngs | and her peccadilioea with candor, This is official, | of playe of its kind, | ‘ bee Me “Vulgar. Unwholesome. In the last act flatly immoral.” | "The question for the censors was: What were the relations be-| talks to you, Mr. Advertiser. A sufficient So said Prof. E. Thomas of the Leschi school and the Seattle board |tween Shaughnessey and “The Girl From Rector's"? Quantity of circulation means Quality of censors last night. } ‘The last scene is laid at “French Charley's,” a place outside Battle} uy Six of the seven members of the board saw the “Girl” at the Seat-| Creek, | also, for when a Dewspaper has Quantity tle theatre Monday night, Three said: “Risque, but it will pass.”| Prof. Thomas grabbed his hat and bolted for the entrance. Oniside it naturally acquires Quality. Take The Star’s PAID circulation of over 40,000 Three said: “Naughty, naughty! Off with her head!” he aid to a Star reporter: “I am oing straight to the mayor. | shall it was a tie, It was up to the professor to cast the deciding vote. | tell him that in my opinion the play ought to be stopped, It is vulgar, i" po i : ‘The profevsor is # youngish-looking man, with the appearance of|unwholesome, and, In the last act, flatly tmmoral, The play doesn’t copies daily and figure it out for yourself. taki his duties seriously. He arrived before the overture and stayed | pretend to give a decent thought or point a decent moral. When there Thi till the curtain fell for the last time fare so many beautiful thoughts which could find expression on the his means over 200,000 readers, yet 3 ‘Manager Ed L. Drew, ke @ lost soul in torment, hovered In the! stage, there is no excuse for producing such vile plays as ‘The Girl there are not even 40,000 of any one class year of the theatre, receiving 10-minute bulletins from the usher in the) From Rector’s.’ 1 would not take my wife or daughter to wee It. 1) in Seattle. Therefore, The Star must be and is reaching more than one class. It reaches, by virtue of its over 40,000 daily paid circulation, ALL CLASSES. professor's ati shall see the mayor before | go to bed tonight.” “He seem Of the many bulletins that the usher brought to Manager Dr Think It O In ver, Mr. Merchant “March 1g.—| Asquith Talks With Miners biggest the ¢ po. LONDON, March 12.—Premier nivel Aaquith, the striking coal miners aiand the mine operat onferred N be here today again while a sul-com- fears so mittee ix straining every nerve to “8 will break|frame a settiement of the strike which is crippling England, ith 341 Descendants s Hundredth Birthday @, Pa., March 12.—Mre. Harriet Wildman Ott, Greene county, has celebrated her 160th birt Mother of 11 children, eight of whom are Iiv- Weg 76 grandchildren, 269 great-grandchildren, 63 dren and one greatgreatxreat grandchild. C, Ott. wan with Gen. Sherman in f Atlanta to the sea, Mrs. Ott still retains all hever used apectaclen. im," F keeping time with the music.” bis mustache.” “His foot only gave him one hope. The professor's face was grim, his lips cor “He is che pressed. He stirred uneasily in his seat, as though impatient to @ “He frowns. @n unpleasant duty done. “He utters an ejaculation of discus 'No hope,” sald Drew, “The Girl From Rector’ when she is at home in Battie Creek But when Shaughnessey, at the home of his fiancee, is introduced | is a highly religious philanthropist, and the wife of Judge Caper-|to Mrs. Caperton, whom he is to take in to dinner, and discovers she) ut something quite different when she gets to New York. She has|is “The Girl From Rector’s,” and he wilts, and she screams and faints, | + with Hichard O, Shaughnessey, a young man who has been|and there is the deuce to pay generally, and the air is tense, a change | into the night Ife of Broadway. It would seem that half of) Was seen to come over the censor, | attle Creek elite spends half of its time In high Hving In New| His features relaxed. The grim light in his eyes was replaced by | York under assumed names. \a@ twinkle. His hand was clapped to his mouth, and bis frame shook. | ‘The scene shifts to Battle Creek, where Shaughnessey ‘Is to be mar- The professor was laughing! | ried, He runs into “The Girl From Reet and discovers she is Mra, ‘Tut, tut! Naughty, ehty! But—oh, well, there is a touch " Caperton, He also runs into “Col, Tandy,” the old roue who was his! the old Adam in all men, even in theatre censors,

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