The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 25, 1912, Page 1

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he seattle | Star who laughs all the time jij VOL. 14. NO, 20. ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER ‘IN SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1912. ONE CENT 3 FALL TO DEATH WHILE FIGHTING (By United Press Leasea Wire.) CLEVELAND, Srte, March 25. —Failing 100 feet in a broken ele vator while engaged in a heated q warrel, Henry Gardam and Wm. Hunter are dead here today. They were in the cage at the seventh floor when the parting of a stee! cable dashed an down to instant Wire) | death. The mangled bodies were found to be locked in a tight em 2. Sup | brace, and scratehes and ie in po) blows in = © ty on the ¢ whieh | bearer Be preaitertiat | the Roosevelt | "| AILUEDING. A. GHILD TO DEATH BLALWHEGK | WITH HER (By United Press Leased) United Prese Leased Wire) SPOKANE, March 38 Corrying san FRANCISCO, March 25.— Engineer tel 5 reman Sum) Deepondent ‘ m ends|mers, Head Prakeman Orean, all ar ea eeetie Me, gevelt followers | of Hillyard, Wash, to death im a 2 gure, and a | deep ravine, an extra freight on the Great Northern struck a rock slide six miles out of Sand Point, Idaho, about 5 Mersey morning. Mre. A. Morse of Chicago is a su! cide and the slayer of her 13-year.! old daughter here today. The pair. were found undressed “To the Coroner: This is to Reports received here TTRANMEN ARE MOTHER TAKES; | | Seattle Brotherhood League club's homelry, on King st., which | nodding acquaintance with the world, the flesh and the devil. {back to the taps. _ bathing, to put on clean underwear, Then, if you can sit down WILLIAM, DOCTOR FOR DOWN-AND-OUTERS, GETS NEW IDEA AND TRIES IT The experiment suggested itself to William when he was forcing a down-and-out moocher inte taking a bath, at the is known as “The Open Door.” Remember William? Of course. William is the side-kick of Dr, Frank Arthur Heath, man of God, and head of the in- stitution, William, as was explained some days ago, is not a man of God. He is the temporal head, just as the little doctor is the spiritual head. He has had in the past more than a The moocher didn’t know he was expected to get in the When this was explained to him, he got in with his Willitm made him face about WHY SHOULD HE BATHE? The moocher didn’t want to take a bath. He had always got along without bath He didn't see the need, But when the dirt was removed from the mooe!: °'s body, and his flesh was tingling and glowing, he became an en thusiastié bather. William had to threaten him with physical nce before he could be persuaded to leave the tub You know and I know,” says William, “how good a gink feels just after a bath, We know how good it feels, just after tub, to a meal that's cooked and served just right—well, there ain't much more to live for, You get me? WILLIAM G AN IDEA. “Well, it was when | was drag; that moocher out of the tub that L got the hunch. I do it this way: If these |moochers could only know how good it feels to be clean and pogiee of Ruginesr Wicklin. Head | form you that I have committed Pe | well fed, they wouldn't mooch Brakeman Orcan and Fireman Sum | Cie, 1 have taken my child with) mers, killed in the wreck, are buried /™e. We inhaled gas. so deep under the wreckage that it) fo onic impossible to recover them, ab | 134 though every attempt is being made Ite remove the debris that is piled oa ones high over their bodies. "swith the arrival of the wrecking |T#ther than leave her alone, with titrain from Spoxane, it Is believed |20 one fo care for her in this | ithe bodies can be yecovered in aj World, | have decided to take her . Tt le feared the bodies with me. I love her too much to til be badly mutilated. wo without her, Please see that Details are unavailable as to the |}O8F bodies are cremated, and that cause of the wreek, a that the |Our bodies are placed in one casket Tt te be- No One to Mourn. Tam Mrs. A. Mrse| in the pyrse our room with which to defray all penses. 1 believe there will be ough left with which to buy a mall floral plece to place upon the grave. Whatever else is left, please New five to the Salvation Army. We ng Ae entirely alone in the world. : dead 4 So are no relatives whom you pone Advise of our death. Good. to a fie |ertnteat ‘and if convicted, 3 ‘confined at Walla Wells’ for the dieaeantta rest of his life. fat of the republican voters of King county favoring primary, the machinery of the republican its own word of (wo weeks before, and to 6, to add its voice to+the appeal being he call a special session of the legislature s Lage oie wd primary bill. for this jon of the King county cen- of this committee, which is supposed to licans, ave been heard to say that they te secured the King county delegation to what they wanted was SOMETHING for sixteen who voted on Saturday to allow the mouths of the people are supporters of Taft. ithe Taft faction in this county. These men, or = know that a preference primary in this pho the state of Washington would cause to be convention In Chicago, next June, a pro that President Taft would not secure one in the Chicago convention! King county going to stand idly by and per sold by this gang of self-appointed dictators? permit these men to choose for them the dele- this county to the state convention at Aber- these men to do! Md file of the Gout party sufficiently indif- the party to permit this condition to exist ANGELINO NAPOLITANO (By United Press Leased Wire) CHICAGO, March 25.—Saved from the hangman's noose by the) protests of handreds of thousands of Americans, speaking dally newspapers, angelino Napoli |tano, under life sentence at Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.. may be pardoned and thereby permitted to go back futo the world and make a bome for her five little children. A movement for pardon has been ted here by the “No Vote-No ” league, an organization of pro- gressive women active in promoting women's welfare wherever they feel there is need of their services. With- in a short time the league will send it to women's ergnnisations e Presidential Primary Law er. “os, eusiom tions for circulation. These will be _ Fepresenting 90 per cent of the party, prepared ¥ bosses to rob them of their right of auf- “4 [By y Unites Press Leased Wire.) 2%. Gov. Deneen today summoned the state Special session tomorrow to enact 13 laws, the presidentia| preférence primary law. . Leaders ipewer movement in Ilinois hope to have the law 9, when the regular state primary election is meet governor general of Canada, with whom the pardon now lies, "DIES ON WAY TO HOSPITAL Albert W. MMe the Continental 207 Oceldental av., an employe of Distributing Co., was suddenly ing at about 9 o'clock and died be fore he could receive medical at- tention, Miller reported for work at the usual time this morning, apparent- ly a well man, An hour later he complained of being sick, An am- bulance was called and he was wheeled off for the City hospital, but when the hospital was reached it was found that he was dead. Miller was 40 years of age and is survived by his widow BIRDMAN FALLS INTO THE LAKE When one of the propeller shafts of his aeroplane broke, John Har- vey, aviator, yesterday failed in bis attempted exhibition on Lake Union with a Wright biplane, with a hy- droplane attachment. The aviator has just succeeded in rising from the water when the shaft broke, and the machine plunged into the lake. Yesterday. Yesterday was Sunday, Sunday and ‘ering. 4 tralala! The litte birds sang sweetly in er buds pushed their blushing angel faces LYesteryrar and cast their fragrance on the ver- Hth a start, awoke, and all the world seemed— It was a fine day yesterday, and thousands #well Ume in the parks, There was a ball , the tennis courts claimed many, and the monkeys at the zoo, The machine suffered only slight hard 10 settie down to the grind on Monday |damage, and Harvey escaped with a a ducking. cad Saved From': Gallows May Now Get Pardon through | |selzed by heart failure this morn-| I arrived with my) forks and spoons, in all their lives 1am a sufferer) some folks sleep in beds, incurable disease, sn | about sheets, what's finer, after a bath, than to get in between | between clean, cool sheets. “You will find suffietent money | fast beneath the pillow in| Hive right. orwarded to the duke of Connaught, llow-servant law applied In federal courts, so bB certified the question | “So I picked up five mofchers that were some down, I give ) you my word. Rags, and dirt, and whiskers. I'll bet a jitney to a bean they'd never had a real meal, at a table, with knives, They didn’t know that between sheets. And, say, talking MRS. TERES “Ne giri of 17 should be left alone. | Bhe is too young, and young girls are foolish.” |the sheriff to come and take me Spring fever covers a - laziness. AINS AND TANDS he sn nws COMES BACK FROM GERMANY TO FACE PRISON SENTENCE A JAKSHITZ want to go; she didn't want to leave me, And every moment I expected away. | was distracted. I did not dare to ask my lawyers for ad- vice. They would say t e would) be plenty of time, | kno But I was afraid. And so | finally de cided to go to Germany with the girl. 1 did not know that the bonds would be forfeited, but 1 did not care, That would uot have stopped 1 hoped to return in me to 000, But the German authorities held me up because | did not bave a passport to leave the country, Then I fell ill when I got to Wisconsin, away for about nine months.” Mrs. Jakshitz voluntarily ap peared in Judge Main’s court Satur-| She | day to receive her sentence was convicted May 4, 1911. Before sentence was imposed, she had dis: | appeared The extradition laws could not hi brought her back. But she chose to return. “1 have lived here 20 years. Thh is a fight for my good name, and J} am going to fight to the finish. I am pot guilty. If I were, | would not have come back,” she says. up to the United States supreme court, and this august body decided that the law does apply. “Justice Holmes remarked that, unfortunately, | in case of a bad Jaw like this, it was not posalble for the supreme court to change the law. This would have to be done by congress, He had forgotten for the moment that when it is desired to write “reasonab! into a Sherman law in the interest of trusts, the supreme court can make law, but-when it is only a workman whose rights are involved, the supreme court refers the matter to congress Anyhow, now the fellow-servant law ts In effect in all federal courts, | | clean, cool sheets? Tell me! “Well, | made those moochers serub until they were shiny ; and T shaved and shampooed ‘em; and I gave ‘em toothbrushes and made ‘em use ‘em. Then I gave ‘em a feed that makes my mouth water every time I think of it. Then I put ‘em to bed,| And in the morning they had break-| ee ite fear * bag od — poached «; nm toast, i Vv {Sane 17, stems, WReR She show ona : oe < “ ; sot Oe and’ ‘coffee witli |S tobe confined tn the county m. in it. And then / toc em outside. ‘ |jail or penitentiary, that caused ‘Lads, IT says, ‘here's all outdoors. Help yourselves. iMra. Teresa Jakshitz « kind-look “They began to scratch their heads, and one of ‘em says, |!9® matron, to forfeit 00 ball, ack, wat's th’ play? leave Seattie, go to Burope, place , a we ithe girl safely with relatives and pe ‘NOW MOOCH IF YE WILL B |then return here to receive a sen ‘Just this,” I says. ‘You've had a taste of what it's like to |tence of one to five years at Walla Now go back to mooching ifyou've got the courage.’ | Walla “There it was, you understand: Work and comfort, or idle-|.-, 1/4 Bot leave because 1 was ss and dirt and hunger. Three of " without s ch ee re eee re re 7 pee Ls ¢ of “ens, without so much as |sehtts said in the county jail, where Thank you’ or ‘So long,’ hikes for the railroad yards, The other |she te held pending her appeal, this two sort of starts to follow; then they come back. And one of} a eg ma 1 am meveve yet « rs. Jakshita was convicted of ‘em said: ‘Bo, you've poited me for mouchin’ ; when do 1 get |having performed an illegal surgical another chance at that tub?” | operation “Those two fellas,” concluded Witham, “are working steady | “I took the girl when she was 12 now, and something seems to tell me they're going to stick.” bared old,” ey ape . Bi ntecor “4 wr " : ae. is lo take care of her ad her wit The fault I have to find with you, William,” said Dr.| ine tor five years. "Then I was cou. Heath, who quarrels with his side-kick Over the latter's material-|vieted. What was 1 to do? 1 did istic tendencies, “is that you over-en size the purely physical |not know. My only thought was side of clean living. There's many acmoral leper who appre-|that she must not be left alone. 1 ciates a bath and a well-cooked meal.4 Wanted her to go to Germany her “ r if. The girl cried; she didn’t) Easy, doctor,” grinned William “Those two converts ot | pakke it to use our tub. I've told ‘em the tub is for nice little | go to — class et say a OLYMPIA, Wash., March 26.—Youo're entitled to 8 per cent on the| There was # “big time in the old | money you put up as deposits with gas and electric companies in order town last night,” for the house to get the service of these public utilities. The state public service com- | thieves who took advantage of the mission has 20 decided. Furthermore, You cannot be compelled to put opportunity offered during church up @ bigger deposit than the extimated bill for one month Also, you hours to pillage the residence dis can have your meter examined at any time by the state meter Inspector, trict, J. EB. Davis, 5261 18th N. E.. but you'll have to pay the $3 fee if the moter is correct. If it is not, reports his house entered by kitch the company will have to. stand the expense, — en windows and a lady's gold watch om» |and « small saving bank taken Mrs, 8. G. Kramer, 600 10th ay., lretarned home to find that ber n 0 TTA, A CARI ¢PENTER | ER \front door lock had been picked and the house looted of several Joka Dolio. was a cakpeaiee.” tite Mepbite wan Yopatring freight jeuits of clothing and’an alarm cars. He worked in » yard surrounded by & high fence, into which | clock freight cart were shunted to be repaired, He wan employed by the}. A complete silver tea set, silver Grand Trunk raltroad. One day he wae working under a box car at ears, cut glass, $18 in cash and his job when the ratiroad people made a fiytpe switch and shunted a|several valuable pieces of jewelry | box car into the yard, striking the car under which he working | comprise the loss of H. Wall, 2000) and killing Fetta. 20th ay. S. A wult, brought by his widow, for damages, was tried before Judge| The homes occupied by 1. A Kobisaat in Chicago, and the railroad set np the plea thai Jobn Fetta | Nicho, 475 1 16th av, N. EB; H. E was a “fellow servant” of the employes’ who shunted the box car into Applegate, ind av., and Dr. T. the yards, and on that account Fetta must be responsible for their care-| Uymatsu, 27th ay., were en lessness and the railroad company could not be held for damag | dd ransacked of any valu Judge Kobisaat was not certain in his mind as to whether the fel- ables that could be carried off. Foreing their way through the wall from an empty store next door, robbers last night gained en: trance to the Shannon & Wolff ‘store at 803 3rd av., and ma away |with several suits of clothes, two overcoats and other wearing ap |parel. | Captain Davis Thomas Davies, steamship pilot, and a resident Seattle since 1877, was. appointed port warden by Mayor Cotterill to- day, Captain Davies is a typical Westerner, coming to the Coast when he was 21, He lives at 625 Fifth av. W. He has been engaged | both in Alaskan and trens-ocean | rtusportation CONVICTING HIMSELF COUPLE, 93 AND 87, WANT DIVORCE PARIS, March 25.—A divorce case in which the ages of the couple aggregate 180 years is arousing much interest here today. The principals are Francois Poulet, 93 years of age, and his wife, Helene, aged 87 rs. “My husband,” Mme ulet told the judge Sa gay old dog. He spends most of his time smirking at what the Americans ‘chickens.’ Evety time a young girl passes the door Francois tries to, start a flirtation.” aro ete meet =. hare a ayers j UNITED PRESS GETS BIG CLIENTS NEW YORK, March 26—Con-) other telegraphic news associations tracts have been signed by Wm, C. combined Reick, the new owner of the New be eas, wasaenamamera York Sun, by which the United) ¥ #4 #4 4 RH Pres@ full-day and Saturday night | leaned wire reports will be served to the Evening and Sunday Sun. olen og, Ges ine oe levee, Tho Omaha World-Herald has also | * Halt Frost tonight; Naht w contracted for the full day leased vk erly winds. Temperature wire report. noon, 48. park on your n ‘The United Press now serves i A waterthark? Why more afternoon newspapers than all ye ke ® tok woke wk ww KR Mover put any water on it * WEATHER FORECAST you dirty boy! You have a Children Find — (‘BD ynamite; Two Badly Hurt} Elmer May, 12, and his 11-year-| old brother, Herchel, whose par-| ents reside at 2964 Dayton ay., are | today nursing injuries in the Noble | hospital as the result of the care- lessness of contractors doing work to the vicinity of th st. and Fre mont ay., which might have caused the death of the two children, The two brothers were playing about the work when they found a package of dynamite caps, The explosion that followed completely | severed three fingers from the hand of Herchel and Elmer's right hand was badly lacerated. An Investigation is being made | to determine the responsibility of the contractors. LOS ANGELES, March 25.—Fire| in the Wilcox building at Second and Spring sts. early today caused damage aggregating $125,000, and for a time threatened to spread) through the retail business section. | The Dean Drug Co, was the heav-| and so | have been | ers multitude of WILL BE UNDER GUARD DAY AND NIGHT Dr. Linda B. Hazzard, the fast will begin her 30-day fast tomorrow under the pecialist supervision of a committee se- lected by The Star fast Dr. Ha apartments in the During the will occupy down town zard section and she will be con- stantly watched day and night. Thomas G. McDonald, physi- cal director of the Seattle Ath- letic club, will take the weight of Dr, Hazzard daily and a physician will make a report to The Star every day as to her condition The conditions of the fast are that Mrs. Hazzard is to absolutely abstain from food, but is to be al lowed water and fresh air. Mrs. Hazzard says that she will be able to walk and oecupy herself in the usual manner during the entire fast, and that she will not have to be confined to bed. She will be constantly aceompanied by @ watcher wherever she may go. “The medical men,” said Dr. Hazzard toda: say it is impos- sible for any person to live more than 13 or 14 days without food. I have Invited them to watch me to see that | do not take food——- to satisfy themselves that the fast is bona fide. I still invite them to wateb the fast. If | am wrong, and they are right, after 14 days I shall be dead. Then there will be one less quack in the world. But, if J am right and they are wrong, | shall not only live through the fast, but shall be in better heaith at the end for having ab bomen from food. “a Thousand Men i in Strike Parade (Ry United Press Leased Wire) HOQUIAM, March 25.—Hoquiam today has had an opportunity to wee how many of its citizens are on strike. Fully 1,000 men repre- a the striking shingie weav- sawmil] employes and tong- |shoremen, paraded through the principal streets of the city. TACOMA, March 25.—That bigh schoo! boys on vacation are being used to try to break the strike at the Grays Harbor milla: is the dec- laration today of Secretary Fritz of the I. W. W. men at Hoquiam in ire to local men today. every gmill but one in the dig- trict is elther tied up or ertppled,”* said Fritz. “The longshoremen jand teamsters are refusing to move, the lumber and the officers of the boats have had to put on overalis and load the boats.” Auto Speeders Gathered in Patrolman Ford, he who cavorts about our public thoroughfares on bright red motoreycle, awoke yesterday morning to find himeelf | bubbling over with ambish. As | the result of his industrious dis- position many of Seattle's most ac- complished speed merchants found themselves Confronting Judge Gor- don in police court this morning, charged with violating the automo- bile and motorcycle ordinances. W. 8S. Kirkland was fined $25 and F. F. Clark, Mack Young and John Panton each drew a fine of W. D. Wiley, A. Lergewent, H. Batchelder and | \H. F. Keller forked over $10 each for their offense, and the jildge was compelled to issue a bench warrant for Burt Willis, who failed to appear, Phil Johnson and Al- bert Guy were below the ege mark and were relegated to the juvenile jcourt for hearing. The chief had issued special or- ders to abolish reckless driving of fest loser. Jautomobiles and motorcycles. JUST A SONG wife and kiddies and a AT TWILIGHT copy of THE SEATTLE STAR, are enough to make any man happy, es- pecially if that man be a merchant. Wife and kiddies afford the comforts of home, while THE STAR, with its daily circulation of over 40,000 copies, its condensed news and ex- tensive advertising space, insures him that his ad- vertisement is being read in thousands of homes that could not be otherwise reached, and is bring- ing him results. The Star’s advertising rate is less per thousand copies than any other local daily and it goes into the home at a time when its news and advertise- ments receive due consideration. If you are not an advertiser, telephone Main 9400 and one of our advertising representatives will pay you a very interesting and instructive call. DO IT NOW! Never Put Off Until Tomorrow What You Can Do Today ?

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