The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 29, 1912, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

aon an alte hi nici nn il merci “weries SHAMEFUL C HAPTERS IN COURTS’ RECORDS NEW YORK, March 28. been selected in practically their own conserv: meant always the sup) most ae againat individual rights ar sented by the state.” This sweeping charge is made by | C, P. Connolly in the current tssue | of Everybody's ticle being a continuation of amazing indictments against “big business and the bench. Big Interests Tipped Off © The writer takes up casos of “leaks” from courts, showing how decisions have been known by spe | celal interests before they were giv en to the public. He republishes) the ree of the Philadelphia Press that Justice William Plamer | Potter of the Pennaytvania su) informed the notort- ia political ring in) advance how the supreme ourt | would decide the famous “ripper” | ease, It in charged that 24 hours before the supreme court of Col erade decided the eight-hour law unconstitutional, the fact’ was known and discussed among insld: ers in a Denver hotel lobtiy, A su- preme court Judge in Ohio, says article, was publicly charged by Tom L. Johnson with giving fore. | knowledge of one of his opinions to friends who gambled on the stock market on the strength of it. Recall in Effect Connolly declares that there is) such a thing as “recall of Judges” in practical effect today, ex- cept that it is in the hands of the machine which controls nomina- tions. “Justice Lewis, recently de- feated for renomination by the) } | } { } | | } | ' | | ruption, corpus to defeat “Judges of our highest courts have ery important if not for of the union for conservatiom has property rights to the ut nd rights of the public as repre wo steel trust in Minnesota, in a shin ing example of the efficacy of thir i of recall,” he says, “He had cone areas in a decision against the trust,” “One firm of corporation la in Ohio,” the writer says, “built up a large practice because of its ‘pull’ with the courts, A member of this firm was a director in a bank and trukt company trust com: pany acted as administrator of ex- tates; it also marketed stocks and bonds, The probate judge, a tool of the law firm, would appoint eith er this bank or one of its directors administrator of certain estates, and the administrator, obtaining # court order for th of ostate property, would sulting funds in the trust pany’s promotion ites, The Ohio Disgrace “Bvery important litigant fp Ohio knew that if he wanted to be certain of his case in the supreme com he jcourt of Obie, it was the part of wisdom to employ Joseph B. For aker, There are lawyers in Oblo who claim that Foraker has been paid large fees not so much for bis legal ability as because of his po- Utieal or other influence over the courts.” Turning to Colorado, Connolly Says that the assertion that ju- dicial anarchy tn that state was the result of social anarchy is a gross public misconception; and disorders were the direct re- sult of judicial and legislative cor- He reviews the great labor war in that st and charges that the courts we: ting for ine owners and even went so far to suspend the right of habeas strikers or any citizen suspected of sympathising with otrihers, ie Party Possible CLEVELAND, O., Mareh 29.-—"If | both the old parties are to be dom. limated by the reactionary clement. | 1 betieve a third party is possible. ‘This was the statement here to day of Jas. R. Garfteld, former see THE STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1912. DOESN’T PAY TO KICK “HOUN’ DOGS” AROUN’; THIS WOMAN MAKES » $50 A WEEK RAISING THEM ADOSEVELT IS IN IOWA United Prees Leased Wire) AnD THE ROOSEVELT CEDAR RAPIDS, March ‘ol, Theodore velt was warmly greeted upe arrival here today by 2,000 persons jo TRIANGULAR DEBATE ON ECZE | Aine RECALL OF JUDGES The big triatigular intercollegiate debate on the reeall of Judges will be held tonight In Beattie, Kagene » and Palo A Cal. Two teams each from the universities of Washingto ford, will engage in the debate Pacifie Coast debating champion {who had gathered at the railroad) ship will be determined tonight Mrs. H. A. Lafier and one of her prize Russian wolf hounds. How can @ woman, with 20 6x perience in business, earn $00 a) week? Thig_ question bas been anawered by Mrs, Anderson Lafler, foriner so- ciety girl of Oakland and San Fran cleco, who recently married a Call fornia writer, The anewer is, Raise Russian wolf hounds.” Mrs. Lafier in the owner of the Stone Ridge kennels. She started out by purchasing Verrada, a well- known dog, several other blue-blood- e¢ hounds and bas since sold pap- pies at a handeome profit. While her husband hes been working on books and poems, this girl has be retary of the interior, when ques |come one of the principal authori tioned regarding the report that [Col Roosevelt intended heading a third party movement, should he tail to secure the republican preat- dential nomination. “Col, Ruosevet | Garfield : fight, however,” not yet over by A special coffin ia being structed today for Milton Robbins, said to be the heuviest’ man in i po ost California, who weighed pounds at bia death He was 5S years of age, a Rative bed Obie. DrAlene, Idaho, March 29, once by his soa, Peter Sutton, a rex ding gifts; Coeur William A. Fondren was foand guilty of murder ip the second de- ties on Russian wolf hounds, and her dogs are conceded to be among the best in the eptire country The prices she secures for the animals range from $50 to $100 for a X puny a to its "pointe, ‘SHOT BY WIFE. AND HS. STOCKTON, Cal, March 2% Shot _twlee, once by bla wife and) Mes at the While dent of Spring Gulch, }point of death bere today jand she states that, as a business | Proposition, dogs pay. | “The more you put in et the out- set, the more your reward,” says Mrs. Lafier. “I do not believe that it takes apecial talent to make a success, bat tt in certain that one mast love dogs, and when you once extabliah @ reputation, your success in a certainty, “It takes bard work, though—-any one going into (he business mus) realize this at the start 1 have often sat up all nigh’ puppy, narsing it with . bave dosed them with medicine/ every hour, like a trained nifre, and they can almost talk to me. 1 understand every different tone in * puppy's whine, One means ‘ham ery and another may mean ‘palp in my little tammy. Ob, there ane many things one must learn before one can make @ success of it!” me : a ewe thane ee * &® “The PALATABILITY of # \* food in an important thing,” @ ys Dr, Wiley in his article @ : ie tomorrow's Star. g Tee eeeneneneaa * critic | saw Relies wed: how was Agnes You | her silver marked? Kthet-—From the jooke of it, f t, Barriaters and kes Wind. | Bree for the killing of Isaac A. Cop: | imoxiented, Suttof abused his wife, | should say mont of it was marked Canada. Jeb at Amwaco February 13 = butler ft A Small Thing to Look for—A Big Thing to Find. | who retaliated by firing « os. bis grotn. infuriated, be jselsed the woman's throat and was atrangting her, when his 1¢-fearold son picked up the weapon and him through the mouth. Heir to $9,000,000 Released From Charge (By Unites Press Leases Wire! LOB ANGELES, March % Morria J. Condory, accused of hav ing‘ attempted to rob the home of Mra. Jack Cudahy ita Pasadena, was released into the custody of his father by Superior Judge MeCormiec! Tom 1. Jobnson, bis counsel, ad- | mitted the receipt of advices from | Budapest stating that the will of } | Condory's grandfather waa filed there yesterday. By ite terms Con- dory is heir to a ®, Ban Diego, Cal., vices from Campo, 95 miles ‘south. east of San Diego, state that two American miners, crossing the bor j @er near that place, were stopped U SHOE € THIRD AND UNION SIGN BIG ELECTRIC SHOE | 2%: sue tn rroportion. old by and robbed by a band of seven heavily armed men, belleved to be Insurrectos. incubators $8.00-—The Ideal. Built for this climate. Sixty-ogg, $8.00, a Chas. H. Lilly Co., Foot of Mate » Seattle. Men’s Linen Collars 12ic Quality 6 for 40c 615-617-619 FIRST AVE. On the Square, Opp. the Totem Pole down - HIDE-AND-SEEK | GAME OF WAR... | nites Preee Leased Wired it”, PASO, Texas, Maret 29. The hideandseck came of wart being played near Jimines by the! Mextean government troops and the revolutionary torees, continued to day, Gen. Trucy Aubert, command: | ing 1,200 federals, being reported to be retreating with Gen Pascual Orcaco’s rebel band in pareult. Rebel advices here say Gen. Aubert te likely to be again surrounded this afternoon and a decisive bat- Boston Transcript |e fought Loyal Mexicans bere assert that Gen Agbert is a wily commander 100,000 estate. jand is playing a strategic game. ; March 29—Aa¢-| Succeeds Wiley ANDREW F. MITCHELL, Appointed temporary successor to Dr. Harvey W. Wiley on the fed- eral board of food and drug io spection. Buried Thunder. SANTA ANA, Cala March 29.— Twelve hundred pounds of dynamite found buried near here is said to- day to be the property of the Haw- ley Stores company. The concern for several years has sold dynamite to ranchers and ra! road men, and declares that the store discovered was nferely its dy- namite stock, which could not be kept in the sales place, Officers are investigating the discovery. “HOW ‘DAISIES MADE THE SUN" Dr. Roland D. Grant of Boston will deliver a free lecture at the Y, M. C, A. auditorium this evening “How the Daisies Made the Sun, which will be the last of the series of free lectures he has delivered during the week to men, Getting History Straight It has been shown that Washin; ton was not the real author of his farewell address, nor Monroe of his doctrine, nor Sherman of his law. Presently we shall find out that Bright never had his disease, nor Mason and Dixon a line on an; thing. And perhaps St, Vitus nev- or sate ed.—-New York Byvening Mai! ithe jeation From the platform of bin |private car the former president spoke to thé ‘gathering, pleading that the government be taken from the control of “big business’ atored to the people, More than 200 persons gathered at the station at Rock Island, Il, at 6 o'clock thin morning to see Col Roosevelt, but they were disap potnted, be warWeeping ONE OUTLAW, STARVED, GIVES UP y United Ireen Leased Wire) Miecevick Va. March 29-— Starved into submission, Claude Swanson Allen, one of the bandits for whom a posse has been hunting | of this vicinity for twe is @ captive here today, rendered to his pursuers, Allen stepped suddenly out in front of the posse from a thicket and point ed his two revolvers toward the sky in token of surrender. The capture gives the detectives renewed hope for the capture of the three remaining fugitives—Bid- na Allen, bis nephew Friel Allen, and Wesley Kdwards, Claude Al- len dontes any knowledge of their whereabouts. ‘The ponse today predicted that the three remaining bandits of the Allen gang will be captured this afternoon. Nearly all telephone lines in the mountains have been cout 18 MONTHS FOR WHITE 6LAVERY BAN FRANCICO, March 29.-— Chee, Celli, convicted as a white slaver for bringing a young girl named Mary Kner from Tonopah to Truckee, was sentenced by United States Dintriet. Judge Fi riogton today to 18 months in penitentiary at MeNell's Isiand and a fine of $160. The motion for a new trial was denied. "Twit BE DISAGREEABLE Pre “ton Mortarwash—The next great war in the World will be tn the alr, vnderlink--That will boom the jumbrelia market Mortarwash—lHow sot Undertink— Look at jthat will be apilied the bleod A Sure Sign of Olid Age “It seems to me that Worthington has been growing old rapidly in wt few years,” “Yeu, bis bair is becoming rather “It ten't his balr that makes him seom old to me. A man may have ray hair and «till be young in spirit; but Worthington bas reach. ed the point in life where he can look at a rosy-eheeked girl and re- fer to her as a healthy young an imal instead of calling «her an angel ~Chienge ta air Herald. Better be flim Pe out of ten cents now and then by a hard luck fiction than to be ever un moved by sad stoties. AMUSEMENT PCB Net bac MOORE THEATRE Tontaht Popular Priced Matines Tomorrow Return Engagement by Popular Demand Muniead Revivat FROM STARLAND” Prices b0c to $1.56. oration tA Seattie Theatre Main 43 Biitott 43 TONIGHT Tomorrow Matinee and Night COLISEUM THEATRE Phone Main 4226 Mata. Thursday and Saturday Tonight and All Week ver D. Batley Company Present “THE BONDMAN” ron teat Mats, bo and 10¢; nights, ACROBATS b—OTHER BIG 8. & C. ACTS—5 PANTAGES Unequaled deville Means Vaudeville. “NERV Big Laughing Hit b—Other abip sts! Acts—6 100 The MELBOURNE |___ Theatre ; Opens Saturday at 7p.m. and - Wa Teaben Hilen, W” for devating for three consec tive years, will again defend the debating laurels of the University ington wae gone Boving Eloping Pair Abroad; Wife’s Husband Suicide ‘provincial legis |lete were elected. |hie Mrs. Hichborn and Her Three-Year- Old Boy WASHINGTON, March 29.- Somewhere near Monte Carlo, on) the dreamy Mediterranean are be Heved to be dirs. Eleanor Hoyt) Hichborn and Attorney Horace 1. | Wyite of this city, with whom she | ie alleged to have eloped. 1 In the morgue bere is the body | of Philip Hichborn, the husband, who committed suicide by shooting himeclf Wednesday night. It is claimed that he killed himself be cause of despondency as @ result of hie wife's alleged clopement. In thie city are also Wylie’s wife and tour children, Before going to Europe he turned over to ber prop- erty worth $400,000. WIFE GHARGES EMBEZZLEME I indictment teasy | pel gn Page rge of having em- bezzied $4,017 the fortutie of hie) wife, who formerly was Mre. A. R., Roe of Fort Worth, Texas, and Chicago. Tufts, who lived with his wife and her three beautiful daughters in ® palatia) home in fashionable Chester Place, was arrested in a theatre during a matinee perform- ance on a charge of vagrancy, He! was held while the county grand jury vited a trac bill Bonds were! fixed at $20,000. i With Geo. nell, former valet) ot King Edward of England, Tufts! visited Nepal, Thibet and interior; India, studying occultiam. Follow. | ing their return, they went to Chi- | cago, where Tufts met the wealthy Mrs. Roo, interested her in his re! ligious work and married her. } Miss Mary Hoe, daughter of Mre.| Tufts, declared today that Tufts | had squandered more than $100,000 | of her thers money, and that! he exercised a weird influonce over , persons through what he called a} projection of hie own will The couple, it is alleged, separated re cently when Mrs. Tufts told her | husband he need occupy ber home no longer | | | } Caugh’ cying to Chloroform Girl SAN FRANCISCO, March 29 Caught, according to the poll in the act of chloroforming Miss Marie Williams, in an alleged attempt to} commit burglary, Wm. Lomelino, 23 years of age, son ofa wealthy drug gist, is booked at the city prison today on an _ attempted-robbery charge, Lomelino was overpow- ered, the police say, by men in- mates of the Williams household. F lagpole Ablaze Residents in the neighborhood of the Whittier school at Ballard were startied Wednesday night by an ex- plosion, They ran and saw a blaze | at the top of the 40-foot school*f! pole. It appears that a shirt beén filled with powder and a long fuse connected, $13,500 D: Damages Dominick Rastelli, Jaborer, for- merly employed by Henry &, Mc- Fee, grading contractors for the C., M. & P. 8., yesterday was awarded @ verdict for $13,500 damages Against the contractors for the loss | of bis right leg while at work at Earlington, Sept, 23, 1911. A life lecture, with tlustrative acting, on the drama of “Hamlet,” which he styles “The Drama of Chastity,” will be delivered the Y. M. C. A. auditorium next Tues- day evening, by Montaville Flow: & feature of the Star lyceum Columbus, lo, March 20.—The jury in the case of State Senator Isaac BE. Huffman, charged with ac- cepting a bribe, failed to agree and was discharged. who has won hin) | which offers large ton, a freshman, he will uphold th recall of judges in the auditoriun at the university tonight. In Pa Alto, un Hoover, also a senior | who has won his letter in three) previous contests, and Rex Rode bush, will oppose the recall, At Kugene, Stanford and Oregon Fy |baters will meet The university reeeiving th highest number of points, counting & point for exch judge's decision and for each debate, will be award. | m oa the ce a 2 ask ts jthet I | about |1 will send you mild, soothing, will convines McBRIDE IS A WINNER AT POLLS Baltes Press Lessee wire: C, March 29— ernment was re- References, Could you an pend thts seat te of Ker ct The Meares the outlying districts are in, it! looks ae if the Liberals have falied to capture a single seat in the ure. Two social- Premier Richard elaborate McBride won railroad = program guarantees to the Canadian Northern railroad for additional lines on Vancouver island The Liberals contested only 1% of the 42 seats, Many of the servatives were elected by accia mation, there being no opposition Uniess there are ¢leventh-hour rebearsals in the backwoods, the next house will stand Conserv atives, 40; socialists, 2; Liberain, 0. WAR ON WASH BASIN (By United Press Leases Wire) PORTLAND, Or, March 29.— War op the public wash basin, | drinking cup and roller towel wa: declared today by the Oregon state, | county and mupicipal health offi- Opposite Laseht. , Acre Tracts to Iherg | . Sold oa Cleared — Reasy for the leers, holding their annual session here. DELEGATES FOR T. R.! INDIANAPOLIS, March 29.—Re- publican conventions in the Sixth, | ERighth and Ninth congressional | districts today instructed their del-| gates for Theodore Roosevelt, The | Tenth district Instructed for Taft.) Other locations HUNDREDS OF PAIRS OF than cost of manufacture. all the time, now is your chance to buy Fi LOWES1 PRICES VER KNOWN, 120 MARION. $7.50 GLASSES NOW For Ten Days O1 $1.50 GLASSES Now $2.06 WHAT YOU GET FOR 62.00 A Kold filled frame perfectly fitted to your face. sire, reading or distance viston gotten ail this and saved a nice sum of EXAMINATION ANSOLUTELY FRER 7 pt AVE. Bring This Ad With You —SUBSCRIBE FOR— TheSeattle Dai Delivered at Your Home — To show my appreciation of the fair and Seattle Daily Star, I herewith subscribe to The one month, and thereafter until ordered stopped, the following address, at the rate of 250 per per month by mail. NAME..... Weinert Meee eneeeeeeeeeee Cut out and mail to The Star, Seattle, Wash.

Other pages from this issue: