The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 10, 1912, Page 1

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ners get These Two Dogs, for Instance the i. an dog its perms © and a brace parents that as wn its of tas as aristocrati M and dog Fane, Contrasts See the The Star phot wh be kidnaped Pierp. Morgan bought another art treasure recently. Recently a strong man died of starvation in New York city And then there Polonoa Polonoa” is a Chihuahua dog. Mrs ni¢ B. Damourette of Seattle journeyed into Mexico about a vea ago to find the best Chihuahua gog that money could Polonea.” . oppe “raphe ever had a mother, he saw If he at a dog show Like pay, h . But he's some dog, just the same “and if “e- his humble brother wanted it, don't doubt for Polonoa” weighs p Mrs. Daimourette brother would get ie be *Polonao” had a bone and moment that humble } three nds. The Seattle Star 20 LOVELORN | THESE TWO MEN — Te eee “Ci 4 OF BARBAROUS TREATMENT. racT 40. bh i MISS COLUMBIA STRIKE IN ILLINOIS FIGHT “Mother Jones” Tells How Brave Little Girl Put Deputies to Flight in Strike. See Page 3 Rich Singer at Local Theatre This Week Has His Troubles —Don't Miss Story on Page 4 Today. “BEAST-MAN” KILL HIS SISTER'S SONS BY MISTAKE? Star teday prints the third section of the Tornew narrative. the beastrrar murders Mis TSyeareld mephews, John and Wil! ONE CENT & | | Two proapectors encounter the outiaw, but escape with their | giving correct answers to bis quections, The manhunt new, earnest.) BY FRED L. BOALT | a geiden Septermder morning two beys—truthers—went te their DEEN, were oo pe orl on thrown jim jail again today In the mili work ere strike at Aberdeen. Ore wor |T. R's Lead Over Standpat President Is More Than 130,000 Votes—Taft Strong Only in Notorious Lorimer District—~ La Follette Makes Favorable Showing—Champ Clark Runs Away From Wilson. ~et eee eee ee and umk mowing. Pest-man’s rifle bad already claimed two victims—“Scotty” and ." the prospectors—eeme time im the summer of 1910. Teperted to Sheriff Ed Payette at Montesane that Ternow ag if 2 cabin mot many miles from the cig Tornew homestead, jan was thrown into 2 foul ceil, ju nursing a three.monthold [babe at her breast None of the women had committed any offense. but were pounced wean By big. Burty |"deputies™ and atruck about the | | shoulders and backs with clubs and | ack jacks. Hindoos have Been imported by three mille, but are scoempiiehing practically nething. Much of the clubbing Ras been dome by deputios at the Wilson and Donovan milla. Former Chief Registration Clerk Courtwright of Seattic is one of the | armed deputies, ANOTHER MAN HURT * Mary Londgrem ts iu bed to » a bad sealp wound where |4re@ the marks left ck by & strikebreaker’s |i 20rtaring ¢ %, 35 strong, tried | Jail « to work. the] b O. And a j the strikebreak. | Yee arres rued om them. rosy.” They Ro the fotle chante ‘Towmdny hetore allowed {deen fort [When ~t (By United rrese Leased Wire) CHICAGO, April 10—incompiete returns today from aii sections of | | Hitneis indicate that Col. Theodore | | Roosevelt's plurality over President | Taft in yesterday's presidentiat lprimary election will be about! | 130,000. ft is certain that 52 of the! | tWineis delegates wit! be p ledged to | | Roosevelt. Clark Unhorses Wilson. Speaker Chan for the demoera ~ Wi T. R. JUBILANT PITTSBURG, Pa. April 10. —Col. Theodore Roosevelt was jubilant. here téday when in- formed of his sweeping victory in the Illinois presidential pref. erence primary “I shouldn't be he said, “If the tide goes all eur way from now on.” Col. Reesevelt left Pittsburg early today for Philadelphia, where he will arrive tonight. He will make a number of po- litical speeches en route, and is also scheduled to speak in several eastern Pennsylvania towns before returning te New York. sek ete ee eee Latest Figures. The vote in the entire state, based on incomplete returns, as | compiled at noon, showed: For Roosevelt, 233,000; for Taft, 118,000; for La Fotlette, 41,000; f Clark, 221,000; for Wilson, 79,500. the latter, apparently, is beaten. Len Small, Senator Lorimer'e gubernatorial candidate is over wheimingly defeated. tespectors, Mike Seully A rifle e epoa h nates, bey stood homely and another, came ay ecrese Bie knee They hough he had evidently GA at move ¥en - Wat scrutinized (bem come to take him Bames?” he sald knew this man was Toreow. They knew, toe that they must! Ris questions—<correctly. Otherwise they would die quickly not know how they knew these things. Yet they stood like cul- hie, trembling They teld him their names. | before Bim, mor did he speak a Perhaps he suspected they we Ps Wood 1. 0. ANDERSON AND €. J. YAEGER the bloody On Tuesda Do you see nom the arms of scars on | hey | OF the ropes used (ankles and im the Hoq oe Mr ed day nto hat the am pledged ther ropes are we Yaeger ay Monte y Pres Senator The | ricts is going to BK major eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Akhheheneeaenaeeeeshare } | Sat tatrete amswer was } ma owns this land” hesitates. They cid not know whe owned the land. instantly Weson his feet. his rifle covering them. Their lives hung on a p The madman's eyes traveled ajong the giinting barre! and faces. He rend their fear. He read, toc, perhaps, their! learned they were rot lying—that they were in fact what wer] were, prospectors and mot deputies. rifle slowly lowered en plerinent va ’ rad ne ‘eaen Race for Governor. em the hat Edw. F. of Chicago, s martes | former } other Tnatorial ndidates Governor Charles 8 renominated by majority of; COAL STRIKE COMMISSION TO CONVENE (Ry United Press Leased — PHILADELPHIA, April was officially announced here a that the anthracite coal strike com- mission of 1902 will be reconvened to settle the present trouble. Four operators and four miners will be appointed on the commidsion, which will be named this afternoon, The commission of 1902 was ap- pointed by President Roosevelt with Gov. Gray of Delaware ae chairman. I and Ander sed a ed Yaeger These Inttice a addrewsed by tims any of his tr T to an insulting they simply replied |atven bread aad water luseet-for refosing to work on johain gang. they refused to ea }tage. They threw | bread back fos Sa Then sou gars oid LITTLE MISS COLUMBIA | that 100 men with ta e are com. | © ag to belp break the strike and | } will make an effort to find homes Hail, Columbi }for them. Resolutions were passed | After traveling in furrin parts | condemmin outside = newspapers for more than a year, the Queen cf whose reports farored the atrikers | the Pay Streak in back in Seattie| ee ree errr | Coats to Be Short rope also E ¥o he beads « atled aguinst the care fied, stumbitoc. bind with fe expecting a shot In the back | ters to the Hamer ranch, a mile and a half from the Tornow! } gawky country bors, heme STORY OF THE TWINS & ‘and Joho Baner, twins, 19 years olf, were Srong as oxen, shy as hares. you boys guing™ demanded Mrs. September Piwins bad (beir rifles “Just across the river, Rtmmmer before they bad shot a bear be brush on the other fiver, and now they hoped for similar luck 8, boys. Something mixht happen to you.” ma! You ain't afraid of a bear, are you™” abe Wasnt afraid of « bear, be! She did not put her fears ‘The boys crossed the river and plunged into the woods. And their bear—an old shebear. Both fired, and the brute fell its the small of the back THE BSEAST-MAN SEES htee yards from where the bear lay, in a SWindiall, the beast.man was jerking beef. He had ‘Up the carrase bile sound of the uhots he whirled. Through a screen of bushes fo men appfoacking. It may be he ‘hought they were coming him—that they had shot at bim and missed. fired—twiee—and did not miss. tan only conjecture whether or net knew Were of his own blood—bis sister's sons. Perhaps he W tee late. As before. he took from the bodies the things the guns and cartridges and a watch—and vanish that night Bauer and his wife and neighbors searched the woods imerning they found the bodies. A little further on they found the , wounded but stil) alive. in the hollow behind the windfall they found the carcass of the re ti od that Unit by M. Cub by Lawrence jal advisory janx and Bauer on t Sunday Miss Columbia, accompanied by! her mother ine two brothers and jone sister, arrived in Seattle tast night. While filling her theatre en |gagéments abroad, most of them in Germany, she learned to speak Ger jman and French. She returns with powals of marriage When she received she could! jenly « study foreign final’ she could them, she was not pleased. They were too silly!” said Miss} | Columbia Her manager. scorafy th mA,” they said. jeeetoe d about 40,000 votes | tial primary. As b as campaign. DR. HAZZARD MAY PROLONG 22 SSeS HER FAST TO FORTY DAYS ©0005 state “1 am confident that | will Both Taw jabie to prolong my fast over rs lared that the me | days." said Dr. Linda Burtield Haz ppg eo naid zard, the fast specialist, this morn ‘img, “F believe it will probably last | Pearer to 40 days than to 30. } Over We at rally Areade ba’ it which Hoard pr ve corpse | e end of who} ) i twenty pro black and these in | / low hidden from the illed a steer took ts. ner and & al p to take tive the m Hassard two 4-day ¥ dee paity fm $ about suf. was ap new doc prove reduce said to be Smith, says} Dr from dukes | nays rinks the men be was made the ry ended the night esented The Haze eaides essman MeKin- campaign mers, doesn't wvorea Roosevert| Chinese Minister renom-| (By United Press Leased Wire) 1 HANGHAL President. fast spe Ange spoke e fast Dr B. Eby o' y ite 5 jesides,’ of Los . she said, “their man-| SHERIFF TAKES TRAIL bunt for Jobn Tornow began in deadly earnest a with a sleepy eye and an Indian's pa id the best woodsmen in that part id the state offered rewards. A grateful gov he man who captures the beast-man. cruisers’ maps. He reasoned that Tornow MM@ake for the Oxbow pass to gain the Olympic mountains. He sent to watch the pass where there is @ foot-log crossing the Wynoo ‘Tommow reached the pass, he must use the foot-iog. r cruiser reported having seen a man, who Mike Tornow, heading that way. Then another cruiser came in and he bad met and eaten with Tornow miles away from the pasa. Mory has never been explained. Perhaps the cruiser met a he thought, was Tornow. At any rate, it was not true. TORNOW ESCAPES sties away from the pass, and within an hour crossed by the foot-log and gained the pass of a rancher, saw him. She was frightened feed him. He gave her # sharp look and ners are bad. knives and are They eat rude with their to women. | And the women seem afraid of the men. were the Bel gians. The only nice men The 1 found y were so/ honest, and big-hearted and natural, they reminded cans.” Miss Columbia bered as the was Streak at the exposition. crowned nt queen will Eskimo girl who bf the me of the Ameri} be remem. Alaska- Yukon. Pacific Queer Accident UAKLAND. Ap mobile ¥ Lean hem the cur Vahey will be clea thts | Banniek | partment today that ordered in otifled the ummer ur m ample t jdonhed Ji coat will doa forms must be that they may be The new uniform thing like the Lon: bobby’s,” whieh is awfly smart. The refined and aesthetic ar itist has caught the idea to perfec on accompanying drawing. From Ket urselves be aoe in th in the it you ca i military counse! for Lieut ang C Tan ie the today ‘COUPLE WILL BE MARRIED AFTER COURT MARTIAL {Special to The Star.) GREMERTON, Wash. April at] Lieut. Jones has authorized me to say that his offer of marriage to Mrs. Margaret McReynolds will be followed by marriage, regardiess of the outcome of this court-martial.” ctica MeRe elying nolds had bee on stand since Wednes lay Jackson This was practically the opening < tement in the argument began for the defense by Lieut. Griswold Jone Griewoid’s argument lasted but a few minutes, when he was followed Roosevelt's campaign managers here claim 54 delegates for him, conceding two to President Taft, with returns incomplete from one district. Champ Clark's majority over Gov. Wilson is about 150,000. Lawrence Sherman is running about 20,000 votes ahead of Cullom for the United States senate, and ; Governor’s Son Bets (By United Press Leased Wire) AN FRANCISCO, April 10— |Fire by of pa speeches, Jack Johnson, son me the giterect} chances stampede of young John @ limit one a's a April 10. | Yuan Shi Kai today appointed Wa Ting Fang as Chinese minister to the United States. Dr. Wu had been considered for minister of foreign affairs, but President Yuan decided that his wide acquaintance with the United States made him @ more valuable representative for the Washington post. iY Dumb Chink Has Fall (By United Press Leased Wire) SAN PRANCISCO, April 10.—Per tly conscious after a fall from a third story window, Lee Gon, a Chi- nese, lay all day in a vacant lot with a broken leg while crowds }passed within a few feet of him, | Lee m is dumb. Attorney F. H. Kelley of Taco ma, chief counsel for the defense Kelley contended that no evidence had been shown to sustain the charges of andaious conduct,” and that the testimony rather show ed that Lieut. Jon hon orable and upright man, and a good office Arguments in the court martial o of Lieut. C. K. Jones, charged with “scandalous conduct” and breaking up the family relations between Lieut. G S. McReynolds and Mar garet McReynolds, his former wife, began this morning. The defense rested its case late yesterday after noon, when the cross examination of Mrs. McReynolds was concluded. Mrs. McReynolds, answering a) blunt question by the prosecution in reference to any improper reia \tiong sustained with Lieut. Jones eliher in, Seattle or on the train to Chicago, just as directly and unhes. itatingly denied any wrong act. Het Cross Examination Payette and his 4 ast-man. Once, on No ber & pon the fresh tracks of a man who had been n the upper west branch of the Satsop. It ‘en minutes the tracks were obliterated. They puties played a game of Colin MeKen FIREMAN HURT the chauffeur,| Pat Bohan, a fireman, was pick were Margaret Budd,|™P at yck this morning Fourth av. between Yesler and Washington, by Patrol n Byers }who found him practically un | scious and with the side of his h bleeding. At the city hospital Bo han said that he had fallen to the in) sidewalk from weakness. 4 tomobile with | Vahey Bush and again the deputies came upon the tracks of his moccasins,’ Della Wright, Louise Hall and H. A mthe trails, but paralie ing them. it was borne in on them finally | Dunt was watching them constantly, dogging their steps, perhaps fardonically. He could «ill them when he pleased. The know!l-! ontheir nerves. They came to regard Tornow ut his true value. | ted him with a sight, hearing and general woodcraft superior| ANNOUNCEMENT TO STAR ADVERTISERS The Star believes in the policy of clean, open business methods. It believes in laying all the cards on the table for a clean, unobstruct- ed view. The Star wants all of its advertisers to KNOW of its tremendously increasing cir- culation and where this circulation goes. And The Star welcomes the opportunity to PROVE its claim to over 40,000 paid copies daily. The Star wants to prove this, not through the ordinary glittering generalities or stereotyped phrase of the advertising man, but by facts. Call at The Star office and . let us show you thé cash books and ledgers kept by our circulation department for our stockholders. This must convince you of our claim to Over 40,000 Paid Copies Daily And if you are advertiging for results, and not through sentiment, you must also be con- vinced of the advantage to you of advertising in The Star. besides WILL INVESTIGATE POWER SITE While ity Electrician lyn was willing to make a definite effect that $1,006 Hebb wa-| members of the| party that visited the site yesterday | are under the impression that the matter ought to receive nore care: 1 consideration before such af rge sum of money is paid for it,| Mayor Cotterill said this morning A proper survey should be made to discover if the site d suitable for the uses every day in the year, and that the reasonableness of the p can |then be determiged. only City Jos. Vagrant if You Cuss PORTLAND, Ore, April 10 |The use of abusive language | Ore gon constitutes vagrancy, and Murphy, bartender, is the first one to be prosecuted, he having * WEATHER FORECAST neen extremely rude in bis remarks *® Showers to Thareday to several telephe operators. & fair; moderate westerly winds. Many are shaking in their boots|* Temperature at noon, 45, lest they, too, be tried for Yasrancy. ¥¥¥ Hee NH EY EHH a | statement to the 000 was too much for the hed the ving become demori the posses. RB is Larson—and a rnow shadowin take aenn taker ter site, ‘Coin MeKenzic December, the ix ine and e lized, Payette went up| rning, he came upon third. The third deputies on.the was furious when told of the moceasin | FIRST SKIRMISH IN LEGAL FIGHT OVER PHONE RATES a legal bat-|Corporation Counsel Hughes yes-| | terday, that he formerly paid| ‘The prosecution was merciless in $1.75 his residence phone gnd/\its crose examination. She was 5 for his business phone again compelled to admit that she| cordance with the rates es' returned to her husband last fall, by the state public service -lalthough at that time alre 2 sion last fall, The Pacific Tele-| gaged to marry Lieut. Jones. To aj ph Co., be alleges, now demands | direct question, Mra. McReynolds and $7.50 for the same service, |replied that “the agreement was The Pacific Co. bases its right to/sttii im effect” then. She denied raise the rates on its own franchise, |that she knew that Lieut. M vere e absorbin, company has a/On the other hand, it refuses to ac-| Reynolds would prefer charges ming ph vad jo eg to raise ts wate formerly |knowledge that the Independent | againat Lieut. Joues following the Mins Annie Southern seated in her| tai) yy james McDonnell for thé|Co.’s franchise has been abandoned, | divorce. room with fingers firmly entwined |P.- ‘ot Independent phones.|The city claims an equity in the In-| Two witnesses were called by the the collar of a burly burglar she! yeDonnel! alleges in the complaint |dependent Co. whenever its fran-|progecution to impeach Mrs, Mo- handed. filed tm bis half by Assistant|chise 1s held to have expired, [ Revnoids’ testimony, on which the me go back. Ili go alone. He fooled me th e, but he won't again. I'm as good a woodsman as he is any }can shoot as straight. Let me go back said Pa: * alone,’ wie chose one of the best wou! ‘ove ty's A shots in the West, for ice here in the mountain fastnesses to the northward the beast- their coming fourth and last installment of the story of the beast-man will| in tomorrow's Star. it is the story of the death of Colin Mc- wt lion-hearted, and Eimer, the “dead-shot.”) The first skirmish in tle that will be carried to (® sv te \Slugged ’em Over the Ropes (By United Press Leased Wire), GREENSBURG, Pa, April 10.— We slugged them over the ropes,” said Col. Theodore Roosevelt to a big crowd here today, in referring | to the t of the Mlinois pri- maries. Speaking at Jeanette, he said: 1 want to see Pennsylvania do what Hlinois did—declare for the people against the politicians,” preme court in reference to the tel lephone tangle in Seattle caused by of the Independent into the Pacific Tel decided Friday preceedings The specific} al the absorbing Telephone Co. ephone Co., will be ning on injunction ages 4 by the city * remark-| question that will com® up is wheth-| ting Sailor Stung Deo, ¢ Pity This Poor Burglar MARYSVILLE, Cal, 10.— again for Kipling, pot! as they Score sled the d single

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