The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 6, 1912, Page 1

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ANFORD HAS MADE HIS RECORD, NOW HE MUST ANSWER FOR IT "plot ike the beginning ofthe end for. Hanford. | HE REALLY IS THROUGHOUT THE imself the subj ion-wi When ari extreme conservative like Taft is forced to practically recall a Hanford decision, when the United He stands today in the United States as igen ian dna ee ae ae ee wsttorney general openly declares THAT HANFORD HAS DONE A GRAVE INJUSTICE TO A HUM. | STRONGEST ARGUMENT EXTANT FOR THE RECALL OF JUDGES. MAN, THEN IT MUST BE EVIDENT EVEN TO HANFORD HIMSELF THAT HIS CAREER ON | Charges of the most serious nature against Hanford have been published broadcast throughout the coun- ‘NCH IS NEAR AN END. _| try. These charges, reflecting both upon his private and official life, have been unanswered or ignored by | ‘ . Hanford, but the time h WwW “Henford will have to face impeachment chargesbefore the congress of the United i / ‘ Reon act erent ete bag roo aes nad enswor tee Wis Sima Ga Uelbala acct ie, s of the United States. He will have An impeachment indictment covering many of these charges will be introduced in congress tomorrow, ‘ i long known for what he really is to the people of this district, Is NOW KNOWN according to a United Press dispatch from Washington today. I FOR WHAT HANFORD HAS MADE HIS RECORD. NOW LET HIM ANSWER FOR IT. e Star. Cherries ‘Are getting ripe, and The Star “will tell how to enjoy them on page § tomorrow. Tiger His name is “Tom.” a eattl ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1912. mee He's in uihcedietaplce woh Seattle today, and story about VOL. 14 NO. 83. "ON THAINS AND NEWS STANDS Bo ONE C him is on page 4. FORECASTS G. 0. P. CONVENTION NMMONER, WRITING — |/“Don’T Boom TOWN; HOW FRANKLIN FOR STAR, PREDICTS FARM,” SAYS POET BOT PROMISE | t, Who Is Keenest Modern Political R ogers Starts Out! . Figures Out the Tremendous Repub- With Sensation in De-| an Situation at Chicago—Taft Bolt Possible. fense of Clarence Dar- dune 6.—Writing fro row — Franklin Admits the peculiar angie that it is possible he may again of It. fight, Wm. J. Bryan has written, for the Newspaper Some ion, a forecast of the republican convention, which . : | LOS ANGELES, June 6—That h the hearing of contests between Pres |) Bert H. Franklin conferred with mie a" ad 8 strike committee of the Mer. BOOM “BILL” TWENTY-THREE YEARS AGO TODAY, IN GREAT] FIRE, THE “SEATTLE SPIRIT” WAS BORN m the fullness of hie political ex ls’ and Manufacturers’ associa- _ tion with regard to his plea of guilty, and that they promised him [immunity if he would so plead, was What Attorney Ear! Rogers for the Gefense attempted to bring out when the state's star witness was recalied to the stand for further croseexamination in the morning session of the Darrow bribery trial toda Franklin admitted going to the of fice of the M. & M. and meeting the members of the strike commit tee there. but could not remeniber any of the conversation, according 10 hiv testimony The district attorney strenuously protested against the admisrion of this testimony, declaring it an at tempt to bring the fight between the labor unions and the M. & M into the trial "We are trying Clarence Darrow for bribery,” deciared District At. weorney Fredericks, “The unions are not to be mixed ” in thia.” “tam an admirer of labor unions, more so than others | know of,” paid Joseph Ford, assistant district attorney, in backing up his chief's argument. “But they have nothing to do with this ca and the de- fonse is just hitting the high places trying to discredit this witness.” After a long argument the test! mony Was admitted BY WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN. the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) convention promises to be the most exciting ever held af the country. crovided, of course, there is no surren: ieettie. Never before have we had a president, fighting for a i pitted against an ¢x president fighting for a third term. alone would mak le of giants, but an inexhaustible quan. ” ia supplied for the celebration by the fact that the con. ence bosom friends, are now bitter enemies. Whatever may be the feud, there is no doubt that @ feud exists, and no feud 0 er been more deadly in its effect on partici- hs “ ot sémetimes strikes a passerby, but to bundred tlousand office holders not to epeak of an bare bad their hopes riddled and thetr bread and but fragments of exploded shells, “= LOOKS LIKE TWO CONVENTIONS : a8 to the outcome of the convention, one must have At the present it looks like two conventions, if have the courage to do all that is in their power. commitice to honor Roosevelt's requests for 250 have the animus.to fight, but have they the cour- fo the last ditch? They had the law on their mt, when they gave 260 tickets to the prest- ‘expresident, but the law is never invoked between igs ate at outs when they co to law. TAFT CONTROLS COMMITTEE ‘eeatrol of the national committee, The committee can Taft delegates to sive him a majority of the conven- Will be about as much to be said in favor of the ‘Taft the South as can be said for Mr. Roosevelt's delegates for republican delegates trom the South, whether § Taft or Roosevelt, represent, as a rule, only what patron- or money can buy TWO BIG QUESTIONS t¥0 questions to be answered. Whoever can answer an foretell the result Chicago. President Taft dare use the machinery which he con- bysti Quel, a stray bull Photo taken 23 years ago, showing fire at First and Marion. You remember the old story about the pearl? careless oyster on the bed of the ocean opened his shell. A grain of sand was washed in. The oyster. in self-protection, threw out a fluid which coated and hardened on the grain of sand, which thus became a pearl ¥ A diver found the pearl. It was bought by : eler, It was sold to « man who gave it to le. wits A burgiar tried to steal it. He was discovered in the act. He committed marder in making h ~ oe ing his escape. He And all shell. twenty-three years ago a heated glue pot upset in a pile of shavings, Seattle, then a straggling town was destroyed by fire. At the time the holocaust was regarded as a dire calamity. Many wealthy peo. ple were impoverished. But it awoke in them a stub- A | born determination to overcome any obstacle. ble lati ed pitehed tents upon the blackened ruins and started —~ again. It was then that the “Seattle spirit” was | rn. The fire started in a wooden building near First | av. and Madison st., on the site now occupeid by the Rainier-Grand hotel, It was owned by the Pontius eng Foes oy spread until it burned itself out.’ ¢ fire-fighting methods of those da: { less to check it ert cote. That fire was a blessing in disguise. Seattle be | gan all over again—and began right. Since then ev-| erything has dated from “the fire.” nese is today a city of more than a quarter of a million population, and with ungu t ties for further advancement ce Sr And all because a heated glue pot u f pile of shavings just 22 years ago. enema CONGRESS URGES FARMERS OF NORTHWEST TO STAY AT HOME eRe A he ee ®) Penwell of Helena, Montana, a * , at the of Alaska, declared * | Seven Staten’ Northwest Develop- ser ea 8 because a careless oyster opened his REREAD RHEE * WEATHER FORECAST *& THIS 1S COLONEL BILL & Fair tonight and Friday; * ‘* probably cooler Friday; mod- * - BY FRED L. BOALT you oak « real wanes ~ in the} ® erate northeasterly winds. * i hi "t break—he can tuke his ine of the delegates to the/ city if times are good, tells you |#® Temperature at noon, 74 * ed gel gelborgge one ea celegates from the Northwestern Development Con- how many syburban lote he fe 4 Tee ee eee ee ee Mmacif, ‘Does he want that kind of a nomination, and |gress ie Colonel “Bill” Hanley of |s0ld tm the past month. 3 BLO N tek what Mr. Roosevelt may then do? (if the ex-president ‘al — Oregon. Understand? | seeing small. | tek } ral Oregon is where Colonel! “I learned to see bi motin, id abide by the decision of the 4 earn e «ona spomgd necgpectnage te sxcure a nomination— | “Bill” lives. That's his address. You tain. 1 wax above the timber ling, + po Foes | may live in the third house around The world was beneath me—the Lad “ if his contesting | the corner, but the colonel lives in timber, for building house what will Mr. Roosevelt do | is, lyond, ‘grasing land. ing of railroads in Alaska was even Meir attachments to particular indi » party, and they have it in thelr power to ne committee will know how many un elt has, how many uncontested dele- ny delegates Senators Cummins and La! Mr. Roosevelt does not 4 ne Taft tas, and how m question denied seats’ repair to another hall, seat and then proceed to nomin: seem to be his purpose, thes If the combatants are that Mr. Roosevelt will be a candidate— convention or the nominee of a bolting convention. either LA FOLLETTE MAY HOLD BALANCE national committee is com: the convention tes Mr. Roos viduals, are ti mo’ Will he take a majority of the delegates; hie contesting delegates ate himself? if indications and threats left to themselves, it is) be nominee But posed of men who, what-| re attached | determine have enough | Wf, as is probable delegates to give bim a majority of the convention, the be may seat enough of Mr. Taft's delegates to make his strength Roosevelt's, and leave and La Pollette east, doors open for a Bight be the result, or lores the nomination of a « the balance of power in the hands 1) sorts of compromises, Taft and Cumming and La Fotiette might be jark horse. Sways, Mr. Roosevelt doesn't bolt SOME SUPPOSITIONS H Roosevelt ie nom! ion of his own DOR? Is their attachm to lead to an organ accuses Mr. Taft of being the candidate of the bosses. | ense of bossism, but | Would be able to put wo has studiously ignor that he wants to be iis son, he calls them hard names, but this kind of evasion can-| ha campaign. He know how many t Roosevelt will ad compare the t al w He Notully short of a major! PM ticket is put in the field by the anti-Roosevelt r WER HEARD OF SUCH , too, that im more, but Mtount the fact + who did not he and the whoe nated, either by the regular conven will the republicans who oppose & ent to the traditions of the fathers ized protest against Mr Roosevelt? p a fight In de ed the third-term issue. will have to define his position, and considers proper or allowable votes he has received at pri- ty even in republican states, and he voted for him did so not because love Taft less, and he must also who voted for him—and a still have been disgusted by the man- confucted their mpaign is abundant evidence of an enormous protest at the polls, epublicans. -ATHING,” SAYS HANFORD a ‘Prees Leased Wire) aA dune 6—Judge C. H./ Stirred up the coun ‘Geeision, stripping Leon citizenship because he looked thunderstruck =e when informed building in Tacoma eMmey General Wicke the Olsson case Amother trial given Hanford ham re of such a thing,” Mette of the court be vet by edict of the attor weven hy the pres! SMO way asics Such a thing te am ,be done,” he replied. ‘It would be improper for me to discuss anything that might come before me for hearing,” he sald, } When informed that Congress- man Berger had given notive that he intended to start impeachment proceedings against him today, Han- |ford said: “If he does 1 will have to stand it.” Fred Ruby, 2618 Stanton st, a switchman employed on the N. P., received a compound fracture of |his left leg this morning at River- wide, when he was attempting to throw a switch. He was taken to ) } Providence hospital. Central Oregon. 1 hunted for Colonel “BilI” Han-| jley at the Coliseum theatre tod. | <*You can’t miss him,” said a man) lat the door, “He looks Hke William Jennings Bryan.” | He does; but that’s the least im-| portant thing about the colonel from Central Oregon. The most im- | portant thing fe that he is a FAR-| MER; and the difference between a FARMER and a farmer is the difference between Central Oregon | and @ truck garden. | For the colonel is estimated to} own 260,000 acres tn Central Ore gon. “Estimated” is used advivedly | You know to a fraction of an inch }the dimensions of the lot on whic your house stands. The colone has to estimate the size of his} farm. | item: Colonel “Bill” cuts 20,000 tone of hay every year. The funny thing about colonel is that be is a poet. I dont’ mean he writes verses. He | is a poet. Imagine a poet knowing | jail about’ manure, fertilizer, alter-| |nate crops, soils, intensive culture and market prices! The colonel is that kind of a poet We got off in a corner, and the| the When men | nan whose address is Central Ore-|1acney they didn't earn president for life, with a remainder |gon told how to “see big.” i “The Farmer Sees Big.” | “The farmer sees big,” he sald. | The elty man sees small, When th the total vote in.those states, he will | BY FRED L. BOALT The hunt for John Tornow, the beast-man, is to be abandoned. The forces of law and order have given up the fight. Tornow’ rul the wild. “Too expensive,” say the county commissione They might have added: “And too hopeless.” For the odds were all with Tor- now. Nature was on h The wild was on his sid stealthy game they played, Tornow bothered by no questions of xpense.” Dolla ind cents mean hing to Tornow, mehe “odds would have been the game if a hundred men had sought Tornow, instead of seven. It Is, perhaps, clvilization’s most remarkable leat. The beast man halted “the maroh of in the foothilis of the The secret of hie ability jaw and order lies in the ¢ is half man and half h progress” Olympics. to defeat fact that h beast. . | away, where sheep and cattle were feeding; farther farms; and far, far away the cities. I saw all ife from that mountain. “It fe « natural Inetinet to herd, Cattle live In herds, birds in Noeks, fish In schools and men in cities, But with men the tnatinct is wrong fuliy directed. Your cities are too big’ they grow too fast “It makes me tired to hear city men boast of the size, in population, of their cities. How are you going to-Inventory, by people, the worth of a city? A man is worth the dif- ference between what he produces and what he destroys. roys more than he produces, he) a dead weight, a loss, a lump. To say that t! are in Seattle 300,000 persone may mean much and may mean nothing. “You have too many useless men in the cities, The real estate man is a parasite. The out0f-work is a dead loss. Man's mania for crowding has produced two slume—one at the bettom and one at the top. In the bottom slum folks don't get enough to eat. In the top slum folks have mere money than they can spend, I feel ag sorry for the folks in one as for the folks In the other, I wish they could see this world as I have seen it from the top of a mountain. ithe MEDFORD, Or, June 6.—Three men were literally blown to pieces and another fatally injured. and four badly hurt by q premature ex plosion in a quarry above Jackson * eg at 11:10 o'clock this morning, explosion is belleved by men working in the quarry to have been }eauned by a carelessly dropped cit jaret on powder heated by being ex- \posed to the sun, although it may} \have been caused by the powder lman who was placing a charge not teooling the hole into which he was tamping the pawder The dead John Simmons, 45, resident of Jack sonville; Louis Lazovich and Louis BRogdon ee WASHINGTON, June 6 Speaker Clark and Chairman Clayton of the house judiciary committee conferred today with Congressman Berger, and suggested that he post pone until tomorrow his speech demanding the im peachment of U Judge Hanford of Seattle. It is believed that the inves tigation of the committee on judiciary into Hanford’s case will be postponed until fall 8. Keb aeeeeeeeeeeteee * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * SERRE E ees His forbears. were German-fa dominant race, When he revertéd to savagery, he took with him to the primitive state his man-cunning: He added it to the beast-cunning. He chose his own battleground— gnch a battleground as the bea would choose, an impenetrable, trackless forest. He took with him a Winchester—the last word in firearms and a product of that elv- ilization on which he turned his back. He took with him cartridges made by the powder trust. Beasts may fight with teeth and claws. Gavages may fight with stone hammers, bows and arrows. But the st-man fights with a modern Winchester with whieh he never minecs, The forest feeds him. A single shot and he has enough elk meat to last him a month. He tans the hide and with it clothes his body. ‘The forest cradles him. A windfall ia hie bed. Hie pursuers, trained woodemen a though they be, are still creatures of habit and products of civiliza- tion. They pine for food cooked on @ stove and served in dishes. Their bon after weeks in the wilder- nees, ache for rest between sheets. Their liv hours, and day: months, and years. They di work “out of office hours.” These habits of thought worked against the deputies in their hunt for the beast-man, The beast-man does not reckon time. He has no office hours. When he is sleepy, he sleeps. ‘When he is hungry, he eate—and the larder is never empty. No need for Tornow to re turn to town for supplies. When it rained the deputies shiv- ered in their blankets. Tornow ures as little for rain, as he lies in his windfall, as does the bear in his cave. The deputies suffered from hunger, cold, fatigui These words are not in Tornow’s vocaQu- lary. 4 TODAY'S PROGRAM 2 p. m.—Address, “Develop ment Leagues and = Their Work.” by Tom Richardson of Oregon Address, “Cen- tral Oregon,” by William Han ley.of . Barnes, Or. Address, “Montana,” Right Rev. L. J Chrissler, Havre, Mont., “Areb Deacon of All Outdoors Idaho, My Idaho,” 8. J. Rich, commissioner of immigration & p. m—Address, Louis. W Hill, “The Northwestern De veloper.” Address, Dr. Allen D. Albert, Minneapolis Trib- *® ment Congress, which began its sec- *\ond day's session at the Coliseum % | theatre this morning. eA *® | Minneapolis this fall js to be one * of the educational features to fa */miliarize easterners with the pos-| * | sibilities of the Northwest country. | *%/A $5,000 prize of farming machin *\ery,, the largest single award of its * kind ever granted, will be offered * | by the league for one class of ex * | hibits a. Presi¢ent Penwelb also outlines a *|plan to bring land shows right to #|the home of the American farmer # | by carrying @ trainload of exhibits big land show to be held in! more important than self govern- ment. After discussing the possi- bility of private ownership of the railroads, and joint private and government control, as in Canada, Joslin said: “There is only one other way, and that is for the government itself to build the railroads. There is a bill pending now in congress, | hope to see.one along these lines passed in a year.” The boosters’ special, carrying the delegates from Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Montana, Idaho and Eastern Washington, une. Address, H. R. Williams president Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound railway All seusions of the congress will be open to the public, and since all the addresses are of general interest, a large local attendance is desired * * * * a eae eee aR SSE SEER ES EE SERRE REE ES To keep American American money, and American en: | terprise in America, instead of al.) lowing it to be diverted into Can-| ada, is to be the chief work of the Northwest Development league Elaborate preparations whereby to accomplish this result are under way, according to the “keynote”) speech made by President Lewis Again, Tornow's was a. waiting | game. The deputies could not wait They were hunting for Tornow—) and tt was “too expensive,” Tor. now could wait in bis lair and pot them os they came. He would not miss. He didn’t miss McKenzie and Eimer He didn't miss the Bauer twins. He didn't miss Scotty and the Swede. So the hunt is to be given up. | Wor! has been sent to the depu ties to return to Montesano, From | @ mountain peak Tornow may sur-| vey hie domain. It is larger than | they eye can compass. And it is} all his With the forces of law and ordér in full retreat, there is| none to question the suzerainty of the beast-man » The r, the wolf, the elk a his subjects. He will not be lon ly, His courtiers are with him ways—the spirits of the wild, the creatures of his mad fancy, with whom he holds wordless converse in the silenge of the forest. # | Stereoptican and making regular «| farming communities. Government *|roads in Alaska and local self gov ernment were the chief t der discussion at the Northwest | committee, presided at this mom- Development Congress at the Colis-| ing’s session eum | farmers, | Joslin, representing Governor Clark|the first speaker, arrived at the King st. station at 10 o'clock last night. It was met by Wagner's band and representa- tives of the commercial clubs. The | train carries 14 cars and a printing outfit for the Seven States Sun. Charles Patterson of St. Paul, pics un-|chairman of the league's executive views and lectures trips to the Government Ownership. ownershinp of rail. W. W. Wilshire, pres- yesterday Falcon | ident of the Commercial club, was afternoon How Much Does Advertising Interest You? The real science of advertising is in its infancy, grow- ing in importance every day Yet advertising itself is as old as man. Witness that Noah advertised prior to the flood and those who heeded his advertising profited; that Joseph used his own brothers to advertise the fertile lands of the Nile; that Sampson, through his feats of strength, was known the length and breadth of the land Today you advertise. Yes, madam, you do. You give your neighbor a cake recipe and thus advertise your ability as a cake maker; your taste in the hat and clothes you wear; your children advertise your care of them; when you call on a friend you have a d—advertising the fact that you have been to that particular home. : The merchant or mnaufacturer calls-on you through his “copy” in The Star, telling you what he has to offer and asking for your patronage for the mutual benefit of you as reader and himself as advertiser. ; Really you are more interested in advertising than you thought you were. : And because you are interested you will be reading from day to day the little talks on advertising which will appear in The Star. OVER 40,000 PAID COPIES DAILY.

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