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+ Rea 8 0 = fico Sra Uh Rbanehee and hersig Gr Wioroeaion] ple, and Hodge wished to meet every man and woman pos fe the money to rent a hall, Hall rents are high, and aynot draw people to hir ‘ { , « acknowl- Ja on people there: sible during the day h without money cannot get them But Hodge has hi edged by all unbiased peor ra t A 1 Hay, elite | “Meeting people is Hodge's method of campaigning. Mr. |heatth, strength and indomitable courage.” He works far into|the Taft man, and Hodge, prog poll an “Bob Hodge, progressive candidate for governor, spent a! Hay has his corps of ‘headquarters workers.’ It ts presumed the night. He would just as soon meet the poorest toiler as| enormous vote, , ‘ hrewdest Characteristic day. He was meeting the people—toilers,| that these steady workers are paid for their services. It is|be entertained on Cannon Hill. He wishes to meet everybody, |.of political forecasters polities of business people and every other sort of individual, Hodge! not against the law to pay men to work for a candidate. Mr,{an@/if they are not satisfied with him, he does not ask their|this state for the past 30 years y wrence is a joke yorked late last night, talking with the railroad boys, He/ Hay is reputed to be a man of great wealth vote, as a progressin 1 the people know tha a a stand- Went to bed at 2 o'clock this morning, Almost before the milk} “But Bob Hodge has no money for campaign expenses | “The beauty of it is that Hodge's addres are such that| patter. Wateh Hodge, stu r with him, and Wagons had ceased their rattling, he was"up and on his way to| except the little contributed by his loyal friends, all among|they appeal to every class of people. He has a method of| then decide if he isn’t the man you'd lik ‘in the chair Hillyard. Hillyard is the home of thousands of working peo-| the plain people. Nobody has come forward and offered Bob| talking which must come from the heart, otherwise he could|at Olympia.” wee | The Seattle Star { r.:.0.-- Seattle Heights is where the Don’t miss Uncle Jack's col- a umn on page 4 today. It’s a “little landers” hang out. Read OnE ~ SEATTLE’S ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER __ Rie Gate Sreckly HaGdw. tor neighborhood story on page 7. VOL, 14—NO., 127. SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1912. HOME EDITION the kiddies. AFT MAY REFUSE T0 LET HANFORD QUIT SOCIETY’S BUDS TO FLING IT's PAINFUL, |WAITS TO LEARN MINERS IN PITCHED BUTWE'VEGOT | JF THE JURIST WOULD BATTLE; 12 KILLED AGILE TO ES FOR CHARITY ees A | HAVE BEEN IMPEACHED | ‘ London. We hate to like sixty The novelist and his wite arrived Oe P ; \in Beattie Inst might, etter’ a, 140. | President Receives Hanford’s Letter, But Is Waiting for Private Guards Charged With Brutally Attacking keg’ vethen seer o Bas , < : if : Women—Crisis in Struggle Between Mine Own- SS Ihe calling ably Dirigo, oni tate Probe Committee’s Report—lIt Is Said Committee ots and tered at the Hotel Washington. To Unanimously Favored Impeachment. Workers. 7 interviewers he announced that cbiinetetinatinicomanpeicies od Gaek: ‘Toue WE ea teto while at sea he completed one novel (By United Press Leased Wire.) SERRE EERE REE EEE E b oe and made notes for two more. WASHINGTON, July 27.—President Taft may reject the CHARLESTON, W. Va., July «| the Paint creek section at once hon i is “ee ; tes si e 5 A 27.—Warm welcome to state #| More than 2,000 miners went on if k ng : |resignation of Cornelius H, Hanford of Seattle, United States militiamen, whom they believe # Strike April 20, but no disorders | . ; i as led us to believe that |J#4ge for the western district of Washington, if he is shown awit! shield them from alleged sd beeen hace ho er pad ag seal ; he is the . that the jurist would likely be impeached if the proceedings brutalities of private detec- «the jectives. i omy, " about. Fr NBLANCE 1| against him were continued. tives guarding the mines along # |News obtainable is that furnished | ¥ ‘ " ‘o tmied 7 ‘ dba ‘is . int creek section, was * | by courlers, and they report the sit- : - wg This was leatned here today when Hanford’s letter of Meh en ins tentreas or art rate. — oe Hag the id) resignation was received by the president. The president's ers at Paint creek this after. The t jous clash between | / i . men strip their Aer he | action will be deferred until the sub-committee which heard noon, sie a Rene at ae ggg ay we Wen | io F . . : bones, not ing vlood, | the evidence against Hanford returns to Washington. He will ane tees, Preah aretanga | Sorina i Wm. Phaup, head of| ? F b or ig se faa «| then confer with the committee and decide whether to accept Charleston. The miners # the bi in forces, 1 3 , , ; hen they é ok jn alal pre | eaatond 8 resignation or have the peachment proceedings ‘ red and hugged each other # i - aoe ’ na abe pe him an a. pritaitive, but highly renewed. . F et teat “the ihireie bee * alld Springer, riddied with pull lectual, savage, delighting It is reported here today that the congressional committee flee practiced on thelr we. w(fell from the car and rolled ‘ filet, giving and taking bludgeor which investigated Hanford’s record in Seattle was unanimous and children would now # /an emb ent. Phaup was badly z blows. We cannot forget a story of | that the evidence brought out warranted impeachment. + | Wounded * jhis we once read about « man tr LOS ANGELES, July 27.—A telegram to President Taft, demand- | Around t nouth of Paint creek | Alaska who was ‘hl ing that he refuse to accept the resignation of Federal Judge C. H. EERE EERE EE RD ‘ land trying Baga -* onicthien that the pri i jand trying | Hanford of Seattle, and continge the congressional investigation into (iy United ‘Press Leased Wie.) [vate guards are guilty of depreda-| | the jurist’s career, was forwarded today by the Central Labor Council “CHARLESTON, W. Va., July 27. | tions. Sto have been told of of Los Angeles, following a resolution passed by that body. The reso- ‘With both telegraph and telephone | frightful attacks yomen and “A NEW LIFE WAS HiS"—THANKS TO ORTHOPEDY which very stringént, urges that the simple resignation of the federal judge does not wipe out his past record, and demands that Wires down, making verification dif- , ' BY FRED L. BOALT such punishment be meted out as the evidence developed justifies. jcult, reports reached here today | or the clash between the “Orthopedy—The art or practice of correcting or preventing def e8 Of the human hedy, oo ; it a dozen men have been siain o nd strikers. Woodsmeti| pecially of children.”"—Webster's Dictionary. loreiies the Paint creek section, in a/ have jolned the miners and are said idiaeaabidae, between miners and Baldwin |to have participated in a pitehed| A little boy was carried to the Orthopedic hospital on a streteber, He was near death—so near that fives sent into the district to | battle with detectives near Mucklow | there was no color in his cheeks, no light in his eyes, no flesh on bis Banes, and no one, by the clever- mine property. The rattle of |yesterday, in which 3,000 shots| est artifice, could coax a smile to his white lips etry is heard continually onjwere exchanged The force of “Tuberculosis of the hips.” the doctors said sides of the creek, and as wom-| miners and woodsmen numbered Bot the doctors and the nurses practiced “the art of correcting or preventing deformities” skilifully. and children are fleecing from |600. It is feared the battle will be| The little boy got the best of medical treatment, the best of food, the gentlest care. He slept in the disturbed territory it is be- renewed today whitest of cots in @ great sunny room of many open windows. here that investigation will| The wives and children of the All around him, in other snow-white cots, were other ehildren, who also were.benefiting by the out the reports of casualties. miners are starving and the strik-| gentle art of the jaw-Dreaking name Gov. Glasscock, alarmed over the |ers are attacking the company’s There was an operation—-a bloodiess and aimost pginiess operation=-and the {ittie boy began to ituation, ordered three companies | stores. The sympathy of the resi-| take an interest in life. A flugh of pink came into his cheeks of chalk. If was just possible to make him| militia to rush from Mount Gret. | creek is with the) smile. So they gave him ploture books to look at and games which one can play on the coveriet of a cot. Pa., where the state troops are y that the guards He will get well,” the doctors said annual encampment, and the sol-|have geen guilty of frightful brutal- ‘Entirely well’ the nurses asked. re arrived here today on a spe- ith “Entirely well.” a ; oti 3 * “God moves in a mysterious way wonders to perform. So the man crawled and crawled and the wolf crawled after him, and | Paulhamus Won’ t by and by the man played ‘possum, and the wolf crept close and pre- R A pared to take a bite, But the man un Against drew back just in time, and ae the wolf collapsed, the man sank his| Hodge | teeth in the beast’s neck and drank his blood. , , H ‘ < up solidly for Bob ‘That's the kind of a life for Jack eesive candidate bor. gover We thought it was, but it isn’t. ate Senator W. H. Paull Yesterday Mr. and Mrs, London |} c were assigned to rooms 626 and 628 lizing that the progressives decided not to enter the for governor, While Paulhamus com the m hy has legions of friends who would irious suites in the hotel ith like to have him run for one of them cam th the major positions, it appears now valet who was n that he can best serve the cause by Nahata is yellow-hu: ne elent. | ru again as state senator, His The other day Harry Whitney Treat, mitilic e clubman and soctety)jeader, sidod on a box and First thing the valet did after un- re-election as ident of the sen- with quite the manner of the professional auctioneer sold boxes at the Mogre theatre. He sold 13. He ne z packing the trunks last night was ate would be a practical certainty sold them for $2,600. , to get out the novelist’s pink silk and in that position he can perform cob Furth, who derives part of his considerabie income from the nickels you pay in car fare, paid a pajamas. This morning London his greatest service at this time, Ja y FORM THAT THIRD PARTY |) $270 for the first selection. Even the well-to-do will admit that this is some price to pay for an evening's bathed leisurely and left the tub - | entertainment. . | reeking delicately of 4 in i ; ; : reeking delicately of eau de cole ogne. PORFIRIO DIAZ The bidding was spirited and gay. Those rich folks had a let of fun vying one with r Z ‘ : ed, had laid | thet efforts to get the best boxes. The bids went up $5, $10, and even $26 at a jump. They ean ‘ f hie ‘aiaster RI ‘A tandp: larmed because) think no more of $25 than you and I would think of a ¢ piece. j Vataot. and th > poteinet aaah C TIC LLY Il I The si at organs are greatly al ed a Some did it, perhaps, cause they have more money know what to do with. Som ‘ | | . t's hhe When cera | the ive leaders refuse to take upon themselves) tneir hearts are touched by the Orthopedic hospital's need and by the great work tt is doing se intaaed hime. they! Gkoneeaent MEXICO CITY, July 27— . . . H : And some, no doubt, bid because the annual Kirmess, though a charitable event, is distinctly a social | rei a al . r pede Porfirio Diaz, former president an 11th hour handicap by putting a third party ticket nd #0 annial n a social | tox . dupades.|, “Porarte Sted presic function, possibly the most important of the whole year, and to be seen In a box Is a feather in the cap is seriously in in the field through the convention system. The stand-| of the socially ambition | 2 ; hadi dak te Tye| Paris and his recovery is doubt- The general sale of tickets begins Monday, when there will be nothing to prevent Tom, Dick and | ‘ y t—-without | tl according to a special cable patters know that the people will be able to pick the ; Se ortnanae | ithout | received ‘here this afternoen: Harry from showing a substantial interest in the gentle art and seeing a good show in ‘ butter. The white of the egg, he _ progressives from the gang candidates, regardless of | the bargain tipulated, must be of the consist.| Government officials have: re- The first performance of the Kirmess will be given Wednesday evening. 4 oy ly 4 . ps ‘e o ceived no official word of labels, and they know that there will be mighty) P ney of jelly. The toast must be} feive i risp and prittle » would ave | reported iliness and con t candidates among those present after pri-| The Moore theatre was dark yesterday afternoon, save for such light as filtered In through the stage piand prittie. “He would have) © vinvntion tne Rot yar bean was empty. Seven lotus flowers were lying prostrate on the hard and dusty floor, After breakfast he returned to | sible. | door, The stage mary day unless they epee devise some scheme to ham- 8 : It may met ned that the lotus flowers wore street clothes. ¥ ~ the suite—which, by the way, is per the people in their selection. in the black hole which was the orchestra pit a plano was playing. A woman marched up| fRie™ laohi 4a. aveuneaka olkran 6 BUT THE STANDPATIERS HAVE FAILED) **4 deem the footlights, snapping ber fingers in time to ihe music : new chapter of a novel, in which | EYE PIERCED The queen of the lotus flowers was dancing. The queen's real name is Noel Dresier, and she has| Be : AND WILL FAIL TO FOOL THE PROGRESSIVES | twinkiing ankies, fiashing teeth, a lithesome figure and eyes of starry bive. | Sat Lenin sae re, dak Cehbebt ee ee BY HAT PIN and bloody, and make savage, gut INTO A THIRD PARTY NOW. There will be no third| 3%. ¥rithed and twisted and’ plrouetted on her dainty tors, her ronnd.arms weaving {Tore bardled Acorall was atateiag-|terat nolese tn’ Aneit throats wwher| i, arlekace GAT ecm By gnd by she awakened her subjects. e sleeping lotus flowers, and they rose and danced with |,/\ sade candidates in the field in this state except the} their quéen rythmically in the gloom of the empty stage The wolf dragged himself af-|they eat. the latest victim of an unguarded hy nce was finish: ed i th. ter the man, reasoning to himself; Mr. London's thousands of admir- hatpin. His left eye was pierced oosevelt electors and that fact alone will give the Taft-| And, “Msp, ths, dance was finished, the queen jeaned up againat the proscenium arch, fanned herself snug: “if 1 can stick it out longer | ers will be shocked'to learn that his |on a Phinney av. car, He arrod Hay standpat gang about all the “third party” trodiles| "tut. the milttant lady, marching: dléng. the footllghts, snapped har’ Wigece d0s.“enie: “Hew, girte,|!an the man, T can eat him [table manners are perfect escaped losing his eyesight. we will do it all over again! a they will want. : pee es Progressives, republicans and democrats alike will The lotus dance is byt one of many dances. It is a note of absorbing interest that Josiah Collins, i march to the polls on primary day and VOTE FOR} J ‘al euiility man in the le pe! ne fety world, has charge of a voting contest—ballots 10 cents each mine the best feature * carnival and the prettiest dance 8 s “MEN, NOT FOR PARTY LABELS. . + aed ther in their shattered forces of ousted office holders] and milk cost money. Hence the Kirmess. And the eges, and the milk, and the long, dr miess sleeping in the fresh air, put firm, new flesh J deposed bosses. They would make quite a respect- on the little boy’s bones, And new red blood raced through his veins, routing the stragglers of the e pe gathering, ix in numbers at least. enemy, tuberculosis of the hips. It touched his lips to redness, and painted his cheeks with the flush = —— the rose. | A new life was his, and in the joy of it he shouted and laughed, ahd demanded that be be allowed about in. It satisfied him for a little while. NEWSPAPER BEATS BARBER Finally, when he was entirely well, his big brgther cams for him. Hd found him trying to stand on ® je his head N 000) Rr Urites Zeer nesses wire The big brother sald something about paying. when he could, But’ the nurse smiled and said not MA $5, | LOS ANGELES, July 27— | to bother ‘ “Jack” Barrymore, the actor, Then they put the little boy's cap on his head. “Come on,” sald the ‘big brother ; DENVER, July il _— ; who is starring with a local But the little boy, disregarding the hand, was out of the door like a shot, down the steps and away, he said that he would work to stock company, today pleaded | running hard and bursting with energy and joy of life, gained by the gentie art of orthopedy. « fils a Bible, suggesting that he . ance of the family are down town at work? ered IS CAPTURED the da . PE He auie power of contempt for ac. | oullty to assault when ar . ~y tions outside their court ee — oe Judge 3 rooms,” Judge Shattuck this | iltiams. je wi je sen- , ‘ 4 BD ptternoon adjudged Fred Bon- tenced Monday Where, Mr. Advertiser, would you prefer | fils, part owner of the Denver Barrymore became entangled : i your advertisement-—in an evening news- Post, in contempt of court and last night with a barber at a 4 li 7 sf y Sentenced him to 60 days in local hotel. Eyewitnesses say ig wi 4 paper delivered into the home in the evening Jail, 495,000 fine and haif the Re note cnictnaee LN 9 . when the entire family are congregated to- costs, and to remain in jail seit het od A z a . : ‘ ) until the fine and costs were 2 3 , — or in the — sig valent ne paid. 4 - the home at a time when the housewife is dud Shattuck offered B | é 4 9 é ry “ ludge Sha offered Bon. SEATTLE BOAT ae ' , busy with her household duties and the bal- WOMAN BURGLAR | ,.32°S S258" PS: a OAKLAND, Cal., July 27.— /tle and the Thelma of Tacoma in leading gulity to breaking into |tow, both power fishing boats cap, ES’ the homes of neighbors here | tured within the threemile Mmit| § ‘ ; SP and stealing several articles of off Vancouver {sland recently, the { 2 e tar oes nto ver rf) 000 Jewelry, Mrs. ida Belle Turner |British fishery protection stthmer ire ae , ; 4 ’ } Was sentenced today to two | Newington docked at the governs __ years in San Quentin prison | ment wharf here last night In - % re t “i e > for burglary. The woman's |structions have been received at ‘ . ; : ; omes Ever Evenin plea that she be given one |the Dominion fisheries here from é 4 ‘ r more chance and be admitted | Ottawa to take immediate steps to- to probation was ignored by ward the confiscation proceedings| FROM LEFT TO RIGHT—RUTH M. BENTON, MARY LOUISE HOGE AND CHARLOTTE M. MANN Superior Judge Waste. of the two vessels, Young ttle society women who will help to make the Kirmess a success,