The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 27, 1912, Page 6

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cig Hs: of the t ny na4 P fand violence was the fi of Should Know and Do BY RDWIN J. BROWN, DL DS ‘The evolution of p ty affords & study well worthy of sincere con sideration. Starting with the morn twilight of history and with the test gitrminer of human intelll- ence, what we now designate as) ty, and what wired for ning life, was the controling factor in the world, as it ts today “The Almighty Dol sol would mental and withoat rehend exist, and it follows wer ix property of the Benomunation. It ts true | form of property is not respected ag ie gold. land, herds and goods it if this property (labor) were to} inactive, the shock would] cause some people in this world tol move faster. The growing inequs ity of property rights tx (he mor tows question of this propert ould that labor] supreme that this The or t that “b whieh bet upon which the he human race depend u Pro Ht is natural ¢ the hat wilh be fi 0 days roperty preser ways ort . the “anelent time muna! lands eemmon for the « Becond, commen pre rn time. and contrelh state. such personal Instruments limes (before what “government was kne anderstand how one p Of persons could own sale property the lands Matiiviions whieh must of the whole peop of tife. The that such p bd individually Sindividually, but even tv we of the pubtt dual requir hin were not considered than human life. ax it fistian civitiza is indians wh merica were cu and harvesting of grain Individual of the products supply the] al herds Wale amore them, ‘alse (arm products were bu ether useful work. T fle the principle of prevatied in ¢h tx of private edged family he er petua e- person! gould not exit in ri fo expel a savage from je was equal to the de alty, and the barba ment much | of same 4 each whe: (Reedoced and how it us the ownership of manners of prehistoric Gi and the ancient Ge Minavians are found as our American | a ty mans as an examp compatriots: ax did Catlin & period of eight 2 to 1839, sojourn wWiidest Indian rica, writ tue, I venture to Sg need not underta FEUDAL rnorenty. stages dey held up the barbaria to bis civilized} wh ars. the ¢ ke to t al Ke forests| and pretense that Jwuch had always be | fords (who now poss their theft nged to the ed the might right), fraud ndation 0 their right and religious freedom. When Caesar landed in he found same w « leath and the rich are getting fat-—afier Years of Christianity ee In Wales in 940 the mo jecting village chiefs was the same war chiefs, First. chosen from t Of the people, the chief was subject to a he refused t serve. The office of the w temporary and re tings it was ti not accept the dangerous to be grea navians sacrificed t jee for a divine mine. Keudalism had a dual ori in from the condition under which he village collectivist evolved, and conquest by force and viole as the lords and barons, who were Judges of the time, frequently turn #@ highwaymen an: undered the were given p sand robbed the t the stigma Sd plokers of man” “ALLEGED FORGER ej to have forged checks on the ASSISTANCE AEPORT 6 WRECK ON C. P. AON (My United Press Leased Wire) VANCOUVER, 8. C,, July 27.—A special to the Evening World from | Fort William, Ont., says: “A serious wreck on the C. P. R. west of White River Junction is reported. Telegraph wi hav been down all night and no details can be obtained. FILING FEES TO BE REFUNDED There's joy in the homes of citizens who have been candi dates for city offices In the past two years-there is considerable jubilee in the homes of defeated candidates. For Comptroller Harry Carroll today announced that he is ready to pay them the money they deposited with the city for the privilege of running for offi He has $4,382 ready to deliver. This refund is in accordance with the recent supreme court decision holding that the Seat tle city charter did not make adequate provision for com- peiling the payment of filing fees. IS ARRESTED John B. Curtis, an alleged forger was arrested yesterday by I tives Hamphrey and Joues. Curtis escaped from Sheriff man of Kittitas county a r ago, while ain to Bilensburg. The omnized him from a} out by the Kittitas of ye Curtis who, whi Northern was a telegraph operator, in the employ of the Pacific railroad, is alleged ou pany to the amount of several hun dred dol HE’LL GET AN HISTORIC GAVEL C. A. Cairns, general passer: ger agent of the Northwestern railroad, will be presented with @ gavel made of historic wood when he comes to attend the meeting of the American Asso- ciation of Genera! Railway Pas senger and Ticket Agents, in September. The gavel will be made from wood taken from two places, part from the steamship Beav- er, which was active in the fur trade in the early ‘50s, and is now a wreck in Vancouver harbor. The rest. will be from paneling of the battleship Or- egon, paneling which was in place when the old warboat made her famous trip around the Horn, during the Spanish- American war. BEGGAR WOMAN WORTH $300,000 (By Uni -" wir LOS ANGELES, July Mr Leota Seybold, a beggar, was ad | judged ings and today is in the Patton asylum Mrs. Seybold has for years been a beggar on the streets of Los Angeles. When her affairs were gone over, it was di covered that she had a fortune amounting to $300,000. $60,000 of }| which is on deposit in several local banks. | Dr. J. A. Bolin of the county hos | pital says that the continued mo |notony of counting nickels and | dimes caused the woman to lose her | mind SEATTLE MAN” HEADS LOGGERS (By United Press Leased Wire) TACOMA, July The Pacific Logging congress adjourned last |night, after selecting Spokane for |the meeting in 1913 and re-electing the following officers President, E. P. Blake, Seattle; vice president, H: C. Clair, Port Jand; secretary, George Cornwall, Portland, Today the convention went to to| Kapowsin, to the logging camp of mupply w: manufacturers. The rights fominal and Bt now by their hey transformed of property. © lady. the Duc drove 15,000 the lords had b with the own authorit into thelr right good and boly of Sutherland people from 194.000 ren of land that had belonged to Pie cian from time Immemorial, and 16,000 Gauls had ‘bee Feplaced by 121,000 sheep. We hay Now arrived at the history of prop fh known a8 capitallem of today Batu A ganae te, tMhis-article in next n . BROWN. DD. #, _ 118 View ‘Ayen Union ioek. day's WIN th Co, St. Paul and Tacoma Lumber “|COTTERILL IS CHIEF TEMPLAR (By United Preas ST. PAUL, Mint or George F. med Wire) July 27.—May- Cotterill of Seattle grané lodge of the Independent Or- der of Good Templars here 1 Jaight | Francisco will vary the usual or was elected chief templar of the er Not Be Rescued Than by Mr. SkKygack ee SHE'LL HUNT BIG GAME IN THE CANADIAN ROCKIES MRS. LEON B. GREENBAUM Leon B. Greenbaum of San |the summer agined, She will follow the trails hunting and fishing anti) the high altitudes are reached, a lone herself in the fasinesses and end to bring back bags of big game. Mra. Green baum's love for the out-of-doors d the wilde was expremued last pring at the Mardi Gras, when she will wear a stordy khaki went to the big fete as a bumble hunting suit, heavy high boots and bee, dressed ail will be as free of impedimenta of |auze with red wings, GANGSTERS FATALLY WO & Mrs. vacations and tn hotel clothes will ge lane to Canadian | der of summer ad of lounging about tas and changing her or four times a da: Canada, where she big game in the rai avor to stalk Rocks GANGSTERS UND TWO INNOCENT CHILDREN IN DUEL NEW YORK, July 27.—A dozen of the best detectives in the city) were sent out today with orders that no excuses would be acccepted for failure to capture gangsters, who shot and mortally wounded two children during a street duel with revolvers last night. The wounded, Tessie Bierbauer, 9, and Vinzent Mazaretlo, were reported dying in Bellevue hospital, where they had been rushed after they had been shot. Rival bands of gangsters met on the street and began shooting, deapite the fact that the thoroughfare was jammed with pedestrians, | mostly children. There was a wild rush for safety, but the Bierbaver girl and young Mazarelio were directly in the line of fire, and were | both shot through the stomach. The gangste: | pistols without injuring each other, of sight before the police arrived on after emptying th surely departed, and were ovt scene. Emily A. South mayd, general secretary of the Y.{ ports W. C. A., for the first six months! jof 1912, shows healthy advance and progress in al] branches of the soclation’s activities, The financial department Is good shape. The fund for the new building {s rapidly approaching th | point which will make ft advisa' | to start building, subscriptions have | doubled and prices decreased. The employment bureau has he!) ed hundreds of girls to good post tions and aided a great many hou |FATHER OF 42 ¥ Onited Press Leased Wire) LOS ANGELES, July 27— President Joseph F. Smith of the Mormon church, husband of five former wives and father of 42 children, spending his summer vacation in Southern California. Speaking of the trouble his church had with Sweden over the passports held by Mormon missionaries, Smith said today: “That matter has been agr ably settled. We found it had been greatly exaggerated.” WE'RE GOING TO OWN 4 OSTRICHES Park board commissioners put in a busy day, and the busiest part was the decision to buy four o# triches for the Woodland zoo. Oth er business transacted was the per mission for a branch library at Co-| lumbia, the awarding of the con tracts for field houses and paving and granting the request of the city swamps for # sanitary fill Report of Mis wives by supplying help. The re fr various department show the helpful work the associa- ion is doing for the young women of the city Dance at Dreamland tonight. FAMILY WASHING So CENTS PER WEEK COVEY Wi UND! PHONE BAST 5606. | BEST MODERN DENTISTRY to location, BAD “PAPER” There's some more bad “paper” in Seattle United States Secret Service Men Foster and Glover have discovered that there are a lot of counterfeit $20 bank notes in | cireulation, The notes are supposed to be from the National Bank of| Long Beach, Cal., and are declared by the secret service men to be Jone of the best counterfeits made. ~ nse ORING PEO DENTISTS COR FIRST AVF. ano PIKE ST OPPOSITE PUBLIC MARKET | will in brownish sae} 'Y. W. C. A. REPORT IS ENCOURAGING COURTED FOR 35 YEAR July w Erickson, 69 years old, a} ploneer of the Kittitas valley married Sandpoint, Idabo, Mins Minnie Nicholson, after ing 36 years for his bride, Erickson came to the valley in 1879, settling on a 240ncre ranch was in to car co! How pare YOU. SAFe MY cire ft! on” a dead man’s friends w at Temeshvar, Hungary. best friend wi he did in this fashion: it. made now on his account » for all time.” the mourners, made it nec near the mouth of the Nanum can yon, In 1877 he had Mine} Nicholson in Olympla and after he moved to the Kittitas valley they correnponded ularly In the epring of 1910 Erick: sold his ranch to Phil Adams $24,000, and wince that time he has been living the city. About a month ago he ed up bis affairs and left for Spokane Mins Nicholson moved = from Olympia pokane last spring and stopped over in Ellensburg to Visit Mr. Ertekson. MISSING HEIRESS IN CLEVELAND? Hy United Frese Leased Wire) CLEVELAND, ©., July 27--Con fident that the young woman who aypiied for a position Tuesday to the superintendent of a nv . home here was Miss Dorcas Sndd gyaxs, the missing New York heiress, Cleveland police today} started a canvass of the city, It} wan said that the woman tallied with the description sent broa of Mise Snodgrass, but that, w rej n| eeeeeeeeteeeeeeee | | | able peared. ] Misa Snodgrass left home on the day sho was to start for Oakland, |Cal, where her brotherinlaw is record | superintendent of construction of a| men. trolley line, EVEN A SEA CAP. TAIN COULDN’T } | | | | vn MISS EMELEEN MAGOON SAN FRANCISCO, ly 26. |tradition that a sea captain is king of his ship was sadly wrecked | on the shoals of feminine scorn during the homeward voyage of the Korea, which arrived recently from | the Far East | Captain A. W. Nelson, master of the big steamer, is competent to) jnavigate the seven seas or quell | | riot mong Oriental steerage pas-| fengers, but when It comes to pre jscribing how young lady travelers {atfould dance, the skipper admits | that he was sailing in strange and) ‘dangerous latitudes. | Miss Kmeleen Magoon, grand jdaughter of An Fong, the famous The Chinese millionaire of Hawaii, ‘the young lady who is credited with the achievement of having de-| jfi@d the steamer’s skipper. | | Miss Magoon was so much the life of the ship that the nickname | ot “The Lark” was bestowed upon! iher. | | The young woman's defiance of| |the skipper was not of such a na-| { Cure as to Warrant her being put in| }irons. In fact, that astute mariner |deomed it best to let her have her) way. | Word had gone about aboard the | vessel that the captain had frowned | on ragtime dancing, and while one jof the dances was in progress, a Chinese orderly came to the merry makers with a note from Captain Nelson which put the official taboo on the entertainment “Well; of all things,” the Honolulu |belle is said to have exclaimed, as she stamped her foot in the mazes of the “Texas Tommy.” “Who told our jolly tain that he was a! social czar?” | On Monday evening the Loyal Order of Moose, No. 991, of Port) | Ange installed officer, after | which followed a soctal session and ‘feast of good things. BH. EB. Fisher, {by authority granted=him by Su- |preme Organizer J. ©, Monahan, jacted as installing officer, parted to conclude the oratio be ee ee | n HERO MADE POCAHONTAS, Hl July adged the of Wm re pt adj slayer be ue tle town of Pochahontas would some time kill attention to Mrs. Miles, Wh: spread through the village, a quer ptended for the many persons wante there was not enough roo: tur Miles was released of $120,000 had signed the The trouble started boarder in the Miles be band that Jones was t from the house, but es 1s * _ WHERE, OH WHERE, IS THAT TAFT RATIFICATION MEETING? What has become of that Taft rat ification meeting? The standpat- ast |tere right after the Chicago conven. ||). tion promised the people of Seattle girl as can be int }to furnish a diploma, she disap-|a real joyfest. They proposed to hold @ mass meeting here. It wa not to be @ strictly invitational a fair, as at Aberdeen. The hall wi not to have been guarded by police- meeting, they ity the sel tion of W. Howard Taft and 4-14 dozen candidates for the Schoolcraft Sherman and swallow the Chicago Taft platform as well The announcement of this pro pored meeting was hailed with joy generally, It appeared that only the standpatte: themselves felt sium right after they made their own announcement They saw visions of the mars meeting turning into a denunciation meeting of the Chicago Taft affair instead of a ratification meeting. And #0, the local “hand-pickers have not been saying much lately of that meeting. Rick Burrows, progressive candi date for senator from the 36th dis trict, has filed and will soon enter upon a house-to-house canvass tn his district. Burrows was a dele gate to the Roosevelt convention at Aberdeen, Besides the initiative referendum and recall, Burrows is advocating the Kansas “blue sky law, to curtal! the fraud operations ot “water” stocked corporations of the De Larm brand. Senator Dan Lan . progressive candidate against Standpatter Will » Humphrey, has been visiting tn Everett in the last few days. This is what the Everett Labor Union Journal says of Landon “Landon is a forceful example of the younger set of men in politics —olean, capable and courageous. As a member of the state senate he a Jones distinction 0 Jones 2 hono to Ko on on when bond 0 Mra ming too friendly ed in ee ee MOURNER TRIED TO COLLECT A DEBT FROM DEAD MAN’S FRIENDS | Tan, Freckles, Wrinkles BUDAPEST, July 27—~The effort of a mourner to collect from | responsible for an unusual scene at According to called upon to pronounce the funeral oration, which | colized wax on the face and funeral local custom the deceased's) “Friends, the good man whom we mourn today once borrowed 100| wash off the wax in the france from me, but most unfortunately he died before he could repay fine, flaky Knowing your high sense of honor, | suggest that a collection be | ticl that his memory may remain eataniohed | e ekin The untimely exit of the orator, under the gentle persuasion of sary for the second best friend of the de ~ eet ed . * Cee eeteeeeeteeeeeeee OF SLAYER Arthur Miles by a@ coroner's jury, today befng practica the hero of It had long been expected that & result of that b pre 27 after being f ly the latter's news nd shot t ever of he he he Jone yerty holder of con Mile bond Pd at $6,000 blank for for the yersons qualifying for So that signa a total the ago, when Jones was a Miles complained to her hus He was ordered his attentions. jand is one of the #ix senators who |have an absolutely clean record in the Legislative Review, issued by joint legislative committee | Landon is not an eleventh-hour pro- |aressive as he insurged when in-| surging was yet unpopular, and has jbeen insurging ever since.” | | Scott Malone's filing for sheriff jmakes the fight for that office an | junusually live one. There are about | office CONSTRUCTIVELY ARRESTED’ Mayor Cotterill, Fire Chief Stet son and H. J. Huhn, chauffeur in the police department, are today under constructive arrest Coun: |ciiman Goddard yesterday swore lout warrants charging them with using city automobiles for other than official duties, The warrants | were isnued by City Attorney Ralph | Piere in Judge Gordon's court. - No arrests have been made, as Chief Rannick guarantees that none of those named in the warrants will | attempt to eseape to Mexico or Hon duras, NEW STOCK ISSUE FOR GREAT NORTHERN NEW YORK, July Wall today has a report that the ¢ Northern railroad is to have an} |issue of new capital securities, and |that stockholders will be given at jtractive rights of subscription for the new issue. The strength of the stock and the information that J. J.) | Hill and his associates have held jeonferences at his New York of fice have given color to the report CONSIDERED CONSEQUENCES) | 6 | | made a record for progressivetsm Clemmer Theatre Seattle's Best Photoplay House, Our New Pipe Organ Will Be Played Sunday For the First Time, by Oliver G. Wallace SPECIAL MUSIC --And— SELECTED PHOTOPLAYS, 1,200 Seats—10 Cents How was it you side-stepped the chance of rescuing the heiress who |was in danger of drowning yester day, Waldo?” j 1 promised my folks I would! never marry for money.” CONFERENCE Second annual meeting of the Internationa! Interdenomina- tional Theological Conference of the Pacific Northwest takes place next week. The title the conference explains its pur- pose. Ministers from every church meet and discuss sub- jects that touch the churches of every creed. Many noted divines will be present at the three-day meet ing. It is expected that 1,000 ministers will be present. VANCOUVER, Wash., July After preparing an application for | a license, necessary affidavits, and | the license itself, Miss Ella Sharpe, | a deputy county auditor, is today the bride of Warl 8, Butler of Port jand. Words by Schaefer Music by Condo To Overcome Sunburn, If you are freékled, tanned burnt, dab a Wheral amount of mer- ~w When yc ning, pare Re it to remain over night almost invisible of cuticle come with tt ting this daily, the is absorbed, but % not the slighte fence. Even the “" to th The underlying skir the new complexion youthfullooking you'll ma the transformation. It's one of the aa few things known to card an ag fade blotchy complexion hands merco drug * mont cases, If sun and wind make entire no gradi t hurt or tabbornext | treatment pe ‘ the conve eck yield dis or so good One procur- ifficient mud It is ab arms, f ved guint Iti- Yo * and crow the bathe ution made y of powdered half pint witch hazel ounce saxoli Advt To The im Wants Silver, old W and P v We will buy your G Gold Scrap and Platr prices Theatre full of the best of USED FURNITURE You never saw such @ sight Save half. Houses furnished complete. GIBSON-CHANDLER FURN. CO. PIKE STREET. Phone Main & CAFE TANNHAUSER 2d and Pike Instrumental Entertainment and Evenings. MEALS AT ALL HOURS a la Carte. \ ry and A ite cal ons Good Dent Good because Looks well, and tortured while havi ‘ If you have lost one, eral teeth and do not wish to wear a plate, we can rep! the missing ones with h that will creditably compete with the best nature gives to anygne. istry it is } ng not wo or sey in- not teeth, If you must have a plate vestigate our work. We only supply your miss but restore your facial contour and improve your expression: our famous Ever Stick tes are thin and strong and food cannot work under them Regular $10 Plates $10 Extra Heavy Gold Cr $5.00 ‘Owns . $4.00 Regal Dental Offices DR. L. R. CLARK, D. D.&, Mar 1405 3d Av,, N. W, Cor. Union St, NOTE—Bring this ad with you.

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