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Cory famous for You 4 3 i, d) * cr. »* nt - at the sl partial! mcided 8° | io! cs ers” Behind it * t& epiit the pro by. putt against Dan Lasdoa or suddenly of the third party the fact that pro- fa control the ae chet 0 mg p the sandpatters by im the those who meeting in the leterta soon after the mifon, had refused to, if as to whether or support the regular RomInees d his hand when he state full tic! matter much if there ie third ticket nominees for or comnty offices. result, of course, fn ‘Hay an open field in the re. 7 i cartoonist some great pictures Star readers. Look at “Do Remember?” on page 4 today. PARTY M0 tion present, andjand also adding Gordon Corbalay, the 39 counties in the the del- T last ‘omtion on ticket at t#@}conmvention as Ding, Senator trickery Edgac.C. Snyder in Chicago. feature developed in was fact that & num; good progressive * progressives. under a republican label,” he said, emt & standpatter if ke should happen to for get a third party convention nom | appeared | nething.” Bt tn the licht of ehtrd party | VOL. 14—NO. 137. Fighting | from the Congressional race, sub stituting himself at the convention, ~ send Hay committeeman from okene, a8 a candidate for con- | Rockefellers Stysemanat-large, Marphine denounced any viting ; and. rettensess, all of/ [xRigh Coakt be avolted by abiding | the alliance of }b¥" the fimdamental progresive i ew of giving the people a di- y vote In the primaries. ‘A man can be a such ollie, which was tol shots, which man Rosenthal Metropole hotel. The fact “and a standpatter ig no less a | expose police ticket advocates. Thet/ Mitted here today by District " was to split the pro ‘WOMAN ROBBER torney Whitman. He declared dy fstfength at any cost so as }Foung Rockefelle#, with the back- Lasdon's defeat became HOLDS UP MAN ing of his father, has been operat- mare evident during the| ink @ pretended disorderly house In ton st. was held up near his home at 1 o'clock this morning by a man The king” coincide Whitman has through his pockets. She secured $160 in currency. STUBBS WINS (By United Press Leased Wire) TOPEKA, Kas, Aug. §.---Latest returns received today from Tues- the gambler in the police Gov R Stubbs has defeated ‘Chas Curtis, imeumbent, for the United senatorsnip. Stubbs claimed morning to have car. tied &5 of the 165 counties in the state, and later retarme Increased this lead. Returns from the west- tern counties are coming in slowly Wf Stubbs is finally shown have been elected, the progressives | orate of th | will have made a clean sweep of lesser “joints” | the state. will bear. $600 Per reform. a $600 monthly THREE KILLED (By United Press Leased Wire) dec’ are taken to the and one passenger were killed and/ ner 86 others injured. some severely, to-| war, day, when a train on the New York, iow Haven & Hartford railway was | derailed near here. The engine top- | pled from the tracks and the bag gage car followed, (By Unitea GAMBLERS Oil Billionaire and Son New York and Support- ing Whitman, i (By United Press Leased Wire) NEW YORK, millions wealth and personal political hie son, John D. Rockefeller, jr, to day are enlisted in the war against) the New York police and the underworld of the metrop- that mam, Gnd failed im their first ination Party labels should mean |*™ iuterested tn his fight to run down the Rosépthal slayers and to Thomas Tevereli, 1114 Washing |the heart of the tenderiota to wet jevidenee against the police and the | White slavers they Rockefeller @: ives would be/@Ad woman, both negroes. The! not connected in tte le primaries, and | man pulled a gun, stuck it in Tev-|the Rosenthal inquiry, ty candidates could ereli's ribs, and the woman, went ‘demce gained by the sok of the “oll gathered, and per. haps it will be used at the trial of ee Chas. Becker, who ts accused of planning the murder of Rosenthal by hired gangsters when the biackmail schemes, by which it ia alleged Uecker and fribute on the world of vice Rockefellers project, Whitman said. was begun in the interest of young Rockefeller has Proof that the common disorder! to|for protection, that the more elab- houses pay more and Rockefeller, the district discovered that white slaving is a regular trade and that country girls and girls from abroad BOSTON, Aug. §.—Two trainmen|at auction in exactly the same man- negroes were sold before the ‘CABINET MEETING Press Leased Wire) SEATTLE’S ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER : SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1912, i ; ———— _The Seattle Star HOME EDITION REJECTED SUITO a — THAINS AND WS STANDS be —— 'SMONEY HE 1s “Apaches” of Aug, &—John D. and the influence of exposed by the pis kitlea Gambler Her. in front of the New the Rockefellers corruption was ad Protect. eriment was ception with bat the evi with mach of that od to ox higher-upe” department levied Month Graft it is understood y houses pay to the police graft what their traffic attorney resorts and put up THE KIND OF MAN YOU CHOOSE TO MAKE A LAST STAND WITH tke Hodge is the sort of a fellow you call Bob; kick a sick dog, or double cross a friend, or lie about his record, or have to lie about WOULD the sort of a fellow who doesn’t Do You Know? That Washington has a woman Read her on editorial page. candidate for governor? story about MAN SLAYS TWO YOUNG GIRLS | AN INSANE RA | Awful Double Colaie Discovered on California Ranch —Posse Pursuing Suspected Murderer—Mother Finds Victims Dead in Their Home. (By United Press Leased Wire.) | WEAVERVILLE, Cal,| the trai} of the murderer. of the Aug. 8—Shot to death, it is ke believed by a rejected suitor, were af the \ i old | Their mother, the bodies of two sisters, Elba owner of Red- Gould, 16, and Kate Gould, 13, have been found, four miles down the Trinity river from Douglas City, and posses today are in pursuit of Geo. Lorenz, their suspected slayer, who has taken to the hills, armed with a} | Winchester rifle and an auto- | matic pistol | Lorenz is declared to have | been rejected by the elder girl, and is believed to have slain |the two in revenge. Both girls | formerly lived in San Francisco. After Desperate Struggle the girls were shot In the 1, and the result ¥y prove serious PEACE MAY _ BE RESTORED IN MEXICO MEXICO CITY, Aug. 8&—That peace will be restored in Mexico is the belief here today following the announcement that Gen. Zapata had opened negotiations with pro- visional general Maranjo of Morelos, Zapata is prepared to surrender if the ter are favorable. President Madero admits having Re hon of Wm. le ste offered peace terms to Gen. Orozco father, with whom the cted |and the latter’s acceptance is ex slayer also made his he The | pected. younger girl was shot through the — back of the bead and the elder tee eee eee ake ek keeek through the eye and the temple, ap-| & * parently after a struggle in the|)® Los Angeles. — Declaring & home where she fought desperately |# that he was dying of infantile & for life. When found, the elder! ® paralys' a teamster who ® girl's clothing was torn, her hair) @ rushed a drug store here & pulled out and blood was spattered | ® was given a sobering draught. ® all over a table, the floor and out-|* He was advised to eschew & side the door, through which the | * Strong drink on bot days. * murderer is believed to have|* * [ARERR pulled her back into bis shambles as, wounded and bleeding, she tried | to escape. Kate, the younger girl, | apparently was shot down from be hind as she fled from the scene of her sister's murder. So far as can be ascertained, the killings took place about 3 o'clock yesterday. Men working near the Lorenz home then heard four shots STANDPATTERS. near the house. All was well in the Lorenz home at noon y orday. The family had dinner together, then Wm. Lorenz went down the river to a mine a mile away, and Mrs. Lorenz, the girls’ “mother. went to Douglas City to visit, jeav ing the two girls and Geo. Lorenz home. “When the Mother Returned” When t moth returned from primaries if Dilling’s ad- SRR: Soo aos Si WASHINGTON, Aug 8A apo.| + : . . r visit she f the two pretty fakes. And, of course, to |ctal log of the cabinee see it. Bob Hodge is the sort of a man you would pick to make a last stand with; the giris dead and Lorene gone crowd ips coors < an BIEHL OPPOSES I rig today. It ts under sort of a chap you would put on the job if your life or honor was at stake. He is HEE Bh ar spre Alps pe Ppead fmportant than the election jstood that President Taft proposed A . . P : s is 0 years old and is we legislature A. J. Biehl, indicted with the late] to outline to the members of hie ut reliable, square, frank and a mighty fine double-fisted hitter of every mean thing beiieved to have eee insane, ae bin Wants to Run W. E. De Larm on the charge of|ficial family his messages vetoing |that bobs up. : | previous reputation has been good = Made the break that the | promoting wild-«yed corporations, | ‘tariff bille and to decide whether | <== id. ink hs _. | Latt also, he been acting Statesman Reed not worry about | will oppose the confirmation of the|to ct the udget bill” if the ; ry ’ in an eccentric manner any standpatters in our party. . as Senator Panl-| sale of the Wabluke Irrigation prop-|Commerce court appropriation| ._20@ CAUSES ACCIDENT. Ieee e eee eee eee. WILSON RALLY Murderer of Pioneer Family | Second Statesman—No; and yet ieeaid be named on a thirdjerty, as allowed by Referee in} were omitte Mr. and Mra. W. H. Will * * n inquest on the bodies of the/ we don't want too many of those j as candidate for gov-} Bankruptcy John P. Hoyt, the other} a iesigapeeey }8119 49th ay. S., were riding alone ®* WEATHER FORECAST. *& IS PLANNED dead girls is being held today at! people who are always sidestepping ie Pesereastve ao sad Bieb! _ in — — TAKEAG D LOO |Rainier ay, last night, tetween!#" Occasional rain tonight and & j the hago ve i aon soe re — you can’t tell where they the field need not be| the last two days, and he is report- (o18) Holly st. and Graha on a. @ Friday, moderate southwester- FO FRI posses from the whole countryside ‘ stan It jeaked out later that | ed to have voiced his opposition to K motorcycle when a n out, @ iy winds Temperature at ® R DAY} ———— === —— = — = —— plan further contemplat bom terms of the sale as being of AT THIS ran in front of the machine and ® noon 69 ®! & Woodrow Wiison rally will be! : ion of Dan Landon! too smail an amount. P| turned it over. Hoth riders had/| # *! hela by Woodrow Wilson club “ vad —— a See | thetr ankles sprained EEN EH RHR: tho Good Ents cafeteria Friday _, ALL TRAINS WILL BE “DRY - o | cane ai fs nf at © p m. ‘Gpecches. will CAGO, Aug. 8—Beginning today, all the trains on IN N CHOICE FOR IC | prominent democrats sylvania railroad system and its branches will be MEANEST MAN IN WORLD poretet ar the ae date lowe cvchibintes the leo tee, eee be s ae x j a aer es » vania state laws prohibiting the sale of liquors on railroa PRESIDENT; FIGHT IS ON es a Se aS prog ee a a ae é ws m world” is Herman Paine, a sea captain, if the charges made f|!mportance will be RRR eee eee ee prior to @ republican national con. rainst hirr {r 1 » se. i r vor % vention, was chosen chairman of the] > 2 ie OE ane Mrs. Julia J. Paine, in her divorce Oakland, Cal.—A mosquito lodged Spee ce og a i < igeas rame— rogressive # |p ras! ational co - today, are trne in the eye of Walter Corder while * * Ph arveomtes + ee arse ashe pore oe! This is an illustration of subdi 12,500 and enjoying an inc driv . shoes ile | € . Re | t Piano Wanted for Cash tleket—Theodore Roose- & |New Jersey was named vice chair-|Vided space. “D" seems higher int alleg al telegraph _ pole, pr President, Hiram Jobn- #| man and Oscar K. Davis secretary.| thao it Is broad, while i seems i eoceree wrecked machine and severe . garnet. sy | Broader than it is high. They are bruises to Corder, his wife and L h ¢ t f § | t B According to the rules adopted 4 dee ede ed BY United Press Lense Wire) O, Aug. 8—To choose an campaign committee, name treasurer and to desig- ‘Sampaign headquarters for the @lection, Col, Theodore and Governor Hiram W. Who head the national tick- the new progressive party, Min conference here today with of the progressive na committee. were male, it was be- that Oscar Straus of New pawili be named treasurer. Geo. former partner of the m York banking house of J. P y the Although no an mace oe? & Co., and Frank A. Mun- Magazine and newspaper Probably will be appoint- the members of the fi ay ittee. a, National Chairman. pe Meeting late jast EJoepb M. Dixon of red Koose night Sen Montana It's campaign EW YORK, Aug. 8 bof wedded life Ten ,000 fortune. | not going to promise more than we FOR TWO YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE. mittee must contain four women, and it seemed certain today that Miss Jane Addams of Hull house,| Chicago, and Miss Elizabeth Dab-| ney of California would be included in this number. | Main headquarters of the new] party, it ts be ed, will be estab lished here, with branches in New York, Atlanta, Portland, Or., and) San Franciago. Johnson to’ Resign Governorship. Governor Johnson planned this morning to leave for California to-| night. He said he had not decided| her to resign the governorship, Horn in the sch site for the city between now and November to cam aligning. Following the adjournment of the convention, Col. Roosevelt said: “lam glad to know how the boll call Perhaps the sarc For when th to flourish there, moose sounds. The progres sive convention was not typical of| the old parties, whose platforms concealed their real plans. We are| m cash, and that wi are able to give. We intend, how He Fig ever, to try and make this a better| house. He farmed, countr dians, Seattle w ed and dreamed, million dollars a year for two || was satisfied. that country. asm of the So they unloaded on themselves at his childish faith. spraddling, prosperous town lection of how they left him “holding the bag.” But Olsen surveyed his domain—for the whole point was his—and Seattle had its ups and downs. BY FRED L. BOALT ooner Exact, had which they meant to found Alki the Indians smiled and said “UNLOADED ON HIM” much cash in those di n the four log cabins. Close by bought and sold lumber and as born, had time to think of Olesen and to Men made vast he built traded with the It grew from a frontier hamlet to a rough, Those early enthusiasts, while they work laugh at the recol fortunes. THEY, UNKNOWING, “UNLOAD” A MILLION DOLLARS ON HIM Nearly half a century ago Knute Olsen brought his family from Blake county, California, to Alki point. cover by wagon the journey which you would make today in less than 48 hours by the Shasta limited. . in "51, 17 years eariler, Capt. Folger and his party, rounding the| heme, with his crutch landed at the point, cabins there, and had finally crossed Elliott bay to find a more sultable| You can see Seattie’s hills, their sides gashed with streets. It took them many weeks to built four log , 1en Olsen came, the earlier settlers unloaded on him the land on it it is believed here that he wil When Olsen came, t ; ; as he will devote most of his time|Alkp polnt. They had lost faith in that wooded strip which in their betw why |fird enthusiasm they had called “the New York of the Northwest Indians had weight with them pioneers spoke buoyantly of the great city ‘Sometime. which was the simple Norwegian and laughed among He bought land of Dr. Maynard. bought more land of an old German, and with it a wheelbarrow, a cow and a hundred bushels of potatoes. it at $1.25 an acre. He And he bought land of the govern- In all, he paid about $1,200 for his holdings himself a In- and lost It became The blue-eyed Nor him to hold. squire” of all is the wa them. The town had booms and slumps, booms and slumps je way it figures out here today for the young [\a city. Now men speak of it, as they spoke of Alki point 50 years ago, ye of John S. Lyle, millionaire New York merchant. ||as “the New York of the Northwest.” ears ago Mrs. i.yle was a pls o hea S WORTH A MILLION i ra rs. Lyle was 8 plain aurse in a New York Alki point is stil! Olsen’s—his and his family’ hi pital. Lyle married her. He died recently. [| wegian found much wealth in the first-comers Ws will was read the ex-nurse was devised the bulk | Olsen ie worth, probably, a million dollars. He is the He ‘s worth more than a million dollars, for the Seattle banks! more—a big bunch this time.” Would lend him half a million on his personal note. They know he is Henest. His tenants on the point want no better landlord. It's a fine Way to get rich | ‘On any fine day in the past ten years you might have found Knute Olsen, come to the winter of his life, sitting on a bench before his nes by his side—for he is now an invalid From that bench you can see the ships coming in from the sea. Seattle's riad housetops flash back the sun. Seattle's docks. chimneys The incoming ships warp in to Here and there hang smoke palis risen from factory Faint to the ears of Knute Olsen come the crash and clang ’ | of machinery and the screams of siren whistles. JUST WATCHES 'EM ALL Nearer at hand a fussy little excursion steamer bustles up to a pier apd discharges a load of city folks, intent upon an afternoon of picnic fun, The road is thronged, and every other person wears a bathing suit, Fat old men with protuberant stomachs. Fat old women with lege like a grand piano's, Lean young men, proud of their swel chests and biceps. Slim young women in mermaid poses when the wavelets hit their toes, or squealix | Knute Olsen watches them in placid amusement. That's his fun When the season permits, Olsen keeps a bunch of roses by his side }Often people stop and talk with him, If he likes them, he will give jthem a rose. Olsen never raise® rents, If you offered him $50 a month for a ‘Splendid Rooms for Rent—Use of Piano The above want ads are adver- tised in the classified columns of The Star this evening. One party wants to buy a piano and will pay cash, Still another offers a lunch counter at a bargain, while another offers splendidly furnished rooms, with use of piano, at a very moder- ate price. Do you read the classi- fied ads in The Star every evening? If not, you are losing a great many opportunities to secure just the article you may need at a bargain price, or to get a buyer for the article you do not need. Star clas- sified ads are interesting reading be- cause they contain such a diversity of ads both from people who have house from which he was only getting $10 from an old tenant, he would only stake his head and go on dreaming. Once a hustler wanted to rent a store building “What for?” asked Olsen. “Grocery,” said the hustler, “We have one grocery in that neighborhood,” said Olsen, “Two One or the other would be driven out df business, “V’'m taking that chance,” said the hustler, “I'm not,” said Olsep. “Good day.’ Then he called two children playing on the lawn, They were his dchildren——the children who will some day fall heir to his fortune. came running to him, flushed and eager to serve. w 8 it, granddaddy?” “1 have given away all my roses,” said Knute Olsen. would be too many “Bring me something to sell or want to buy something. Phone your want ads to The Star, Main 9400. Pay when you are down town. A Classified Ad in the Star Goes Into Over 40,000 Families Daily