The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 5, 1912, Page 1

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___ If you are for Bob Hodge, you must vote for him Saturd: didates. A light vote will enable the candida with mone: oa if the people, the men and women who pay the bills, turn out Saturday is the day. The polls will be open from 8 until 8. September 7. A tremendous, big vote will insure the nomination of Hod d tet ; . ge and other good can- and the political manipulators to control the primary. They always get out all their pi ty ‘But turday, their majority will be overwhelming. Honest candidates depend upon honest voters. Star HOME EDITION OM PUBLICIT TOL TUS PROBE IN CRT SEPT. The Sea ttle “THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1912, , Now that you are back from your vacation, of from your summer camp, phone The Star your home address so that the paper can be delivered to you without de Star phone is Main 9400, It takes the finest kind of courage when you work in the bowels of the earth. Don’t mies reading Fred L. Boalt’s story about his trip to Roslyn on page 4 today. VOL. 14. NO. 161. ONE CENT 4! JUDGES SHIELD SHOE TRUST FR MOTHER JONES ATTORNEY STEALS TO | oR FOR MINERS | ON THAINS AND SEWS STANDS Be | AND HIMSELF; “MAN IN CASE” IN JAIL EVERETT, Sept. 5.—This is the P. Featherstone sorting to thievery, according to the jattempted to bribe two city det Police, in an attempt to save the life | tives to “protect of a client, Walter Hansen, former |erators from raids district attorney of this county, and < the poolroom op-| The detectives are alleged to have turned the mon house with Prominent in state politics, was ar- over to Chief of Police Grant & Famous i He caused tholr arrest, Feather ‘ Woman Leader to od: @ emerged from| Hansen, acoording to the detec story of the price we pay when we Pp dquarters, carrying the | tives, them earlier {1 vlolate the oats pee em ne| stone was sentenced to 160. days,| WASHINGTON, Sept. 5— approached earlier in bullet-riddted coat Thomas MoGiliis [the day, declaring that he must have is said to have worn on the day he| Mc(illis’ coat, or his client would and he {s still In jail, The wife re-| An innovation in trust inquiries ceived a sentence of 30 days, which| wan teamithed jhas been instituted by Judges March at Head of 3,000 Striking Miners Through and wrong. The moral Is that the pleasures of | is alleged to have been shot and|he convicted. The dete ’ M p © otives sa, } ’ e’'s| Colt, Putn Charleston to See Gover- | killed by Alfred Sorenson. Hansen|they told him they would not pen sinning are not worth the price we| Last might Miller wént hie wife's) oo am and Brows i 4 le defends y 4 * Powe vrore co.|10-Yearold sister on an errand to| Massachusetts in their ruling ‘por. ding Sorenson. sonally steal the coat, but would PO, Gnd the Renvlent cobs t rid of While she was gone| sonal Fa Following Hansen's arrest, five|leave the door unlocked, Then, cape—eometimes. “yd og wee ggg sone| that the investigation of the (iy United Pree Leased Wire) other men and a woman, alleged | they allege, they set a trap for Han. A man married a girl of 16, He) be slew his wife. Hix wengeanos Shoe Machinery Trust shall be : TON, W. Va.,| members of a gang of “phony” pool. | sen, 4 | wae 8 good man, se men go. The) noe eerrete ouee her. brain,| secret oven newspapers are to To protest against |™ Operators, were arrested on| Up to a late hour this afte r girl was pure—then. A child was) first shot tore ‘ough her brain,/ , 2 To prote RAiNSt | charges of attempted bribery. The |H afternoon |born to them—a woman-child who| and she fell in a crumpled heap in| be kept out, Tule of the mine guards,| woman was released. 7 yey tint ge in on | ea hop-| | knew no wrong. |@ corner of the room. He fired) ‘Testimony is to be taken by @ e 5 o a e re iy one: : 4 e} e rom 4 " Jones, the famous wom-| The police allege that Hansen,|before night. |" wae two years ago tnat the| ®etin and again. ‘Then he del commissioner privately and private , E leader, will lead. 3,000 au 5 }man married the girl. By and by| *troyed bimnelf ly presented to the court. One of Se RUNAWA | | these judges states as his reason for |this remarkable course, “There has | been too much of this kind of pub- lieity about trusts already.” There is rearon to believe that Miller planned the double crime many hours before the commission of it. For early yesterday morning | the wife met another man—and she |was very young. She sinned—she| and the other man, but the man ain was greater than hers. And thi “miners from the Kanawha coal t through the streets of ston tomorrow and make} Y HORSE GOES 4 2 he baby to the home of] Decent public frankh Gov. $s- price? he sent t public men are frankly a mal call on Gov. Gla |" The girt is dead, by her husband’s| his wife's mother shocked by this usurpation of pow- i at the state house. | aed. Two corpses le side by side Injer by the courts. There is no more zy | Mother Jones will make an ® " | | ‘The husband, who loved the girl,| the morgue. reason why the trial of the Shoe to the govérnor, intorm- Y is dead, by his own han The Man in Jail. Machinery trust should be secret him that t rd system Ost ~ L, Ming, Sept. 5.—Just |dened horse within a few feet of A baby girl is orphs Featherstone, the real cause of|tban there was for secrecy in the am. that the gua fo bi br rs joosevelt began speaking at | whore Col. Roosevelt was speaking And “the other man He's inlthe tragedy, was told about {t at| Proceedings againet Standard Oil he: resumed in the Paint | the | alr growads tn Mamito, near | Roosevelt seomed unmoved by the fail with a whole skin the county jail this morning. For|&"d the Tobacco trust. The Shoe section as soon as the | a ve ranaway horse plung | tumult and continued bis address tn W. H. Miller shot and killed his!_ moment he said nothing. Then,|Machinery trust {s recognized as ie’ withedvavent Sie will Es ae the crowd about the stand.jan effort to reassure the throng wife, Nellie Miller, erday after dropping his head on his breast he/one of the most dangerously com a Td oo Rand saad the bo ro were Injured and/Tho horse stopped plunging when noon, in thelr home at 2531 26th) exclaimed This is horrible.”|trived of all the great business mo- a dem: i ere taken to hospitals, Thirty |the crowd became so dense that it st, and then lying upon a bed In! Later, in his cell, he broke down/nopolies. It levies a tax on the or intends to do then. jothers were knocked down and suf. | could not proceed further, and was same room, he sent a bullet) completely. footwear of every man, woman ang child in the country, and makes use of the patent laws of the United States to uphold monopoly. If the court persists against the protests of the department of jus tice in shielding this great institu. tion from the publicity of ordinary court procedure, there will be com sequences of a vigorous kind in com gress, fered leaser injuries. dragged down by « dozen hands More than 30 men, women and|None of the injured is expected to children were trampled by the mad- die. SIX PEOPLE ARE INJURED IN ONE DAY!.». 2A QUEER CAR ACCIDENT passengers and the car crew) injured attended None was se Were injured at 5 o'clock yesterday riousty burt. The injured are: afternoon when Motorman A. H.| Mr, Prank Wright, 2366 N. 61at the record-breaking | Coulson of a Queen Anne car failed st. head and shoulders cut and| A total of 40 divorces was |to release the grip on the counter. bruised; Mra J. M, Longfellow, between Judges Frater,| balance when the car reached the|S¢41A Aurora av, bruised about Tallman, gnd Albertson, | foot of the nitt. the upper portion of body: Mi Frater led with 26. The The counter-balance is # heavily! Myrtle Longfellow, Mrs. Lougt: of the cases Were on the | loaded car that travels in a tunnel low's niece, bruised about the head; ot desertion and non-aup- | and Leeandla mad car on - pa ae td Skogiund, 3232 roa e divorces were un- | Side |. When the iat. W, and brulced; Mra. ; Was not released the counterbal|Haiel ‘Stell, 1138 Eighth ay, W.| NME'S ANO FLOVD “iene” sila fo hace mien ance hit a bumper at the end of! bruised about head and upper por) through bis brain, and death was| The mother of the dead wife is immediate jalone in the wrecked home today, Jealousy of “the other man” was| packing up the little household the cause of the murder and suicide.) things, “cleaning house" for the Recently Miller found’ his wife {n/ last time there. COUNTY BOARD. A. TO REACH WILL PROBE | SPOKANE ON SELF | SUNDAY 7 Chairman McKenzie's| Theodore Roosevelt will arrive at te apite of that he/SP0kane Sunday ing. He will Unequivocal statemen! leave for Seattle Monday night, ar- | would refuse to give bis testimony jriving here about 9 a. m. Tuesday. © The miners want the guard 4 abolished, claiming that i the conduct of the guards ha The location of the polling place for each precinct in King county for the progres- sive primaries next Saturday can be found by reference to page 6 of The Star today. INSTRUCT WOMEN but give them Commisstoners | They've got « chance now *To give the boys a chance why I took them, Strong. “My plan more boys this year, and then add | charges the tumnel, and the street car| tion of body; Mrs. J. H. Darting-| CHICAGO, TIL, June 00—Whenjfor thelr own good.” Mrs. Keefe | “ . 7 stopped with euch suddenness as\ton, 2927 E. Cherry at bruises, | Floyd Keefe, age 7, and his brother /#@l@. “A rich man like Mr Strong |Defore & bihoat ny gee saci hors ave benctloalt; ee By coroa' ve ‘ i} 5 | . ry - | > " 4 | be q o y bee : Ege Ag windows and injure siete Coulson and Conductor! Kenneth, age 3, woke up the other on ni tetany for them; I can|but that be insisted upon a grand | {ore Tale tenet of which Ole HOW TO VOTE Hoffman were up. Ambolances were called and the! bruised. jary investigation, Hanson is chairman. He will speak |} Hamilton and Rutherford yesterday gt the Dreamland rink at 11 a. m., passed a resolution calling for anjat the state convention of the pro- themselves of the |@Tessive party in the Armory at 2 ™., and at the King county fair. The colonel will be met at the shaken up and) morning they were poor, thelr play- ground was the alley open which theie home stood, their playmates ie were the children of the alley. | Then came a big automobile and j carried them away. The local organization of the National Council of Women Voters of Bryn Mawr has ar ranged a meeting for Friday at 8 in the Mental Science audi- that said Gordon | is to take two investigation by | principally made against | “CHASM OF HATE BRIDGED BY LOVE” one each year as long an | live. 1| them | ; torium to which every voter is PHILADEL s Fat oe In the morning they were the ™ . "a | ldepot by the 1,300 delegates to the Pane aus ok gel eee ager {children of a poor working woman; |UK® Children, boys ‘especially. 1/ ‘The “probe” was to begin this|state convention, the delegates to] |"¥ited berg dey Instruct 7 thter of th elate “Lucky” Bald and hetress to $16,000,000 ea latter's estate, ure said to kave been amicably settled here tay, aud the couple are planning | L trip to Europe. MecClaughry receives an in-) @timated at more than 4 COUNTY W.C.T.U. - ELECTS OFFICERS the county convention, and by thou- sands of other Roosevelt enthusi- asts, who will join in a big parade on the main streets. Those in the |line of parade will carry bandanas, the symbol of the new party. While the colonel will be speaking at the Dreamland rink, the delegates will hold their convention and will rati- fy the nominations made in the pri- imaries on Saturday, At the Dreamland rink meeting 200 vice presidents will sit upon the stage, 100 men and 100 women. The suecessful candidate for governor by the civil war has been bridged by love and af fection. I would to God that my father were here now to see how time has swept away all bitterness. It can be truly said that ‘Johnny Reb’ and ‘Yankee Bob’ are pals now.” —~ This was the statement here today of Capt. Robert E. Lee, son of the great Confederate commander and himself a civil |) war veteran, who is here to assist in arranging for the 50th anniversary celebration of the battle of Gettysburg, next July, in which both the “blue and the gray” will participate HISSED AT THE jwill send them to my home on Su-| morning, but McKenzie absolutely loft a multimillionaire. ; ear Loaf mountain in Maryland | refused to appear before them. Mc. Sounds like @ fairy tale, doesn't |.) 9% not mean to adopt them le | Kenzie has charged mismanagement ic? But it is true. It had its be |SM% They will retain their own | of the county hospital, the poor ginning in a speech made by Dr. A. |LAme*. And thetr parents may see | farm ‘and the King county ferry Lols Lindsay Wynecoop, She said {tei Tahal! provide for chem, ed-| Hamilton and Rutherford, upon that bachelors ought to adopt chil. (Nome them, sending them to college | passing the resolution appointing dren to raise. sors —— er prepared for it, and | themselves - . ag Fe ineeiey & ; em for the vocation in life they | stated that if they found sufficien | fiw co ys pat Pent |are beat suited for, whether that be |evidence to sustain McK "8 i bling es gett welt) fl physictan, merchant, lawyer, |charges, they would ask Prosecutor |them was Gordon Strong, million-| preacher or farmer "| Murphy to ask Judge Ronald to call | Sire Chicago real estate mas, “Why? Because that's the way 1] grand jury. Dr. Wynecoop had a list of ready-| choose to spend my money.” Although Chairman McKenzie re- to-be adopted youngslers ready, fused to give testimony because the in the evening they were the wards women voters how to mark and caet ballots. 35 MILES AN HOUR, ALLEGED That Harry J. Smith was driving his automobile at a speed of 35 to 40 miles an hour when he struck Mrs. Marion C. Steever and caused her death on June 8 last, was the testimony of Neil McDonald, a street car conductor, in the mam slaughter case which began im vote, ue SS FRUIT DEALER FINED Eugene Gtlman, owner of a fruit!) She knew of the Keefe boys. HHAMRRARAR RRR KE commissioners had no power to ad | Mrs. Mary Stilwell, president; [stand at the new Sanitary market jat the Saturday primaries will pre-| Judge Ronald's court this morning, 5 Lola J. Flagg, corresponding . IFiret av, and Pike et, was flucd 6 )ecta tae ee een rn naeies Ri Por “Beattie and vicinity: x/minister the oath to witnesses, /sige and will introduce Roosevelt | The accident occurred at First a . ry; Mrs. Luin Thompson, re- Sor selling decayed” apples The eget a bBo pater, store for)% Showers tonight or Friday, #|Hamilton and Rutherford held their) 4 general admission of 26 cents} #24 Spring st. at about 1 o'clock P Rertisg secretary and Mrs. Allce| cimy Ualted From Leused Wire) | stand has given the hoalth depart-| “I woulda't have given my boyal& perature at noon, Soret Tam RL AEH Hobe, BenslOn tne orm, | Wil be charged at the Dreamland | {he, MOMMNE etting for port oy Magent, treasurer, were elected last ZURICH, Sept. 5.—Two Ital- [ment a great deal of troub) away for ahything to te oe Prag * | John W. Hanna, charity commis: | meetin, Steever were waiting for a car. The lan socialists were arrested ei ve ing In the world but ## * bellalied sioner, was examined. auto, according to McDonald, shot at the close of the twoday on of the King County W. REBELS FIRE __ ON COWBOYS ©, Ariz. a band of Mexican rebels f 7 horses and fired upon a i of American cowboys, who 10 interfere, according to ad-| Feceived today at the state oe €owboye were compelled to : _ two of their number, Roy| and Oscar Sims, are still Vietor DuBots, the Spokane real ‘fatate man, whose race with a Se- | Mille chaufenr on the Georgetown | Be et July 20 resulted in a wreck} cy Killed Katie Way is made from dani i gerous injuries received by/ with the furious energy of a dy- Ewe Lamb, a look of horror flamed ware Hm 7 mage in damage sults|» fall while making a flight at the|namo. It was his body, not his| lin his face, such as I had never Pioneer Sq by oe ey A br Pir county fair, Bud Mars, = sae | brain, that was inactive. seen and hope never to see again, N b al ae, damag ‘otal 455. | in in the hospital here today. ler} We reached the office. Bones and he fell back, uttering an inartic- i i uy rei te. 4 dears! sues for his three sons, | ¢ ing from the half-mile race track, | doffed his street coat, donned a lulate cry. seg - the time to y, esta ‘ Depression is vanishing, and the dullness & that the girl was the sole of the family. He asks} for that. He also asks damages for loss of business | Occasioned by his being compelled to keep hin store closed ten da tif le of his 2 f a ya |notified the police of Seattle of bis thought, 1 walted with what pa- a certified check will do.” * Seeordance with the Jewish |being robbed of $80 in Darrington |tience I could command, and, to, ‘The congressman did not answer. boost. It is-really a shame not to take Mourning custom. yesterday. He says the inan Who! while away the tedious hours, I set | Whether {t was the sight of the advantage of the opportunities offered, Was cleared of blame for © fthe girl by @ coroner's Th. . Ga Lamb. For such was the herculean jasked to give up real money, I do rarer) Y AN PLE ASED «aoe onrintianeen, was fined $5) task wich the congressman had Orman. Se did eet anewes. Tes class districts can now be had on terms crossing the intersection of Second |**t 7. Umbsatone Bones. =} | shock had been too great, and at prices which will soon be impos- Lept. 6—Wm. Perhaps I dozed. I-cannot tell, 1 ©3 | His condition was pitiable, After sibly low. Look over the Classified page Bryan, whose work at the @ convention was largely ible for the nomination of Woodrow Wiison, sees victory the democratic nominee here yesterday for hissing at Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany while the latter was witnessing | the Swiss army maneuvers in | progress here. The prisoners will be held until the kalser leaves, and then probably will be released. arrest and imprisonment mere political suspects. Actual offense must be committed be- fore suspects can be taken into custody. Mayor George F. Cotterill, who He had been away from the city hall for a week. BUD MARS HURT OLEAN, N. Y., Sept. 5.—Suffering ithe biplane driven by Mars suddenly dipped and crashed into a fence. OF $80 Joe Chenier, of Darrington, has did it is now in Seattle and wants him located, FINED FOR SPEEDING ay. and Pike at. LOST $200 GOLD John Marr reports to the police that he elther lost or was robbed of $200 in a Washington street saloon The last glimpse I caught of “our; hero,” the congressman, as T, Omb- tax! and were whirled away, show-| ed bim framed in the doorway,| smiling and bowing, bis face alight) with happiness. | It waa plain he believed himself rid forever of the Suitcase labeled | “I am a Trimmer” and the Bwe| Lamb. | During the journey to the office which nestled between us on the peat } Long association with T. Bones in difficult cases had taught me that his master-mind was working bathrobe, and, ensconsed in his fa- vorite window seat, fell to smoking furiously.. This lasted seven hours and 30 minutes. Not daring to disturb his train of my own puny faculties to work to} solve the problem of how to lose forever the Suitcase and the Ewe only know that my groping thoughts were shattered by a frensied cry, and Bones stood before me, bis face ghastly, his thin, powerful fingers clutching and twitching nervously, Bryan _indloate @ heavy increase in Vote and a hopeful in the republican ranks. ie encouraging.” Rickey’s” as the latest drink on the incandescent way. It is an inky looking drink, named after Gyp the BI quiet him as it ougbt to have done, Never had I seen him #0 upset. “Nutt,” he whispered, “I must be breaking up. I'm getting old, I “Nonsense!” him. “You are in your prime. You ee scoffed, to comfort /Iike. And I ask you, my dear Nutt ask you, did I, in the interview = |fee?” well, shal! I say ‘near’? Perhaps ‘close’ would be a bet- ter word,” I amended “Or ‘tight, said Bones ‘tight’ is the word. I must see the congressman again before setting to work upon a plan which, I may say with perfect mod- “Yes, |Suitcase and the Ewe Lamb with us, Bones strode to the counter and \rang the bell. The congressman |himself appeared | When he saw the Suitcase and the “In our previous interview,” said Bones, “I neglected to mention that my retaining fee will be $1,000, and of course it is payable in advance. If you have not the money with you, Ewe Lamb and the Suitcase, which he had expected never to see again, or whether it was because he was a time he regained control of him- self sufficiently to gasp: “Take them away; Take them away!” Bones was adamant, “The mon- ey," he said, “first.’ half an hour, and in whieh the as jtute Bones was worsted at every are the greatest detective in the}with my client, the congressman, | point, the great detective accepted world,” He waved me to silence. |say one word about a@ retaining|a retaining fee of $2.98, Come with me. | TRAVELED 3,000 | MILES TO MARRY Mises Ruth A. Wiltberger of Washington, D. C., arrived in Seat- tle yesterday afternoon, was met and driven to the court house, where a marriage license was ob- tained. The couple were married afterward by Father Newman. Mr. Callahan left Washington six |months ago, arranging for his bride-to-be to come out in Septem- |ber. Miss Wiltberger took the 4 Rooms and {-Acre Prosperity is wi every line is du Lots in White Pfesident, as a result of the | y¢ “Quick, Nutt, the needle!” he They haggled, I Hf poterday, y ” ey haggled, I will not give the ’ election. cancion Sea ae gasped. guess. My faculties are—are—not). “Business,” he said, “is business, |sordid details, It Is sufficient to e f a t § tome aper Vermont results,” New York—-They are selling“Gyp| 1 gave him a shot, but it did not| what they wer Byen a detective must be business: |say that, after a dicker which lasted ’ |3,000-mile trip alone in order to! 40 Acres Farm Land, $1,500 fe, which has dominated the market is gone. as land values will now steadily increase. carefully this evening and note the really good things to be had. (ver 40,000 Paid Copies Each Evening around the side of the car without letting up in speed. SHE DIDN’T TELL HIM ABOUT IT When Mrs. Louise Kendall made up her mind to leave home and hus- Prees Leased Wire) horiti are | “You di ” “T won. | #t the depot by her future husband,| band, says the complaint filed by MRTINGTON ane ean the |, Tt, butheritics | here stone Bones, the renowned detec ou did not,” 1 replied. “I won-|Wittam Callahan, inspector in the|himc't. Kendell for a, divorce tig “Verde ed for the kaiser’s safety, tive, and I stepped into the waiting dered about it at the time. a | Max L. Ker Tanch, 15 miles south of the Swiss law prohibiting the ; “You have heard that this client ts | UBited States immigration service, | morning, she did not take her hus band into her confidence. But he, knows she has gone for good, for; Mrs, Kendall sent him a postal from |Chicago, so the complaint alleges, The couple were married at Provis dence, R. L, in 1905. Kendall ab leges that soon after marriage his wife acquired the cafe habit, which eventually led to the breaking up Missing. has been laid up with Injuries the detective maintained a sphinx esty, is unparalleled for ingenuity. their home. a 0 ESR Sere caused by falling from a horse | tike silence, which J respected, and Come!” | marry Callahan, of the 5 § W while inspecting the Sultan power | which was broken only by the plain Again we took a taxi to the hotel| on ANTS DAMAGES site, is back on the mayoralty Job.|tive bleating of the Ewe Lamb, of the congressman, We took the i ' Twenty Minutes Frem $1,000 th us and business in ie to receive a generous Center, and other high

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