The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 14, 1912, Page 1

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The Seattle Star “THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPA IN SEATTLE VoL. 14, NO. 169, SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1912, | ONE CENT oh. 04in5.4x2 HOME EDITION NEWS STANDS Be QUTLAW SIDNA ALLEN IS CAPTURED ss EPIDEMIC OF SUICIDE EXPECTED ——fsprngyr (BANDIT. TRACED WAKE PROTEST [VETERAN DETECTIVE WILL No eee ee Eee | CO FOLLOW DEATH OF GENERALNOGI FICHT RAGING | THROUGH LOVE MORE FOR OLDTIMES’ SAKE aegt ih “Grit hae Work your wits, They will win a.seat at “The Heart Breakers” for you. Find out how, on page 8, This is “Circle Day” for Star boys and girls. Their doings and sayings will be found on page 4 every Saturday. Pe , Kioto at 6 p. m., and with no dela the d at the t, the burial cortege wa over death of Emperor Mutsuhite, immediately formed. Thousands ac . | whose body this evening was com ompanied the coffin to its last rest | He Has a Record and He's Proud of It for He Was First Man signed to the tomb at Momoyama ‘ ling’ slate; and hundreds of thou } Arrested by Detective Freeman, Who Has a Record of oo fe cease Ubtkaine, oY ands of the emperor's late subjects ¢ y ing, vu lined the dusky avenues tn dead #i (Dy United Press Leased Wires : SH the court grants this Injunc-/ 36,000 Arrests Now, rites scarcely less impressive than tenes tab the: coriabe ‘paseed DOUGLAS, Ariz., Sept. 14,—A fed “SN : lon, it Will accuse these striking] BY FREO Lt. BOALT | those of royalty for Gen. Count Carried by Men eral force of 300 men is locked in a t n qinera at Renton, without any} A green young policeman in a brand-new uniform turned into 8" | Maresyki Nogi, the hero of Port) The ancient ¢ wstaiis of four spe- desperate engagement with rebels | heart k whatever, of being dyn alley behind the old Detroit hotel one fine an bac morning or gee Arthur, who, with his wife, commit claily chosen oxen drawing the cas- 15 miles south of the Arizona bor t proof . e tee | 1Ute Ane found: a man sicoping on a lumber pile. He was a stocky, but | tay nare-hici jet as.the body. of the ket of the dead ruler, whitch wae ob der, according to a federakmessen Rage i miters or threatening to dynamite) ragged, young man of about the officer ae. ; ; emperor was borne from the palace \ nT the public funer- ger who arrived shortly before noon, | "* i em . > and to murder. it is not enough to The policeman had never made an arrest before in bis life, and be on its journey to Kioto, after a terrible ride across the des |r llen bandits that if the strikers did not in-| ¥@# embarrassed, He shook the ‘sleeper gently, The sleeper opened aaa tar talidetonaienaa Whit ahint in’ the coutt Ree baad hy jone eye and apoke thus Five hundred men with two rapid-| 7; \ tend to do these things, the injunc-| TH cut your head off, you blighted quintessence of all that's vile five guns were immediately dis « A, Kt i tion will mot hurt them. Suppose! and unfit to print!” or words to that effect patched from ‘Agua Prieta to the eriff and several « the @ourt issued an injunction! OH, SUCH gee ‘ ” | rescue rrendered t a man to prohibit him from The officer had been well brought up. Never had he heard such According to the courier, the fed 5° againat }language. His mind worked swiftly, and he reasoned that a man who, éteie the bing até preowned ’ j + beating his wife. Is there any com) in ine stupor of sleep, « Nuently and threaten so horribly | . c ught fort for that man simply because! must be a di The messetker - ate ori ; - he bimesit knows that he never in-| “I'll cut your heart out, you this and that!” remarked the recum meg tink : erg: era: he f ay is wife? p| DORE one. and : 1, The Rated to beat his wife? in the ie) "Today the officer admits he was frightened, “A bad one, this, who ‘agg Foon a Guance of an injunction of this char-| would cut his heart out, Perhaps a murderer. It 4 cs cre tilled with endear~ acter, there is a velied indictment, With great courage and presence of mind the officer clapped the | Pe seat tated that Allen ah least, that these men are crimin-| handcuffe on the wrists of this lawless and blood-thirety monster and + gerrionnn (We ng truc- The court has no right to place| (Ok him to headquarters tion near D ine foe © HAS ARRESTED 36,000 NOW eal ae Tag ri Such a stigma upon the names of im Twenty years ago! Im the years that have passed the young officer o eet Oh teen eee ~ necent men.” has grown into @ grizsied veteran. He has made many arrests since he | was able to give but | member of the ng which did | Representing the miners who are| pinched poor “Dyke.” To speak in good, round pumbers, he has made relieved to be id his arrest is expected momentarily. Sev- ral other members of the gang n sentenced to death ther than that the fed-|the shooting, is greatly outnumber ents were imperi officer In Amer 36,000 arresie—more, probably, than any other pol lish inion at . Se Swastich @ unio a has made ) dakey Furth’s mines in Renton, Stewbume, thieves, bad men, murderers—Mark Freeman, detective | George H. Rummens this morning on the Seattle force, has met them all, grade a strong plea against injunc Now, when Mark Freemga and “Dyke” meet, as they often do, Pree. ; | man's great shoulders shake with mirth, and “Dyke” winks, claps a erals w dand|near Des Moines reinforce Enginemens’ Bravery have be f Save Many Lives | (the {illsvilleanurders. .™ +. | band over his mouth and doubles up with silent laughter, REDDING, Cal, Sept 14. i Siete Cushman, however, grant) Out of that “pinch” 20 years ago there hae grown up between these Through the bra © ed the temporary injunction | two men a curious bond of friendship. Freeman feels for “Dyke” a| Joseph Poor a Lindsay in rematy r lives we ‘The complaint filed by James B.| regard almost sentimental; for is he not the first of the 36,0007 And/ Howe, attorney for the Puget Sound} the -iong-remembered incident has given poor “Dyke” something to| Power & Light Co., and! bo about. Poor “Dyke™! by Furth, alleced every con-| “Why,” be says, “I'm the first man Mark Freeman ever pinched!" crime from simple assault| A bad man? No. “Dyke” never hurt anybody but himself “Dyke” jthrests to murder ad dynamite | is a negative. He's no good, but he iun't bad. For 20 years he hasn't the part of the strikers. Not) done a tap of work or earned a dollar, court opened this morning was | “Let's go see ‘Dyke,’ said Freeman to me yesterday, even an affidavit t torrob We found him in Billy the Mug’s. orate these accusations. “A friend of mine,” said Freeman by way of introduction. showed by affidavits “Dyke” extended a Oabby paw ~) that ond man accused of threaten-| A friend of Freeman's was a friend of his, he sald, handsomely ‘tag violence has been on crutches For was he not the first man Freeman ever pinched—the first of 26,000? at an accident collided ¥ bh 16 runaway freight} cars, inj & 14 perso: Engineer Poor se the brakes | possible, ag also did Lindsay, and jumped ust as the cars LOS ANGELES, Sept. 14-—Clos- ing one of the most successful na- injured are mostly women,| tional encampments in the history suffering cuts and bruise Engi-| of their organization, thousands of | neer Poor's leg was broken. veterans of the G. A. R. and their | for three months: that others were) “My friend,” said Freeman, “wants to know all about you ‘Dyke.’ wives and families are leaving to- > We Alsska, and that others were! Where you came from and what you've been doing with yourself.” TO HONOR BOOTH day for their homes. The last gen- fn Renton, and that there had | ONE OF THE MEN WHO DON’T FIT IN NEW YORK, Sept. 14.—A mem.-| eral business session was concluded " be "Ro violence whatever com-| “Dyke” gathered bis scattered wits and added this chapter to thé orial in honor of he father, the te yesterday, following the elec- We variegated annals of the men who don't fit to j late Gen. Wm. Booth, is planned | ton of Judge Alfred Beers of Bridge ~ “E admit that the strike breakers He was born in Liverpool, he forgets how many years ago, His! here today by Commander Eval port, Conn, commander-in-chief. scabs. That's what they | earliest recollection is of being hungry. He stowed away, a barefooted | were. Am I to be denied by an in-|tyke on a tramp steamer, For years he sailed the seas, He has been fa the right to tell the truth?/ drunk in every port. The captains used to shanghai him and “Old Dub- c y has been operating lin,” his pal, on erase of three times a year. Violation of the law In| “Tell him how you came to be called ‘Dyke. Freeman suggested. H te providing safeguards for) He was ashore at Antwerp, Hotiand. In Hollanduthey have dykes | Booth who hes returned from Eng-|The complete list of new officers land, where she went to attend her | named follows \father's funeral. The memorial Commander-in-chief, Judge Alfred here, Miss Booth said, would take|B. Be Bridgeport, Conn.; senior the form of a training school for| vice commander-in-chief, Capt, H. Salvation Army workers. Z. Osborne of Los Angeles; junior » They have paid a/ to keep the ocean back. “Dyke” came aboard drink. The captain anid: vice commander-in-chief, Americus Wage scale than elsewhere.) “Do you think you're a dyke for all the beer in Holland?” they want to keep the men} And after that he was “Dyke.” Here's the first photo of aap | Marunomlya, emperor of Japan, in the native royal costume, a fearful Organizing a union. The only) He never went to school, He never had a mother’s love, a father’s | and wonderful garb worn by his ancestors for centuries. The new emperor “had his picture taken” in ee | Joins the Church. Then Whedon, Louisville, Ky.; chaplain- gg patina He Killed Man|!"“2ief. Rev. George E. Lovejoy, | } Lawrence, Mass.; surgeon-general, ‘Gt violence wore committed by | protection and guidance. He never knew anything but hardship and it to please those of his subjects whovetill love the old Japanese dre Usually the mikado wears Euro- JACKSON, Miss, Sept. 14.—Fol-|Dr. L. L. Whitaker, San Antonio, ‘Company official, who fired a shot hard work and curses and blows and “good times” ashore. | pean clothes, lowing his profession of religion at | Tex that an excuse for wholesale! BLAMES BILLY THE MUG | Letter to Emperor. there, a Tokio was hardly surprised that Heside the bodies when they were bore th could be had. And this of Twenty five years ago he came off a government ship, on which he Count Nogi, descendant of the first 4 in stead 50 Hase villagers |“ camp meeting, during which he| Appointed by Commander-in-Chief body on their shoulders joined the church, Walter Brence,| Beers: Adjutant general, Henry J. Who held a commission from) bad been passing coal, and, with a pocketful of money, called on Billy | gamuri family of old Japan, shoutd}found was a letter to Emperor al ceremonies, was dispensed with 4 young ton county farmer,| Seeley of Bridgeport, Conn.; quar- Sheriff, has bern ‘filed’ by/the Mug It was good, new money, fresh from Uncle Sam's mint $70| elect to die according to ancienteYoshihito. Nothing has been given during the march of nearly an hour) Went to he preacher and confessed rmaster general, C. D. R. Stewits b jot it. Billy the Mug got it custom, to serve his master in the Out A® to its contents. There was to {ts last resting place on Momo-|that two years ago he killed Lewis |of Buffal x. Judge Cushman held that, while! “"Twas Hilly that put me on the bum,” said “Dyke.” realm of shades, but it is declared also a communication to the sur yama Knutt, an aged confederate veteran.| With the object of maintaining Be Would not expect the strikers! Still, though he bas always blamed Hilly the Mug for his wasted/to be without precedent that hig) seen kenera! of the general staff) Arrived at the tomb, no time was|Brence bad never been suspected. |the peace of the encampment, the “Who bad a right to strike, to adopt| life, he has never been able to stay from Billy's place, even now that! have shared his aacritof the army asking that*he arrange’ lost. While. Prince and Princess| There were uo witnesses to the kill- | selection of an encampment city for @ewing room conversation, stil) Bilty is dead. He has memories of Billy the Mug which will not let fice. And ee a result of the doubte forthe disposal of the bodies. <* | Kanin, representatives of Emperor | ng 1913 was left with the executive fhe word “scab” was objectionable,|bim sleep o' nights unless he's drunk, | tragedy, it is feared that when Throughout the whole cowitry| Yehsibito and Princess Higashi-| Bence insisted on going to the | committee, which will make its an- _ “Im the interest of peace and for! Do you remember the night ‘Blackie’ got ‘Red’ Murray?” asked| couple are buried, an epidemic of today ix running a wave of admira-|fushimi, who represented the em-| Widow’of his victim and he and the |nouncement within 90 d Preservation of property, 1| Freeman. this Injunction until the men) Deo I?" said “Dyke.” “"Twas me that run across the corner and festablish their innocence of the told you of it.” The court will not want) it was over a trifling matter of an $8 split-up. harakirl (suicid wilt be startes; tem for the dead soldier. No de) press dowager, took thelr stands| preacher visited her home at mid-| which may gravely concern the)taila have been finally settled yet near by, the Shinto priests began|tight fo pray for forgiveness. | most ancient houses of the empirera#ito the way in which his memory ceremony of burial tn pesfect| Brence then surrendered to the of. “Red” Murray cheat- Time-Honored Custom. bhall be honored, nor as to when ee. Every one of the thousands) ficers om record such charges) ¢d his companion in crime. “Blackie found him asleep tn Billy the| Today the bodies of Gen, Nogi the funeral will be held, but it has of spectators who stretched far out |——~-— TRAE ee yh Sop: SCARE REGULARS them unless they sre Mug’s, and with one swing of his knife cut his head off. and his wife tie in tho simple home; Pen decided that the tribute to into the night refraining from a sin-| helped us out. | PS by & preponderance of evi- “Tis not nice to think about,” said “Dyke,” and shuddered. at Akasnki, where they ended their pNogi and his wife will be on ale ghe word. You mean,".he said, “a Spisula 3 ‘ad It upset Billy the Mug, even; he lost his voice for a week. Old | lives by the ancient method of saw[eommensurate with his sacrifice On the lusion of the Shinto | Solidissima. i | Senator West saw it, was dazed with fright and horror and dropped! rifice as old as Nippon, Out of afAand it 1s expected that their obse ceremony the representatives of Thanks,” we said. “It was on , GUILTY |dead the next day. The sight killed two other men, whose names| maze of conflicting reports current )diies will almost rival those of the the royal family offered prayer by nl ing of our tongue when you | “Dyke” cannot now remember. And Paddy Ryan went to the insahe| when the tragedy first was made peror, for love of whom they|the casket, the tomb was closed, | Poke Spisula solidissima, of N BERNARDINO, Cal, Sept. 14.—Overwhelmed in numbers by the Bull Moose element, the regular republican delegates to the San S ; « Bernardino county republican con- ooo fe jasylum. public, it has been ascertained that} dled and with only a picked guard of | course—chowder, vention, Which apace wa bolted 3 OF SLAVERY |... “27%e" bas & cabin on the tide fiats. He fs at the docks when al Count Nogh, in full uniform, and hia — some hundred men, remaining by| For the Spisula solldiesima must} .54 marched in a body to. another es, }Sbip comes in, to greet the “homeward-bounds.” The “homeward-| wife, in state raiment of the old Emperor Is Buried. |the vault, the great gathering dis ste: - cepicle wed with that well-| han to hold an Independent convens SPOKANE, Sept. 14—George E.| bounds” go with him to his cabin, and they eat and drink, with “Dyke” | Nippon, ended their lives in a KIOTO, Sept. 14.—Arriving by| persed quietly, and the body of the) knowny edibie Tha nk to which We| tion. Preparatory to bolting, reso- ' an attorney of Herrick, a8 host, until the ship sails. Then “Dyke” waits for the next ship. It|in thelr home which was deco pecial train from Tokyo, where) Emperor Mutsuhito was left to his/ Yow rete as the Ostroa virginica. |iutions for withdrawal were passed ‘and prominent in Idaho pol-|is #0 he lives, with a photograph of the dead em-Epublic funeral services in his honor! eternal sleep. Called b: pre Wait =i about among the regulars. Their today is convicted of “white He's dying slowly of cancer and longs for death “Pwere concluded early today, the PORT TRS ETI sob hy Ander i Te have me x FL action is based on the allegation body of the late Emperor Mutsuhito|**** ket ke ee HK HKHH! We have a friend whd ordered] iat while alb delegates to-the con- le ” fast the other day h ‘ ing * WEATHER FORECAST «| S88S for break vy Eeduiatinaat on Motmerame bil ie Fair tonight and Sunday; «| When. the eggs were brought, our|Yestion are pledged to republican | trie e ested | principles, a majority propose to in- men with @ sharp sword, sald hia, the ancient capital of Nippon.|% cooler west portion tonight: | {rend anlifed and sullmcsted. that | Gorse Roosevelt, jo Bird. 4 2 ead silence marked the depart- * ae M4 R. TO ADDRESS SEATTLE have been the one Nog! wore whi With a strong body of the im.|* moderate ensterly winds, Tem- *& De a | MEN VOTERS | HAD HER VICTIMS Gen, Stoessel yielded up the keysfperial guard waiting to receive it \* peratiire at noon, 76 WW en Ineationed’ without qual. |¥re of the regulars, The. progres- iB RERRRRK KAA K ERE of Rus: Gibraltai the royal funeral train reached| *#& a AKA RARER KERR HK * | ttication,” repreved the waiter, “the pa agi rage Aesy the organ- * lege of the domestic hen is meant.” | ation o ot cab E ANGELES, Sept. 14.—~ Fu hundred women vot- #) Los Angeies will be giv- opportunity literally to for Col. Theodore Roose- ‘Veit when he speaks at Shrine M Monday evenin. wehis second speech of the im Los Angeles. Under the of a score of squad the members of the 8 chorus,” organ- for the purpose of produc “NG musical praise of the will break into song. * * H iv ror. in transporting two girls, Mr. Freeman,” he pleaded, “it won't be long. Before I go, come| Both Nogi and his wife died 1 to Idaho. He will down and pinch me again—for old times’ sake!” accordance with the ancient ¢ later. | Sure, ‘Dyke,’ sure!” said Freeman. “We'd both enjoy it.” tom, each cutting across the as *3 wun, OF, FRIDAY’S 13 HOODOO We AIN'T THE ROUGH-NECKS WE USTER WAS. “cs "=" gNOW FOR DENVER We have interviewed a Second > » j|avenue hatter. He says hats are DENVER, Sept. 14.—Following a BEFOR T - worn much larger since the savants| rain, a light showfall continued in- came to town termittently here today. ed bi regarded as a doubly unlucky day.| while riding « motorcycle on First Friday by iteelf is constdered bad,|av. 8. Bad bruises resulted. and the number 12 is always looked Five members of the football upon a# a hoodoo, When the two| squad of Broadway high are declar come together something awful is|ing today that Friday, the 13th, is sure to happen unlucky. While they were practic- Friday, the 13th, however, was | ing yesterday afternoon a thief en. not @ very great hoodoo in Seattle. | tered their dressing room and stole | No accidents of any great import-| $15 in cash and a number of rings} ance happened, no tragedies took/and stickpins. The loss of five place, and as a whole the day was suits from the Standard hotel, First rather uneventful, all things con-| av. and Pine st., enlisted four more sidered. But there were a few peo. in the ranks of the superstitious ple whose rabbit foot charms did| The camp of Fred Seffin, at Belle aeons ore of man ‘shout European savante—the best and} |mightiest thinkers the Old World jcould send—who want to know | what we are, and, if so, why. And} if not, why not? | They Desert Us | | First, they watched — the little | ebeels go ‘round. Then they took | us apart, We'can only hope they will put us together again before | WHEN MENTIONED WITHOUT QUALIFICATION , THE EGG OF THE ---~" DOMESTIC HEN 1S) © MEANT, NOT THE El Over Two-Thirds of Seattle’s Homes Reached by Star Want Ads . When you require the services of a Want Ad, telephone The Star (Main 9400 or Elliott 44), or bring your copy to us, and then watch results. These little Star Want Ads will reach over 40,000 homes each evening. Surely.among all these homes there is just the article you are looking for. Some Seeeeeteeeeeee MER RAK | they leave. They. know all about ? not help much vue, was robbed of a violin and $19. | ’ a . Th. I r | There was A. Govig, a laborer on A. J. Howum, 1902 North 44th at.,| our climate, natyral resources, r That Is a Freak the N. P., who was struck by atrain| Was unlucky to the extent of $3, flora, inclinations, vices, foibles, y whims, and tantrums, from the | | by Montana Man “t Yan Aswelt and received a trac: | taken by a thief in the night. -Mrs |time when Mt, Rainier was a _ | : tured skull. And P. EB. Cassidy,/@ P. Callahan bought a rabbit's orn Mont., Sept. 14.—A/ 6212 12th av. N. W., who lost a fin.|foot in the afternoon. She lost a * 6 @ freak has been cap-|ger in a shingle mill at Ballard. gold watch while shopping In the ot * ternoon E the ground up to 2:15 this af The mere pr nee of these jlearned gentlemen has had a | marked influen upon us, We} have long been conscious that our me eee Doyle, a rancher| Mrs, M. T. Bradshaw was among morning. Tom Winkler was the ;. idge. It ix a huge the unlucky ones. Her home at|last to suffer from the hoodoo of Mountain Vion having vix eux and 606% Eastlake av., was entered ja|the day. He slipped on the deck measures 14\ the afternoon and six rings, two of | while working on the steamer Ken lion ms its them diamond, were stolen, | to-| nedy and broke his right wrist and | Weston civitization is rough anf] Star reader probably has a position just suited to Oo extra jave gether with a gold watch. Tripp, | three ribs de Cd 2 vs 3 directly from th : whi» Boul ot ARPT a |savante came-the culture and pol- ff) your taste and ability, Reaching, as they do, such a On either ide jish of the effe East. We. were | |diamondsa dn the rough, raw mater-| jal, with good hearts, rough necks, | developed, | nin great number of Seattle’s homes, Star Want Ads are most’speedy and satisfactory, and the most NAME OF LESLIE M, SHAW IS _ 0 are f a \ we land co gated »rehead here | . Re INJECTED IN WESTERN STEEL C ASE! fd Stale" ehe'tout ws | geenomical. BRING YOUR WANT AD TO THE body. The name of Leslie M. Shaw, purported copies of telegrams and | brows, the, wholo being auperim- | STAR’S DOWNTOWN OFFICE, 229 Union Street to contemplates sending the| former secretary of the treasury, |letters between Moore and Shaw, a her pet yn wolf (With Souvenir & Curio Shop) UNDER THE BIG PRexbidition. He caugit it] James A, Mose against the Metro-|Shaw unduly influenced the Metro |ropeai,” we. have undergone a |) ELECTRIC SIGN, and your advertisement will be | chang t for) politan Trust Co, of New York. | politan company to loan $600,000 to This action waa started by Moore | Moore to recover the plant and properties Calhoun denounced . these affi of the Western Steel corporation | davits in emphatlg terms this morn and $1,000,000 damages on the |ing, saying h t it was outrageous delivered to the homes of Seattle, in SEATTLE’S HOME PAPER. Over 40,000 Paid Copies Daily Reaching 200,000 Readers R” INVENTOR DIES | Sept. 14—~Ke Only yesterday we went to the jeafe which we are wont to patron that you|ize and called for a dish of whic! | Nix on the “Clams” | | | BY FRED L, BOALT your life to the pursuit, Sretg: und that th had been a con-|to drag in” Bhaw’s name for the ; “ where who | Wwe ate very: fomdes: 8 { thi r fr 5 of | If you were to.search the centers| would find any 66 anywher : ase and Stock Telegraph com-| pie it 71pm ae grr pat Ee Fe eh ag pcrrespondence | of iearning of the world for 66 sek | could show a highor batting aver-|which the chief Ingredient is a cer ‘ dead at bis home in leat ; " . : age in erudition that the 66 who, at|tain . bivalvwar shell. fish. which, this moment, are in our midst. since the savants came, we would For several days now Seattle has |not for the world call “clams.” We teen entertaining a party of 66|were embarrassed, but the matter e' ¢ gents whose combined gray ne In Brook: | trust after the loan had been made, and }entific gen PAAY, at the age of 74 yours A number of affidavits were|when Moore began to suspect that| matter would show a higher total) eons last invention was the! yerved upon Scott x telegraph system. bulk and quality, than any other Calhoun, attor-}the Metropolitan company was try- |! ney for Moore today, containing |!ng to Job him. 66, it is doubtful, though you gave

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