The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 21, 1912, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

does Senator W. L. Jones think he can help “T ~ Am-a- Trimmer” Humphrey when he has such big Lorimer and Aldrich tariff load to explain himself @ VOL. 14. NO. \" QU ACCOUNT INE } dUDCESHIP CONTEST ing the demurrer of John Judge Joiner of Ska MENTAL NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—That! Burton W. Gibson, the young New ork lnwyer, who ie charged with cave strangled to death his beau tiful client, Countess Szabo, to get it wil noticed that the lines are this morning dec = possession of a fortune she had irregular and unnatural HARDNESS & SEVERITY ballot boxes in hail at | Witled to him, la deformed mental Hardness and Severity judicial election mus a ly is the opinion of Jessie Allen The jaw is excessively long, LIPS —-FIRME CRUEL jon the mere reques!| Fowier, the leading phrenological showing the combative element. ithe auditor's office. ae expert of America, while the upper cheek bones are mS relins lea S Mahest) The count was drowned while we and heavy, Indicating hard to fight it out In Novem) peating with Gibson, and medical| ness and severity SUP® | experts declare she was slain by a The height of the head, leas that jiu-jiteu strangling trick. The po-|normal, shows but little moral de lice are looking into Gibson's rec velopment, and rather a low ne and) ord and have already found that ethical judgment. When com y vole tO three others of h thy clients| pared with the full base of the! election | have died under suspicious circum-| brain the upper part of the head Get farther contest. The fail stan |pates into {nsignificance | sae 8 deputie: pro-| Miss Fowter, who is the head of | Tho acquisitive element in very | Bs netted for keeping tally of | the American Institute of Phrenol-! strong, which broadens th temples | mamber of 8 cast In| ogy, has made a careful examina-|and creates an appetite to possess fs respons for this | tion of Gibson's face and skull, andi In the photographs the indications today gave out a summary of herjare very strongly represented in all the present members | deductions. jthe development for graft, and it fenced were candidates for re | What Hie Face Tells jwould be ¢ paratively easy for an outside judge was call are many kinds of men-/him to exert a stimulating influ Te to hear the petition for re mity, and we apparently |ence for the accumulation of what the ballot boxes and count-| ave one type before usin the like-|ever ratified his fan dhe pumiber of ballots. Jobn T.| Hess of this otherwise clever law The nose is an executive type, Mled an affidavit of prejudice |7**" she said not one that is refined and delicate Jobn B. Yakey, who}, “I examining his features close-|in outline or form. Hence there Judge | Judge Joiner then |'¥ We find the evi of the Mo-| will be nothing too difficult for a| called. tive Temperament, which show but | person who has such a form of fea charge of the case Were ready to admit their de The 18 highest candida in lander of the vote received by are as follows: Frater, Ron Albertson, Dykeman. Gil Tallman, Mack! Brerett Smith. George. Frank = Griffiths. Cari Smith, Casey Another indication shows firmness of the lips. e tightly compressed, and mposure. This is all the ident from the fact that he have shown this coolness of in times of danger many times be fore. His chin is square, why accompanies the hard, Cough and enduring type of individual. We do not find a single of sympathy in the whe ontour of the face, |entrance through the front pate of GTON, Sept |the establishments, robbers early to probe to the bottom sy |today entered the Walker & Wood ruff meat market and the Dounigan than robbers ped fea contributions ests & Corporations to past cam es iF MORE KILLED itnett They show more » always market and $600 in money and $250 n jewelry from the saloon. The the safes and obtained $50 from the contributions, | to the witness stand| FREINURG, Germany, Sept. 21 friman to clear up.| Lieut. Berger and Lieut. Junghans late husband's deal-| fet! from monoplane while fying and the| near here today, and both were in stantly killed. bestablished here at Arms Rar ew York with th he had subpoenaed Sec (CT. White, Gen. Counsel Director Libby of the company; John P. Me oa York Life: Cor . fon of the late ¢ ©, Tegehotf, pri to EH. Harriman. | BELFAST, Sept. 21.—Aviator J H. Eastley fet! from his aeroplane here today, while giving an exhibit tion flight. He was so badly injured that he died in a few minutes. U. S. ADMIRAL ROUTS REBELS MANAGUA, Nicaragua, Sept. 21 After battling his way through hordes of rebels under Gen. Mena, besieging the city of Granada, who! | had threatened to sack the town if subpoenaed Mins of the late treasurer, ix ‘be asked to testify that John PD. Arch-| meiketetier also will) | Admiral Southerland, with 1,000 ma- x saireene ‘ rines, has reacred Granada and plac of gy ed his men In control, according to ms’ contributions to po advices here today. te to be made.| Was found on the verge of starva. companies tion. falled later Admiral " positive “be shut off Monday, positive orders from Washington to x PB ™. on Jackson relieve the town at any cost, owing and Seventh avs to the pressing appeals of relatives av. &. between Southerland received there. RIENCE COUNTS IN CONGRESS --~ — rf Fang” « ‘« Ou z genes, wino voted with Aldrich to boost the tariff on the YY tim Humphrey voted with Cannon for the at he will assist “l-Am-a-Trimmer” in hie Their battle cry is to be, “Experience Counts XPERT SAYS ACCUSED LAWYER IS VICTIM OF ; 1 little feeling, emotion or sentiment Joiner’s ruling this morn |) tas revived hopes of ullimare| T2# fact is sustained by his ap ie & number of candidates | P®4Tance, as the cheeks are hollow th and the bones are hard and tough, | it should fall into their hands, Rear) ‘The populace} instructions=€etaoinetaon | of Americans and others besieged; THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE 175, SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1912 CAR, OF REFINEMEN IRREGULAR --LACK DEFORMITY ws and severity ” well jand self-polsed confidence The ear Is lacking in refinement and tndicates Intellectual brutality E , STRONG EXECUTIV TYPE CHEEK BONES, LARGE as callousness With aw it could d bal ox lture to consider anced organization cellent work ‘The whole contour of the face shows abnormal features and a singular coolness and freedom from sentiment of any kind. Jeenmast: ch anaveen power SOME SPECIALS IN THE NEWS | of keenness of analytical power penetration, and ability to size up character, He te Just the opposite Mrs. Alice Holland of Philadeiphig hae talked only 36 hours continu- type m the Rev V. T. Rich ously, yet they bave sent her to an @sylum, eson, the Boston Kyman who Denne murdered Avis Linnell, for he bas | a cold, reserved, feelingiess mind An ee! with 17 ratties and a button has been caught by Scott Thomp- though cle withal, while Riche. | 80n of Vinta, Cal, The other day Séetty caught a catfish that barked son had o passionate, unbalanced | &t bim. (mind, full of controlling magnetiom —_— The Women's Aprti-Gambling association of Larned, Kan., an- nounces that it's either home for babby or horsewhips for the ho | proprietors. "CHICAGO COPS ARE. IN BAD CHICAGO, Sept. 21.—-Probing into| ach in his thorax the escape from the police here of! an chaiaman, Out of the examination. ‘71 can dates she was one ONE CENT Mrs. Laura F. Donnelly of Brockport may be the state's first wom of 179 who passed A boy in a London hospital has been discovered to have his stom- ON THAING AnD wmws da [ (By Uaited BOSTON, § Indictme a | ine ts wer ay by @ epecia nection with the big textile mili « dynamite in str the big strike 4 This makes which } bee ca jtwo me betie to oe by connected. with the § Thane comers Roseburg, Or-—Sheriff Quine's wife detected R. L. Mooney attempt. | Public , of the Hank of Montreal branch in| '™ t© escape from jail. She waited till Mooney stuck bis head out of ident of the New Westminster, B.C. Assistant |®,20l¢ in the wail, then poured a bucket of cold water down the back : Fr meetings Chiet of Poles Rehutier has wn (oft his neck, Mooney rushed for bie geil. faeue ie otal » itee Rehutte a un ante! in: earthed a scandal which bids fa 7 4 Cambridge, wh to shake the police force of Chicago San Francisco.—An aged man wanted to mail a letter and persist. acted a to the roots. Schuttier, it te said, today has | ently yanked at what be thought wag the handle of a letter box. Five pa tr arly ifive men under suspicion, and four| “T*® Companies responde induce Gov. F are under direct charges ranging | gn ae into the struck from incompetence to direct brib- San Francisco—-“For he's # jolly good fellow” spirit ied Cuyler Lee wy foe to a Turkish bath. The howF was Jate and Cuyler was sle Failing to appear in court today on thme as @ member of a jury, Cuy Never again, SHOT NEGRO WHO == fined #80 ATTACKED GIRL | quoth be Dresden.—Owing to the scarcity of meat, dogs are being stolen a © Pome On ow ACQUISITIVE ELEMENT STRONG A LOW SENSE OF MORALITY KEEN PERCEPTION ANALYTIC POWER LACK OF SINCERITY Mental and Moral Traits of Burton Gibson as Mise Fowler Finds Them Revealed in His Head and Face INDICTMENTSIN 2 DYNAMITE fa rene “ort Wire) secret © return ad here to 1 grand jury in con accusations ag own tk nt American Atte up > In ier STRIKE SITUATION STILL SALT LAKE nd SERIOUS CITY 21 Sept _ The Seattle Star HOME EDITION | , te ¥ slaughtered by meat dealers in this city, according to evidence ob | BAKERSFIELD, Cal, Sept. 21.—| tained by the Tierschutzverein (Seelety for the Prevention of Cruelty |One hundred more sheriffs depu William Koop, an aqueduct worker,|to Animals). ties were sent from here to Bing was brought here today, following > era jham at noon, where over 4,000 an inquest by Coroner Dixon into lstriking miners refuse to surrender the shooting of an unknown negro, | about 45 years of age, in Jawbone canyon camp, on the Owens river Los Angeles aqueduct 22 miles east of Mojave. The neg~> was caught in an attempt to assault the 7-year old daughter of a woman who Is known only as “Queen of the Val-| ley,” and who lives in a covered wagon. Koop was summoned by the cries of the child, and fired three sho into the negro’s body. here near Low Angeles. They photographed bin leg if it fits t marks around the Los Angeles swimming pool. to see Portiand, Or-—Mrs. J. B. Johnsen reported there was a burg! downstairs. Policeman Stanton found Mrs. her beau, billing and cooing, were the “burglars.” asked Carl Neilson. “To see the have ball games,” he answered San Diego.—Roy Nunamaker, who has a wooden leg, is under arrest ‘The police found on him a newspaper clipping telling how a peg leased man had stolen the clothing of three boys In a swimming, pool Johnson's housemaid and Los Angelts.—“What are the duties of the vice president?” was He will to study the constitution before again applying for naturalization. their arms ing hourly c Gemmel eral Manager Copper compan: Bingham, Jack he lar iffs deputies, a for the protectic |Denver & Rio |fused today to he Jackling of the tension is increas 1, assistant to Gen. y, is in charge ling himself will go there this afternoon to confer with | |the company officials and the sher nd to perfect plans | on of strikebreakers | to be sent into the camp by hun dreds. The Greek section men of the railroad re- in sympathy nde strike Utah | at} do so many women take the only seats where men are permitted to smoke when there are other seats in the car sue HIS TREACHERY AND MEAN PETTY TACTICS Obeyed Order of Boss M’Millin to Rob Roche Harbor People of Money Order Department Because the Boss Wanted to Force People There to Buy at His Store. Roche Harbor, Wash 1 brey, House of R entative oe ved notice from departme that Harbor will be ma oney order office July Ist. You sec withdrawal similar previous order, Conditions remain the same awe get order cam celed, or at least postponed until my letter this date reaches you. JOHN 8. MeMILLIN oe ee Gover ent via Seattle Washington, D. C., June 18, 1912 Hon, John 8. McMillin, Roche Harbor, Wash Department bas rescinded ordc: making Roche Harbor a money order office W. E. HUMPHREY.” Yes, friends, the honorable Humphrey is right when he ay I erier count congress.” The folks at Roche Harbor, across the sound, want and need a iey order department. They petitioned for one, and the department at Washington granted their prayer. It vad vi that the people of Roche Harbor wanted, nee 1 a money order department § s an old line politician and the Roche Harbor, didn’t want a money order depart- ment It would hurt his busin cancelled as you did before,” he commanded 1 er” Humphrey obediently did as he red back: “Order 1s cancelled.” le frier a concrete example of the value of “ex- perience in congres An inexpe ressman, receiving such an order B McMillin, w d have blundered all over Washing- t icken with its head off. He would not have known he about it. An inexperienced congressman positively An honest one wouldn't. and couldn't have donc it. lid ler cancelled nes for the broad spirit of the folks of g though they do not get their money order lepartr not wish Humphrey any hard luck. They only hope he chokes. Indeed, they love him—the way a brewer loves the Anti-Saloon league. Every time our congress- man’s name is mentioned, they utter loud cheers (for Dan to the bone-headed and imbecile he Harbor were so dead set on a Vhy, the silly people had an idea a t portation of money to and from town and make it easier to buy and sell in neighboring ywns and cities. Sea for instance And there were merchants right here in Seattle who actu- ally hoped that Roche Harbor would get a money order depart- 1 e Roche Harbor money might find its way to But Boss McMillin fooled 'em. He knows what's best for Roche Harbor. Why should Roche Harbor spend its money a thre in Seattle en it can get anything it needs, from a paper of pins to hing machine, at Boss McMillin’s general mer- chandise store So Boss McMillin wires “I-Am-a-Trimmer” Humphrey at Washington to hang the binger on the money order depart- ment. And Humphrey does as he’s told. An inexperienced and honest congressman might have told toss McMillin, with some heat, to go to Spokane. He might entertain absurd notions about its being his duty to serve, not Boss McMillin, but all the people of this district. But Humphrey, out of a large experience, knows whose hand to lick. For has not McMillin for years been a large | noise in state politics? Wasn't he for years picked regularly as delegate to the national republican convention? And, when | Gov. Mead was elected through the influence of the railroad interests, didn’t he appoint McMillin to the first railroad com- DIES. AT HER Geneva—The police of St. Gall looking for the most up-to-date | With the Hingham miners, | mission in the state | burglar in Switzerland. A few nights ago he broke into the convict . And -was-he ieicked off thi cocsmesion? Canalis | prison there, and, forcing open the door of the cell occupied by a young CHAUFFEURS JAILED. ifs vasinad tae War Tues fa a a Certainly not, | BABE’ S GRAVE |woman charged with murder, attempted to strangle her. NEW YORK, Sept:-21—Coloner| 1° Fesigned——the way Judge Hanford dit a pol "lr tieae aii ak ahaety Groea And isn’t he a rich man? You bet. He owns the'big lime " 3 “ f Every umpire has his day. Tomorrow is umpire’s day at Dug’s.| used electrictlighted tags on his| Works, doesn’t he? And most of the land? Yes. And the , ig ly i atageh Pa Fo Ole Hanson will make the presentation speech when the fans hand his! automobiles to show the numbers| store? Sure. He’s the leading citizen of Roche Harbor, isn’t peside the grave o r by, the a 2 ve “ sther’ prese: ) e nd. because y were irregular, 2 ‘ dead “body, of, Violet Graaee, Pa PR med ge lodge badge and various other presents. Optical pres . “ny on Bes Beret Beige Dh J he? No doubt about it. And a money order department would young working Woman 23 years old, | was found today The pathetic end of Miss Grange | | was the sequel to a unique case mother love brought to Hght w |she was arrested recently for hav ing mummified the body of her in-| fant child, keeping it in her room GO ON, EAT YOUR COSTLY MEAT, BUT GET NEXT TO THIS in the tenement district for four If you have some slight doubt as to whether the Taft- ay I }@ Aldrich-Cannon-Humphrey tariff increases the cost of your “1 couldn't bear to part with the little darling,” she pleaded to the|[™ living or not, try to explain this: magiatrate, before: whom she was | During the month of August, American sirloin of beef #0 1 steeped it in vine it sold for 1914 cents in London and for 28 cents in Seattle. None of the rot about middlemen, increase in gold pro duction, great rise in wages and similar ins twaddle The only explanation that died and had a man She her wages in blackmail, told of paying the man half} incere how, when | explains this difference in price. holds water is the robber tariff. |she fell ill, he threatene ; and of her desperate efforts to meet his demands. Unable to pay “the vi ‘hush money,” Miss Grange was Great Britain levies no tariff daties on meat products. In arrested the London market the American beef trust must meet competition from Australia, New Zealand and South om such compe America. The tariff protects the trust f tition at home. With the tariff abolished would sell at home for no more than abroad BLACK SATISFIED Judge W. W. Black of the super lor court of Snohomish cou who has been nominated for governor on the democratic ticket, ridicule the ineligibility suggestion against his right to election during his| term as judge. The question has| been decided favorably in many | states, he asserts. Judge Black's | eligibility ig to come up at a meet ing of democrats in Seattle this af- || ternoon AFTER T. R. RECORD SAN FRANCISCO, Sept, 21.—-De- termined to have a larger atiend ance than that drawn by Col, Theo. 001 t upon his recent visit ere, the local democratic campaign committee is working hard in prep- aration for the coming of Wm. J. Bryan, who will speak here in the interest of Gov, Woodrow Wilson pext Tuesday night. American meats Of course when these facts are made known the shriek goes up that the trust cannot pay decent wages without the privilege of robbing the people 3ut this shriek is the biggest lie in all the tariff argu- ments. The census shows that the average wage paid in the packing industry is $570 a year, a trifle over $10 a week i ow high a tariff is needed to enable the trust to pay such wages? All told, there were 89,728 wage earners employed in the year 1909 in the packing industry, less than one-tenth of one per cent of the population, If, once a year, a tax of about 60 cents a head were levied on the meat consumers of the United States, the tax would raise a sum equal to the total wages paid by the beef trust. Yet the tariff enables the trust to tax meat consumers more than that every week in the year. | feurs. If She Cho Chew even if she che Paris, of suicides ca in Paris. Exe however, In who commit city limits. to allow then NEWPOR New York, worn by a ne as Newport's eries, SUICIDE BURIALS suicide outside later a modiste identified as her salesiady, oses, Can Tobacco Now | SUNBURY, Pa., Sept. 21.—As St j}mon Hine and Rose Nicholas of Mil |ton were applying for a marriage | license at the rder’s office, Hine |warned the girl that when he mar. lried her she would have to stop |chewing gum, She grew angry and, escorting him into the corridor lof the court hov gave him a |sound lecture, whereupon they re lturned to the recorder’s office. |Hine stating he would marry wed tobacco. 21.—The bodies nnot be cremated eptions are made, ‘avor of persons the he decision is the Paris council's CAN BE SENT Pittsburg, Pa, Sept ~ “Dnu's" may be sent on postal card, says Judge Cha P . Orr, in the United States dis... trict court The decision fol lowed the postmaster's refusal n to be mailed, T MARVELS Sept. 21.—Ne port marvelled at the creations A week her and the gowns undelivered fin- woomer, | hurt it what's all the hurt his business, wouldn't it? Of course. It’s unreasonable of his humble neighbors to want to do anything that would They ought to be ashamed of themselves. Well, then, bother about? * * * * * We've used up a lot of perfectly good words to explain an act which could be summed up thus: tersely and truthfully: A | mean, petty, piffling act of a mean, petty, piffling peanut | politician, BRING YOUR WANT ‘| ADS TO OUR DOWN TOWN OFFICE—— THE SEATTLE STAR 229 UNION STREET Between Times and P.-I. With Souvenir and Curio Shop

Other pages from this issue: