The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 18, 1912, Page 1

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about the court, of 3 y has, About the reason,” and all that. But do about what it is doing to labor? See page 7. heard = things States supreme 14. NO. 225. ARE DANGEROUS Saturday, November 30, 26 Renton coal mine strikers up before Federal Judge Cushman for contempt citéd on the complaint of Jakey Furth, charged im beeh “violent” towards the strike-breakers im- ( th from all parts of the country when he dis- nton miners had organized a union complaint against each of these 26 men is iw used “violence” by applying the word “scab” to = Attorney George H. Rummens, for the strikers, contends that a strike- breaker ts a “seab.” Calle "Em Dangerous, But Jakey Furth’s attorneys ar. gue that the blanket injunction against the strikers, issued by Judge Calhoun, covers the widest kind of possibilities where con tempt charges would He. And the jmen caught saying “scab,” accord \ jing to Purth's attorneys, are with \ out question dangerous and “vio }lent” characters, as defined by the Anjunction. . against by aypor ore ot ee wd : ‘brands of “violence” bare been Patel fall short by 5.000 | made by the Furth agents against heck was completed |i5 strikers, But these have been , jim general terms, and made “on in formation and be : Hut the charge that the strikers to Comptrolier Harry | names on the peti Were found valid | made by Chief Regis- PGaines and bis corps | ised the word “scab,” in made #pe- The number neces: | citicalty, and ie whoily relied upon the recall election | i, substantiate the contempt case. association, of which/ & former teamster, president, will} In which to file addl-| to the petition. In the origina! petitions under lock in the dent. number of new DELAY SENTENCE OF DEFRAUDERS (My United Prove Leased Wire) TACOMA, Nov. 18.—C. EB Hows- ton and Joha H. Bullock, convicted fo invoke a recall|of defrauding the governmem on will become | collusive coal bids, were not sen- ; says Comptrolier|tenced in federal court this morn- they are io be re-| ing. their cases going over aati to property, Car-| might at §: 39. Will be returned to| A private agreement between the ciation. attorneys for Houston and BL D. Townsend, government counsel, postponed the appesrance until this eveaing. itconsisuoe | PLAN EXHIBIT AT gt 1915 EXPOSITION Y Los Angeles all lights in the (By Untied Prese Lenecd Wires & moment in ad TACOMA, Nov. 18-~Over the curfew bell at | delegates, representing the various | Rotice to boys and} commercial bodies of the state, will home. meet here Wednesday to discuss Washington's exhibit at the Pana- ma-Pacifie exposition in 1915. J. E. Chilberg of the Seattle Chamber of ON COAST | commerce, and president of the A. ‘were ordered dix) Y-P. fair in 1909, probably will be Bt all ports in|chosen chairman of the meeting. A storm| The Seattle delegates are support the coast, and willing a suggestion to recommend to tonight or to-| the legislature an appropriation of $500,006, fED ORE TO GUARD AMERICAN EMBASSY have been “violent,” because they} 100} } ) The Sea __THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER iN SEATTLE SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1912. | The Star presents today these first photographs to reach Seattle showing the Turkish Might from and torch, This photograph is a classic, | might have labeled it “War.” | But arth | ed ft from his imagination would homes ravaged by shot and shell The artist who could have paint- bave found himself famous, He like other people, both great and small, think that war has to do only with maps, and plana, and tactics, and. bodies | of troops and glorious eombat. common folks on both sides are They don’t stop to think that ihe the basis of all war, just an they | | are the foundation of every other enterprise in the known world, In war it is not the great and t he rich who suffer, Their suffer ing. a# well as thetr fixhting, is done for them by the common folks. Over these plains of Thrace, bled, fell, starved, raved and die and Turkish fighting men who h: the word of Turkey's rulers, to Cheer for the Bulsars if sou wish. Turks aro human people-—theie children God help u eo INVOLVED IN all when war come for five days, plodded, ran, stum- od. cid men, women and children, ad been torn from thelr homes at fight--for what? but don't forget itat the hildren human children, like your our way! CLIQUE FOR: t._ONE CENT 3.084.835. GLORIOUS BATTLES BOYS’ RUIN; TRIES TO DIE} PORTLAND, Or, Nov. 18.—W tt Allen, gray haired business man. is today dying from the effects of | cMoroform taken with sutcidal in |tont on the Sth floor of the Y. M |C. A. butiding, and Jack Rigo Rypay violinist, C. D. Bronner, N. B. Healey, H. L. Rowe, Earl Van Hulen, Earl! Brown, Lionel Robert Johnson, E. Taylor are an der $5,000 bonds each, as the resalt lof the unearthing of & nce con- |necting them with alleged dliielt conduct toward young boys. The Investigation was started at the instixation of Y. M. C. A. offi clals, evidences of the practice hav Ing been found in the dormitory of that building. All have confessed with the exception of Rigo, who is SANE ANSWERS TO FOOLISH QUESTIONS Lam a rich Itallan widow owning Your spaghett! tactories, A hand- drone (2 paying me vinient ». Do you think hie inten re honorable?—Mre, Bacaga Undoubtedly, his object is mac- aroni, Where can a poor cripple with a wooden log work?—Stumping Steve. Mf your peg has a good brass ferrule on the end you might get a job mashing potatoes in a hotel Kindly print a recipe for seram- bling oysters.—Mre. L. R, Remove the nair from the oye jters and peel in the usual manner. Parch in a slow oven, then cover with grease and scramble as you would eggs. Please tell me how I can acquire self-control—T. D. R. Eat in a restaurant where there is an orchestra. When you learn te eat without losing your appetite you ean consider your self-control _AOMIRAL SiR ARCHIBALD BERKELEY MILNE net of the British Mediterranean squadron, and who Of the big international fleet, 14 battleships, 22 cruts- Constantinople to save 300,000 that city from the defeated and Overs and auxiliaries, at r and native Christians in ‘ soldiers. Nov, 18—British marines are guarding the United In Constantinople, accord: ing to a dispatch receiv- rom the commander of the British warships assem- rus. in the let Ambassador W. W. Rockhill have 116 men to pro- Office, 9 marines and blue jackets in all, from the war- ‘8, were landed in Constantinople this after- ish government was willing that the pow Ir forces, but the marines were moved into the perfect. Fvery time I comb my hair T lone ® handful of hair, What will pre- vent it from coming out?—M. D. RB. Stop combing your hair. I have been keeping company two years with @ beautiful and refined young lady of 22. Her mother is a widow worth $160,000. I have pro- oned to the young Indy at least 20 imes, but she han refused me ev time. What shall I dot Propose to her mother. Dean, notorious because of hin exeapadé with the famed Princess Chimay several years ago, and Johnson who {has not yet been examined. AH are prominent professionally The men confersed to have héad- ed a vice clique formed for the pur |pose of ruining young boys.’> No officer or active member of the ¥, IM. C. A. was oven . remotely: rem: nected with the practice. The confessions are unprintable. Dr. Harry L. Start and Dr, Fy A. |Hodeman were also arrested: jconnection with the scandal, wat Dr. Hodgman was released and Rr. Start ie being examined this after. | noon. Alien left a note dectaring “he was innocent, but couldn't bear the disgrace. a PROGRESSIVES | WILL ORGANIZE | | A permanent organ’ ion ip j planned of progressives In King leounty, and also an organization for the whole state. Informa! discussion of the plan took place in the Henry building assembly hall Saturday night, and as a result a mass meeting of pro- | gressives to form a permanent or- | ganization will be called for next | Saturday, This organization ts to be main- tained on a dues paying basis, and will have for its object to promote progressive legislation and progres. sive ideals, TEACH LOGGING AT UNIVERSITY? As @ result of the trip to the unf- versity last week of L. J. Donovan, George 8. Long and E. P. Blake, ‘prominent lumbermen of the North west representing the Pacific Log- ging congress, a movement has been started to establish a chair of logging at the university The men were enthusiastic over the work of the school of forestry. RRMA * Rain tonight and Tuesday, * ® increasing southeasterly winds * * becoming high tonight or ® | © Tuesday. Temperature at ® * noon 51. * ROTI TTT TOT OT TOTOT OT tok aR PRESIDENT TAFT HAS lost WESTMINSTER ABBEY HAS his smile, Gout, not election, been burned t. Mr, Abbey kept a warehouse at No, 61 Front st, New York, where he sold everything from a needle to an anchor, CAPT. CODY, THE English aviator, has been mulcted $100 for killing a cow with his aeroplane. A SUFFRAGETTE SCHOONE! Boston from Calais, Me, ®, manned by women, has reached GROUNDS FOR DIVORCE—Mrs, Emma Miller of Elgin, ll, eut ber husband’s hair and shaved him for four years, is seeking the divorce. ORGANIZED SPOONING I8 a It 1s not he who new experiment at Wellesley, The front house has been thrown open to men callers, AFTER LOSING MONEY at poker he had saved to get married a young Camden contractor bound and gagged himself and told fiancee he had been robbed. young lady ELOPING COUPLE WHO won He fooled the police, but not the race from Mississippi, the bride's father reaching the pler just in time to see them on a Hamburg liner pulling out, lost after all. The o trouble, but did want to give them old gentleman didn't want to make $1,000 or so for expenses abroad. H | CHARLEY, THE ONE-ARMED FOOTPAD, COMES TO TOWN did. The police of cities know him well, They know hig partner better. The partner is a pegleg who pre- tends to sell shoe strings. For several years the one- legged and the one-armed gy rated around Detroit, Cleve- Jand, Buffalo, Pittsburg and Cincinnati, Peg-leg was known as the “king of the yemes,” and his partner was facetiously dubbed his “prime minister.” His real name is Charley The “king” is a neat dresser and looks respectable. He has, also, tremendous shoul- ders, powerful hands, and a hypnotic eye. He hails you respectfully, and asks ff you will please buy a pair of shoe- strings from a one-legged man At the same time he lays a hairy paw on your shoulder, digs a stubby thumb into your collar bone until it hurts, and stabs you with his hypnotic eye. All this on a busy corner and In broad daylight This Is general enough. You give up 50 cents for a pair of strings of a kind not worth a nickel a gross. The “prime minister's” work is less classy, because he uses violence. It is, nevertheless, scientific violence, and the one. armed man stands high in yese society, BY FRED L. BOALT Eastern Any strong man can do it if he takes great pains. Half an inch below and at one side of the nose is the base of the “eye” tooth. A sharp blow at the base of the “eye” tooth will immediately render the victim unconscious, It is as well to contrive to have the knuckle of the middle finger land with recision on the spot indicated, ne must not blunder, A miss of a fraction of an ineh will burt the victim, but not dis- able him, and will make bim fighting mad. The one-armed footpad never inissox John Hendrickson, logger, came in from camp Saturday with a pocket full of money and a disposition to spend it. He never got a chance, At 1 o'clock Sunday he met a onearmed man at Washington st. and Second av. He didn't know the one-armed man was the notorious footpad. The footpad asked for a match It Is one of the rules of that free masonry which obtains in the street at 1 o'clock tn the morning that when one man aske for a match, or even the “makin's,” the other shall gtantiy oblige, Only a boor would refuse, “Sure,” sald Hendrickson, fumbling in a pocket, At that instaft, when the logger’s attention was else- where, the one-armed footpad started the punch. It was per- fectly timed, admirably placedy and had exactly the right foree. It was the puneh of an artist, He Loses His Roll As is often the case with one- armed men, half the strength of the vanished arm have goye into the arm r SICKELS CUTS OFF SIX HEADS With the discharge of Court Clerk Will Campbell, County Clerk D, K Sickels has fired six deputies for political reasons since November 7, when he became assured his be- queathal of the office to his son, Will K. Sickels, proved successful at the election. Sickela declared the county Clerk's office Is strictly a “repub- lican party” office, So when he was sure his son was elected he immediately discharged those he suspected had lost faith In the par. ty of Aldrich, Penrose and Lorimer, ing. When Hendrickson woke up, his roll--$106-—was gone, The one-armed footpad is a neweomer to these parts, but his fame got here before he HOME EDITION. H E you, Mr. Bachelor, why have you never married? Have you an excuse? Cynthia Grey wants to know. She's inviting you and vour poor, mis- guided fellows to write her all about it. See page 3. CAPITAL ‘AUSTRIA BRISTLES AS ALLIES PLAN TO SHUT HER OUT FROM SPOILS (By United Press Leased Wire.) VIENNA, Nov. 18—Turkish dispatches from Constantie nople declare the Moslem forces have repulsed the Bulgarian advance, but 2,000 sailors and marines Nave been landed in the capital from the combined {dreign fleets to prevent a massacre when the Turkish rout, which seems inevitable, does come Dispatches from Constantinople late today say the foreign residents have appealed to the representatives of the powers not to permit either the Turkish or Bulgarian troops to enter the city while cholera is raging. An artillery duel which lasted all 1 . aD | day Sunday was followed by a bay jonet charge, resulting in great | losses on both sides. Night stop- | bed the attack, and under cover of darkness the Bulgar regiments . withdrew. The thunder of guns was plainly heard in Constanti-| ° nople all day, Snuday, and thou sands of wounded Turkish soldiers bd fill the public buildings Must Win Quickly. Military experts here say if the Bulgarians are effectually cheked, | the allies will be forced to modify | thelr demands and make peace; On ether waves, a wireless mes- quickly . iigies |sage, flashed from North Yakima fulgaria, Servia and Montenegro, ‘ D 6 it is pointed out, have sent every |‘? Beattie, Satermay, telling Goes eailable man to the front and can-| ©. Defoe to come quickly and de |not reinforce the troops now storm-|fend the honor of his name ling Turkish points. Winter also ts} The wireless was from Defoe's approaching, adn if the Bulgarians | + otner. treat they will have to wait until] : Ispring before renewing the attack,| Defoe, a member of the crew of land this would give the Moslem | boat plying between Seattle and |troops ample time to reorganize Victoria, stepped ashore at the | Cholera Menaces Europe. Grand Trunk dock Saturday night, | | Foreign physicians at Constan-|4%¢ @ messenger handed him the tinople say that all. Europe is| Wireless. He had just 15 minutes | threatened by the epidemic of |‘ cateh the Northern Pacific train cholera in the vicinity of that city.|No. 2. He sprinted for the station. It te reported that 12,000 Turkish | The hours Defoe spent on the lgoldicrs died there last-week train were whiled away by his [we As a warning .o Servia, Austrin| Wife dancing at Wheeler's hall, in ts believed today to be preparing | tbe Naches valley, eight miles from & demonstration of overwhelming | North Yakima. | milita rength on the Hunga-| At 3 o’elock yesterday morning | rian-Servian’ frontier, and a naval| Mrs. Defoe and her escort, John | demonstration in the Baltic, H. Hagerman a young farmer, | bin) date: Aaehe started on the long drive home, ac Sofia intenenen that “Bulgaria | COmpantod ay eaetee OENarn oe hon gavered ‘Darvin. Of stink ou jother young farmer, and a second ry woman, port if Servia defies Austria to Interfere with the plans of the 8I-| "perce, weetngee tom the house, les for the partition of Turkey. saw the buggy stop a block away Ninety thousan Austrians = are ~ jkrown to be within strtking dis-|oi nett ie decance Che ae tance of Servia. The situation i8i foe and Ogburn stepped to the vin ola = most ominous for the! eround. Defoe began to shoot Aadipkh sa orien weenie The first shot struck Ogburn im | jet the leg, inflicting a flesh wound. STICKER JUDGE Hagerman whipped the horse into | |a gallop. A second bullet pierced ry | his brain, and he died instantly, bis | DOESN T GET JOB reas tating forward over the dash- “Judge” George W. Sampson did Although wounded, Ogbuarn | not convene court this morning. He climbed into the buggy and drove did not appoint two bailiffs. He did to the police station with the dead not fit himself into a silk gown. |body of Hagerman. You see, “Judge” Sampson didn’t Forgives His Wife. become fudge, after all, although to-| After the shooting Defoe return- Gay was to have been the day. ed to the house, and to him later Deputy Prosecutor Evans has crept his wife. It is sald that, in given the county auditor an opin-|the tragic hour they spent alone jon that Sampson was not duly| together, the woman begged the elected for the two months’ term|™4n's forgiveness, and that they till next January, because the spe-| Vere reconciled. cial election had not been pro-| Police went to the house a little claimed by the governor. So there! At any rate, when Sheriff Day was no election certificate for! and the police went to the house, a Sampson this morning. jlttle later, it was the wife who He will now bring mandamus|#"swered the knock at the door. ° proceedings against the anditor,| | ,,ceoree Isn't here,” she told the and by the time the supreme court ; is through with the case. Samp-|, But they searched the house and son's term will be up, but then, he| {ound Defoe under a bed, the re- — $666 for two months’ At the hospital Ogburn said he ~ and Hagerman met the women a week ago, that they called them- Edwin F, Meyer, on trial three!selves Flora and Cherry Delmore, weeks on the charge of having con-|and that they represented them- spired with J. A. Kettlewell and P./ selves as unmarried, H, Wheeler to defraud the govern-| . An inquest on the body of Hager- ment in the purchase of supplies|man will be held at North Yakima for the navy yard at Bremerton,/this afternoon, Hagerman was was acquitted by a jury in the fe only 19 years old, which is also Og- eral court Saturday night. burn's age. Opportunity Offered by Well Known Dry Goods Store On page 6 in today’s Star you will find an ad from the Panton and London Co. which is just full of special inducements for Tuesday shoppers. You will find merchandise that you want right now listed at most attractive reductions from reg- ular prices. The advertising columns of The Star are filled daily with money saving opportunities which the frugal housewife will not overlook. Would you like to rent that room which you are not using? A Star want ad will find you a good tenant quickly and at the cost of only a few cents, Call Main 9400 or Elliott 44, or stop in at The Star's downtown Want Ad Office, 229 Union st., with the Souvenir and Curio Shop. | aaa AB ai aca i a eR A A aa eae i ae Rae earls NS

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