The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 1, 1913, Page 1

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PROBABLY FAIR TONIGHT @ND FRIDAY; MODERATE WESTERLY WINDS ‘ Hl We Janeball Trust’; > r She were a feather. in_ hee at; core ee eee VOLUME 15 THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN } SEATTLE Z HOMI wit’ace vin oe, c pameonter “ to eve °. NO, 54 SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1913. ONE CENT Sactte wuls. EDITION sas talk teicher reese eee JAPAN TO FIGHT ALIEN BILL IN COURTS JAP AMBASSADOR BRYAN MAKING VAIN APPEAL TO CALIFORNIA SENATE | PREPARES TO F | FORMAL PROTEST 4 WASHINGTON, May 1t.—The allen land law bill submitted by Attorney General Webb of California and adopted by the senate an amendment to the Birdsall bill, the terms between the United States and Japan, opinion of President Wilson and hie advisers. tise that as soon as the bill ie passed Viscount Chinda. the Japanese ar ssador, will file a formal protest with the state de partment It Is expected that President Wilson will suggest that the quickest way to secure results is to bring action in the fal courts to test the gonstitutionality of the bill. All negotiations so far between Ambas. gador Chinda and government officials have been of the most friendly; character. Wilson believes Japan will fight her battles in the courts, and not otherwise. SENATE DELAYS VOTE ON NEW LAW SACRAMENTO.—California hy nm land bill as re-drafte ie atill discriminatory and violates f the treaty In the gain been warned by the President is not vate influence of Secretary Bryai on the demo the senate ved today ugh to again Webb t The word will be spoken to tisuse, ena rnia’s de progressive aked sadly w hours Cal te tston « ' Among the spectators In the senate gallery today were two Japane! who have attended the session of the legislature | daily for months. to se firet-han encroachment of » Callfornia lands, accompanted by PB vanes Diboo, Secretary of State Bryan, indicated by the arrow, speaking to the California state senate, in the senate chamber at Sacramento. Bryan's visit to Sacramento, at the order of President a rm colony at Florin, ten| Wilson, is an unprecedented happening in the history of the United States. California senators, in speeches, likened their state’s position to that of seceding Southern states in the |i les from the capital, where prac-|days before the civil war, “It is the same,” one speaker declared, “as though President Lincoln had sent his secretary of state to South Carolina in those times of political strife before ab Siher ate eee COM WOMAN TANGLED IN WEB OF FALSEHOOD; sourte was and it was that the eo Webt admint what results shal fol « Influx of the little brown man viaittJontvtea!s cuts COUNTY ‘PAYS FURTH’S COMPANY $5,000 | SESW SeeS5\A YEAR FOR LIGHT WHEN PLANT OWNED follows saxe Sacram Ning y bill, 5 “Gor, Hiram Johns } Stake the liberty of « tention to the Webb // ealt tavotve an appeal’ to the bers of the senate vote, aimont to] BY THE CITY OFFERS IT AT LOWER RATE © courts on questions of treaty rights | a man, to exclude the Japanese, NDS IN JAIL L : ene, on pace MA Te OE! | min. Thereoen, eae helood a The people of Seattle—and they constitute 85 per cent of the population of King baat | Wilson, draft ft, explaining the new law.) have a light and power plant of their own. By Fred L. Boalt n Gove nson’s reply | said “ ape |*"Oniy eftizens and those elieth Bikt the people's elected officials, Commissioners Hamilton and Rutherford, refused to pat- adi Suinide’ a Shee eee P thank you ee te cakiese, te lronize the people's plant. daa |, gestion. Th ore of land ' _ Dolly Carroll, nee Travis, is a federal prisoner at the county Jail, the fact that may empl y Japanes rs eee | Instead, they made a contract, last fall, with the municipal plant's competitor, the Puget | ver vive eyes. worthy of a poet's ode, are filled with tears. ‘The rims preaenve @ aire, 7 a d with ight of weep! She’ discouraged that, though face of veg te ot daly ger we gee | Sound Traction, L ight and Power Co., Jacob Furth's prit ate c or poration. | grief plays haves ‘rity the cotsplexion. ‘fot mabes: to hoes tek and have referr: sthetersiit po ags au ca And the people’s courthouse, the pe ple’s county hospital andthe county poor far and the Coliseum building, which | doesn’t resort to her powder puff. eld by Japanese Thinese cane e Own, all thes people’s buildings are furnished with light and power by the ate concern aad not by the peo For Dolly Carroll, ex-wife of Dr. James Carroll, head of the Carroll not be beques their allen nt and power plant a parte ° : net | School of Physical Education of Tacoma, is in serious trouble. She and Al E. Young, alias Al Rogers, alias Guy E. Davis, were t will be that February the bill ran up to about $700. . The private company averages $5,000 per year business out of these public | arrested at the Winslow hotel, in Winslow, yesterday, charged with n will be pre-| building , in all fairness, « have gone to the people's light p «ene Oe ae sear ee mas > pe om x 4 rhe a sce econ nicer yell amilton ‘¢ therfo against 5 tien DOE ete eC See on eae Sia . Tucker, timber inspector, 620 South O st., Tacoma, says the ing colonies will be = The hameless deal perpe rate | Be Iton and Rutherf rd ag Li taxpayers is pa ticularly ageravat ng, because, | man of the several aliases and Dolly Carroll, nee Travis—he thought by Bee when the old contract with the Stone ebster concern was up, last fall, the city put in bids, cutting the lighting rate for | he was engaged to marry the latter—muleted him out of money and . ie apanese or. Chin me land.| the poor farm and hospital exactly in two, The county was paying a 6-<cent rate then. The city offered a rate of 3 cents | property worth from $4,000 to $5,000 LBs BM eee per kilowatt hour Incidentally, on the say-so of a dictagraph placed by a Burns de- t 1 pat SEP a EP 7m ut ina flat rate of 2% og: The: -comt tadicraire anit: they. didnt 4 3 id. | teetive in the room next to that occupied by the prisoners, Marshal | Forg naining business the city put in a flat ra 4 cents. The commissioners said they didn't .want a slid- | Sich) may preter’ another-and eves” mone serious cberes— ane ot ing scale, y ¢ private company was given a contract on a s g scale basis, which p ts it to charge 2.4 cents per | opium smuggling. GRIM REAPER FINDS kilowatt hour in the most favorable month in the year, February. In the summer months the rate will shoot up far above From this brief review of the facts the reader will understand why 2.5 flat rate made by the beautiful Dolly Just why the commissioners favor the private lighting company to the people's company ts another one of those mysteries. Maybe they buy lights from the private concern for the same rea- son that they buy water from a private company which Hamilton himself helped to organize in | Georgetown. THIS COUNTY Carroll, nee Travis, weeps and will not be comforted, oe eee POOR PICKINGS HERE} ASHINGTON, May 1.—The grim reaper is doing a constantly W ing business In this country, and Is avoiding Seattle, , more than any other city, according to vital statistics covering 23 states, published by the census bureau here. These states Include 63 per cent of the population. Seattle has the lowest mortality rate, 8.8 per 1,000. Minneapolis and Portland, Ore., come next in the order named. phis claims the highest death rate with 21.3 to 1,000. CHICAGO POLICE MUST BE POLITE “OH, WHAT A TANGLED WEB WE WEAVE—iI” ce eee The Carrolls were divorced a year ago last January. Dolly's intt- macy with Young, alias Rogers, etc., was one of the grounds on which the decree was granted Dolly is the daughter of D. W. Travis, for many years engineer at }the Tacoma city hall. She met Tucker in August of last year. Tucker said today: “She came to my office and said she had some land {n Eastern Washington |that she wanted me to see for her.” She called frequently, and “We let the deal drop and talked love, I liked her from the start, and apparently she was very fond of me.” Young, alias Rogers, etc., posed as Dolly's “brother” and protector, He engineered the wooing. In December Dolly announced she would St. Paul, Mem- ANYHOW, THIS FACT REMAINS. THE TAXPAYERS OF | ARE FORCED BY THE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS TO PATRONIZE THE COM- if the police jored with a neat bow man isn't too fat Major Funkauser, second deputy superintendent, has added the study CHICAGO, May Strong and courag of f ness to the curriculum of his police training school PETITORS OF THEIR OWN PLANTS. DIVIDES HER TIME 3, 000 JAPSMEET: SEA UNIONS AID. {have to go to Chicago for an operation for an internal trouble, and a i had BO mine) Young said he had relatives in Chicago, and that er go along, and they cou ve money by stay Bimen are to be Re Fauiy ois eons) DEY TWEEN HUSBAND pease CT ee ee fois, and tn the gtroyed the grocery store owned by AR ALL WHITE WIRELESS Tucker paid for two—both ways. damose) who ace Mrs. E. EB. Thompson, Lowman Dolly pturned—‘much better.” Tucker showered gifts on her— Chicago, will not on r-\|drive and California st., causing a jewels and leopard fur scarf. They went to theatres together, and teous answers, but will also be hon-! loss of about $2,000. ta United Press Le | With all of the maritime untons | ite suppers afterward—at the Rathskeller and the Washington. SAN FRANCISCO 0. "May 1— Barring all Americans and all other on the coast giving active support “My affections for Dolly increased,” to the striking wireless operators, | sai’ Tucker, wife for divorce and marry Dolly.” “so I decided I would sue my By United Press Leased Wire weeks, and returned punctually as ‘aller 3,000 Japanese business etrike breakers are having a tough) Dolly was willing If her “mother would consent.” Together they é NEW YORK, May 1.—A bride|the end, to remain for the next two|and professional men of San Fran- time of ft, and, according to re-| went to San Francisco to interview “mother,” whose name, Dolly said, who bestowed her affections im-| Weeks Jcisoo gathered in a mass meeting # received by J. P. Sorenson,| was “Mra. J, E. Travis.” McCormack Bros. partially on her husband and hie| This excited her curiosity, so, alhere, lasting until early today, to organtaer for the wireless men, Tucker did not see “moth He talked with somebody over the }bosom friend during ate two| Month ago, when Gunther left, Mra. |listen to discussions regarding few of them are lasting more than | telephone who said she was “mother,” and who finally “consented.” By | i weeks for a period of more than|Sumner sent her daughter ‘ land bill before the one trip, ena | aomee chance not yet exp) sined, the real mother of ‘Dolly got wind of i one yen: vealed Justice low “Mrs. Gunther The at Sacramento. It te ‘ arconi compar unted ucker's presence in Sdn Francisco, and a hint of bis mission, and the j | Anniversary Sale bpd 4 Fe ety: eteat ported dhiat: "Mys. Guntit that some of the speeches advocat-| without reckoning ther unions | plot fell down, like the house of cards it was, when she told Tucker that £ |Chase Bond, a railway mail clerk,|tered a house in the ed war when they turned down our {t was not she who had “consented” to his marriage to Dolly. 1 asked a divorce from his wife,|Mrs. Symne immediately Previous to the meoting a huge quest for an increase over the Then it was Tucker's turn to employ guile He and Dolly returned Starts Tomorrow \Loulse. Bond named boy {Upon fer, and was told that no|sign announcing the object of the a month salary,” said Sorenson to-|to Seattle. He was even more lover-like than before. But he employed 3h lfriend, Jack Gunthe Iso a mail| Such person lived there, but that/gathering was placed over the en- day. “Strike breakers are finding}a Burns man to shadow Dolly and “Brother” Al, 4 clerk, as corekpondent. Neither|Mrs, Chase Bond was at home, and|trance to the hall. The place was'that it 1s not worth even $100 a| CRE PERG ' ‘nther nor. Mra. Bond defended | 4s permitted to see her |packed to the doors month to work on hips where “OH, WHAT A TANGLED WEB WE WEAVE WHEN FIRST" 4», McCormack Bros, have been doing bust | Goriféasee, to: Hubby | Those in charge of the meeting|everybody from the cook to the eee oo 8 itle about labor economics." [ted Humphtey $4,000, PRACTICE TO DECEIVE!” | Bond‘and Guather rs. Bond. begged Mrs. Sumner| Would divulge nothi regarding mate has {t in for them.” | Ten days ago the Burns man followed the couple to Winslow. An- * ness at Second avenue and James street r “runs” between art aff remain silent, when|What took place, further than to A car load of operators import-| other operative joined him, and they placed the dictagraph.’ A record n Bond wa © should drop in bu r Fond | state that the alle bill was ed by the Marconi men from the|was made of every word spoken during the 10 days by the couple whi! for two years, and to properly celebrate res Ge a his ns be hed wile: tp eens oe under’ discussion, At i conc East due in San Francisco to-| they were in the room . ‘ spr this fact are holding a big anniversary ¢ ‘ ; en a -verea,| kiseed her adlentions The in-|8ion of the meeting the Nipponese night, but we do not expect them| Much of the talk had to do with opium smuggling. Soon after tale: whic - Gunthas are tatch aie iid caora ve Sumner, |emerged talking excited! to last 1 | Young's arrival at ¥ a as en n the cons! ale, which starts tomorrow. Full details gond dnd. Gi pnt aneray eerie <x» |lightahip Swiftsure 98, ‘He was'to have left ina few days for the esean of this sale will be found in their full-page ghe ise and “ SKN mOHeaD ct OAT eae ie i rhs “has ited wick ase st with ibe. Buienar MA | rh ic ph, never sleeping, never {dle, while the operatives ; nouncement, which appears on page 3 Te lec tac the <stirone, ducee er lak atatienar’ Gane | took turn-and-turn-about, recorded, word for, word, Young's well-laid i in today’s Star. hehe led hie «, cot a|Mrs, Sumner's story corroborated a ber loci away fi Wat 145th et hy the ‘Grecende). ct usveral. otsta "Phere: were plenty of places on board the Swiftsure, he told Dolly, P y +4 canes, with | whou| wite’s &4 end: ‘knick-knack } saa opium could be hidden, and the captain be none thé wiser. He , q hey are making very special price in- Gunther boarded, noticed that dur-| which he nized as belongs ikon ‘if Pa hide {named the: er pee : uce g his absence on the rond “Mrs,|to he Then he accused his wife INGTON, D. C., May 1.—|) ater in the debate Rep. Falconer The ¢ aint of using the mails to defraud is based on corresrond- i ments, which should appeal to those Fee eee tlaic snow tr. tealeae admitted her duplicity The lumber schedule was formal-lof Washington denounced President | ence with Tucker, Special Agent William R. Byron and,U, 8, Marshal 7 who desire to buy seasonable merthandise demas | _-, ||¥ approved in the neuse today after Wlison, Addragsing his remarks to| Jacoby yesterday afternoon went from Seattle to Winslow in a chartered ah Wichievcavtal —- x > a hot deate in which Rep. Hum- the democratic members, Falconer | launch. Dolly was arrested at the hotel. She wept copiously, but would y-saving prices. PAINTER TUMBLES CHARGE FALSE AFFIDAVITS phrey of Washington attacked Rep. shouted: “You Hindgo-Chinese lov-| not talk ® Ye Y { painter, ¢ Palmer of Pennsylvania, asserting ers wanting to put #ingles on the Young was taken when he returned from the Swiftsure to the hotel. |» Pe a os 1; e Tenth an t to the Criminal inf ition, @&nrging |that Palmer gonstantly was “strut- free list would know that you are|Ho struggled, and had to f m: ber, their ad is on page 3 today, paveme t t uff Karl and 1 Leonhardt, @os | ting around, egotistically.” Palmer ruining a great industry if you had Today, sullen and Pit sole occupancy of a cell, and don’t fail to lools it up. " W n A W t as With’ chain falee & replied by maintaining that Hum- a grain of sense. You are trying to| while blue-eyed Dolly, given the freedom of the women's ward, weeps astla i¥, and Republican ; : phrey harbored a personal grudge put the Japanese into California by the hour . ‘ \ te} H retain 1 acalp wound) “a to creditors, was filed Wed-|\ because he defeated a mileage|with a pedagogic president whol pete oh elles Posi and a broker le. Hi taken | nesday They are under $1,500 graft which he said wuld have net-|knows a lot of fine phrases but lit- “OH, WHAT A TANGLED WEB WE WEAVE WHEN FIRST WE I bail Eeseail|to tho Seattle General hospital 249145 are “

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