The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 9, 1913, Page 1

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> ~ - — OCCASIONAL RAIN TONIGHT AND SATURDAY; MODERATE. BOUTHEAST SHIFTING TO SOUTHWEST WINDS The Seattle Star THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, MAY 9, ONE CENT VOLUME 15 HOME NO EDITION ON THAIN® NEW WEAN 61 1913. AND ) IM WAITING TO BE MY OWN MAN AGAIN,” SAYS WAPPY, IN PEN, TO BOALT J MERIT OF geting aro wie roe Tie |EX-POLICE CHIEF TENDS CHICKENS AT 3 REMEDY | Administer It at The Jacob Furth Coal Mine W ALL A W ALL A: TELLS ST AR Vi AN OF DOUBTED PLANS FOR TIME WHEN HELL BE FREE t eeeoworon, May cts By Fred L. Boalt. teal denunciation of the claims of WALLA WALLA, Wash., May 9.—I didn’t come to Walla Walla to see ‘““Wappy.” He was told that De. Frederick Franz Fr I was at the penitentiary, and said he would be glad to see me. He would have been glad to see any- the Sarover7 nt Se body from Seattle. He was hungry for news of “the outside.” caiosis, was cau Woked here today before the con | wention of the ation for the 4 ‘ Sedy and F ft Tubdercu-| He is not the ““Wappy” I used to know. I wonder if he realizes how greatly a year in prison has changed him. It has been a change for the better, if I am any judge. At any rate I like him better than I did; and so would you, I am sure, if you could have seen and talked with him. Before he went out of the world and became No. 6539 he was a familiar type of the police officer— ressed, was} Asso: Le cone Prange pong brusque and domineering in manner; heavy-handed and heavy-footed and bull-necked; sophisticated and The report Friedmann ja bit hard, and taking a cynical view of life. treatment, by Dr. A Anderson's | gsistant, as a government inves tor, said Attitude Uncertain “We believe at the present time fat we are a position to ex Paes an opinion on the Friedmann ecovery, Dazed « he present || Smadition of the pati we have/| No. 6539 is today another sorta gentle, rustic figure, whose tired eyes smiled at me, almost timid- ly, through steel-rimmed glasses. | found him at the chicken house, surrounded by clucking hens and | strutting roosters and swarms of cheeping chicks. The chicks were all about his feet. ' I was doubtful of my welcome, for “Wappy” in other days did not love The Star. If he felt any rancor—I do not think he did—he hid it well, as with outstretched hand he came to meet me, the chick- ens running and dodging before his advancing feet. See him, in your mind’s eye, as | saw him, in prison garb—trousers of gray shoddy, high-hitched by CABINET TAKES UP PROTEST ON JAPANESE BILL |] Py United Press Leased WASHINGTON, May .— |] After a meeting with Secretary J mThe disease for which the rem-| Sryan, at _ which Ambassador stout suspenders, hickory shirt, an ill-fitting coat, also of shoddy, and a battered straw hat. On each r 4 is prolonged, and Inda formally presented Ja . : yr yey : a rerisad b $s of ad pan's protest against the Cali] Piece was stenciled “6539. 5 “ate : d Macement and retrog n: it 's| fornia anti-alien land bill, and A shameful garb—yet he bore himself with a dignity that he lacked in the days when he was the P nfluenc 1 a iT th et at . ee ¢ ” Ee severtal at beastie eee va gracaie fer oppeet.| head of Seattle’s police department and a member of the “vice syndicate. aii to & proper valuat of the tion to the projected law, the “They told m the office | would find you here,” | said SSS % feet Of therapeutic measures. We cabinet today took up the whole “i he replied ‘8 pleasanter here than Inside the wall. | lose sight of the e subject of the California action Bryan promised to reply to Chin da's contention as soon the cabinet decision was reached Bryan today was cheerful over the affair and evidently be. asked for thie work when busin, | always used before | came here. when—when | get out sent him saw a side of * There to have chickens about the place 1 expect to go into the chicken 0 the experience will be valuable.” Then he had to show me some snap-ehote hie son had taken and The corners were well thumbed Aa he conned them over | ‘Wappy” that | didn’t suspect existed. | THEY CALL HER THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRLIN U. S. were several photographs showing the bungalow at Sam- mamish lake—the cottage to which he will retire when the state is through with h “My wife feeding the chicken that’s the path leading down to the lake. —a stocky lad in football toge—‘and thie is the fence he bullt.” HOLD MOTHER AS In the last picture, the picture of the fence, “Wappy” found a fath- ere njoyment, and he chuckled fenc lieves that any danger of a seri ous misunderstanding has been averted. Hope Not Justified “Without presenting in detail the @edition of the pat Weare in a posit the effects thus far jestify that cor 4 BD ety inspired by Deity.” And he explained. “ And this is my boy wirespr ‘ost me a dollar and a half an inch,” he said. “But it's a good am | | He Is looking forward hugrily to the time when he shall be ra } ODD ITEMS chickens for the market on the place at Sammamish lake. He tlk he talk of the future there. SPOKANE, May 9.—Charged “t can get from Kirkland to my place In 20 minutes In that little | | with having murdered her son, Ray-| machine of mine,” he said. eaee frese tensed Wire mond Johnston, 26, by administer-| This reference to the automobile sent him off on another tack. yew YORK, May 9—-The Une ing strychnine, Mrs. Mary John-| You remember ] it. don't you? No? It was OM the license clerk's window was; RENTON MINER, PAUL ZEDLOUCHNICK, AND HIS FAMILY, | ston under arrest today She | heck tic Ts Ape ntl of th ' up an hour while the agitated eginto custody foll aia chure a an against the chief of the fire depart- er —— the marriage lt-| + adie: Mis verdict by a coro: t which was the st popular man in Seattle; and, _emnse Itiades Stamatopoulos 18 witnesses had n were tT ng their friends buy i - | r a ) at ings. at seveetegaeactge Cade “i ted tin’ tl utnumbered the firemen three te : CARELESR WITH HIS LEG ’ A on 10,000 votes. We had a lot of fun SP By United Press Leased Wire | er was named as ber of it.” > NEW x, M 9 mi: | ‘i Peep Mv iragy ‘ 4s tT ieee beens ner the penton ot father Then his face fell. I guessed of what he was thinking d LL, police station and identified Seta | albaan ee Pa pun The most popular man!” How are the mighty fallen! #8 wrlificial leg found in the road.| snintan 4a wale, ie erage The talk drifted. Ex-chief and ex-pollce reporter, we found we had He bad lost it while riding a horse| when he cared $10,000 lnvurmnen |& lot In common. When he was a detective back East he had had deal t id didn't know when it fell off. OR BO ORE MUTRDCE Inge with public men whom | had Interviewed, knew chiefs whom | ‘ poise Mrs. Mollie Zedlouchnick, who|the ground unconscious, while the knew—and crooke, too i@ WIVES’ WIGGLES WORRY |oharges Louis Jones, superintend- little girls stood about her, weep. 5 The veteran chief, Sylvester, of Waehington, D. C., was mentioned, , PM Onitet Preas Leased Wire }ent of the Furth coal mine at Ren- || and Kehler, the “golden rul chief of Cleveland, recently deposed, “ CHICAGO, May 9.—Recause hus|ton, with having knocked her un had been warned by and Matthew Kiely, the bumptious chief of St. Louis, now, | believe wives were conscious Tyesday night as at who held a gun, on the pension list, and many others. = in the tempted to prevent him and three an it waa “their “1 eee they ‘got’ Kohler finally,” sald Wappenstein, “Well, he was id officers from throwing her hue tterhbin cot some a good chief, but, like moet of us, he got his. It's a hard job—being a band, Paul, into the company's bu! ring house and chief. You're going to make enemies, no matter what you do. | can't - i pen, is still confined to her bed to g the Ry United Prees Leased Wire say, though, that | was ever strong for the golden rule in police work | see day. The woman is a nervous intil her h SPRINGFIELD, Ul, May $9 | Perhaps I'm old-fashioned.” ] os BRINGS DEATH. : |wreck. About her arms, back, and Lieut. Gov. Barrett’ O'H - | pointed out that Kohler, though a “golden-ruler,” had Ideas con- t PAUL, ay %-—(Spl.)—|head are marke of the night's en ry) nise not inced today that he w t gol cerning the social evil somewhat similar, perhaps, to Wappenstein's. | Chew J red shoe ¢ counter. Jones hic tomorrow to attend the At least he believed In segregation and a definite line of demarkation foo: doll caused the flouchnick, he ntterbin, first session of a legislative com. between the world of the “good” people and that of the “bad.” ] the 6-month-old | was com! with his w t release hi Zedlouch whiet ill “| atill believe a restricted district necessary.” sald “Wappy,” and j of 8. W. Wicks infant |three child 11: Mc promised, and was permitted charges made agains! } there was a hint of the old stubbornness in his tone. “These women are od poisonous dye, which /and Sophie mn with the white « here. They always have been; probably they always will be. It's a big J i me from the shoe, and died short grocer at Renton, Sheriff Gives Statement being conducted by problem.” 4 | iE aterward d cause or warn! Under Sheriff J. L. McCormick, |s@nate committee We spoke of once-famous crooks with whom we had both had a COMMITS SUICIDE. him on the bridge upon investigating the complaint, He sald he would not appear un-| nodding acquaintance : ’ BRUNSWICK, N. Y., May| company's office exonerates Deputies and less he were surnmoned “Have you been reading Sophie Lyon's story?” “Wappy” asked. A cow which was being Flanig: He issued a state While tha Sophi ‘a diamond thief who stole a million dollars worth of gems a in } : Clings to Her Husband anigan ssued a statement hile no has ophie wan 4 nghter in New Brunswick, 2 _ a A Jones in| Oday, saying that Paul and h ade as to the charges contained In her time. She turned straight after she went broke, and is today Pane fray and ed into hile gy dP pies * wife d Capt. Worth of th an the living respectably in Detroit — mill pond, through which | alleged to have s a Furth compa vile names and legislature, 1s report that 6 “She says crime doesn't pay,” added appy.” “She's right, too f city water eR | bande gir ene ore nti gage 4 kee that Worth arrested Paul and subpoena probably will f to the || know, I've seen 'em—all kinds. It doesn’t pay. Take a look at those ] i tried to rescue her, was choking him. Potterbin urned him over to the deputies. | clerk of the Sherman h in Chi poor wretches In the jute mill if you think It does. sed their every effort.| while Deputy Sheriffs Hoge He asserts that the woman was not cago to bring the register of the Eddie Guerin'’s name was mentioned. Eddie was—and may still a mal < =e to} Flanigan a - - ; knocked down, but that she fell hotel to show, apparently, whether | be—a bank-sneak. Ho Is famous as being “the only man who ever es 2 dam, stood there a| pa ft . backwards when the itles | O'Hara ever registered there caped from Devil's island.” Moment and toppied into the race-| handcuffs ee Pr Hed her husband up the Ts to {f so, whether he was accompanto¢ “Last time | saw Guerin,” said “Wappy,” “was in Chicago, That ay. rately r hus b b 1 t + nick held posed! F he jai by anyone was after the French had nabbed him and sent him to the Island. | hear Mm PBLAINE—CHARGED with smug-|band as ira h Mei, Sonos eee ote <esesieeeennnteasinin . ——— | he blew back to Paris.” ing Russians into the United| bull pen.” At the door, says Po “No; he went to London,” said. “I talked with him two years ago States, C. Nickactff, a Russion, is on|terbin, Jones shot his arm out, ; m | Ms way to Seattle, in company |struck Mrs, Zedlouchnick, and for GRAND JURY ( AI HORAR DO ACERCOM RN ee ae ‘Freak, half an hour she lay or L Wappy” laughed his unbelie what Is o ° ? “Training with a ewell American mob," | told him, “—-a handsome . ‘ q woman they used to call ‘The Queen of the Chicago Levee,’ and—" | | | “—and the Toledo Punk and the Cincinnati Kid, and—" | “Wappy” had knowledge of the whole crew. In thus wise we rambled on, speaking mostly of the unlovely facts | of life, of which, it may be, we both know too much, but now and then getting back to the wholesomer subjects of which none can know too much. County Commissioner David Mo- outside of the police department, Kenzie, whose colleagues on the|has been mixed up with a vice pro board have neglected to invite him |tection conspiracy 1s rumore to several quiet n {ngs when the Hi} Himelhoch Bros. Have to be the line of inquiry followed by the j a Message for ¥ ou crematory and docksite deala were| grand jury F ay We had a amoke together, and when It came time for me to go, through, will probably be Mrs. Grace It Wappenstein sald 4 by the grand jury this after-| rested for conduc “It's done me more good than you can know to talk with some one ) , . noon ouse at Third t th teide. I've becn here a year, and, If nothing happens. | have The floods in the East delayed their Maeuste’ tus been’ taking alat ana whe; it tye yanre More to: server 'h tot kicking. you understand. I've been 4 : ersiste demand for the conven ying that vocation for several) well treated here. I've obeyed the rules. But it has seemed a long time. shipments of merchandise to such an ex- fa grand jury for about alyears apparently with ample pro-|| tive for the time when | shall be my own man again. Good pel” . ear, and In public pches has/|tection, was closeted with the I crossed the field, going in the. direction of the war tent that they were obliged to supply called atte to a number of /rand jury for fully an hour Thurs: | tay" fice. When T turned at length to look back, I saw ! themselves from other sources. But now FRTAA ‘eraiih « bane: (nkaredting die: (uo walcn tha eigay ee eee: | him, a long way off, a quaint, rustic figure, scattering grain P closures |recetved, came from a source out-|among the hungry birds. And I heard his voice if that the floods have abated, their delayed hahne Muanined adn tHe folios Hevmitonne.- ae “foo! Chick-chick-chick! Hoo! Chick-chick-chick ! + 1 om an alleged vic | as from certain officers tn the | eceeeiaiiinns = — —_ — a arenes shipments have arrived all in a bunch, s0 gambling Inquiry |department, is sald to bave been| AS that now the are li “swamped with back to an investigation of the | Stated by herself. E ] P wedenaenen ow they are literally “swamp Pe Tad maeataey denies ftte ivelyn Says Pom oveessncees bo Soop goods, ry called A. D. Barrall, F ) | YoYo” dito a “ | 4 wt Ome ~~ At i werent NOW HE OWES ‘Looks Like Papa vate SON To reduce their stock to a reasonable jury room| | * i ‘ : olumes containing the r | By United Lenned Wire > sik eesunrieen tried ¢ basis, they are cutting prices and cutting i oe deeds). 7 ju eG NEW YORK aN ey ea PAULINE FREQERICKS them de - ‘ t examined the deeds | to look at d ittie Pompon| NEW YORK, May 9,—Four | ERE ts uline/ Fredericks, whom Harrison Fisher, the world- ¢ pep. . ng onl c eat 7 i | hom Harrison Fisher, ‘ rf Full particulars of the ba 1 Clerien ' to kno Ww hfs father, Hee inspagtors—-Hussey M H famous. painter of fair women, declares is the most beawtiful 4 gains which they have to offer you for Sat- James Masterson, 80, didn't know | fortunate Har atements | Sweeney and Thémpson—wh irl in-all America, He says she ts absc fect 3 urd, " Z ; ‘ um Cummings, a teamster, | whe Ms enough, Some ! cently were found guilty of bribe liss Fredericks is the star of “Joseph and t hren,” the great lay will be found in their large display loyed 0 time ago the court decreed that the ‘Wireless message re-| were each sentenced, today, to one| biblical pageant which is being shown at. the iry theatre, New ad Sa - : ’ lies of county de r was to former wife, who is|ceived here toda re Mrs. Eve- year in the penitentiary and fined|*YorR, In it she rays the character of the lovely temptress, Zuleika. 2 mee appears in today’s Star, on page rs’ field to the lonly a¢ Masterson. aaked|lyn Thaw, who {s a passenger on $500, It was reported that the wife| Miss Freder who ston gin made her first big hit im ont fail tc i lowed Harrall At noc hat the case be reopened, It w the Olympic with her baby boy, of one of the inspectors has declar-|"“The Fourth Estate She wit w from that cast in the midst of the > look it up. Card, superintendent of the poor|Now he {8 required tq pay her|Russell, bound for England. The ed thet unless her husband tells the| season to wed Frank Andrews, millionaire builder of the great McAlpia q farm, wa seted with the grand|$4,500 and $250 attorneys feos, by | m » was in answer to Harry district attorney everything he} hotel, Gotham's biggest hoste jury an order of Judge Dykeman. ‘The|K. Thaw's denial of patefnity of|knows of police grafting in New That wak two years ago, Now married life palls on her, she say® N\° ‘That a prominent city offictal,|couple were married in 1910, her child. . lYork, she will tell him herself, 4 So she has come back to the stage “forever,” as she declares, 1

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