The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 12, 1913, Page 1

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Buying Seattle-Made Goods Is Not Spending but Investing--You Get a Chance at Your Money Commissioner E, Dana Du his estimate on the official fig ted by experts of the census exercising all the moderation vatism customarily demanded by says that the population of Se inute 1s ireau VOLUME NO, 115 SHOWERS SEATTLE SATURDAY, TONIGHT OR The Seattle S THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS WASH., SUNDAY; LIGHT JULY 12, 1913 WINDS FROM SOUTHWEST AND WEST ON THAINS AND NPs #TANDS ONE CENT EDITION ar HOME THE working copie i ing fiv comput the sh d bor reader ation who read T 200,000 SENATOR REED, WRITING AN ANALYSIS OF LOBBYING EVIDENCE, SPECIAL INTERESTS MAKE U. 8. YIP! POTLATCH TO OPEN WEDNESDAY; PROGRAM ISSUED The most elaborate program al oH Tyee Rice and his rial navigation ever given in Se court w b arters at the ttle will feature the 1913 Potlatch. Wa net Tt be and) which begins next Wednesday. ot ndants will be dress There will be nine flights, two by i ime during the of the chiet! the first woman aviator to be seen mighty in Seattle, Alys McKey, who is now Mrs. Johnny Bryant. The remain The 0, ben! ing flights will be made by Joh . the people and Frank Bryant and will two night illuminated exhibitio ringing & mes-| Seattle and! of small} In all of the fights. e y with plane wil cle th t token, th tore of which Is view of the Potlatch grar sent undisclosed. D is will nd the hydro-aer es Seattle from Washington | wat fF € fa taneously with pver the battleship fleet he tyee's arrival from the North OF age ow FI ght pen chon i Tilikums to Meet Him Wethecde Th ee has advised President z »y rm Potlate association Jay Might w 1 * a ook 1 be followed at 5 o'clock afternoon by a hydro-aero by Frank Bryant. At an electric | the event Jobany Bryant ve the first illamt nated fig Friday ly 18, Alys MeKey will fly at 10 the morning. and her husbend at 5 in the a noon Alys MeKey will make her second sociat bow flight Saturday morning at 10 ments with weal o'clock. Frank Bryant will circle for handling the of-| the city at & o'clock and Jobnny ficial program. which will be is ed Bryant will make a second illumt ne week. A separ ar will nated flight at 10 laturday night. be printed every day. The offictal D ‘¢ the four days of the car-| program will sell for five cents. The er of these chil is determined to commit suicide Miles Poindexter, the progressive senator from The t eine ( ia tele ae ’ ij stat s used his influence + La even one relative on I ‘ as lain on a bed « terrible the eral payroll, he has ed the progressive ¢ et \ hie, sven a strange But while the reactionaries are ating over a purport d g pure den discovery, of a large number of Poindexter's. relative a AEC ace in weant.° MebecOE thet: Shay ant the governniemt: emp! nsinvation that he has used actually hungr I u undernourished. and wit! his influence to get them the jobs seems, for the most an want ; at any rate. un yarranted They wou he ¢ I le * he says Certainly, it is silly to suppose that Poindexter could * # * # * * ha yossibly secu a vat r anyone, let alone any P pa F 1 x ed the a alt Le nistration It is true, too. They would be better off. The woman could put her children—the ig i "the ae seca d list of 11 purported Poindexter ap oldest is nine years old, the youngest 21 months—in a home or a free day nursery. Then te geo le aa hed yest Bed ai have been ob. |She could work and keep the home together. For she is a capable woman peng antbe rs B pce 88, sah ger Com But with a sick husband on her hands, to say nothing of the children, she cannot leave ct ; y Srapinls io) tae eaalbioas cned in Ber home even for a day. If the man should die, if he, when no one is looking, should find Poindexter, an ar : a means to put an end— ist . * * “ * * } any special influence. Some of he ne A : F Poindexter first entered congr fy pars: Rev buon I ars, '¢ 2 where there is a flock of. Poindexters heanwhile ‘the : hav t ther, getting a little c ¢ Rytl f the senator from Washington tren into her € € ave food ar 1 ! sindexter responsi for one pare 4 coud - ppointment, small thougl The Millers are not clever. If they had the wisdom of Solomon they could no ag mator Poindexter solve this problem—alone. The woman does not want her husband to die. She watches x! ny at Abnapc It him day and night , a cational institution for his son It is, after all, a question of money. With money, the rent could be paid, the children or \ expen - government, but if there were fed and clothed. Miller is not coward. It is not because he is afraid to live that he any other boy in the state of Washington who was qualified wants to die. ne ; . ii for that appointment,- Senator Poindexter, as a true pro- “Tt q BB hg gh aay were mel IS pean REL Ro gressive, should have favored the stranger rather than his - + en would have a "| Mille fa anc in t chance own son. ANOTHER RAINY 'S SIND hetter carry sliCkeTs) py vnised Preas teased Wire cots Sunday, sald the! WASHINGTON, July 12.—As a , his afternoon. The! rowuit of jeniousy vetween the ser eas howers, and there \ clearing spel, al- ate and house lobby ir € s a chance that the| committees, it Is f 4 weather may pass during | cess of the probe Into the lobbying is threatened iit ,der storm that, The senate sub-committee, hear noon was just one of the n-ande| th planned to “kidn Mar ot whowe off altimo BOALT IS TENDING BAR He'll Write of It Monday Fred L. Boalt of The Star staff, is tending bar. Probably no man in our complex community life sees more human nature and reads it with a more discern- ing eye than the bartender, whether he be mixing costly and fancy drinks behind a glittering mahogany counter or shoving beer in a workingmen's saloon Boalt's experiences should be worth while. He will tell you about them Monday and Tuesday of next week. hall A Harlem Tragedy,” one of the best stories the gifted O. Henry ever wrote, complete on page 8 today. A Star reporter talks it over The story is on page 6. Is Lister making good? with him. Read his conclusions. Hugs and kisses for dessert! That’t the fare of Paris shop girls, writes Correspondent Shepherd to The Star. See page 4 FATHER OF THESE CHILDREN SAYS HE’S GOING TO KILL HIMSELF; AND IT REALL SEEMS ASIF THEY WOULD BE BETTER OFF HERE ARE THREE OF GUS MILLER, WOULD BE OF SICK MAN, WHO MINED TO COMMIT SUICIDE, BETTER OFF THE FIVE CHILDREN IS DET cR- “THEY BECAUSE IF I WERE DEAD.” * | ii the N jal Association of Manu factur caused subpoenas to be iseued for him by both committees at 9 a, m, today instead of at 0, the time original! When Mnuihail left the a night the house mit i} poe hi to appear at Y toda it Chairman Overman, of to ignore th mmona and ordered his own Ui to meet at 9 ere em be of h « med hi n t it, He fied a M b companying a chee for $200. Cushing warned Mulhall to “be reful in cashing” this check. The Switnéss said the money was used in “a close congression Aiatrict In September, 1904 Cushing yte Mulhall that thereaft he would recelve eve rid a check while he retained } connection with the “Workme Protective Association, n orgazitation he had formed to work for the repub lican tieket, Cushing sent bim $100 a week besides $49 a week for ex-| |penses, Mulhall testified. | | WASHINGTON AAIG. GES IMARION P. MAUS, late command er of the Department of the Colum lpia, will be placed on the ret |list of the army August 2 harges of lobbying by By Fred L. Boalt. ENATE AND HOUSE WOMEN NAMED LUCKY FELLOW, AY COMING ROW OVER MULHALL ON COMMISSION THIS DOPE FIEND t hope. That is why the| Five Chances in »» CONFERENCE 10 OLYMPIA, July 12.—Gov. Lister ; Jome morphine flend in Seattle today appointed four women as) Some morphin fiend In Sen members of the first minimum is a happy cuss today wage commission in this state, as, Tucked away In @ secret cache provided by the last legislature. ).. hae enough dope to keep him in They are: Or. Theresa 8 McMa-| ios aoe the next 20 years hon of the University of Washing ton, Mrs. Jackson Silbaugh of Se- Amd it didn’t cost him a cent attle, Mrs. Florence H. Swanson of is also a happy day for the Raymond, Mrs. M. J. Laumer of wholesale drug house which sup Spokane. Labor Commissioner Ol- igs the Proidence hospital son acts as fifth member of the Raymond and Mrs. M. J. Laumer of | Hight on top of the last big order for opiates, that inetitution has commission. mission i# to make an asked that the supply be duplicated gation ¢ conditions of! Hospital officials are mourning labor and wages of working girls the loss of 27,000 tablets of mor and fix minimum regulations. It|phine and codine, which cost about will be the only state commission |§150, The drug was stolen from nolely composed of womer hospital pharmacy PENNANTS . Coupon No. 13 Any four coupons clipped from The Star, consecutively numbered, pe presented at The Star offige with 15 cents, will entitle you to a 65-cent pennant. A different pennant every week. University of Washington Pennant out To-day. Pennants Will be sent by mail if 5 cents additional to cover postage is enclosed. Bring or mail to The Seattle Star, 1307 Seventh Avenue, near | Union Street. H | | Hundred, Fans Say, Mr. Fan, been watching the Pink? Maybe you have, maybe you haven't, but if vou haven't, you are passing up a good chance to Ret of the five free grand. and passes, which are offered tn the Pink edition every night Tonight there will appear in the Pink a photograph of at least @ hundred fans. About the Is of five of the fans will ap n circle~ Those five fs the circle will gramdstand tick by r at Star. Every night a similar photo be printed in The Star Pink If you see The Star man point ing bis car your way, you'd better buy the following cht Ma ‘ou re one of lucky five. CLOSE TONIGHT ringing to a close the most sue- cessful gathering in all its 40 years of exietence, the National Confer-| ence of Charities and Correction will tonight, at the F vath andi torium, discuss “Standards of Liv nd Labor. John A chairman, will the committee ley, of New The Present Ryan, of St read the Mr r York, will Status of Minimum Wage Legisiatio nd “The Prob-| lem of the Worker Who Is Unatile to Earn the Minimum Wage” will| be discussed py Prof. Arthur E.| Wood, of Reed College, Portland.! A. J. Me Iway, secretary for the Southern States of the gery Child Labor committ will @ Paul, report of orence Kel on speak on “The Minimum W and Ch id Labor. | This morning, the conference took up in three section meetings the following subjects The Church and Social Work Standards of Living and Labor,” and “Probation, Prison and Parole. War Secretary Will Call Here| WASHINGTON, July 12.—Ae-| leording to a tentative itinerary an. nounced today, Secretary of War Garrison, Major Gen, Wood and Quartermaster General in Portland August 2 he and racks, August ‘acoma and the at American of Vancouver Ba » spent In maneuver grounds Lake will be visited attle will be reached August 4} nd after an inspection of the sound rts the party will proceed to Spo kane, reaching there August 6, H and votes of congre: That LATT LI a fide over) STAR every 40,000 Figur- basis of publishers. of persons in the week th he he Star daily DECLARES LAWS: y TELLS HOW WOOLEN TRUST PUT AGENT ON JOB The what nee lobby IN —e tM ‘By James A. Reed and its attend closures have demot suspected the great financial inters el rected and controlled jegisiation. «f controlled, but that the s beyond tion FIRST—That they have opposed the election of men known to be opposed to their plans and desires. SECOND—That they have secretly given ald and support, financial moral, to those who have been subservient to their interests. THIRD—That they have carefully and secretly affected public sen timent through news matter sent out through the press of the country. FOURTH—That with great skill they have carried on a propaganda with their business connections, and by this means sought to influence FIFTH men they maintained business it has been not only to undertake to direct a in Washington, whose course of legisia- lobbyists tion and oppose al! inimical legislation, but to undertake to control the SIXTH—In one instanc | selection of the committees of the congress. . at te manufacturers, succeeded in having appointed as confidential cl the republican members of the finance committee of the senat secretary of the Woolen Manufacturers’ assoc ast, one of these interests, the woolen rk of , the ation, who performed his work so satisfactorily that He was presented by his employers, the woolen manufacturers, SEVENTH with $6,000. *« of Hawali, Porto Rico, Louist- ana andthe beet sugar interests have made common cause to prevent a reduction of the tariff'on sugar EIGHTH=That there of the protected industries and community of interests between many that there has been raised and ene pended, directly and indirectly, for the purpose of controlling publi mar nd part of the day in an inspee-| William Sentiment and effecting legislation, many thousands of dollars. Prdsi enth ent Jackson's ©, MISB JESSIE M. WiLsUN i to a member of the. French le | gation. (Fifth, sixth and ried during Aleshire | administration.) bride: reve BY White Ho idee jried President. Cleveland. June, 1. Luey Payne; . Washington, > youngest sister of ‘Mrs, Madison,| 12. Alice Roosevelt, no® Mra. March, 1811 as Longworth, February, Anna Todd, cousin of President 5 | Madison's wife, 1812 13. Jessie Wilson, second daugh- 3. Marle Monroe, the first presi- ter of President Woodrow Wilso dent’s daughter to be married in Will be the thirteenth White Hoi the White House, 1820. + (bride and the fifth prosid Mary Helen, niece of John daughter to be married in the y ms, married to Adams’, House. The bridegroom will Francis Bowes Sayre, assistant to @ B. * Pmily Martin, relative of the! District Attorney Whitman of New | president, married to Lewis’ Ran-| York: The date, though not yet ane | |dotph nounéed, will probably be set for §. Mary Faston, niece of Mrs. some time in the early fall. Jackson, to Lucien DB. Polk, Delia Lewis of Nashville, mar JILTED, SHE SUES s| PORTLAN dnty Lioyd Frank, a member of the firth of Meler & Frank, department store &. Elizabeth Tyler,* married to! proprietors, is being sued here to Weller of Willlamsburg,|day for $50,000 for alleged breach | Pa e of promise to marry by Mra. Ger 9, Ellen Wrenshall Grant, known trade Gerlinger Mrs. Gerlinger, as “Nell who beeame Mrs. Al- who is the divoréed wife of Edward gernon ©, F. Sértoris in 1874 RB. Gerlinger, an automobile man, 10, Emily Platt, In 1878, » niece eharges that In January, of this of President Hayes, who became | year, Frank promised to marry hem, 4 the wife of Gen Russell Sfastings.|but, in March, repudiated his com 11. Frances Folsom, who mar-' tract, 3 °

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