The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 18, 1913, Page 1

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co) THE GAME BY BERTON BRALEY fully as near “all in” as you! NH |Buying Seattle-made goods is not spending but investing: You get a chance at your money again. It stays here VOLUME NO a re Ol j ULZER TRIAL IS | OPENED Both Sides Confident; Mem-! 4 bers of Impeachment Court Sworn in. EXPECT ACQUITTAL | + Governor Declares “Boss”! Murphy's Attempt to Oust Him Will Fail. oT F A ALBANY, Sept. 18—Gov. Wm x was piaced on trial before ‘ AY merschment court of 57 mem fers, not counting two absentees, ‘today. Ben. Wagner cal! order in the senate chamber od the court to the eT. New York state capit = & m, and at 12:55 the cou foarned, having transacted no bus fness beyond the swearing in of| peal was represented} OAKLAND, Cal, opt 18 by an impos Tay husband or another year in bat did not appear in fonable finishing school {: fa person, though he This cholce.was put flatly gant telephonic Miss Lil Stanton, a Los Cc with it from the executive mansion. eles «ir n she arrived a few da °o rr way Both Sides Confident National Washi A month ago It seemed certain that the executive weuld be ¢ take } moved from office. ‘AS & result, however, of an en i her ‘ ughout the m & marked ] | ergetic campaign j state ‘there bas ] | | | | ] ofr Tre change in sentiment school and a post graduate s« Both sides professed confidence.) 41) 1. one, and besides He “We bave proof of the governor's | wouldn't walt y said Assemblyman Aaron! ‘The next night she was married , leader of the fight for Sul- Swafford, ory W gers removal, “and he wit! be re. |‘ Heary "4 15, HUBBY OR SCHOOL? GIRL DECIDES TO TAKE THE HUSBAND an Oakland | have ended th their triumph’s gone ‘THOR’ IS ‘STILLAT “LIBERTY Thursday's Here, But Siegfried | Continues to Enjoy the Rainy Outdoors. 'CASE IS CONTINUED Judge Humphries Puts Hear- ing Over After Sharp Verbal Passage The scheduled conviction of At torney Thorwald Siegfried for con tempt of Judge Humphries did not take place this morning, but was continued to October 2. Ties’ « tal ne Humpt "of ¢ “ ‘ke H b gh 8 4, th h attorne Alexander Bur of d to go on trial immediately or rrow wd was present to wit t unusual case, where hries was the ainant, prosecuting attorney and |Judge as well | Enters a Denial | | fried entered a denial of J s’ complaint swer, I will susta: But Foster deci to take the judge's hint. He did not demor be done so, the case would 5 | real coca aye : fag a §§} the introdt » of any testimony the daughter of t ate E, Stan He's a Gri “Overruler” d Gutzer Makes Statement = iton, wealthy lumberman “1 don't think the answer |s suf. y “I believe I will get a fair trial, —_——- so a $5 | fictent, either,” said Foster, said Sulzer, “and if I do | will be }T am willing to treat it as such, so , Scquitted. The time has passe |wo may take testimony.” | . When 2 political boss’ whim can be | | Mefore. presenting the answer,’ “gratified by the remora! from of Aiforney R fice of a man whose only crime Is that he has served the people | The Central Labor Counc!! has un der consideration a resolution to troduced last night by L. W. Buck, 1 aa of the Barbers’ union, asking all SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 18.—J|organized labor to withdraw a f something happens to pre-| support of the Seattle Times, and Yent them from serving out the|to concur in the resolutions t J Sentences imposed by Federal ed at the Dreamland meeting e Judge Van Fleet yesterday, it looks Monday today as if Maury I. Diggs and F. The resolution is in the hands c OPPOSE PAPER undy offered a motion to strike from the complaint certain} statements which he sald were mere conclusions of jaw and not Statements of fact Overruled,” Judge sald Bundy | Humphries | shortly then presented three oth sna to make the complaint finite ar nin wanted fr ow Stoxfried ead of m a conch also want He manner ous | fact as He fight on! When the game seems lost and you want to quit and you're sticking just by your nerve and grit and you can’t 5 “alb in,” don't ever quit as you want to do, but keep your heart till the game is through, till the last hard minute is passed and gone ao The chaps who win are the boys with pluck who never will quit till the gong is struck, and many and many a game they play is won at the END of a LOSING day ing the struggle out, won by going the whole long route, while they So, though you're staggering, weak and blind, battered in body and dazed in mind, you can’t be sure that the other side You brace and rally FAIR TONIGHT AND FRIDAY; COOLER TONIGHT; MODERATE WESTERLY WINDS. The Seattle Star THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1913 Where the Fenp PioMee® AKO = - am CAPO” ——— SOMETIMES (TF PLOATS TO Tee STREBT Tin-Pan Alley, By Norman Rose. (The Star's New York Correspondent.) | NEW YORK, Sept. 18—In the first place, there ts no street as Tin-Pan Alley T to be. It was at, between Broadway and Sixth av. All in a row were the “song shops.” Any day in summer or fall, when w he atmosphere of this block was | shot f f astor 11 a m. to 6 p.m But the shops have separated. They are tn several blocks, from 87th at. to 44th. Tin-Pan Alley is a region In many of these crosestreets you may chance spon a knot of people standing on th When you join them you discover that they are assembled for purpose ibing a free earful of barbershop harmony, floating from a casement above | Let us invade ‘one of these song foundries—there’s one in 44th at. that's about the busteat and notsiest tn the whole district, Ter or the macont floor “At the Tront, «falled-orf #éction, thére are a couple of desks and several prosperouslooking gentlemen. Running the length of the floor, there is a long hallway, with benches and chairs along one side, a row of doors on the other side, each opening {nto a small room whose furniture is a piano and a chair or two. If you want to hear SOME RACKET, drop into that long hall- way. The door of each little room ts ck i when they're “trying out" a song, but, gee whiz, those vaudevi and cabaret and roof. garden peor have volces that go through ordinary giasa and wood and plaster much as a 13-inch shell would leak through » custard ple | The wystem is this—the proprietor of the song foundry pays | the rent and supplies the pianos and the plano players | «three or four composers and three or four lyric ters though weary in brain and brawn ONE BevmG ONE OUT WITH THE FiDDLE Mlustrated Especially {The Star by Raymond Crawford ean earthly c fight on! in spite of its front of strength and pride NEWS. CENT. Siwe staxpn, be Popular Songs Come From| nce to win and you’re weary and jaded and near fight on! won by stick- may not be tired and jaded, too, and The Star Is the Paper That Goes Into. the Home! More Than 40,000 Sold Every Day; Number Is Growing Steadily SELL BIG ISSUE IN HOME EDITION. $260,000 Worth of Munic ipal Bonds Bring Premium at Portland ARRANGE SALE HERE Port Commission Today Con- siders Bridges’ Preliminary Resolution Mine BROHERS WALKING OUT A The fight against the domination of Seattle's public improvements is on Commissioner Bob Bridges, at the regular meeting of the port com- mission Wednesday, introduced a resolution to put the $200,000 bond issue for the West Seattie ferry up for popular sale And this afternoon the commie sion will take up consideration of the resolution. ; If ed, it will mean that Il be reduced from ninations to $100, so stors can take them trust Portland Blazes the Way Ewer In fact, it will force the bankers the songs in whose composition he has a hand to take a new attitude toward mu. The lyricists and composers greet the people who sing songs nds, as y demon- i b They are of every grade and class, from cor and mu the popular bond sale in at comedy down the cheapest cabaret tepe. From one song I id, Ore terd shop to another th travel nd. ankers’ trust Have you got a good song—and what ts there in it for me to elieved it had a grip on the city, sing it? and refused to buy certain bonds That's the question they want answered. The offices and the | which were issued for a municipal composers and the lyric writers and the piano players are there [| improvement, to which the finan- to answer that question | clers didn't take kindly You can't advertise songs successfully in any other way,” says The result was that $260,000 In Farl Carroll, one of the most successful of the lyric writers in the “You've got to get them sung in public to get them before and song-selling constitut game the public. Song-writing commercial proposition.” A pretty good proposition, too, for those who succeed. Carroll has a number of big Spy 23. “it's You Bince the World Hegan,” “Honey, You Were Made for Me, isl® d'Amour” and “Dreams of Long Ago,” for which Caruso wrote the music, are among his successes. Fred Fisher ts probably the most successful of the song com- posers, excepting only Irving Berlin. British army Fisher has served tn French Foreign Legion in His face is sear about In every wild Hroad way If the Man in th “Apy Little was a “clean-up re are a the Algeria, Moon We for Fisher whole big shops,” said Fisher d and scarred with wounds quarter of the globe to make a fortune composing popular songs Girl Is a Nice Little Girl,” lot of people, doubtless, who are writing just as good songs as the big successes that are turned out of the But their songs aren't big successes be- | municipal {mprovement bonds were up for poular sale. The issue was | divided into $100 denominations, as well as for larger amounts. Pay Premium for Bonds The whole issue was sold in one |day. And the important fact is |; that the bankers themselves went into the open market and bid for the bonds more than the ordinary folks, so that the bonds were sold at premiums of from 2.63 to 5 per jcent above par. Yet in Seattle, the bankers’ trust has been unwilling to pay more |than 88 cents on the dollar on the | West Seattle bonds, in the hope of killing off the direct ownership jand contro! of the enterprise. a hard-pan hits to his credit, though he ts in South Africa, the rman navy He has knocked finally drifted to and the ( an¢c e a Coon,” “My Brudder Sylvest,” “Peg o' My Heart”—each one “POTTED TURKEY? b rs M show in what manner “Judge H have drawing accounts—that ts, each one draws so inuch | cause the system isn't back of them.” gues Caminetti will spend the next | the none itive ‘ne aitioa eitae phries was intimidated and -e the amount belng deducted from his royalties on So now you know why a popular song {s popular. Be prac tect ne | eee ae ane coccniticn came |Darrassed in the administration « | o jan | trade: ne oppositio e ” | ” | 1 4 his court jfrom E. H. Mitchell, printer em — “ - —— — Staaeinepetiniatcesinenseapentiaieitists TIME originally selected | ployed by the Times 4 Gn Peay iy rag Tekan clcciais : but was begged by| The majority of the council ap-| stad crit art bat - lawyers to send| parently concurred in the view of |Ties replied with @ curt but decte J. R. Grant & Co., meat packers, prison. He|Buck that the Times has always |!¥¢ rich age Gamers | | Were put on trial this morning be- Willing unless the at-| arrayed itself against Inbor, wheth but Judge Humph } feat rg “oe nae of three torney general objected ler organized or not organ occasion to deliver one of his fa | B Livowals shart on tar ; on millar t 7 which i sales | Gimasaas PB 3 |selling decayed and decomposed rated readiness to find § - - ne votted > ~ dll rl daaeate ” | TOKIO, Sept. 18—Trouble | CONCORD, N. If, Sept. 18—Har WASHINGTON, Sept. 18— | LOS ANGELES, Sept. 18—Be | Dro “West and Chemist B Ther » much of habit to| between penny ane Stine Seer ry Thaw was quartered today tn| By a vote of 286 for to 94 / fore a jury in which rancners were|gardus were put on the e aia 1 in critic — “ PH, ey a pipe resale i, ike naw fovee. room 7 at the Eagle hotel, an apart against, the house today passed in an overwhelming majority, | behalf of the company to give ex- cede gaat he Tl na| lic, it was learned today. [ment made famous as the “throne) the administration currency | George H. Bixby, Long Beach cap-|?°Tt breton . pe on re e erious. , | : i 2 product complained of as unfit for moued the grievance While the Chinese govern. |room” in Winston Churchill's} bill, talist, went to trial here today on te Meer paonecnge ut yi lhi. You've NOW, MRS. TRUE> eo of the Par Assoctation| ment professed its intention of |novel, “Conistan,” and occupied at a charge of contributing to the de. | Numan. eee Soy bolsonone 4 ‘Com this man's charges, and now| complying with Japan's de | va iois times by Presidents Perce, stoaweney of Oise Barker) 4 19-14 the’ etatm’ thet tik, Gria ae | —E HOME BE REASONABLE. comes and denies {t all mande for reparation for the |itayes, Roosevelt and. Taft FIRES SPREADING yearald ouces att | sasist' yom jn: [Oren aaa ee illing o! ree r a ‘1 ; aa | eae ooeree St la conditio: a we , WITH LIQUOR 'VE GOT TO Do | Makes a Foo! of Court. Nankin recently, It has shown |, aie rept halt wh sol fore adjournment iast night. It is|® pass fon tt at it was likely to SOMETHING “Here is a man whom I never) no signs of doing anything | a eens ae ee Oe oo i unique that every one of its mem-| Br sos iin polebal s. Both Dr. YOUR fore who atta r He's Japan has not yet withdrawn |? ee all lata a PASADENA, Sept. 18.—Warning| bers works with his hands for | they rage sear th aires thee | vas allowed to leave the ee “iat —— ey ate some of the stuff an ty] FOR THIS COLD a fool of this court He] its marines from Nankin nor [110 Nuh a ON ‘ was issued today by Commissioner | living and ever is married nl ce tor onc 0 go shop. ° were not afraid of poisoning BREATH! ’ 2 é eee ae ae records,| Ite warships from Chinese wa- | ithe and once to aco. the sights, M. H. Salisbury, and spread broad-| Not one is a city n || The case was continued this at. DON’T I? or that I was in any conspiracy! tere, and unless It receives sat. y2iNE and ot ; ; t through the city through the] >, Nine Jurors aro ranchers or smati| ,_ Th ntinued this af with any lawyer on the soap bor| isfaction very soon, will seize A 6 already popular in the town,| cast t rough the elty ‘ hrough the/ farmers; one is a day laborer one | ternoon. any ane m1 atiment unquestion € ep: e: hat ever, r , — —— me at had " ed abl 1 8 fig or | sadene re 0D and ano an employe of a water | # about being impeached. 1) pllance with Ite wishes. pated tonight to fight the fire. which ta ad, snother an employ A water | fr. Dow SER Dveeen Ie His mother has engaged a suite|said to be eating its way to the SS eee Oy if 1 didn't do what they say I did ; t in the hotel adjoining her son's,| Arroya Seco. It wasn't Slegiried’s (put in’ any and {s coming from Montreal to| The fire has grown worse, and | —— way. It's rying things to an| be with him y there is danger of tt working its LOS ANGELES, Sept. 18.— | absurdity ynsensity Now he way through Dark:canyon {oto the “There's nothing tragic about denton phe charges. What do you) rhe twoday fall session held by arroyo, in which case the Pasadena ees this; just a failure dropping j Mink of the e but {the Presbytery of Seattle was con- | water supply and hundreds of sum-| The formal complaint, requesting| Ut. A touch of the heat, | eee eee tor tia” qrut | cluded Wednesday at the Brighton | mer cottages would be menaced. |the sale of tickets on cars, prepared | guess” |Judge Humphries told him that! pe spytertan church. The meet-| by Corporation Counsel Bradford, | ese words, scrawled on a bit he had an attorney, he'd bet-| ii was prealded over by Rev, T pati in behalf of the city, has been filed |f Paper, were found clasped, with | the lawyer speak for him. lu Lewis, the mc ator. | Iva Thompson, 15, disappeared with the public service commission revolver, in the hand of a man ried stated after he left the|” y;“w. McRobbie and Harold H.|from home in Everett last July 10, The hearing hea already heen eet{ "to lay dying on the steps of rt room that he dented he made] senaerson, who were taken under |and the police of Everett, Seattle, | for danteniby whom the fount | Naomi Christian church. He had charges against the Judge, but thats. tutelage of the board of educa-| 4nd several other Northwest cities, —— as well as the informal, complaints | {Ted a bullet through his head, and, his “crime” apparently consista of}, of the church Wednesday, | have been looking for her. Recause one dog was found to! wit) be heard in Seattle. according to hospital surgeons, had having written a letter to the Bar) pave announced their tntentions of t really, says the girl, there} be suffering from rabies and oth On behalf of the city, Bradford | 2°, chance to recover Association asking that body to te | taking up work in the foreign field n't aDY occasion for alarm Jers found atfitcted with the ais and Assistant Corporation Counsel, eae nine mi aS poe Be vestigate certain conduct of Judge | vetition for a Presbyterian » simply went away to get mar-|ease {n paralytic form y Health | pierce will appear, while Hugh C scribed SOX Humphries which was reported to|Snutch at Port Angeles was ried, and she is now the wit Bil Opailacenae Orfsiion” oil’ spk Todd, engaged by The Star, will ap-| Clothing contained no other means him aranted Clyde Banning, 17, and ving at the | the council to pass, next Monday. | year informally in of the /f Mentification : he 2.R. Sturgis,| his ordinance requiring that ali OLD C a ; people. THE Pa Le Touc r COLD CHANCE FOR PEACE, | triet dogs in the cefty re muzzle Wild is At 24,600 feats the hignest point TT OUCH OF COL SHERIFF IS SHOT) that the police |in the judgment of the health de-| a wise student profits by his own ex-|reached’ by the Duke’ of - the é THINKS JOHN LIND ¢ looking for the girl, so he tel-| partment, It becom necessary, | Pertence, but tt ler fits by | Abrugai on Bride Peak, in the Hime aad HAD IS NO EXCUSE FoR ephoned to headquarters last night. and that at all times dogs running |‘?! : Ai Rade ep ilayas, the barometer stood at pur WING THE EXAMPLE OF SOMG OF 1 MEMO: G ahd shoritt|, VERA CRUZ, Mex., Sept | at large must be muzzled seh ut rement 12.35 inches or only 1.6 highes “ OLEDO, pt, 18 Cy i > . uld ste . ’ ss outs ‘ believe Provisional Pr {than it would stand on the top o ey BEST CITIZENS” WHO MAKE Vineland Wiliams OOUntY WES | Totes ‘mess to the Me Mount Everest. Yet none of the ERY LITTLE AILMENT A PRETEXT sbot through the Head and serious-| "Cte S eaves ac excellent oper | party suffered trom mountain aloha To Daccy Ww TH ¢ er duel with three youthful for Mexico and tt United | ness TH e mobile bandits. After holding | States, to wot togethers, wad John) WASHINGTON, Sept. 18,—The | “ Sa TE an = automobile = party — the | Line per h Cian ‘| following nominations were sent to A ’ Phat ithe forced the occupanty to today. “That's all 1 can say. Tti8|the vonate.. today etiner oe Don’t Wait Start ite the machine, robbed |"P to, President Wilson Ik, to be solicitor for tho state| Something em of $300 tn cash and then| ne West Coast Lumberman of | department, and Clay Allen of Seat-| Tonight will come the tie-up. Jsemble early in the evening down Get your ad in and let it get drove away in the automobile |Taconia and the Pacific Lumber |tle, to be United States district at-] \wnien means that for 20 min-|town, and will muster. f¢ be-|] to work for you. Star Want Trade Journal of Seattle have con-|torney for the Western district of » keen | fore teekling their rivals, The bat-|] Ads are doing things for people | solidated, | Washington utes there will be some Keen | tig ts to begin at 11 o'clock. A bon-|| every day: they'll do somethi seins — -—--—_—_ ~ ——— | hustling, tussling, battling and/fire will provide sufficient illum for you, if you'll start them to, Ve | = ~ || wrestling among the lower class-|{nation for the spectators. ‘The || wor They'll make (trate ’ | PENN NT COUPON || men at the university, under rules| freshmen will be under the gener-|| rent houses and rooms, secure ian. a | A |! neither sanctioned by Hoyle norjalship of Frank Anderson, former || positions and help, find lost ars |_ SAN FRANCISCO, RO te NO. 71 the marquis of Gooseberry, but by|Lincoln high school athlete. When || ticles, sell real estate, poultry, The police were asked today t he Star, consecutively num- |) three upper classmen, as’ follows, | Orv Gladden, president of the horses, dog cows, furniture Jsearch for Miss Lillian Hanna, a Moy fede’ SoUpare elibed Aron Te a VW DG ld, Tom Barto|studert body, gives the signal, the || or anytl worth the money 4 bered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitle | to wit: Lec ; ‘ poretty high schoo! girl wie Mul vou to a 660 Pennant. Wisconsin Pennante now out, A few Idaho |/and Ganor Wright number tied up will be counted, |} Start. them to work; they'll minaing from her home here. ine || Pennante etill left. Pennante will be sent by mail if 8 cents addi- || ‘The scene of combat is laid inj and the first test of supremacy k wonders for you if you'll 1 tae ary bs Hy to her parents, || thonal for each Pennant is enclosed. Bring or mail to The Seattle |ythe A-Y-P, stadium, where the wil be over The wil come th | th A chanioe Phone ‘ a on Street. sophomores will gat iaeteAlak away, { don't know i Star, 1307 Seventh Avenue, near Union Str [the yearlings, ‘The latter will as-! ball game, BELG. where, but I'm going.” Ban ses ONE DAY

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