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| e } be 66 A BOUT the sworn,” he said, with hiv crowd,’ hand high over bis head. “And Judge Thomas Me 1 know the penalty of perjury Mahon, substituting for Judge too. Gordon, just before police “Go ahead,” growled City At court convened yesterday aft. torney Van Ruff. rnoon “This 1 erno Dla je the 1 was just = askin aig A, a \ « for melting p a at Rony, enough to get to ett on, ey } and then I bought a box of A Howard, heavy jowled strawberries to give to my and tn need of a shave, denied friend the — barten¢ and he he was a perpetual beggar | gave mea drink after that Witnesses ald he “pathas but I didn't buy none ‘iv pena cediis oe | The evidence was pretty dle many quarters in the strong that the old man has lower end of town, then | been begging for months changed his gifts for booze. | Twenty-five dollars’ fine, Jud lw yer honor, sald the court, MORE THAN 45,000 PAID COPIES DAILY SHERIFF'S DEPUTIES dig up hundreds of dollars’ worth of jew- ciry. Once in a while they really enjoy earning their ries | SPEEDERS PAYS An Hour in Eternall VOLUME 16. C, Ruben and Joe Gortel ! thon | and unfriendiiness in the faces were wild, anarchistic looking About $10 each,” sald the of the court and attorney, he individuals, ‘They have been acting Judge sew @ new fenp. ging und saloons TPs d “1 had @ policeman nearly peagehadh nigeun “i on nt J. Barnes had the courtroom shoot my eyes out two years short on funds, The charge in an uproar ago in Portiand, so I'm nearly was disorderly conduct He was in on a charge of blind now,” he declared. fl One possesses for a voice a begging “Well, you ought to know deep growl, and he bas a rov “Weil, | got a job over in | what the iaw is, then, if you ing ¢ That's Ruben Georgetown yesterday and the got that close to @ policeman,” 50 cents—" you beg | boss gave me “Then why returned Van Ruff. “| don't think | ought to be Gorick 18 voluble,, His long hair aspires ceilingward. were They both came from Can- ging?” asked Van Ruff, | up for a little begging when t ada. Gorick says he did have “Well, you see, sir, there was didn't prosecute the police for some money, but It's gone now, a hole in my poe! that," id Barnes, aggrievedly. and it slip and that Ruben ts keeping him n muttered a verifica- ped through.” Evidently reading skeptic “Fine $20, and have his eyes examined at the City hospital im | _the pe altle plar The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print NO. 88. SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1914. pemene seems to be some question among King county standpatters whether Loren Grinstead or some one else should be made chairman of the re-| @ publican convention on June ‘13. | g By all means, give it to Grinstead. He ‘is entitled to it. Who better than) he can typify the standpat slogan, “We Want Pie”? | NO ONE JAILED F. C. Rippe figured that. because ft was 3 a. m., he could, maybe, scorch a little. He did, But Officer Webb happened to be an early bird Rippe was reminded that both of | traffic rules and officers are on the job 24 hours a day. Webb said Rippe was going from an bour. McMahon eald;, “Fie $15.” A new face—that of Thomas Mc- Mahon—peered from the police court Longa gala afternoon— “speeders’ da: Judge Gordon was off fishing. There were severa: vases Speeding, and several fines were im- posed, but, of course, nobody went to jail. None of them, it seems, was a repeater. You/mnst first be a be ct - see, before you can qualify for compulsory jail sentence. R. R. Rings was speeding, accord-| He was well dressed. and as he ing to police officers. %, heard the testimony of the officer “Ever in before?” he was asked. ; fingered a fine looking derby and He was not in the $12-a-week He shook his head. a dressy pair of gloves. “Ten dollars.” Ten dollars fine. eee H. Yunoki, tt appears, was doing between 25 and 30 miles an hour when the fates brought an big <r ttle . The case = ape Goodener was another where the testimony of witnesses for the defense is in almost exact contradiction to that of the arresting officers. The judge took the ssa of the officers. ' Goodener was fined $25. nigh and resulted in the brown man’s incarceration. “What've you got to say for your- self?” Roff. “Well, you see, I have frien’ ride wis me,” began Yunoki, smilingly. “My frien’ wus late and I go fast for him.” “Ever in here before?” The smiling Yunoki was a bit mystified. The question was re- peated. “Myself? he queried. ea, yourself,” said Van Ruff. “Oh, no—not yet,” replied the lit- ughed nerv- asked City Attorney Van w. C. . vodmikted he was going over the limit, but said he was trying to make a grade, and thought maybe it was permissible. He fell into the terrible clutches of the stern, uncompromising Of ficer Johnson. fined 920. He w JW. Considine, Ire is in again. tle brown man; and ously. He was fined $10, PARLIAMENT 10 Ch TO THEATRE! auto accident. His Funased will come up soon. ADMIT MOTHER’ | HELP SOLDIERS JONES TO CANADA BUY MACAROONS Did you ever F equat at the festive Word was received here today by board, consume @ round of corn “Mother” Jones, noted mine work. | Poard. Consume ve. and then find ers’ organizer, that the imm{gra-| there was no dessert to polish it tion dere rtment at Ottawa has or- dered ioeal immigration officials to |. 1) nowju feel? pass her if she applies for admis-| Tyis'ig goirtg to be the fate of the mm, inte Comets. | National Guards at the ten-day an- Mother” Jones also received a ‘unless some suc- nual encampment, cor is received. The fund for providing grub at camp has run short The Seattle theatre has promised to lend a helping hand telegram to the effect t at Secre- tary of Labor Wilson h . taken up with the state department at Wash-! ington, D. C., the refusal of the Canadian government to let her! take ship to Victoria and Nanaimo, | “no nignt is “National Guard night” | 1456 steps of the Washington mon-| The bandits escaped in an auto-| CLEVELAND, June 5.—Four per-| Buckingham palace during a Here and there, however, an ir . B.C. yesterday. at the performance of “The Littlest | uinent in 10 minutes, and walked mobile sons were. known to have beon| “court” last night, and appeal- |reverent individual could be found The Ottawa officials will permit foie) The proceeds go to the del-|on her toes from the top to the Thirty minutes before a pay | killed and many were injured in a| ed directly to King George for | who considered the incident funny her to enter the country if she goes {cacies fund | bottom of the state capitol at Den- clerk in the employ of the John| terrific electrical, wind and hail| “votes for women,” were iden- | The suffragets, of course, were hy as “a tourist or lecturer.” Some of those national guarders | ¥ er in seven minutes, Masury Paint Co. was held up in| storm in Northern Ohio late yester-| tified today as the Misses Mary | overjoyed ‘They evidently fear 1 wanted to! 4+ searve if they didn't have| Last November, she startled} Brooklyn and robbed of $3,000, the | day. Immense damage was also| and Eleanor Blomfield, daugh- Priceless Relics Burned ay in the king's country forever,” | 150" feam puffs and lady fingers, | London by tip-toeing to the ep of [ebiiers also escaping in an auto-|done to crops, and some buildings| ters of Sir Acthur Blonpieis. Hoss adeeb peel Rs a é she declared today. }the London monument and down, | | mobile. blown down, | and granddaughters o e historic. structure built during the 4 Mother” Jones will leave to-| joint memorial services will be|then walking along the Thames | etree | late Lord Bishop Blomfield of jearly days of Norman rule, was : night. She plans to speak to the! nel by Rainier camp, Royal Neigh-|embankment to the top of Cle | | Lendon burned by suffragets today. coal strikers at Nanalmo. bors of America, and Elliott Bay| patra's need! and down again. | Court attendants, horrified at With it were destroyed many al- 4 camp, Modern Woodmen of Amer A STAR WANT AD will) jca, Sunday afternoon, at Moose} sell it quickly. \hall, OLE HANSON INVADES COURT TO FIGHT FOR RIGHT TO TALK STEVENSON, Wash., June 5-—Ols Hanson inee.she missioners and county sg tn ottentet ae roger to keep him from speaking at the courthouse last night, although all political tings are always nae sings The republicans are to hold a meeting at the courthouse to the cornmmissioners passed a rule denied him th ¢ of a courtroom. Han invaded the court in open se Huttord chat atta the courthouse be closed to all or open to all. Judge Hufford called Prosecuting Attorney R. C. Sly into conaut | tatlon The standpatters were final! 94ge, and Ole talked for over an bank plan. but y compelled to surrender, bag and bag hour to a big audience on the farmers laundry driver class by any means. | --— This time for falling to report @D/ of her toe-stepping endurance next the laugh today on | to keep Hanson away. And the auditor ers office at the ion and demanded of Judge Hughes, starting for the door Grinstead served the pie cause faithfully. recognition the pie-counter boys can give him. Did he not proclaim himself a progressive republican on the Roosevelt | tidal wave in this state preceding the Chicago convention in 1912? | Grinstead did. He got $500 for it. He pocketed the money, went to icago, and represented, as attorney, the Roosevelt delegation before the na- tay committee. Grinstead’s eloquence didn’t help. The national committee turned down the! Roosevelt delegation and seated the Taft men from Washington. Grinstead He well deserves whatever 28 to 30 milesj}came back home. His job was done. He had been paid, and that was the end “*4y © the Renton officials. of it. There was no use to be a Roosevelt man or a progressive any longer. Grinstead served the standpatters well. It would be a low-down trick if the | °°", pie seekers should now turn him down. i _Yes, Grinstead deserves to be the chairman of = standpat convention. MOST REMARKABLE PAIR OF FILE RECALL LEGS IN WORLD COMING HERE: PETITIONS OF THEY PERFORM IN PUBLIC CITY SIGNERS Recall petitions against both Commissioners Hamilton and Knudsen were today filed with Comptroller Harry Carroll. Take {ft on the word of Dr. Joa | W. Amey, of Bellevue hospital, New York, Seattle is due to see “the most remarkable pair of legs and feet in the world.” They belong to Misa Mazie King, Only the signatures obtained the toe dancing expert featured among city voters were filed with “The Passing Show of 1913,” Phe: 5 which is to be the attraction at the These totaled 15,800 against Hamil Moore theatre next week. ton and 14,800 against Knudsen Mazle will give a free exhibition | The petitions signed in the coun try precincts will be filed later Tuesday noon with County Auditor Phelps. | She will walk up the main post To set the recall machinery in office steps at Third and Union, motion and to compel an election, then up the three flights of stairs there must be a total of to the top story, across the floor, signers on the Hamilton petition then down to the street again, ON | and 15,700 on the Knudsen petition TIP-TOE ALL THE WAY. | After the check by the city regia Mazie first leaped into proml-; j tration clerk, the recallers will file nence when, as a result of a wager, enough names with the auditor to she tip-toed the entire 42 tlers of Jmake up the necessary number. in the Metropol | Madison square, steps, 1107 in all, itan Life building, New York Doctors Examine Her Thie remarkable exhibition of endurance brought ber to the at tention of Dr. Amey and other leading physicians, and number of surgeons made X-rays of Mazie's feet and toes for the pur- pose of clinical lectures ANDITS WORK BY DAYLIGHT IN | GOTHAM STREET Since then, Miss King has ex ceeded that record, and has added NEW YORh, June 5—Highway another remarkable accomplish |men blackjacked a bank messenger | ment, that of jumping from a table employed by the American Can! and alighting on her tip toes. Co,, in front of the company's of Makes Fast Time, Too |fice at noon today and got away She had made the descent of the | with $2,700. elting Pot---Police Court McMahon: ort he boards | sald | or ld the Charge, as to who had wo e '¢ | gambling Oh, well, it's wrong to Andrew Jot wan called. | It seetie Davenport got the as to ‘lose in gambling,” NO, uh, Jedge, Ise not gull best of the game and that | "#4 the court, Fined $10 each, ty, yer he declared e ore Dave Kerr testified Johnson Reed's watch went to Daven William Meister and A, G. drew a knife on him | Pe for securit Grossman were in for selling Kerr said he called « police | Pretty soon he came back | gooseberries in boxes that man and that the latter chased | and said he wanted bis wateh. | weights and measures officials Johnson several blocks before Said he's 'fraid hi would testified held only five-eighths catching him. Kerr had a d | quit him ff he didn't have it,” | of a pint | in hie face to show for the explained Davenport Ah told | They were eloquent in their | counter him she'd have to quit then explanations, and sald they No, suh, Ah nevah pulled no | ‘cause Ah sure wasn’t goin’ to wouldn't do it again. But they | knife,” protes the prisoner sep'rate from that watch | were fined $10 each. | He drew $50. | ¢ was conflicting test! “The weights and measures pling | mony a# to whether Davenport | ordinance is for just such cases | The cases of Reed and Dav- | had gambled or not, and also | as this,” commented the court, AST EDITION WEATHER FORECAST—Unset- tled tonight and Saturday; prob ably showers; warmer Saturday; gentie southerly winds. LAs. the News ON TRAINS AN NEWS STANTS ONE CENT ‘STRIKING PHOTOGRAPH OF MRS. — PANKHURST’S ARREST BY HUSKY | “BOBBY” ON PALACE THRESHOLD With threats, both on the part of the city and Scott Cal- houn, receiver of the Seattl Renton & Southern, things Promise to warm up in the Rainier valley Calhoun says the company will refuse to raise if tracks to the Invel of the Rainier boulevard regrade contemplat- ed by the city. The city, in turn, th to cover up the tracks if they're not raised. Calhoun says this will be a vio- lation of both the Handfordized tn- junction and also an injunction ts- nued by Judge Frater | The city replies that the Frater injunction has been disposed of ~~ favor of the city, and the Hanford- ized injunction does not apply on street Improvements Wiil Go Through With It | In any event, the councilmen are prepared to go through with their determination to fool no more time “We will order their tracks cov- ered up,” said Counciiman Erick- | sen today, “If they do not comply with the regrade changes. | AM | PREPARED TO GO TO JAIL, IF | NECES ARY, to assert the city’s right in this respect, and there are | other city officials who are willing |te do the A condemnation judgment of 600 will be paid the Renton com | bany Monday Hy the council, it is asserted, and this will clear the way for immediate work on the boulevard, Prepares for Action The fireworks will then begin to pop. In the meantime Assistant Cor poration Counsel Pierce is digging into the records in the federa! court {n preparation of his motior to modify or put out of business en tirely th Hanfordized injunction which Receiver Calhoun is attempt- ing to set up as & scarecrow GEN. CARRANZA | STILL MUM ON | “Tell the king I'm arrested!” BID T0 POW wow When Mrs. Pankhurst, leader of the militant suffragets, made that | famous remark, a few days ago, she was being carried in the arms of @ NIAGARA FALLS, Ont., The “A. B. C." mediators not worrying today over Carranza’s delay in replying to their invita- tion to the rebels to take part in| itante. the peace negotiations | The picture was, happily, obtained by a lucky photographer just as It was stated they had expected | Mrs, Pankhurst cried out her defiance, grasped tightly by the policeman, the rebel leader would take some | with her feet.off the ground. time to think the matter over, and| considered {t natural that he should | do so. LONDON, June 5.—Two suf- | burly policeman to a patrol wagon. June 6. “Arrested in the precincts of the palace!” was her exultant cry when were | carted off to jail. She had just led assault on the gates of Buckingham palace, London—one of the most daring enterprises ever attempted by the mil- the terms they suggest There were further exchanges of | views today between the mediators | and the American and Mexicay en- voys 4 DIE IN STORM Current comment indicated the P masses of the English felt a shock- * jing outrage had been perpetrated. They continued to hope he would agree to Join the conference under fragets who succeeded in get- room at ting into the throne Some toes! | Tomorrow The Star will print a} picture of them INSANE WOMAN FU HANDS JOLT TO BOAT CUTS RATE Pe hw Seen Peers LAWYER HUGHES "i : er Northland will start passenger|™man made the former lightweight | traffic between Pertland and Puget | boxing champion of the Northwest sound points Monday. A rate of | apologize, first to herself personal }$4.50 for the voyag including |ly, and then to the entire meeting Attorney P. D, Hughes attempted | nd meals, has been announe-| ‘The Renton car line situation was to assist county officials to induc insane woman to leave the jail courthouse lady, __Mazie King k made; he fare by rail is $5.60. |the subject of the discussion, and ; . the council came in for severe re-| buke at the hands of Hugo Kell ARREST PASTOR |». &. Moser, ana others on the Come on, now urged “You diletory tactics pursued |know me, don't you? Fitzgerald defended the city dads The woman closed her eyes a mo-| Rey, D. W. Myers, Sedro-Woolley,| and 4 ared there seemed to be a ment, then looked solemnly at| charged with abandoning a wife and | hopeless muddle Hughes ltwo chil@ren last January, was No one seemed to know what to Oh, yes, | know you!” she cried, | rested last night In a house on do, he said ‘You're Brigham Young!” at. “Old man Furth is dead,” Fitz WOMAN MAKES COUNCILMAN =: APOLOGIZE FOR HIS REMARKS was an act at first most priceless relics, Among them wes a Bible, which 4 jhad been chained to the chancel “ for centuries. their minds, of sacrilege, tried to suppress the news Both Society Women The Blomfield family moves in| It is doubtful if Rockefeller’s the best society in England |riches could have bought it from was said the two women be-|the church authorities a aan to no organization, but acted what, t > | independently With the crehestra playing its loudest to drown their voices, attend- | rd gerald went on. “So he don't know. “OLD MAN CHRIST IS DEAD, and he don't know.” It was here the old lady j|ants quickly hustled them backwe arose and demanded an apol- etiquette requiring that urt | ogy. visitors must constantly face the “Anyone who will use language | king—from the palace and turned | HEAR EASTERNER of (hat sort,” she said, “has no busi.| her over to the police ness representing the city of Se May Not Prosecute H. H.W benven. es commissioner of attle.” | The crown prosecutor says eines of Pennsylvania, will Fitzgerald turned several colors} charge more serious than disturb-| he the chief speaker before the pro- of red, and, utterly confused, de-|ing the peace can be made g00d | gressives Saturday noon at the 4 clared it was a break during the| against them, but court attaches | Praser-Paterson dining room, sixth ‘ heat of discussion maintain that so trivial an aec-/figor, Wheaton is here to study im- E 1, as further excuse, that) cusution, considering the enormity | migration conditions, and repre " he n't a Christian,” of the offense, would be ridiculous. |} sents several big societies in the the incident passed, the/| and that unless some adequate pen-| past me idorsed the action of the/alty could be exacted it would be uncil in turning down the 26-per-' better not to prosecute at all New York progressives urge Col, year Renton deal, The king and queen are furious, | Roosevelt tO run for governor,