The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 11, 1915, Page 1

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WENTY-NINE people the McArdle land bill, by the legislature HEALTH tion for real emergency such emergency can, the effrontery SENATORIAL RIGHT OF BE STOPPED FOR T AGOGIC MEASURE 10 Put on the roll of honor these few names in the house who voted against the emergency clause: MURPHINE, GHENT, GROFF, HALL, JMUS, IVERSON, JONES, KLEEB, LEONARD, M'COY, METCALF, PALMER, PAID CIRCULATION GUARANTEED OVER 99,000 COPIES DAILY VOLUME 17. NO. 302 SEATTLE, WASH., senators and “except OR SAFET under ON MORE IMPORTANT MEASURE Mark the names of these 29 senators and 79 representatives. ; to seek protection through the initiative, LANE, Put the rest of the house members on the roll of dishonor, and add to that list of 79 the names of the 29 traitors in the senate, as follows: THURSDAY, 79 and on the Renick city finance bill necessary government health, such be Y, support cases, laws as may of the state when the very life, any circumstances, be measure, designed by the republican machine to ruffle Governor Lister, fingers about the McArdle bill, one way or another POLITICIANS’ MEASURE BILLS BECOME 79 PE’ THEN A HE SAKE OF A CHEAP, LIKE THE Ty S. PHIPPS, SCOTT, SHARPSTEIN, SMITH, Pes, .44, 1945. ascribed to either Yet “necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, ports to change the system of municipal finance which has been in existence for YEARS AND YEARS to declare it was necessary for the WHETHER THESE TRAITORS AND REFERENDUM, “IMMEDIATE LAWS OR NOT POL BIGGER AND MORE PEANUT RENICK AFFAIR, referendum, BLACK, COMSTOCK, ROBE BONER, CAMPBELL, CARLYON, CHASE STEINER, STEVENSON, SUTTON, representatives at Olympia yesterday voted to defraud the public. They voted to employ a cheap trick to beat the people out of the privilege to invoke the referendum, if the public so desires, on for and its existing publi the McArdle 29 senators and over tw PRESERVATIC IS OF COMPARAT ITICIANS IN THE HOUSE VITAL PRINCIF THEN IT CAN BE They are the kind RECALL! AND SMITH and TheSeattle Star The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News ON NEWS sr ONE CENT who is a democrat POLITICIANS’ BILL PHAINS AND They v PRESERVATION OF ¢ institutions.” That provision or peace of the state or any of its institutions would be vitally threatened. The McArdle land bill is a political doesn’t give a snap of the the Renick bill The general public of the house voted to health, public safety,” Yet or o-thirds IN of IVELY SMALL VOTE TO CHEAT PLE IS AT STAKE. LIKE THE M'ARDLE STOPPED BY THE SAME IMPORTAN THE IF THE who made it necessary, in the CLEARY, L. DAVIS, TAYLOR, WE THE etc 79 members of the house had the public peace and health.” PEOPLE —& REFERENDUM CAN i MEASURE, FRAUDULENT TRICK, ‘oted to cheat and rob the The constitution makes the people's right of referendum apply to all laws passed the IMMEDIATE PUBLIC PEACE, was put into the constitu- No declare this PEANUT- The Renick bill pur- CE. BUT WHEN 29 OUT OF THE OR FOR A DEM- first place, for the people FAIRCHILD, FRENCH, LLS, WRAY. IGHT EDITION WEATHER FORECAST—Falr TIDES AT SEATTL ate 7 ANDS, Se Mig 13.8 ft 12.0 1 Correspondent Shepherd Arrested at Dunkirk: | Finds His Military Guard Is Man From Seattle [2 Men and Woman Live REFERENDUM ISBLOCKEDIN|| - LEGISLATURE) f= Senators and Representatives Scheme to Balk Voters on | Petty Political Bills. CALLS ACT A FRAUD) Senator Landon of Seattle! “Pans” Solons Who Betray Their Constituents. _ | Together inPeace;She’s Impartial With Kisses OLYMPIA, Feb. 11.—-By a vote of 29 to 12, the state sen ate yesterday declared the Mc Ardie land board bill is nec sary for the “immediate ervation of the public pt health, or safety, support of | the state government and its existing institutions enacting thi clause, the senate aimed to prevent the people from em: ploying the referendum on this measure. The constitution al- lows a referendum of the peo- emergency | ple on y legisiative bill | cept those d- in | ency cases “for the preserv: tion of peace, health, safety, / ete i The bill was rushe the house ‘ and the senate am iment declar ing an emergency was quick! concurred | The McArdle bill is one of thre measures, designe z lit the r purposes ization against Gov pro. ara tor Brown, republican, said that if a republican governor were lin office the emergency clause | would not have n attached. Senator Landot nounce the er {fraudulent and unconstite ational line, Mass. he found his ideals har-| Senator Hutchinson, republicar monized marvelously with those of| said the engineers of the bill were Mrs. Chase, with whom he met al-|ashamed to tell the real reason most daily over the plans why they tack the emergency Mrs, Margaret Chase is close to|clause to the measure 50'years old. Dr. Chase is 65, Hart-| Senator White, democrat Special Correspondence. EAST ALSTEAD, N. H., Feb. 5.! | —Clad in veivet bloomers and a white shirt waist, whose low-cut V-) neck was loosely knotted with a| ed said it } boggy ennett 40. was plainly a trick to destroy the flowing tie, Mrs. Margaret Chase oe ae et yan & highly honored| referendum power of the people sauntered, one day, into the village physician, and Brookline 1s a striet-| Those who voted against the of East Alstead, her loving soul-| ec —l\emergency clause were Bethel, band on th rt Re | ‘ | , Millan, McGuire, | Weatherford behind the Fe tage shatiring and ite occupants, Or. Chas nde 'WANTS TO MAKE EM | i onde, White. i . (at right); Mrs. Chase, and A A vote of 79 to 7, the house New England village. chitect Dennett (at left). “i QUIT FOOLING US!) BSre (akin Ake iainareeors: treet That was more than a year ago o e 'to the ick bill, which seeks to and today the villagers gaze all un | TOPEKA, Kan., Feb. 11—Crool,| prohibit cities from borrowing aghast upon the convention-wréck-| Dennett croo-oo-ool Mr, McGinnis! = |their own funds ing life of these three “free spirits Ten years ago she was Dennett’s| This ip what he did: We intro-| "Representative. Murphine and _ who dwell together here in the old! contented wife, and he was a suc-|quced a bill in the lower house| lane of Seattle were the only ones Chase home, on the summit of| cessful architect, a Harvard gradu-| making {t a misdemeanor for women| of the King’ county delegation to Mount Plato , an athlete, a student and withal to wear false hair, bleach their hair.| vote against it, Rep. Hastings of Leaves Saddened Home a dreamer use cosmetics or other so-call Seattle was absent when the roll } But, though there {s joy within} His dreams were of higher | beautifying agencies, “for the pur-|eail was taken * the Golden Rule Triangle, there is/of the emancipated man, and pose of creating a false iinpresstan a saddened, proken tome in New new social system, whose chief mer. Furthermore, they are forbidder —The tug Chickamauga, built for York, where dwelis Mrs. Mary Ware it would be lack of system from piercing their eare or Wearing the Pacific Towboat ‘ 0. was Dennett, divorced wife of Mrs.| When called upon to plan a house) earrings “at parties or in any public |Iaunched yesterda It floats ele Chase's er-soulmate Hartley for Dr. H. Lincoln Chase of Brook-| place HOW Do You syPPose | SHOULD SAY THEN SERVE A NOT. SOME OF 4? THE PEASANTS Tover THERE ONIN i MEAT ONCE A ) | SUPPOSE THOSE POoor® —— /soipjers over in EuRoPe| +| DONT GET — FANCY FOOD THESE DAYS ke La > y )OF EATING | Home. MEAT ly | Union at GOSSIP —Herb Schoenfeld, Hugh Cald. well, Chet Roberta and some of the| other town sedates will have the run of the Arctic club ball tonight Herd « they stand for any rough stuff. | —One of those newfangt% jit-| ney bus thing-wmajign ran numb | into @ regular auto yesterddt and hurt two of our townsmen ought to be a law against that —Adoiph Hepp, city salesman for Stewart & Holmes, has four broth ers in the German army, and, all told, 23 relatives fighting with the allies, He has many savage argo ments with John Boyd, our neigh bor pharmacist, at Seventh and who is antt-kaiser —The birthday of Susan B. An thony will pbrated by the Se attle » Monday. Some. times we wish we were dead, too. —Trevor Kincaid, professor of entomology (bug science) at the intversity, once was offered three times his present salary to go to I He told the Cornell folks wouldn't the Northwest ecause there are so many fine living here —"Cap"” Foster, who runs the wn secret » bureau for Uncle Sam, # body is pass zens, Het Al Dale, the towr got one of them —Kenny Beaton, journalist, Is crazy (not to be taken Iiterally) b Jogs. —Parson Sydney Strong talked about love at his church last night What's Sid driving at, anyway? —U. 8. Marshal Downey busted E. P. Medberry’s dinner last night by pinching him. Bill says Med mis the mails, The marshals are always inconvenienc ing r folks -The Woman's Commercial Club heard our corporation coun sel today and then fed him. Brad | always was a lucky char —Chris Schwabe, foreman of The Star's composing room, has bought a Ford. Look out, now girls The Sons of the American Rev olution are going to gather at the Lincoin hotel Friday night and talk about Abe Lincoln —Mre. Hickey showed a bunch of mothers how to care for thetr babies at the Bon Ma store yesterday. Prof. Frank Kane, who has one of his own, was in hopes Mrs. Hickey would show them how to walk the floor, too. No such luck, he reports. —The Women's Democratic club is going to debate on the tariff next Sat ay Dick Slater, the towr wit, ventures that ft will be no ‘lace for false hair and short fir 1 | HORSE STEAKS | aren't going to) There! COEDS CUT UP Jailer Sends - Message by Writer to His Wife, Who A CADAVER AT UNIVERSITY U. of W. Daily Creates Flurry on Campus With Story of Anatomy Class. WIELD KNIFE IN SHOP Body That of Man Who Died! Recently at Georgetown, Declares Student Paper. “A white man was cut up, his | muscles picked to pleces, his verte: Is Waiting for Him in Deadwood,S. D.;Shepherd Tells of Aeroplane Bom- bardment of French City. | By William G. Shepherd DUNKIRK, France, Jan. 28 (By Mail to New © York).—Dunkirk is forbidden ground and I am under arrest in a hotel as I write this. | My jailer has orders to take me down to the train brae counted, all of this within the|at Noon and start me off for Calais. limits of the university campus.” So starts off a news story in Wednesday's issue of the U. of W. Daily, which is today causing a| great flurry among the students The article goes on to assert that al women assisted in the grue. laboratory work, and quotes one co-ed, whose in a “confession.” The man is one who died recent ly at Georgetown, a pauper, the Daily says. It goes on to relate! that the anatomy class worked over the body where cats ‘pigeons are often dissected, but in an old shop building in an out-of-way corner of the campus Neighbors Are Distressed Three men students occupy a room across the hall from the one in which the dis tt was done, and were much distressed, the Daily intimates the stench were to the by Officials of the university reticent today in regard story Dean Frye of theesclence depart: | }ment refused to discuss it and re ferred all inquiries to the presi dent's office, President Landes was out of the city retary Stevens consulted with Prof. FE. Victor Smith, the in structor whose class is supposed to have studied the cadaver, and announced the article was not correct in all its particulars. Prof. Smith could not be reached OH, VERY WELL, DOM PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 11.— During the reading of a mur. der indictment against him, Dominico Pacini, who killed Mrs. Olimbia Palermini Nov. 7, interrupted Circuit Judge Davie to correct the charge that he had used a knife “It was a razor and a re voiver,” Pacinl informed the court FIRE DESTROYS HOME Fire broke out in the home of Fred Viol 113 Alaska ave., at] | 1:05 a, m. Thursday nage, $10( Origin unknown A LA CART | PRESUME | His name is Theodore Hoorens, and Seattle is his |home, though he came over here for the war and was | assigned to the secret service of the French army. At this blessed moment his wife is in Deadwood, South Dakota, and Hoorens wants her to have a ame ts withheld, Of this story addressed to her, in care of general de \livery. v's pad to tes feline bot cn Aaa In fact, I think I should have spent last night in jail, where two English ne ‘wspapermen are ‘ence hall,|had not Hoorens told the chief of the secret service that he would vouch for me not running away. But friendly as he is, Hoorens has to escort me to the train and put me on it. | Last evening, before the | eret service man got me, | had a chance to look over this much- bombarded town. The last three weeks three sets of funera’ have passed through its streete—Dunkirk burying its dead victims of German aeroplanes. Only this morning seven caskets, bearing the corpses of children who were killed when a flock of 24 Ger- man flying machines passed over! Dunkirk, were carried through the streets in hearses. NO ONE OBEYS ORDERS TO STAY INDOORS AT NIGHT Dunkirk goes about its business usual until nightfall. Then it! closes {ts shutters and stays in doors, and at 9 o'clock out goes ev- ery light in every house and hotel | | “My citizens,” reads a public | letter which the mayor has | posted throughout the town, “you are brave, | know, but | nevertheless sensible. It is | folly to remain in the streets | when the German aeroplanes fly over our city, and | beg of you to go to your cellars at the first sound of the warning sig- nal from the tocsin.” | The extraordinary thing about “SHIP SEIZED | BY ENGLAND FALMOUTH, Engi Feb. 11.— \The cargo of foodstuffs carried by the American steamer Wilhelmina, which was destined for Germany, | | was seized by the British govern- |ment today. Officials of the port | took possession of the steamer and |transferred her to a dock where her cargo will be unloaded. | Finat disposition of the food will |be determined by a prize court which will expedite the proceeding as much as possible. The steamship itself will not seized andmay sajl as |eargo is removed It will enter » cannot be S. before anugunce German federal coun Imperial government foodstuffs in Ger be soon as the said is the hip's that the ¢ it left the t ment of the ell that the | would seize all many. owners |planes through the sky |three English in |this warning is that no one obeys it. The other day Dunkirk yas shell- ed for a fourth time Eighty bombs were dropped and ti \re were five more funerals, and the crowd- }ed hospitals became more crowded, for there were 52 more wounded to care for. The good folk of Dunkirk will not go to their cellars. The sight is too wonderful to miss. At one time they saw four French aeroplanes chase seven German and who would stay in a cellar while a show |like that was going on? The second time 16 German aero- | planes hovered over the town, and |the Dunkirkians rushed to the streets to watch for another sky battle. Sure enough, six French and planes rushed into |the skies toward the Germans, who flew away GERMAN LINES ARE ONLY | 18 MILES AWAY FROM CITY And then, a Sunday or two ago, 24 German machines passed over Dunkirk in a great hurry, heading | across the channel toward England, and 11 sightseers were killed, in- cluding several children Then came the fourth faid. How to get the folks to lose inter- est in such daring affairs and rush | to their basements fs a problem too great either for the mayor or the military authorities. Thirty-two thousand civilians live Dunkirk, and you can't arrest them all in a bunch The German lines are only miles from here, and it’s only a 20- minute ride for a flier from the German hangars to Dunkirk, so there is evefy reason to believe that Dunkirk may expect another air raid at any moment The Belgians’ army headquarters is seven miles nearer the front than this. There is only a little flat: iron shaped piece of Belgium left— about 12 miles alopg the North sea 18 | coast The king and queen are still on Belgian soil, within range, most of the time, of the German guns, and in constant danger of aeroplane bombs. Within a very few hours, if the Belgian lines along the Yser were to break, the Germag forces would be oceupying the very hoose t& which the king is living: But here comes Detective Howe ens, of Deadwood and Seattle 1 wonde? if I can make him carey my bag to the depot

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