The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 4, 1915, Page 1

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The Seattle THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO Star PRINT THE NEWS : VOLUME 18 SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1915. ONE CENT = 2Xy.'"4!00,0¢3! VOTE FOR OSCAR M’GILL FOR SCHOOL BOARD! HE’S A ‘LIVE WIRE’ AND HE’S RIGHT! FIND HIGHER-UP’ IN WAR PLOT IGH EDITION Federal Authorities Say At- tache of Frisco Consulate Is Man Behind Explosion —| sued for His Arrest. | A report from San Francisco that the ar- |rest of Baron George Wilhelm Von Bricken, |connected with the German consulate there as one of the “higher-ups” in the C. C. Crow- jley alleged bomb conspiracy, including the jburning of Pier 14, and explosion of a dyna- mite scow here, might be expected at any mo- ment, was the most important day’s develop- ment in the arson and explosion investiga- tion. A warrant has been issued, charging him | with being a conspirator with Crowley. This follows closely on the heels of the announcement, earlier in they day, that German Consul Bopp, at| veroling e . FARRELL fe] . WHITE WILLIAM STRAIGHT FAIRFAX HARRISON San Francisco, probably would fig- iAibera’s Gesatean Rattney Sesckthiy ak the Tres ened’ Raia ee Reanés President Us ® oeset so Bee Prostient Unitas Mine Work. Member of Firm of J. P. President of the Southern ure in the disclosures which federal E Man ury mist ation ers of America Morgan & Co, officials will make soon. . — . ° TW" = . , he w ‘or O YOU realize that the MOST MARVELOUS And if so, what shall we do to MAKE THIS — MOST IMPORTANT SIGNED ARTICLES THAT fl princken “threes tien'wva sis0| opportunity, WITHOUT DOUBT, which has OPPORTUNITY OURS — TO SEIZE THE ANY NEWSPAPER HAS EVER PUBLISHED ON ta Bg OO gare el ever confronted a nation in the ENTIRE history of TRADE SUPREMACY OF THE EARTH? THE SUBJEC oT OF BUSINESS. pmeree.” the world, CONFRONTS AMERICA TODAY? The Star wanted to know, so it could tell its The men, in addition to Babson, who con- ley "was arrested charged. conspie| That, at last, SUDDENLY, because of the readers. For it certainly is a large part of PA- tribute to this authoritative symposium, are: acy to violate U, S. laws. | j great war in Europe which, in a trice, and without TRIOTISM to wish to see your country GAIN in JAS. J. HILL, famous American financier and saaereir Goan tle tee { warning, DEMORALIZED ALL HER INDUS- greatness. farm ex : se The, Feason the warrant was not/| TRIES, the chance for WORLD-SUPREMACY has Therefore we asked Roger Babson, a great WM. G. M’ADOO, secretary of the United Bi r7ried lant night when federal of | been THRUST, willy-nilly, upon these UNITED American economist, to expound FULLY AND _ States treasury. ‘ ; iiating tanteaat offttels cr -atsie| STATES, youngest of globe-powers? LEARLY, what the grasping of this opportunity JOHN P. WHITE, president of the United cece eareen, Oreeee or ee But do you also realize that “OPPORTUNITY involves. Mine Workers of America. : : | ptaater it Nas learned he was not] KNOCKS BUT ONCE AT EACH DOOR AND AND WE ALSO ASKED THE LEADERS OF JAMES A. FARRELL, Lay sinc of the United te nor to the embassy at THEN RETURNS NO MORE”? THE AMERICAN WORLD OF BUSINESS AND States Steel corporation (stee trust). ‘Cae oe Re The world today is knocking on our door and LABOR WHAT IT INVOLVES—WHAT THE FAIRFAX HARRISON, president of the ffl princkon was placed in a position PART OF EACH UNIT S Yesterday we printed Today, ticles by captains of indu These men will talk to y asking that we take in the rich foundling, WORLD- SUPREMACY, that no one else can afford to adopt JUST NOW! The world will ask this of us just once and NOT AGAIN! ARE WE GOING TO HEAR—AND HEED? RES ir [D ORDER TO CLOSE GALT ON DEC. 18 on page 8, we begin the series of HALI Mr. BE? Babson’s article. Southern railway. of J. P. Morgan & Co., and noted stry, finance and labor. ou in a series of THE EFEAT BO He’s a Dangerous Man CH WILLARD STRAIGHT, member of the firm GEORGE M. PERKINS, chairman finance board International Harvester company. Hs Weather Forecast Tonight and Sunday, occasional Only 16 shopping dewss' | of being a foreigner, against whom | |the government could act without | |committing any diplomatic impro- priety, 8. 8. Murphy, a Utah miner, fe said to be slated to testify Monday to the grand jury that Crowley | | sought to employ him an aid in| blowing up a powder factory at bencoatne 0 ———— NEW YORK, Dec. 4.—Some wag put a squirrel aboard the ship, and it was immediately | made raed mapotts tho the al 4 “NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—With bands playing and hundreds crowded on the docks cheering, the Ford peace ship, bent on es- tablishing peace in Europe, de- parted at 2:15 p. m. Henry Ford, promoter of the trip, intends to visit belliger- ent countries. —e Soot ce wits and is, employes of a Seattle fireboat. who are slated to tell of | Crowley coming on their vessel |soon after the bombing of a munt. est barge in Seattle harbor last May rain | SEVERAL MORE ARE | MARKED FOR REMOVAL | PROVIDENCE, R. 1, Dec. 4.—Re |moval of Acting Austrian Ambas. ~2 sador Zwiedenek, Austrian Consul Before sailing with hi, nti |General Von Nuber, two Austrian| horts, he announced that while vice consuls at New York, the con his passport is good only to take him to neutral countries, “1 will suls at Pittsburg and Cleveland, and # |the Philadelphia consul general will WISI MAS \ i see eel a assert my rights and . a“ : " ABE re © the next step in the govern-| will visit belligerent countri j winttanwen Yaa oceans OBERT F. BOOTH, port commission candidate & |ment's crusade against Austro-Ger| While he said’he would teat all " | dent Wilson and Mra. Norman Gait has the support of the kept newspapers in Seattle. fj [man diplomats and consular offi-\the warring countries, he specif= i n 1 an Norma Tia et : Rr. tebe sper cials displeasing to the administra- ically mentioned England and \ will wed December 18 The Star does not believe in eleventh-hour at- i Hon, according to the Journal today.| France, and told of his intention of ; | Announcement of the date was} tacks on candidates. It has tried in this campaign,| } Se pi eertered ie rie Ford factory at iene & Ss thik taken i oe am f Southampto! ; With Prosecuting Attorney |"A great many of the law-abiding| ™™ ia * forenoon by the White! which ends today, to avoid attacks on the perso a, HT The peace ship ts slated to stop Lundin asserting that many sa- [saloon men have kept their places | '!0" of the candidates first at Christiania, Norway, about a loon men had promised him closed, but it {a unfair to them to al-| The White House statement es 6 December 14 " they would comply with hie iow others to open, and in so far as| said he eaten: But, as the kept press has at the last moment suaiall as ’ Thacce 4 will. ii:18 all eae? wedge It was announced by the White ill go to Stockholm, Cree oe seo wlectiones ones shall see that offenders are | isaay that the marriage ot UP for its readers a sticky mess of fulsome praise of | Copenhagen and The Hague. ¢ port an ions, |p ted 4 , A the latter place, Forc afternoon and even- declined to comment on| Mrs. Norman Gait and the pres Booth, lauding his legislative record at Olympia and pic-| At the latter place. Ford intemma Saturday tatwan \é clined fl eherift| dent will be on Saturday, Decembe ny ,/to leave an international peace ing, Lundin announced at noon | the refusal of the mayor and sherift| dent will be on Sa stated, the wea. turing him as a progressive man and a man of the peo-|! TIDES AT SEATTLE i day night a Star_ ran will court sit .to which the nations that he would have complain to carry out the provisions of the atie: Watt be ccthe Gait Race @, 1308 | pf s feel d 1 12.5 ft. 7:56am, a6 tt. () listen to a sermon on “The Man Tat war could ‘appeal when they de issued, and would swear out jay aine, Will Be of the Galt ho | ple, The Star feels in duty bound, even as the eleventh ja Dim. 14.0 f. 0:08 p.m. 08 ft. (| Ought to Marry,” proached by Rev.| sire to start peace negotiations roprie- en h | 7 a ‘ Waa 1" p warrants for all saloon prop Bradford Backs Lundin | “The only guests wilt be: Mrs; hour is struck, to tell just what manner of man| Sch races n ahead sted aN te ae ap aaver| Plans, however, will be crystal tors who faile: The statute clearly defines the|Gait's mother her brothers and sis | a aa ee ee ized aboard ship. Ford declared “The trouble with this procedure |auties of the sheriff,” he mid. “He ters, the president's brothers and | and nant Harrison st hoy, (that the ‘vorld will think different fe that it fs slow.” said Lundin, after |i, empowered to make arrests even| sister, hin danghters and members hioned politician who finds it useful to wear a| In Monday's Star he will have l1y of the project before it was dome & forenoon’s fight with Sheriff |r rersons who attempt to selllor his immediate household thin cloak of progressivism not only an interesting report of/” Ford announced the king of Noh Hodge and Mayor Gill, in a vain 1) Wore na Gaya. Constables iia tavilatiods Will te ienued In 1905, when Booth was a member of the house, he introduced a| the sermon, but gossipy, readable | way had cabled his best wishes for effort to exact promises from them | (auel © ma this power and’ can ne hour of the wedding and the Dill giving lessees of shorelands and tidelands a preference right to pur comments on the things of peculiar | the expedition and extended to the that either the police or the she: arrest on warrants Iname of Abe officiating clergyman, Chase and the right to relinquish without penalty. Interest he noted about the church | party a hearty welcome of his would enforce the saloons’ closing pration Counsel Bradford] were not announced THIS BILL, IF IT HAD BEEN PASSED INTO LAW, WOULD nd its pastor and choir and ueh-| country “By the time the warrants are et nin on author-| "The jdent, however, made {| HAVE GIVEN THE WATERFRONTS OF WASHINGTON CITIES,| gra and how Its services are con-|” Before the vessel put ont, note Sworn out the afternoon wit pen ality vested by law upon the policelknown that no wedding ‘gifts are| WHICH SHOULD BE MADE TO SERVE THE INTERESTS OF ALL| ie nhao , able members of the party were gone, and anyway, they to the sa [and sheriff to arrest on port and|areired THE PEOPLE, INTO THE HANDS OF PRIVATE OWNERS FOR ALL| iT} ” cama gers eae SGecanin the ‘called to the rail and introduced o right back to the sa- and i " esired seventh n det-Ac : , pene ane Bae school election days |. Despite this, however, dip! TIME TO COME saWibudenttion Ghucenes amid wild cheers from the docks. Metayor Gill had previously told the| The cause of Mayor Gill's refusallroyaity and high officiais are Ii It also disregarded the rights of upland owners. which The Star is running on Mon.|,. With the bands blaring forth @ “orgy er to make no arrests |to instruct the polic e to make did presents. when the Municipal league committee appointed to sound the can: Lave raise se | variety of music, inctnding “On ee hout warrants, and Sheriff arrests today was his opinion that plans for the presiden. didates for the port commission and the school board questioned Booth, | Ate you reading them? jward Christian Soldier and Hodge ignored Lundin's letter, re-|the statute does not provide for ar-| tal honemnoon are Ie still e anret|HE ADMITTED THAT THE PRIVATE DOCK OWNERS AND THE : America,” the crowds joining {a Dieta wien that aa shertt! 1¢ was rests on these da | It is believed, however, that the| RAILROADS WERE AMONG HIS SUPPORTERS, BUT CLAIMED HE the song, Berton Braley, poet, and his duty to arrest and imprison all Mayor Explains leouple will take a trip either to the| HAD MADE THEM NO PROMISES. | | Fourteen missionaries from Nor-| Miss Marian Rubencamp, a writer, violators of the election closing ' <t Ik 1g,| South or to w Jersey Why are the dock owners and the railroads supporting Booth? | 4 way leave on Sado Maru for Orient| were married aboard ship by Rey, lew. ligt eereren tne geet HO SOld. ITE sveaitaae and ity, tide wlll And how could Booth, as a member of the port commission, serve NEW YORK, Dec. 4—Dr. /Saturday morning |Jenkin Lloyd Jones The sheriff said his men were t this ie not such an election as) nally open the social season on| the people loyally in the working out of the belt line project, and at the| Kari Muenz, head of the Ham- = — — “too busy to fool with anything of '* rete «page shpat to use the|January 7, with a reception for del-| #ame time please his supporters, who do not want a belt line at all? burg-American line, was sen the sort,” despite the fact that most ndin - it at|egates and wives attending the Pan FRANK HANLON |S BOOTH’S CAMPAIGN MANAGER. HAN! ooo ts 1g monthe in the of his force goes off duty at noon roe Nx weksoe cr American cotlgrees LON 18 THE MAN WHO WAS DISCHARGED BY BRIDGES AND) ‘en ; OPPOR | UNI | y! Saturdays, and thruout the morning : rdays, in ma Mir? re REMSBERG FROM THE PORT'S EMPLOY LAST JANUARY Atlanta federal jpanitentiacy, 3 ‘ eputies stayed in the rests if he thir proper to do fh ‘i had been district, fol’owing his conviction of cu: ye or six deputies stayed in the re Hanlon, who, before going to the port commission, had been distr toms violations. Similar sen In November the Star made the substantial Sifice lounging in chairs. freight agent for the O-W., is mow manager of the Pacific Coast “Let him get the constables to do| “My reason for acting as Beaimenin Co's aack, Pler A tences were imposed on his gain of 31,738 lines of advertising over Novem it,” sald Hodge I won't usurp po- was that | do not pre diag. to make The Booth headquarters 8 in the Railway Exchange building fellow conspirators, George ber, last year, During the same period one Wh © get wa arresta when | know we Koetter and Adolph Hochmeis other Seattle paper made only a nominal gain lice power. When we get warrants + T 100 university students have been employed, at $5 a day, to pass e we'll serve them licked in the courts. This tht ng tas Pay as bhiead fib ile J : ter, while Joseph Poppinghause and the third paper in the field showed a loss both car ; ; Lundin then stated that he would been tried out before.” | ' On E-YOU LIKE TO SEE THE RAILROADS’ SWITCHING MONOP. Was sentenced to a year and a approximately equal to The Star's big gain. fase complaints against all saloon.) Lundin Informed may, saloon 5 OLY KEEPING BUSINESS AWAY FROM ELLIOTT BAY, AND WANT day in Atlanta, Sa ea La we . o kept their places of proprietors who phon offic ; i ia 3 4 Seer ro seee tees pisces, ot | proprietyr se for advice TO SEE THIS POLICY CONTINUED, VOTE FOR BOOTH, was Bacd tke Gumiael gus ok This is further proof that more and more Se- f business open today, charging them |this morning, asking for advi , IF YOU WANT TO SEE MORE COMMERCE COME TO THIS PORT, vas Heer ‘ hin miiditt ta benurindl Gone with sefing liq nor on election day that they be Nogiteag + to. Arrest PERMITTING SEATTLE TO TAKE ITS PROPER PLACE AMONG $1.00. is 4 attle advertisers are each mo z van 2 i ee nee ce and ede et THE LEADING COMMERCIAL CITIES OF THE WORLD, VOTE FOR —— of the remarkable advertising opportunity offered f the saloons today,” he com me cepa nt la Polle Trepmurer of the REMSBERG AND EWALD AND ALL FIVE OF THE PORT PROPO. tor and thus they were responsible them by The Star. That opportunity is a reason- 1 Martha Buvoly Co., of S118 s6th ave SITIONS oh ane Lig: ST a Peo able advertising rate based on the most solid kind i T UNUSUALLY HEAVY VOTE x ing held the police Sa The Hague conference was not of newspaper circulation, and a volume of circu- if ret oma h ' ‘POPE T0 MAKE PEACE PROPOSAL ; representative of the world's lation, net paid, on a six-day-a-week basis equal instant bs ve thoug t, since the Vatican was not me . her in the Nor hwest Indications Saturday were t chting Superintendent Ross} South who was epresented. to or greater than any other t st. an unusually hea ote would be| has ordered al t lights “blink: |run down Potts was Morenver he will assert that the re! Hee Gore cast in the port and oo! elec-|ed” at 6 and at 7 p. m,, to| drt iL Pe ; ith ave, and Jackson | BY ALICE ROHE peace treaty would not have been violat Merchants who must make every advertis tions before the polls closed at 8 mind procrastinating citizens to|s riday nigh | ROME, Dec. 4.—Germany al Cardinals from the allies, p&rtic-/ed if It had the sanction of the ing dollar produce the maximum in results are p. ™ go and vote | Richio wa ready has made informal sug ularl asquet of France and/church, because then the people invited to investigate The Star's advertising Wousual interest in the iseues| Whatever®the outcome.of the estions toward peace action | Bourne of England, have been|would have known all abdut the pragosition has been displayed by the public jelection, the latest port ith ‘an ,200 ATTEND DANCE Shru next Monday's consistory, | sounded out with this proponal, but | treaty and the nations would have Readera Wha: Sats MauMeuniiusunine cores ie t | be Peg paper t bi Seo } reports today declared EAR ld By ARVO: FepLeg. (NG a)::| respec ‘i * ts to Berlin dollars produce the maximum should take ad gana ge pala Ai os ae 7S Cardinal Hartmann of Co- | lies will not countenance halt sbarte. to Mer vantage of the daily offers in The Star's adver times what it has the ter understanding of the nite More ‘than 1,200 persons attended| logne is said to have brought a | peace measures De cepts ciate tising columns—the best bargains in merchan i when port projects were a Pret te etka oy aPt ther |g tonetit datos given at the Hip-| proposal. thet- Gerniany. will Why Hague Treaty Falled privilege of sending uncet diea, grocdtlas, ate, thom the: Hest-and: sant’ ves be The oi or ee ri 2 pede ty or — podrome Friday night by Nile tem evacuate Belgium and Franc . he eda re os eae fy eens per , Ale 1 hea : ay liable merchants of Seattle etween 6 and & p. m., because ¢ rene me oy etctined. - Wengwach ra e to the autonomy o consistory that the failure of the| ready has dispatchee Nee eo ee iil ran fon a anay te Tg on ine ee) pe Duty ane agree ‘the Vatican will | great powers to call in Christiahity | messages to Berlin, it was aald to een onre, ee Se ng : PWustaia bon cantion-taxt veal make powerful efforts toward | made The Hague treaty a dend let. day The old Morning Grouch is again snarling in its perpetual peeve at The Star. That old organ sure can hate with the hatred of a vampire. It seems to enjoy its role as the Theda Bara of Seattle journalism. in Elliott Bay; Warrant Is-

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