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» fy 4 1 1 t 5 L J ‘ 4 » fe PRIZEFIGHTING! The Seattle Star NIGHT EDITION REGARDLESS OF WHETHER PROFHSSIONAL Pai SriGhsiNe Is GOOD OR BAD, It Is HYPO. witawi Yas CLERICE, Pre cuie tae ee CRITICAL POR A MAN TO ASSUME A SUNDAY "EW o8, CLARICE, 1 oO" N ONE SCHOOL ATTITUDE, AND YET IN THE LEGISLA GF ORGE, AT 1 Hk an RATHER BUREAL THUS RE- TURE VOTE FOR PROFESSIONAL PUGILISM. CAN vn Same re MARKS a Ais, SON} WAT AND | ATURDAY ERG SENATOR SUTTON GET AWAY WITH TH aod” aan ar’ ABLY FAIR; COOL! COOLER? BRING US OF POLITICS? ee ee (: THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS OTHER ICE-COLD LEMONADE, GERALD, HURRY! CHILBERG FOR | POINDEXTER |. ON NAVY BILL Well Known Banker and Other Business| Men Apparently Break With Humphrey and Abandon His Campaign LOOKS A LANDSLIDE FOR SENATOR Chilberg Praises Incumbent’s from the office of J. E, Chilberg, banker, former pre dent of the Chamber of Commerce, Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Navy Yard and Alaska Railway Bills; Humphrey Forces Crumble The following statement was issued Thursday night si- president of the exposition and president of the Swedish-American Republican club: feerg at luncheon at the Washington hotel today. guests were Messrs. “Sen. Poindexter was the guest of Mr4J. Chil- John P. Hartman, George W. Work for) Other} VOLUME 19 'LINER BRAVES OPEN SEA TO AID BREMEN NEW LONDON, Conn., Aug. 25.—Nosing her way thru a fog, | while a little tug puffed and snorted alongside, the North German-Lioyd liner Willehad Swung to the plier of the State n Steamship Co. here, to day, adding another chapter to German defiance of the allied warship patrol off the Atlantic coast. Customs officials and all New London believe the coming of the} Willehad forecasts the early ar rival of the merchant submarine Bremen from the German port of that name. The Willehad made the trip from Boston with encort Coming thru the Cape Cod canal, | i thence out into the open sea,| Ithe liner traversed more th miles of her urney thru a zone in |which she was subject to attack or leapture, had enemy ships sighted her. She went out beyond the three-mile Mmit, but was not mo-| jlested It is believed here the Willehad {s to serve in the same capacity for the Bremen as the Neckar, interned at Baltimore, did for the Deutsch land. The Bremen’s cargo will probably be transferred to the | Willehad which will act as a/ |“mother ship” for the submarine, housing her crew wh they are in| port, and also protecting the sub marine from enemy eyes The Willehad flew the jermas Allen, George B. Lamping, George F. Russell, Howard | ensign as abe came into the harbor | M. Rice, and O. S. Larson. FOREIGN TRADE IS 18 MILLION Seattle's foreign commerce amounted to $18,205,954 during the month of July, according to figures made public Friday in % the official report of the cus- toms business of the district of Washington, issued by Collec- tor Roscoe M. Drumhelier. Imports amounted to $9,768,- 520; exports $8,437,434. The total ports for during that m: says, were $27,7: $14,151,864 represent the ex- ports. Duties on imports were paid in the amount of $163,490.07. Other receipts made the total collections for the district $174,- 958. aoedl “Matters of interest to the republican party and of !o. particular interest to the city of Seattle were the topics of discussion. “Mr, Chilberg assured the senator of his appre-| It is not known what the caus of the breach is between md end Congressman Humphrey In the past, Chilberg has been a warm supporter of Humphrey, and he was listed as one of the Hum phrey campaign committee in the present contest Equally serfational is the appar. jent repudiation of Humphrey by such men George F. Russell, former postmaster of Seattle; John P. Hartman, lawyer and leader among conservatives; George E. Lamping, former adjutant general; George W. Allen, president of the} Arctic club and bonding man, and | O, 8. Larson, banker. | HERE IN JULY Withdraw From Committee Howard Rice, the remaining member of the luncheon party, is secretary to Senator Poindexter. From reliable sources, it is learn ed that Chilberg has withdrawn from the Humphrey campaign com mittee, and that other withdraw sis will follow | The significance of th® Chilberg | defection is plainly that the Hum- | phrey forces in Seattle are crum- bling as rapidly as in the rest of the state, and a landslide for Poin-| dexter is as inevitable as it was | six years ago. The Navy Yard Bill Humphrey's apparent exports and im- the entire district th, the report 088, of which That luke. | litically, he has been with the re warm attitude toward the Bremer. ton navy yard had something to do |with the final break between the | Seattle cougressman and Chilberg lis highly probable. Chilberg bas been a consistent booster for A "6 te Doubt that Mrs. Anna Long com- itted suicide, b ecidentally Moor of an apartment house in Los. Angeles fon expressed A ison st Mrs oft in health join ned to vi Reports that dresse telling grasped a crucifix and leaped to| her death actionary forces and Senator Poin dexter with the progressives, the Bremerton navy yard bill, affecting | Seattle's commercial affairs #o di rectly, may have caused Chilberg to draw away from Humphrey Postoffice Site In his remarks, Chilberg laid particular stress on Poindexter's | lable work in behalf of the navy yard and the Alaska railway bili, the two biggest national boosts for | Former Postmaster Russell's ap. parent withdrawal from the Hum phrey campaign is equally signifi cant. Russell was postmaster jwhen the “Humphrey postoftice | duckpond” site was about to be purchased. He protested against lie, declaring it was unsuited. In| |spite of the protest, Congressman lost her life by falling from the fifth Phursday, was the by her sister, 1009 East opin Mrs. | Mad- | Wismolek, Wismolek said Mrs. Long Seattle August 9 for Califor good spirits and in good She expected her husband her next month, and Mra. and daughter had plan t her. from Los Angeles were Long sealed a letter ad to her sister, and, after friends she was despondent Mrs Mrs. Wismolek and daughter left | Humphrey , whol letters fo the : . [treasury department, urging its ‘or Lon ele o arrange for Log Angeles Friday to arrange} chase ond declaring that the tor the funers Bort » lie price, $169,500, was reasonable DR. HOLLAND TO TALK BOOKS OPEN NIGHTS Registration books will re dent Holland of the Wash-| main open every night for a State college at Pullman| week until 9 o'clock at the the principal speaker Sat-| cltyeounty building in the | urday ton ; vents bas 7 r A 4 grange picnic at Ren-| comptrolier’s office, beginning ction Friday. Registration will close big program of entertaining! next Friday, Sept. 1, for the been arranged, primary election. Get busy! |firm operating the | president and was warped into her berth on nat wide of the ‘pier, headed | cown stream, | Capt. riinsch of the Eastern For. | warding Go. which represents the slant subme fines Deutschiand and Bremen. was the first man aboard the Ger ciation of the assistance rendered by the senator in the) man liner when she p had docked BERLIN, Aug. 25.—Preparations for the submarine Deutschland’s next trip to the United States have been almost completed. The cargo is entirely ready, and, according to shipping men, is much larger than they expected. The crew that re. turned Wednesday night from the first trip expressed willingness to enroll tor another yoyage 'N. P, LOBBYING IN RAIL STRIKE ROW IS CHARGE ‘BY ROBERT J. BENDER United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Aug. 25.— With President Wilson and the railway presidents apparently hopelessly at loggerheads in their efforte to prevent the threatened strike, the president today stirred up excitement by suddenly calling the heads of the railroad brotherhoods to the White House. The conference with the brotherhoods lasted an hour and a half, adjourning just at noon. According to the work- ers’ representatives, however, it left the situation unchanged. They were asked to accept no compromise, the brotherhood chiefs said, and gave the impression as they left the White House that the might be expected to| stand firmly by the proposal which they have accepted, but which the railway heads refuse. The brotherhood men, while at the White House, placed before the president the charge that a nation wide lobby is being condueted to influence sentiment in favor of the railroad The ese telegrams to show that the Northern Pacific R, (Continued on page 9) ZEPS KILL 8 IN ENGLISH RAID LONDON, Aug. 25. One of the ix Zeppelins that raided England last night reached the outskirts of Lond nd hurled down bombs, elightl maging an electric pow er station, Wen, French, command er of the home forces announced toda ihree men, three women and two children were killed by the lraiders. Seven men, eleven wom: en and three children were wounded, ! SEATTLE WASH FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1916. | SHE CAN MAKE ICELESS ICE-BOXES Prof. Mary E. Sutheriand, . Instru ctor in Home Economics “PROFESSOR” Is TOO STERN FOR WOMAN WHO DOES WONDERS By Cornelia Glass Protesacr” seems a terribly stern thing to call Miss Mary E. Sutherland. She has earned it, tho, and has all sorts of A. B.'s and M. A.'sand Ph. D's after her name, Furthermore, she teaches home economies to the young women at Washington State Col lege She has just been here on an advance trip to arrange for a se ries of lectures she will deliver during the Land Show, from the 4th to the 14th of October. She has lectured on home economics in almost every city in the United States and she ts a recognized authority in every branch of it. Makes iceless iceboxes She ia a connoisseur in the art of keeping down expenses. She knows how to create iceless ice boxes that keep food chilled dur. ing the hottest weather, and she can build a fireleas cooker that will cook anything, from a@ roast a loaf of bread She can cut a pattern, cut out of the material, baste it it, and stigch it, and have a house frock, all in an hour and a half. Meanwhile, she chats easily to her audience, telling them how they may do it Must Know How And the wonderful part about this young person is that she thinks every girl should know as much as she does in or to make « home a livable p 1 think a woman Is me at tractive in the kitehen than any it fit place else in the world,” she told me. “That Is,” she added hast fly, “provided she knows what she is doing while she is the What do you think comprises knowing what she is doing?” I asked The Spoon and Shovel “1've always believed in the old saying that women ean throw away more with a spoon than a man can throw in with a shovel,” said Miss Sutherland, “and I think the first thing women should learn is economy, both of food and time. There isn't any need of spending a whole half day on a dress gr Waist-that's wasting t and due largely to the fact that most women are afraid to make their own pat terns and will puzzle hours over a commercial one. Miss Sutherland speaks rapid. ly and brightly with @ world of energy in her voice. ‘Then, too, every housewife should know the ealory value of common foods,” she continued She should know that one head of lettuce equals one bunch of radishes, equals 1 small plece of cheese, eq teaspoonsful of olive ofl, equals 4 tablesponnsful cream, equals 11 kernels of wal nut meat—don't you think she hould Oh, ves” | agreed amiably Oh, yes, indeed Do You Get Thi Also,” went on r land, quickly, “she should know that tea itself Is not restful nor invigorating but that a Jump of sugar equals @ handful gf beans | day | Justice Charles E |. or a silce of carrot, and will be stimulating Domestically economical know! bread or a whole edge doos not comprise Miss Sutherland's education. No, in deed. She quotes from the clas. } sics in that intimate way that | bespeaks a long acquaintance She i# musical and artistic, but abe believes that mothers who raise their daughters estheticail only are committing a crime, be | cause there never are and nover | will be enough rich husbands to g0 around Helen Gould's Friend instructor Gould's school Mins Started the kitchens It really clean up great city ganized, was personally in hygiene, sanitation lutionizing of the fami! sh While life in Lyndhurst w an ned That and he.” to refer t Maybe sc but why when and » unconsciously exquisite to he me watching It r a she sald softly from Helen Gould.” It doesn’t seem right,” ° She {s a native Oregonian and her college education was recely- 4 in Oregon Agricultural College. Then she went East and became in Lyndhurst, Helen In New York. Sutherland the who movement to on the Rast Side. She or. for a long while condneted the classes food preparation and which are now revo the living condit * in the tenements. was speaking of her York and at the school her fingers playing with jeweled watch pin blouse, She caught ns w real treasure to me, It was a gift Vhy Is It? A woman called up The Star Fri complained over Hughes calling “Char: she said, & man of his promi. uence so tamiliarly,” is it no one ever kicks Former | United States lis called Like Monkey Than Corpse, He Says SAN PRANCISCO, Aug. 26 |The fact that Jas, Gaffene, arrest ed in Seattle, is not particularly ndsome may save him from] |hanging as Pietro Tortoricl, who | sl w Biagglo Vilardo here 18 ears ago Today C. Brucia, a mail carrier, who took letters to Tortorici two} days following th murder and who| was a fellow cl member of the layer, took the ‘stand and was| ed to identify Gaffene as Tor torlel That not — Tortoric said Tructa Tortorte| w handsome This fellow look like a monkey Gaffene smiled and turned to his | j attorney Rather look like @ monkey than & corpse, he remarked, }] couples S!and seated about table ONE CENT ON TRAINS liquor. dows, Tom Shuter’ houseboat at Juanita. jnot Pp for in many months. | wis made of the liquor seized imme diately he said attempt that might be Clancy was the defendant.” Seated at the telephone, Under beriff Stringer assembled his men shortly before midnight, sending lout two parties, one to Clancy's jand one to Shuter's fhe Clancy raiders were heade¢ Scott Malone an4 included Dep. Brewer, Calhoun, De Vech }man, Morgan, Jarrett, Johnson, Muls, Davis and Von Gerste, In the other party were Deputies Star wich, Stark, Campbell and Kline. by utles They left the courthouse simul taneously in automobiles, observ ing every precaution to prevent a off. ich Clancy's at 2 A. M. wifione's party arrived at The Meadows at 2 a. m., surrounded the place and advanced from all jcirections while the noise of their epproach was drowned by the! music within and the laughter of drunken women and men Malone pounded on the door. Oh, is that you, Scott?” asked Clancy, peering out into the dark- ness All right, boys! shouted Ma lone, and the others closed In on covery avenue of escape, barring doors and windows, thru which a shower of bottles and glasses re thrown eral people tried to climb into the yard, but were held back At least half of them were wom en, it is said, and many of the dancing in the ballroom in varying ses of intoxication were promi t A number of the deputies lined up the men guests and took their nemes and addresses which were turned over later to Prosecutor Lundin for use as witnesses when the case comes to trial Find Clancy's Supply > mt o ‘! while this was in progress and etsae Wirneten while Malone was searching the Teddy"? roudhouse for its t Mquor cache, the piano player leaped thru | Ja window and made good his es | 4 cape. No others got away He’d Rather Look | Clancy and Charles Van Nor tern, a waiter, were arrested and mit up $600 bail, including ball for the fugitive plano player, who Clancy promised to produce later Mrs. Clancy was present, but not arrested. Malone, after searching house and the premises, the road including the abandoned race-track, return to the house and discovered Clancy's liquor cache secreted in basement pulling out the lower drawer of a bureau in one of the rooms, Malone found he could look into erture of consider size un r the floor, Using his flashlight discovered about 300 bott he said. This w along with conside the By able an ) beer on f fiscated whisky Two hundred yard boat mooring on the the Starwich party (Continued on Page 9.) 3 of 8 con able from Shuter Bothell came | ouse road, AN NEWS SLANDS (RAIDS END ROADHOUSE ORGIES AND CHASE WOMEN TO COVER | Johnny Clancy Is Arrested After String- er’s Men Use Guns to Halt Terrified Guests—3 Resorts Are Raided in Wee Small Hours. Sweeping King county in the biggest raid in its history, sher- iff’s deputies, directed by Under Sheriff John Stringer, early Fri- day emptied three notorious roadhouses of their drunken women — and men roisterers, hustled some to the county jail, seized large stocks of assorted liquor and at a late hour were continuing their jsearch for big caches of intoxicants said to be buried about the shores of Lake Washington. | Wild orgies were in progress in each roadhouse, it is sai |when the deputies swarmed in and ordered everybody, guests |hosts alike, to throw up their hands whi e a search was made for About 80 people were found, nearly half of whom were wom- _ en and almost all of whom are said to have been unmistakably ~ under the influence of liquor. The places raided were Johnny Clancy’s roadhouse at The Mea- ~ houseboat at Kenmore and Bill Mullen’s | There was a panic. windows but were blocked by deputies. | All about the notorious old roadhouse was unmistakeable evi- idence that liquor had been dispensed and consumed in large quan- tities, it is said. For the first time liquor “plant” was discovered. Prosecutor Lundin said Friday he considered the raid the b stroke of law enforcement the sheriff’s office has been respo We will have a chemical analy-; -———— “to prevent any made to switch the liquor for water, as bas | been done in other cases in which| At Clancy’s the raiders surprised about 50 people, some seated at tables drinking, others in the ball room doing dances that would | s muster at the board of censorship. Men and women dashed for doors and Johnny ° Clan in history, HER LOVE SPURNED, WHITE SLAVE TURNS. 4 AGAINST BETRAYER NEW YORK, Aug. 25.—In the same littl: wicker satchel in which she once carried her books and lunch to the Irving high school, Caroline Kaufman, pretty white slave victim, today carried to the office of Assist- ant District Attorney James Smith letters, telegrams and pictures which will serve as evidence against Gustave Ku- \turned home every afternoon at 5 o'clock, and then at 7 place on the street, She said she earned $10 a week as a stenogra- |pher and as a slave averaged $90 a | week She retained enough for herself to buy food and clothing and turn ed over the rest to Kugelman. She continued this for two years with- out a protest, until she learned geiman, alleged white slave that Kugelman this week married a ringleader. woman in Brooklyn, Then she con With tears in her eyes, she (sented to tell her story to the dis- trict attorney ‘BACKS GILL'S — KICK ON PHONE. RATE INIUSTICE Corporation Counsel Cald- well Friday addressed a letter to Mayor Gill, concerning the told of her betrayal. Gustave Kugelman was ar- raigned in the court of general sessions, and in default of $10,- MO bail was locked in the Tombs. Included in the documents which) Miss Kaufman turned over to Smith were letters to Kugelman from prominent actresses on the legitimate stage and in the motion picture business. Kugelman insists that the letters were genuine. Miss Kaufman is 22, and an ex ceptionally attractive girl of me dium height, with coal black eyes and hair, and a fine physique. Altho reluctant to tell her story,! Injustice of the telephone com- Miss Kaufman commented at the) pany’s power, under presen opening that even now she did) laws, to place one vatuatio! not see the “wrong of this life.” upon its property for fixing Attorney Smith explained to her that her testimony would result in the prosecution of Kugelman Miss Kaufman then told how she rates and another for .paying taxes to the city. r He referred to the interview with Mayor Gill on the eub- met Kugelman thru a girl friend, ject, printed in Thursday's The love-making that followed did, Star, and reviewed the lega not pass the bounds of propriet history leading to the present for more than a year, Miss Kauf-| situation. man said “The legislature of 1913 so She became deeply in love with) amended the law as to bring Kugelman and believed his story about the result of which you that he would ry her as soon! justly complain,” wrote Cald- as the rich father he told her about) well, who offered to facilitate died any effort the mayor was die In November, 1914, Miss Kauf-| posed to make to “remedy the man began to live with Kugelman| injustice” by legislation. as his wife, and then she learned that there was nothing to the “rich father" story, and that Kugelman EXPORTS SHOW U S. had been married at Atlanta Kcoxetmen boxset “trsiveness) PROSPERITY BOOM and added that he needed money She gave him the $10 she made| WASHINGTON, Aug. 25.—B® each week as stenographer, but he| Ports during the month of July te needed more. She ised at first | taled $446,000,000—a record for July to consider his method of getting|—altho the figures are $19,000,000 more money, but finally consented,| below the June exports. Imports Gave Up Her Money were $188,000,000, a falling off of He instructed her to walk on cer-| $68,000,000, compared with June, tain streets and to use certain ho-| Exports for the year ending with tels said she did as she was|July totaled $4,511,000,000, compar. nd w never molested | ed with $2,883,000,000 the preceding oll ar, the bureau of foreign and do- Kaufman told how she re-!mestice commerce announced took her