The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 20, 1916, Page 1

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RKEYS } N A ‘ AVI AVIATED NDAY VHEN YOU GO TO MAR ' Y, OR _ FOR ANYTHING § MAN BEHIND THE Cot AN OR DEMOCRAT? N YA AT PARTY THE COUNTY N Y PPLIES FOR YO BALM VERDICT SENGS--FOR Margaret Strand Wins Large| ‘or me Sum From Alaska Miner- et sip Lover | Fo woman HE ASKED FOR chiens! ¥ wenty thousand dollars in | feu of unrequited love! A jury In Judge Gilllam’s court Monday morning awarded Margaret Strand a verdict in | her favor for $20,000 against ; Peter Malone, wealthy Fair. | banks miner, who, according to the Strand woman, failed te marry her after promising to do 80 » and ad the ant jury T under ad Mrs. her his promise the day for proached, howey insisted that she come It was after arriving here t heard he had married another | OULD ABOLISH =: ELECTORAL VOTE, PORTLAND, Nov. 20.—Car tying a proposed amendment to the United States constitu- tlon abolishing the electoral | college, Senator George Cham it in berlain of Oregon is en route to Washington today. He be lieves the electoral college obsolete and that the is presi dent should be chosen by d rect, popular vote before star i him, wherea n row siar lead of 400 tes thruout th untr Chamberlain said his an t would be prop t« be come effecti PORTLAND. Gatens of t 0.—Tacoma po- You Can Almost wm adors in the G cap have been told by the . allies that they m leave the —80 vid is Joseph C Linclon’s great story, country b dnesda the novel-a-week which begins today . SPOKANE, Nov’ 20.—The nlnth | annual apple opened here to: ita 4 me Pec ge 1 " Twer 16 merchants ha It's a different sort of le than the usual run aa iding stunts. th will MR yep Of stories of the sea, too t th ' reatest 1 Don't it. Begin today and finish Saturday. Street dancing will be one of th Six large installments—one each dav TURKEYS GO UP ' The Seattle Star REPORTED ON NIGHT EDITION er TELEPHONE RATE ! KATTLE COST vER LSt CENT fORK THA THEY DO IN TACOMA OR NTER, POKANI rORK THE fh ERVICE 1 AT oO DORBN'T 100K VERY SUNNY HEREFORE, 118 COMMIS THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS 2] Teesbay, PARTLY CLOUDY, Waren VOLUME 1 BY THE POLICE REP REPORTER Henry could come back to life to w tory story . erin the story of M t i the ther , ff ‘ ‘ x a aster too mediocre t writ ior Mme. 8 . Hein Thre ears ago many of thent not Smell the Salt— t 1 large » for an adm A t H of t at Jn Europ x igbtingale at the ree audience with the ecstacy and joy of know that all that while there was a sor used to be silenced r atives ki th «7 Yes! Joyously? ¥ uight be and more of ber earn late the the warstricken in Europe HERE IS HER STORY ‘ nd I could see the great hamanity of that « overwhelmin pathy bat ma | of meaning. for me ell you of the depth 4 feel towards o CHANGED BY GRIEF OVER WAR art and the thought of y ¢ nd with the earn sy. super , t poor war suffer police as mi at by can " their dreadfu ee ce ot . LL THE WAR END?)—keeps me up, gre to find consolation tn orrow Taevings, was taken ASKS PROTECTION FOR AMERICA afterward and forced L : ay ¢ the doctor's for the nig protect S.A p_ Deaetital on itry, and put only | b ar e of human being VILLA’S WIFE DIES : oat nao tlre ome fe ar millions for thetr own pock “ were nar ld go \ ngelist thru ne ry and nfortunate ¢ in Europe, no eat at nation re n—just for mercy's sake—RE { THE PEOPLE THAT THE MOTHERS AND CHIL. OvER THERE ARE THE SUFFERERS, THE MAR } ERNESTINE SCHUMANN-HEINK AN OPENS WAR ear camry the United Commor an ant ess DRY soldered moore plank rik of pe , NEW YORK, Nov. 20.—Six of a campaign) ™en were killed and several d F ey injured today when the boiler ; * of the tug Rambler exploded The boat was lying at her pler in the East river TOLD TO GET OUT bo 0 ahi dispateh LO. pe toda ery Gert Austrian | features, Athen Bulgarian | S BROKEN, ASK CONGRESS Citizen Deputies Denounced Anarchists at Record Meet ing at Dreamland |!DEMAND FREE SPEEC Resolutions largest m in Oream adopted by the meeting ever heid nd pavilion, were forwarded Monday to Presi dent Wilson, Secretary of La bor Wilson, United States Sen- ator Mil Poindexter of Wash. ington and Meyer London, so. clalist congressman of New York, urging congressional in vestigation of the killing of Seven and the wounding of 50 at Everett on Sunday, Novem ber 5, when the steamer Ver ona, carrying 250 1. W. W's was met by citizen deputies in Everett The meeting afternoon w called by the Central Labor council jointly with the Industrial Workers of the World, as a demonstration in behalf of the right of free speech, which, the speakers contended, was lawlessly abridged by the authorities at Everett. Every available inch in the large hall was occupied, Probably 1,500 standing thru out the meeting, which lasted nearly three hours. It is est mated a crowd of approximate- ly 5,000 participated. The Speakers Judge Ric held Sunday The speakers ard Winsor, “mem were Hul of t Coune Council of former otra! ett president la mg of th mational chureh, ( ne Congr f fon od brother of 8, Senatorelect France of and J. T. Dorao for th Ww w Bridges, president of ort commit local organiz and «Rt the § or Gill's statement iff, mayor, and citizen ot Everett had no ¢ Verona from assenger was frequi ed by the speakers The report of the indu trial relations commit cit several time nm support of the cc that the Everett Incide: similar to other alded by the constitutional order. dey landing indo’ federal was tention was en er trampled law and “The Real Anarchists” late denounced anarchists resort is class order zed last week in Press club by 1 on The were real direct included organ at who action In th w the lew att the that th as MONDAY, NOVEMBER H/ bh he Seattle tokhe Pallding | et he i Queen Seattle Mars er bert 5 b ne n right to pre its rs 18 od on nt ‘sen where suthorities. rights: as to as com 1916 ON THAINS WH STAND AN ONE CENT Mary Garden Returns After Singing to Soldiers Along French War Front S -sRBag ate - Brea pea- 4 ee? 2 ee -TARY Caror/ Mary Garden, fanious ty to the s« . New York, then j« at B Woman Near Death | ypera Idiers., nn the Chicago Of inger, has returned the She will t a masicale a company sing: From Shooting by : Her Suicide Sister. Miss Allce Carey, a ed 38, was near death Monday, with three bullet wounds in her body fired by her sister, Mrs. Margaret Hartman, who after- ward committed suicide by tak- ing poison, during a fit of tem porary insanity Sunday morn- ing The tragedy was enacted on the dairy ranch of Robert Hartman, near Redmond Both women were gradua' of the University of Michigan. Mrs, kitchen Hartman walked into the 1 fired the first shot | into sister's back. Miss ( turned, Two more bullets in cansetk succession entered her abdomen and hit her hand. She sank to the | Qloor unconscious. Her sister turned and went up stairs, and there took formalin. used o@ the ranch for industrial | purposes. Physicians said she died | almost instantly | The two men say they heard no | shots, and the husband learned of Girl Sets New American Air Record and Asks for Powder for shiny Nose WOMAN GIVEN 'HER HEART 1 $20,000 HEART BUT SCHUMANN-HEINK TO INVESTIGATE « HUMANITY everett CASE ‘FLIES FROM CHICAGO TO GOTHAM IN SMALL PLANE; STOPS TWICE NEW YORK, Nov. 2¢ 20.—Ruth Law, a smiling American, took her place as the |premier woman aviator of the world today |when she set a new American record for cross-country flying. She landed at Governor’s Island at 9:38 . m., having flown 840 miles from Chicago in an old style exhibition aeroplane. Miss Law made but two stops, the first at Hornell, N. Y., and the second at Bing- hamton, N. Y., where she spent the night. | She was forced to alight because she had run lout of gasoline. | Fully exposed to the wind and cold owing |to the fact that the type of machine she drove forced her to sit out in front of her motor | without any shield, the plucky you! yg woman outstripped Victor Carlstrom’s re rd for | continuous cross-country flight made Novem- |ber 2 in the very newest type of machine and then continued her journey and flew further woman. before-im history. ia ee ‘ae the slow, barely topping the hills along Miss Law's second longest flight that has ever /the Hudson in order to t _able to been made, Her flight of 590/see the ground and keep her bear” miles {s exceeded only by that of | ings. fs bee utenant Marchal of the The fog was so dense, in fact, |that her flight was followed with difficulty after she left Binghamton, One report was received of her Jarvis, but at many army, who flew from Nancy ta} “C helm, Poland, in June of this lyear. The distance of this flight was 812.5 miles passing Port Miss Law left Chicago at 7:25,/points the aeroplane was invisible, Central time, Sunday morning. She| “I followed the Delaware & Sus- | Fees hed Horn 0 miles away, | quehanna railroad for a time after 3:24, continued to Binghamton, |leaving Binghamton,” said Mise reaching there at 4:20 p. m., and|Law, “Then I cut across country. It was pretty cold, but naturally ft resumed her Might early this morn was not as bad as yesterday, when ing. Her flying time for the entire trip|1 was in the air much longer. I was 8 hours and 59 minutes. finished the trip without taking on Gen. Wood Greets Her any gasoline in addition to that with which the tanks were replen- ished at Hornell. “I barely had enough to finish on. As I neared Governor's engine was using the last. I vok planed to the earth and landed with the tank practically empty.” Miss Law was given a rousing re- ception when she landed on Gover- nor’s island. A band at the head of a detachment of soldiers on morn- ing parade was playing as she was sighted, and immediately the music that she was forced to fly very|was turned into a blare of greeting. Numb with cold, Miss Law was helped from her aeroplane at Gov ernor's island by Maj. Gen. Wood Henry Woodhouse and Augustus ¥| Post, the latter two governors of the ‘Aero Club of America, The plucky little woman was immediate ly hustled into an automobile and Jrushed to an army officer's house thaw out The last leg the flight—150 miles—was made thru a dense fog Miss Law said the fog was so heavy to prominent citizens, following an| At the Lakeside private sani-| the affair when he walked into the | aasioned speech Judge !tarium et Kirkland Monday, Miss | kitchen and found his sister-in-law FACE PO W DER FOR oman Burke Carey, Dr ge H. Davis, her| wounded, on the floor. He then/| | Pre the speakers de-| physician, and the husband ad-| walked upstairs and discovered his lared that not one of| vanced only the insanity theory to| wife, dead | IER SHINY NOSE IS the 74 held he Sno-/explain the affair. Both women have been suffering bomish would be con She suffered from insomnia fre {ll health, he said | ’ ted of murder |the victim told attendants, “Lack| Miss Carey had lived at the Hart MISS I, A W S RE UEST Rev. Strong expressed the hope! of sleep might have driven her in-|man home for about five years. | |that the authorities would Mberate | sane.” Mrs. Hartman was Miss Carey anne |them all, in the in pace,| Miss Carey was washing dishes spent the last few months in Cali-| NEW YORK, Nov. 20.—The , nipulate their big machine in that before any trial ndjin the kitchen, she sald, and Rob-| fornia, seeking better health | first thing Miss Ruth Law long a trip. that the whole matter should then|ert Hartman and his father, M The father of the two women is} Pct ary for today when she fin- “When they kept on putting me become a closed incident | Hartman, were outside working on |a member of the law firm of Carey | ished the record-breaking aero- | off, I just decided to hop into that err yen ep apeo teh depanflrrpad framdoeiakh ionic ES. _& Carey, Sandusky, Ohio. | ished tvtight on Governor's little machine and make one great ay tevetanied. te ere ore, | faland vine face powder. Her effort that the, Mrerstt at “the nose was shiny. I didn't think it hardly possi- |that the Everett affair is “the | "She was hustied into a wait | ble that I could make the trip learest labor case in the eeiny | 5 | automobile at the army | without a stop. My machine will of the world,” and will absolutely ing tion field, whisked away to |not carry enough gasoline. But |show up the lawlessness and an — home of Maj. Wm. Hart- | now I'm going to have that big ma- Jarchy of the Fverett “maste WHICH FAILED T0 BLOCK PLANT the ovof the army signal |chine, and I'm going to try it all Has Hospital Records corps, and the travel washed | over n Doran said that members of the] off her rosy face Fog Furnished Thrill LW. W. w vo brutally man A . Then this daring maid of the air,} Speaking of her machine, Miss handied in Everett for a long time| _ Charging that “a subsidized In it history and descrip-| .ng had out-Carlstrommed Victor | Law pointed laughingly across the t © the deadly conflict that press has misrepresented every tion of t yetem behapaircaaa nu light from Chi-| field to where her biplane rested any of them, on returning to Se| effort of Seattle's municipal Photographs of the great indus-|O°U ON A york, placidly asked|in the shadow of the huge aero attle, had to be sent to the city hos.| Plant and published many ar- {trial plants which have finally |C*® \° Hartmann, “May 1 borrow | Plane Caristrom used when he at- pital | ticles that pe Kae ord ae piped Sonerects with the city mi * a your face powder? te ed the flight between Chi We have clinienl reco’ ot] and misleading,” the biennial | plant include views of the Skinner-|*°™® . a gah, Pe ge ial 1eir cases from the ct ta ott i report of the city light depart. | Eddy — shipbuilding — corporation | Powders Her Nose ; Fhe’ atarae., cla tahickoe ae he said. “°W ve of.| ment made its appearance Mon. [Frye & Co, packers; Booth fish-| Having powdered her nose. she chine with which Miss Law shat- vents to show the Inw.| 4@¥+ erles, Ford auto assembling plant|talked to the United Press of her! tered Carlstrom's record was not on suffered by indua| The reference to the papers |@nd the port terminals flight half as large as the Curtiss mon- Let me tell you that} which have fought the develop: " | Sitting in an automobile and| ster that Carlstrom had left on the when a congressional investigation | ment of the people's plant is ma | rosy cheeked from contact with the | aviation field, The small machine icereaonatvetiaton| me ot eh rayon, oer MAY ASK A REGOUNT |iiis sir thm woe Trion |is harely' "100 horseyowen, wu | the signature of Supt. J, D. Ross, swathed in sheepskin and olled| tho other te capable of 200, ‘DRESSED TURKEY “Aw the success of the depart FOR GEO, COTTERILL garments, she graphically describ-| Speaking of her flight from Bing- ment has increased,” it continues, | Jed her thrilling voyage. | hamton to Governor's Island, Miss the opposition has proportionately | - | I'm awfully w 1 pleased that! Law said it was about as risky an JUMPS UP it CENTS inerea: Seattle ht and pow Hecause the count shows a fall-| I've been able to beat the Ameri-/ undertaking as she had ¢ ever faced, er system fa th gest city-owned | ing off of 10 per cent of the vote on} can record,” Miss Law began, But apni FATS: » leyatem in America from the stand: |COMBress, as compared with that|{ could have done better. Tb Mi fr blige Tet ay an buy | polnt of its general activities and for president, George "E. Ryan, a/lieve 1 could have made the flight FIRE WRECKS HOME: a dressed turk folks from the number of customers member of the democratic congres-| all the way thru if things had turn turday, the Western ave vred and size and character of sional committee, believes there|ed out the way T expected them to. Loss TOTALS $5,000 was 36 cents & pound for dressed its system, The steady growth of | May be grounds for a contest in be-| And I'm going to try it again s tor Monday they're paying 36 | the department and its steadily in half of George F. Cotterill, candi-| Used an Old Plane cents to turkey owners [creasing success, covering a period |ate for congress at the recent) When I le up my mind to| Fire that broke. .pipctebih |e “ae of 12 years, has demonstrated be. | election Jury this fl she said, “I got] fective fireplace tétally Méatroyed WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE | yond a doubt that 1 munteipal Cotterill was defeated by 8,000} into communication with the Cur the $6,000 home-ot G. Meteniel ter will he shut off on Ferai.| plant has as good a chance of suc- | Votes, and a recount may show him] tiss factory and tried to buy a big eek ak ee nand st. from 42nd ave, 8, to seth A sny privately owned plant |the winner, says Ryan, He believes| battleplane, one of the most pow-| “t 49 Sand ave, 8, at midnight e. 8, and on 44nd ave. 8. from| under similar condition: mistakes in addition probably were]erful I could get, But they would} Sunday, Furnishings valued at Ferdinand st. to Dawson st. Tues The booklet carries a four-color|made, and that in some cases the|not let me have it They were | $2,000 were totally destroyed, The lday. November 21, from 9 a, m.|cover by Jenner, showing the water-!officials misunderstood the proper] afraid a woman could not handle| losses were partially covered by to b p. m front. method of counting, the powerful machinery and ma-| insurance, island the

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