dahl dahl lost. it it dahl this newspaper but tacoma. the … · of dr. sun vat sen, when the...

1
Hans Dahl thought he had a grievance against the Times. Had Dahl come to the Times office and shown that he had been unfairly treated, the matter would have been rectified. The Times has always been, and will always be, ready and willing to do the fair thing by every- body. It will be just as fair to the weakest and most friendless man as to the most powerful. The Times, of course, will make mistakes, but its mistakes will be honest ones. When it has made a mistake the Times will be big enough to correct it. This newspaper's square deal policy has no limita- tions. It's policy is just as much of a guarantee to the saloonman as it is to the churchman. The A SPECIAL WORD TO MR. DAHL AND TO SOME OTHERS Times plays no favorites. Dahl must have known that the Times had no grievance against him, but he was ill enough advised to hire attorneys and try to make the Times pay him damages. Dahl lost. It was a foregone conclusion that he would lose. He should never have gone into court at all. It was an expensive trial. It cost Dahl nearly $2,000. This newspaper does not carry a chip on its shoulder. But when attacked, it is ready to fight at all times. It makes no difference whether it is the least powerful or most powerful man in Tacoma. The Times fights fair, but fights haixl. HOME EDITION Are you writing that $-."> prize essitjr on Tacoina and the Festo? It'll help Tacoinu grow greater. The Tacoma Times THE ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN TACOMA HOME^JDITION WKATHKR FOJIBX\ANT. Fair tonight and Tuesday; cooler Tuesday. > VOL. IX. NO. 123. TACOMA, WASHINGTON. MONDAY, MAY 13, 1912. 30 CKNTS A MONTH. SOCIALISTS AROUSED,TO FIGHT HANFORD RULING TftFT IN TO \u25a0 TRY TO TAKE CONVENTION I,in. Up Today. For Roosevelt (uncontested), For Tnft (uncontented), 137)4. Contested, 228. Klected today, 10.- Whether there are to be two conventions at Aberdeen Wednes- day to select Washington^ 14 delegates to the national conven- tion, depends upon the state cen- tral committee which meets to- morrow. Taft leaders are openly boast- Ing that this pro-Taft committee •will arbitrarily disregard the Roosevelt-UaFollette majority, and will seat every contested Taft delegate in the convention on temporary rollcall, which was the cause of course of the absurd bolt here. The program for the proposed convention steal includes an ar- rangement to admit no one into the convention hall unless lie has a certificate \u25a0 signed by B. W. Coiner. The secretary of the commit- tee, Edgar C. Snyder, Seattle, is a progressive. Hay Has Cold Feet. Gov. Hay, although a Taft man, has been attempting to dissuade the Taft. leaders from carrying out this program, so as to avert his own defeat for re-election. Insurgents, however, have little hope for a "square deal" and they are preparing to use physical force if necessary to gain admis- sion to the hall. Prepare To Kill Rev. Richeson By Vnited Press Leased Wire.) BOSTON, May 13. —Investiga- tion into the mental condition of Rev. C. V. T. Rlcheson, con- demned to the electric chair for the murder of his sweetheart. Avis Linnell, was continued today with Doctors Stedman, Frost and Tuttle conducting the examina- tion. Preparations for the electro- cuting of the unfrocked pastor were begun today at the Charles- town state prison, where Riche- son is to meet death May 19. The death call was put down in order and the electric wires inspected. CASE SCORES HAY (I»y United Press Leased Wire.) CENTRALIA, May 18. —Otto Case Saturday spoke to the larg- est political gathering yet held here In his campaign for gover- nor. He said Governor Hay had tried to steal his scheme for im- proving logged off land and he denounced the governor for try- \uu to build up a state political •machine. 117 r J Wanted To Buy \u25a0 Property, on following streets: i A atreet. Pacific avenue. ./ ;-,-. C street. - '•"\u25a0'\u25a0-*''*:-""^^^K" D street. E street, north of 18th." \u25a0 \u25a0 t\ Tacom» »v«. north of 16th, '\u25a0 \\ a street north of 11th.i-._*v<v?" \u25a0 Yakima ay. north of 11th. X atreet north of ; 13th ; _ ' St. -Helens avenue. - - ." .'. Puyallup avenue.';- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' .\u25a0.. t-.. , jJefferson avenue. ;*;';*."-•"; ?.''s 1)1 vision avenue, <;-'-• " : '•• •' - And other clowe-in dUtrlcts. During the paat 10 day* we have purchased 125,000 worth and have that much more to buy. with. Will f pay f cash. Price*: mu»t, be , low. What have you to offer? 1.--if Calvin Philips & Co. 11l California Bldg. Little Hunchback American Who Planned New China, Home a Wreck GENERAL HOMER LEA. A few years ago Homer Lea, a Los Angeles boy, went to Stanford university from the high school. He was a hunchback, crippled in body, but of wonderful brain. A year later he became associ- ated with the little band of men who were even then dreaming of a new China. There were meetings and strange feasts in the heart of San Francisco's Chinatown, at which crippled American, Lea, was an honored guest. He left school and disappeared. A year later an American trav- eling far in the interior of China found the ex-Stanford student drilling and training a regiment of Chinese. He developed a military genius which startled the world through his book "The Valor of Ignor- ance." While in China, Lea, in 1909, undertook the relief of the Emperor Kwank Hsu, but reached HIRED MAN 65 SHOOTS WIFE 18 Pekin too late and had to flee. The strain of operating the In- ternational chess board, while others furnished the brawn, broke him physically. "He has a fight- Ing chance for life," is what the doctors have told him. So this little man, the hunch- back with the wonderful brain, who engineered the China revolu- ton, and was the right hand man of Dr. Sun Vat Sen, when the lat- ter had a price on his head, Is home to fight the hardest battle of his life. (By United Press Leased Wire.) OLYMPIA, May 13. —Posses are searching the woods south of Tumwater for John Tumble- bloom, 65, who yesterday shot and probably fatally wounded Mrs. Anna Thomas, aged 18, at her ranch. The cause of the shooting is unknown. Mrs. Thomas' husband Is in a Portland hospital, and it Is said he hired Tumbleibloom- to take charge of the ranch while he was away. Insane Patients See Big Circus (By United Press ; Lnw«d Wire.) SACRAMENTO, May 18.—The slate hoard Vof >" control ii today cheerfully approved * the bill for six hundred circus tickets 1 issued to patients at'the Nap*: state hos- pit last Friday. - Superintendent Osborne had 800 each of the men and : women JJ, inmates) taken :r, to town .on i special Itrolley\; cars ,- and shown I the i wonders ;• of I the M me- nagerie and the "big t«tt." Is there any luck in a horse- shoe? Twenty-five years ago as Joe Bachrach, a clerk, was plodding up the dsuty road from the N. P. dock, his dreams were of the Ori- ent, a good clerkship with Lil- llenthal & Co. in Yokohama. He had just interviewed the captain of an Orient bound steamer. He didn't hav^ much money, but he did have a fund of energy and was quick to act on impulse. He stumbled ov«r something In the road and turning, found a horse shoe, Just a common horse shoe that had been thrown by tome truck horse hauling freight to the steamer. The points stuck out right for luck. Right then Joe Bachrach, clerk, decided that he did .not want to go to Yokohama. He was going lo remain in Tacoma and make his fortune. He carried the horse, shoe home. Z~<:?ii Brought i Him y Fortune. > v , ;-. Today Joseph Bachrach, ; mem- ber of the firm of Feist & Bach- rach, dry good*' merchants, has that fortune. He's I still '\u25a0 got ' that horse shoe and .it Is \ gilded Iand decorated with '. handpal ted j flow- ers. ; i'.'That may sound ' as ;if I'm : su- perstitious," . said Mr. Bacfcracb, when the Times : man iquestioned him ; about It. "But If there was any I charm \, It •' surely » worked > or- me." IX. REBELS BEATEN, IKE LAST STAND PRINCIPAL FHATURKS OK IHNI 111 it A I I 1,1 -.. 1,000 federals and rebels killed and wounded In 12 hourß' fighting in the desert from daylight until night. 5,000 troops on each side engaged. 0 Foderals routed rebels and captured 10 cannon and wgouloads of hand bombs. Rebels destroyed train, brigades and supplies in re- treat. 9 Insurrectos fled over foot- hills. 0 General Orozco admitted defeat, blaming reverse on superior artillery of federals. (By United Press leaned Wire.) KKLLAXO, Mexico, May 1.1.— General Ororro, commander in chief of the rebel army, admitted today that his (•,>\u25a0<•\u25a0-«. were defeat- ed at Oonejos and that lie hus Is- sued a general order for all rebel troops to mobilize at Kellano. (Hjr United Press Leased Wire.) CONEJAS, Mexico, May 13.— Gaining possession of this town after 12 hours' fighting on the desert 300 miles south of the American border in which t lie rebels were put to rout the vic- torious Mexican federal army un- der General Huerta is planning today complete annihilation of the rebel forces. The insurrectos fled over the foothills toward Escallon, 14 miles to the north, where it le be- lieved they will make their last stand today. They have been con- structing fortifications and trenches there for two « m k«. A steady and accurate cannon- ade by the federal artillery was responsible for the victory. The rebels withstood the withering fire for several hours and then began to evacuate their positions. retreating slowly and leaving many dead and wounded. Toward nightfall with General Tellez, in the rear of Huerta's forces, maneuvering to flank the rebels and cut off their retreat, Orozco's vanquished troops aban- doned the fighting and fled has- tily. (H.v United Press Leased Wire.) 11111 MHIJ'KIA, Miiy IS. Have the government seixe all but $2,000,000 of every multi-mill lon- iiirc's fortune upon the possessor's death. Let the government ann and run all telegraph and telephone coiniMtiiies. Take over for government con- trol the Standard Oil company and the tobacco trust. Have the government confiscate all ,<mi I hinds. "these are some of the methods of preventing the accumulation of swollen fortunes advocated by the Rev. George Chalmers Rich- mond, rector of St. John's f'Jjits- ccpnl church here, whose bitter denunciation of the will of the late Colonel John Jacob Astor has created a furore. The Rev. Mr. Richmond com- pared the terms of Astor's will, handing down the bulk of his great fortune to his son, will that of Dr. Francis Bacon, the late surgeon of Yale university, who out of a $400,000 estate left $10(1,0,10 to be used In the fight on tuberculosis, a few thousand to other worthy causeß and the remainder to help poor boys through Yale. Astor Is Scored. "We are filled with patriotic ARTICLE; 3—JOSEPH BAOHRACH Ss} It might or t might p not Ji nave be«n the - horseshoe. The Time* man is iucllc«d to believe It was. tbts vital euergy of the It \u25a0*\u25a0« of the hardest in- cl»rk« tbat molded him laU»l the terviewg the Tim«« man ev< rich merchftat. ' [ tacked. There .was a. constant stream of women going in and out of the atore. Mr. Bacbrach had seated himself near the WELL KNOWN TACOMA MEN, THEIR BUSINESS AND THEIR HOBBIES Preacher Denounces Astor Will; Says Money Should Go To State shame after reading the will of John Jacob Astor," declared the clergyman. "He stands forth at the Judgment bar before the Christian conscience of the Amer- ican people. "It is a disgrace to leave a for- tune of $50,000,000 In these days." May riwrt Will. New York is also eagerly dis- cussing whether the heir to be born to Mrs. Madeline Force As- tor In July may not upset the colonel's will. In a similar case sometime ago a babe unborn at the time of its father's will re- ceived half the estate by court action. The question as to who will be the Mrs. Astor hangs on the out- come. door. Ht had a nod and a smile for every one, knew most ot them by name, and they knew him. He was continually saying, "Excuse me," in the middle of the sentence to hurry away and find a clerk, display a bit of goods or see that gome one wax made comfortable and at home. He Worked Hard. How Joe Uachrach, the clerk, grew to Joseph Bachrach, rich merchant, is told by hts simple statement that he began clerking for Gross on Tacoma avenue aft- er finding the horse shoe. Mr. Feist, now touring' Europe, had a small store, not much stock or money, but plenty of energy. It was natural that the two should become partner?, move to Pacific avenue, buy their present store building; buy the adjoining property, have a Bargain Annex on C near Thirteenth, and then sell the adjoining property to buy the corner at Thirteenth and C. Mr. Bachrach's business bob- by is discounting bills. He has a wife and two fine children, a boy and girl. "All I can afford," be says. He's keeping that horse shoe but not making a collection of them. \u25a0 Princess Rewards Him SANTA BARBARA, Cal., May IS.—A check for $40 from Prin- cess Rosplgllosi was received to- dny by George Norton, who found a cigarette case worth $1,000 I which the princess had lost. At left, a seashore snapshot of Mrs. Madeline Force Astor; on right, Mrs. Ava . Aittor and her daughter. Ilelow, Vincent Actor, who was willed most of the giant fortune. "-\u25a0'\u25a0*.' .\u25a0:.-, ' No Supper. Now Both in Court "He threw me ou-t and wouldn't let me go back," Katherine Ken- ner told Justice Evans of her hus- band George, a rancher six miles west of Roy. "I went out to work and came home. No wife, no supper, no nothing," Kenner told Constable Ashbv who arrested him on a warrant charging abandonment and non-support. ii .1. i\;tinm siept ihhi ilium In the St. Paul mill boarding house In the same room with a dead man and did not know It. He almost had heart failure when he heard that J. McCain, aged 65, his roommate, wai dead Tory Herval, the chambermaid, nearly died of fright when she tried to wake McCain up. Last night when Karllch went TAKE ACTION IN NATIONAL CONVENTION \u25a0 lMH\\\l«tlls. Iml . Ma? IS. —Overshadowing In interest even 11ii' mi <• for the presidential nom- uiiiiiiiii, delegated to the national NocintlHt convention here today lined ' up holtilly behind a more* input to compel Judge Hanford of Seattle to .recall Ills decision an- nulling the citizenship papers of Leonard Olsvon of Tacoma }or luce impeachment proceedings.' I Congressman Victor Berger of Wisconsin promised on the floor of the convention today to take action in congress. Old Parties Help. Scores of telegrams from r«- publlcans and democrats over the country promising to help the so- cialists in their effort to prove that Judge Hanford permitted personal prejudice to rule hi* action, were read. The decision, the delegates Buy, will be carried to the United States court for reversal if n«i-es- «iiry, and they freely charge that the decision is the direct result of Judge Hanford's opposition to the recall of the Judiciary, he be- lieving, they say, that by depriv- ing Olsson of citizenship -he would curb agitation in the west In this direction. The morning ttesglon was devot- ed to a discussion of Hanford'B decision. Candidates for president will be nominated Friday. Kxpeits I ii.nl Battle. General Huerta 1b being show- ered with congratulations today. He predicts the complete discom- fiture of the rebels At Escallon. Colonel Trucy Aubert, of the federal forces, who was shot In the leg, is not seriously wounded. Chink Robs Chink (Ry United Presx Leaned Wire.) MEDFORD, Ore., May 13.—W0 Lee, a Chinese laundryman of this city, was robbed at an early hour today of JBOO In gold by a.i un- known hCtnaman. In a struggle v ith the robber Wo suffered a se- vere cut over the heart. Wo I.if waa asleep in his room in the rear of the laundry when the robber attacked him. Man Sleeps In Same Room With Dead Man, Doesn't Know It to bed McCain was lying appar- ently asleep. When Karlich arose tils moraine McCain had not moved, and Karlich thought he was sleeping. Tory went to waka McCain and when she shook him, his mouth.fell open. Tory scream- ed and fled. McCain suffered an attack of heart trouble early last night. hag no known relatives. CLOSEI^OOJS OPEN , TO A ~" JWANT w ; —pi -";.*J Yon » can ten v reach ) the 5 Inner ost offices iofI the buyer and 5 employer by a Titties "want." Along « with the ! Indispensable copy ,of i the 1 dally paper; goes I you* "want : •A.'gQ&i&'fa&a&tfiJs IP-\u25a0''\u25a0 Sueh Tads as autoe for sale, machinery for sale;situations wanted,;, etc., often receive the attention of the busiest men in Tacoroa when \u25a0 placed (in The Times. \u25a0:„'\u25a0'•',\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0; Remember, too, no i other Tacoraa ; paper reaches ;bo \ many } men ; in this vicinity as the Times. : MOST EVERYBODY READS THE TIMES.

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Page 1: Dahl Dahl lost. It It Dahl This newspaper But Tacoma. The … · of Dr. Sun Vat Sen, when the lat-ter had a price on his head, Is home to fight the hardest battle of his life. (By

Hans Dahl thought he had a grievance against the Times.Had Dahl come to the Times office and shown that he had been unfairly treated, the matter would

• have been rectified.The Times has always been, and will always be, ready and willing to do the fair thing by every-

body. It willbe just as fair to the weakest and most friendless man as to the most powerful.The Times, of course, willmake mistakes, but its mistakes will be honest ones. When it has made

a mistake the Times willbe big enough to correct it. This newspaper's square deal policy has no limita-tions. It's policy is just as much of a guarantee to the saloonman as it is to the churchman. The

A SPECIAL WORD TO MR. DAHL AND TO SOME OTHERSTimes plays no favorites.

Dahl must have known that the Times had no grievance against him, but he was ill enough advisedto hire attorneys and try to make the Times pay him damages.

Dahl lost. It was a foregone conclusion that he would lose. He should never have gone into courtat all. It was an expensive trial. It cost Dahl nearly $2,000.

This newspaper does not carry a chip on its shoulder. But when attacked, it is ready to fight atall times. It makes no difference whether it is the least powerful or most powerful man in Tacoma.The Times fights fair, but fights haixl.

HOME EDITIONAre you writing that $-."> prize

essitjr on Tacoina and the Festo?It'll help Tacoinu grow greater.

The Tacoma TimesTHE ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN TACOMA

HOME^JDITIONWKATHKR FOJIBX\ANT.

Fair tonight and Tuesday;cooler Tuesday.

> VOL. IX. NO. 123. TACOMA, WASHINGTON. MONDAY, MAY 13, 1912. 30 CKNTS A MONTH.

SOCIALISTS AROUSED,TO FIGHT HANFORD RULINGTftFT IN TO

\u25a0

TRY TO TAKECONVENTION

I,in. Up Today.For Roosevelt (uncontested),

For Tnft (uncontented), 137)4.Contested, 228.Klected today, 10.-

Whether there are to be twoconventions at Aberdeen Wednes-day to select Washington^ 14delegates to the national conven-tion, depends upon the state cen-tral committee which meets to-morrow.

Taft leaders are openly boast-Ing that this pro-Taft committee•will arbitrarily disregard theRoosevelt-UaFollette majority,

and will seat every contested Taftdelegate in the convention ontemporary rollcall, which was thecause of course of the absurd bolthere.

The program for the proposedconvention steal includes an ar-rangement to admit no one intothe convention hall unless lie hasa certificate \u25a0 signed by B. W.Coiner.

The secretary of the commit-tee, Edgar C. Snyder, Seattle, is aprogressive.

Hay Has Cold Feet.Gov. Hay, although a Taft man,

has been attempting to dissuadethe Taft. leaders from carryingout this program, so as to averthis own defeat for re-election.

Insurgents, however, have littlehope for a "square deal" and theyare preparing to use physicalforce if necessary to gain admis-sion to the hall.

Prepare To KillRev. Richeson

By Vnited Press Leased Wire.)BOSTON, May 13.—Investiga-

tion into the mental condition ofRev. C. V. T. Rlcheson, con-demned to the electric chair forthe murder of his sweetheart.Avis Linnell, was continued todaywith Doctors Stedman, Frost andTuttle conducting the examina-tion.

Preparations for the electro-cuting of the unfrocked pastorwere begun today at the Charles-town state prison, where Riche-son is to meet death May 19. Thedeath call was put down in orderand the electric wires inspected.

CASE SCORES HAY(I»y United Press Leased Wire.)

CENTRALIA, May 18.—OttoCase Saturday spoke to the larg-est political gathering yet heldhere In his campaign for gover-nor. He said Governor Hay hadtried to steal his scheme for im-proving logged off land and hedenounced the governor for try-\uu to build up a state political•machine.

117 r JWantedTo Buy

\u25a0 Property, on following streets:

i A atreet.Pacific avenue. ./ ;-,-.C street. - '•"\u25a0'\u25a0-*''*:-""^^^K"D street.E street, north of 18th." \u25a0 • \u25a0

t\ Tacom» »v«. north of 16th, '\u25a0 \\a street north of 11th.i-._*v<v?"\u25a0 Yakima ay. north of 11th.

X atreet north of ; 13th ;_

' St. -Helens avenue. - - ." .'.Puyallup avenue.';- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' .\u25a0.. t-.., jJefferson avenue. • ;*;';*."-•";?.''s1)1 vision avenue, <;-'-• " :

'•• •' -And other clowe-in dUtrlcts.

During the paat 10 day* wehave purchased 125,000 worth andhave that much more to buy. with.Will f pay f cash. Price*: mu»t, be ,low. What have you to offer? 1.--if

Calvin Philips & Co.11l California Bldg.

Little Hunchback American WhoPlanned New China, Home a Wreck

GENERAL HOMER LEA.

A few years ago Homer Lea, aLos Angeles boy, went to Stanforduniversity from the high school.He was a hunchback, crippled inbody, but of wonderful brain.

A year later he became associ-ated with the little band of menwho were even then dreaming ofa new China.

There were meetings andstrange feasts in the heart of SanFrancisco's Chinatown, at whichcrippled American, Lea, was anhonored guest. He left schooland disappeared.

A year later an American trav-eling far in the interior of Chinafound the ex-Stanford studentdrilling and training a regiment ofChinese.

He developed a military geniuswhich startled the world throughhis book "The Valor of Ignor-ance." While in China, Lea, in1909, undertook the relief of theEmperor Kwank Hsu, but reached

HIRED MAN 65SHOOTS WIFE 18

Pekin too late and had to flee.The strain of operating the In-

ternational chess board, whileothers furnished the brawn, brokehim physically. "He has a fight-Ing chance for life," is what thedoctors have told him.

So this little man, the hunch-back with the wonderful brain,who engineered the China revolu-ton, and was the right hand manof Dr. Sun Vat Sen, when the lat-ter had a price on his head, Ishome to fight the hardest battleof his life.

(By United Press Leased Wire.)OLYMPIA, May 13. —Posses

are searching the woods south ofTumwater for John Tumble-bloom, 65, who yesterday shotand probably fatally woundedMrs. Anna Thomas, aged 18, ather ranch. The cause of theshooting is unknown.

Mrs. Thomas' husband Is in aPortland hospital, and it Is saidhe hired Tumbleibloom- to takecharge of the ranch while he wasaway.

Insane PatientsSee Big Circus

(By United Press ;Lnw«d Wire.)SACRAMENTO, May 18.—The

slate hoard Vof >" control iitodaycheerfully approved * the bill forsix • hundred circus tickets 1 issuedto patients at'the Nap*: state hos-pit last Friday. - SuperintendentOsborne had 800 each of the menand :women JJ, inmates) taken :r, totown .on i special Itrolley\; cars ,- andshown Ithe iwonders ;• ofIthe M me-nagerie and the "big t«tt."

Is there any luck in a horse-shoe?

Twenty-five years ago as JoeBachrach, a clerk, was ploddingup the dsuty road from the N. P.dock, his dreams were of the Ori-ent, a good clerkship with Lil-llenthal & Co. in Yokohama. Hehad just interviewed the captainof an Orient bound steamer. Hedidn't hav^ much money, but hedid have a fund of energy andwas quick to act on impulse.

He stumbled ov«r somethingIn the road and turning, found ahorse shoe, Just a common horseshoe that had been thrown bytome truck horse hauling freightto the steamer. The points stuckout right for luck.

Right then Joe Bachrach, clerk,decided that he did .not want togo to Yokohama. He was goinglo remain in Tacoma and makehis fortune. He carried thehorse, shoe home.Z~<:?ii Brought i Him y Fortune. > v ,

;-. Today Joseph Bachrach, ; mem-ber of the firm of Feist & Bach-rach, dry good*' merchants, hasthat fortune. }« He's Istill '\u25a0 got ' thathorse shoe and .it Is \ gilded Ianddecorated with'. handpal ted jflow-ers.; i'.'That may sound ' as ;if I'm : su-perstitious," . said Mr. Bacfcracb,when the Times : man iquestionedhim ; about It. "But If there wasany I charm \, It •' surely » worked > or-me."

IX. REBELSBEATEN, IKE

LAST STAND• PRINCIPAL FHATURKS OK •• IHNI 111 itA I I 1,1 -.. •• 1,000 federals and rebels •• killed and wounded In 12 •• hourß' fighting in the desert •• from daylight until night. •• 5,000 troops on each side •• engaged. •0 Foderals routed rebels •• and captured 10 cannon and •• wgouloads of hand bombs. •• Rebels destroyed train, •• brigades and supplies in re- •• treat. •9 Insurrectos fled over foot- •• hills. 0• General Orozco admitted •• defeat, blaming reverse on •• superior artillery of federals. •(By United Press leaned Wire.)

KKLLAXO, Mexico, May 1.1.—General Ororro, commander inchief of the rebel army, admittedtoday that his (•,>\u25a0<•\u25a0-«. were defeat-ed at Oonejos and that lie hus Is-sued a general order for all rebeltroops to mobilize at Kellano.

(Hjr United Press Leased Wire.)CONEJAS, Mexico, May 13.—

Gaining possession of this townafter 12 hours' fighting on thedesert 300 miles south of theAmerican border in which t lierebels were put to rout the vic-torious Mexican federal army un-der General Huerta is planningtoday complete annihilation ofthe rebel forces.

The insurrectos fled over thefoothills toward Escallon, 14miles to the north, where it le be-lieved they will make their laststand today. They have been con-structing fortifications andtrenches there for two « m k«.

A steady and accurate cannon-ade by the federal artillery wasresponsible for the victory. Therebels withstood the witheringfire for several hours and thenbegan to evacuate their positions.retreating slowly and leavingmany dead and wounded.

Toward nightfall with GeneralTellez, in the rear of Huerta'sforces, maneuvering to flank therebels and cut off their retreat,Orozco's vanquished troops aban-doned the fighting and fled has-tily.

(H.v United Press Leased Wire.)11111 MHIJ'KIA, Miiy IS. —Have the government seixe all but

$2,000,000 of every multi-milllon-iiirc's fortune upon the possessor'sdeath.

Let the government ann andrun all telegraph and telephonecoiniMtiiies.

Take over for government con-trol the Standard Oil companyand the tobacco trust.

Have the government confiscateall ,<mi I hinds.

"these are some of the methodsof preventing the accumulation ofswollen fortunes advocated bythe Rev. George Chalmers Rich-mond, rector of St. John's f'Jjits-ccpnl church here, whose bitterdenunciation of the will of thelate Colonel John Jacob Astor hascreated a furore.

The Rev. Mr. Richmond com-pared the terms of Astor's will,handing down the bulk of hisgreat fortune to his son, will thatof Dr. Francis Bacon, the latesurgeon of Yale university, whoout of a $400,000 estate left$10(1,0,10 to be used In the fighton tuberculosis, a few thousandto other worthy causeß and theremainder to help poor boysthrough Yale.

Astor Is Scored."We are filled with patriotic

ARTICLE; 3—JOSEPH BAOHRACH

Ss} It• might or t mightp not Jinavebe«n the -horseshoe. The Time*man is iucllc«d to believe It was.tbts vital euergy of the It \u25a0*\u25a0« of the hardest in-cl»rk«tbat molded him laU»lthe terviewg the Tim«« man ev<rich merchftat. ' • [ tacked. There .was a. constant

stream of women going in andout of the atore. Mr. Bacbrachhad seated himself near the

WELL KNOWN TACOMA MEN, THEIR BUSINESS AND THEIR HOBBIES

Preacher Denounces Astor Will;Says Money Should Go To State

shame after reading the will ofJohn Jacob Astor," declared theclergyman. "He stands forth atthe Judgment bar before theChristian conscience of the Amer-ican people.

"It is a disgrace to leave a for-tune of $50,000,000 In thesedays."

May riwrt Will.New York is also eagerly dis-

cussing whether the heir to beborn to Mrs. Madeline Force As-tor In July may not upset thecolonel's will. In a similar casesometime ago a babe unborn atthe time of its father's will re-ceived half the estate by courtaction.

The question as to who will bethe Mrs. Astor hangs on the out-come.

door. Ht had a nod and a smilefor every one, knew most otthem by name, and they knewhim.

He was continually saying,"Excuse me," in the middle ofthe sentence to hurry away andfind a clerk, display a bit ofgoods or see that gome one waxmade comfortable and at home.

He Worked Hard.How Joe Uachrach, the clerk,

grew to Joseph Bachrach, richmerchant, is told by hts simplestatement that he began clerkingfor Gross on Tacoma avenue aft-er finding the horse shoe. Mr.Feist, now touring' Europe, hada small store, not much stock ormoney, but plenty of energy.

It was natural that the twoshould become partner?, move toPacific avenue, buy their presentstore building; buy the adjoiningproperty, have a Bargain Annexon C near Thirteenth, and thensell the adjoining property tobuy the corner at Thirteenth andC.

Mr. Bachrach's business bob-by is discounting bills. He hasa wife and two fine children, aboy and girl. "All I can afford,"be says. He's keeping that horseshoe but not making a collectionof them. \u25a0

Princess Rewards HimSANTA BARBARA, Cal., May

IS.—A check for $40 from Prin-cess Rosplgllosi was received to-dny by George Norton, who founda cigarette case worth $1,000

I which the princess had lost.

At left, a seashore snapshot ofMrs. Madeline Force Astor; onright, Mrs. Ava . Aittor and herdaughter. Ilelow, Vincent Actor,who was willed most of the giantfortune. "-\u25a0'\u25a0*.' .\u25a0:.-, '

No Supper. NowBoth in Court"He threw me ou-t and wouldn't

let me go back," Katherine Ken-ner told Justice Evans of her hus-band George, a rancher six mileswest of Roy.

"I went out to work and camehome. No wife, no supper, nonothing," Kenner told ConstableAshbv who arrested him on awarrant charging abandonmentand non-support.

ii .1. i\;tinm siept ihhi ilium

In the St. Paul mill boardinghouse In the same room with adead man and did not know It.He almost had heart failure whenhe heard that J. McCain, aged 65,his roommate, wai dead ToryHerval, the chambermaid, nearlydied of fright when she tried towake McCain up.

Last night when Karllch went

TAKE ACTIONIN NATIONALCONVENTION

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lMH\\\l«tlls. Iml . Ma? IS.—Overshadowing In interest even11ii' mi <• for the presidential nom-uiiiiiiiii,delegated to the nationalNocintlHt convention here todaylined ' up holtilly behind a more*input to compel Judge Hanford ofSeattle to .recall Ills decision an-nulling the citizenship papers ofLeonard Olsvon of Tacoma }orluce impeachment proceedings.' I

Congressman Victor Berger ofWisconsin promised on the floorof the convention today to takeaction in congress.

Old Parties Help.Scores of telegrams from r«-

publlcans and democrats over thecountry promising to help the so-cialists in their effort to provethat Judge Hanford permittedpersonal prejudice to rule hi*action, were read.

The decision, the delegates Buy,will be carried to the UnitedStates court for reversal if n«i-es-

«iiry, and they freely charge thatthe decision is the direct resultof Judge Hanford's opposition tothe recall of the Judiciary, he be-lieving, they say, that by depriv-ing Olsson of citizenship -hewould curb agitation in the westIn this direction.

The morning ttesglon was devot-ed to a discussion of Hanford'Bdecision.

Candidates for president willbe nominated Friday.

Kxpeits I ii.nl Battle.General Huerta 1b being show-

ered with congratulations today.He predicts the complete discom-fiture of the rebels At Escallon.

Colonel Trucy Aubert, of thefederal forces, who was shot Inthe leg, is not seriously wounded.

Chink Robs Chink(Ry United Presx Leaned Wire.)

MEDFORD, Ore., May 13.—W0Lee, a Chinese laundryman of thiscity, was robbed at an early hourtoday of JBOO In gold by a.i un-known hCtnaman. In a strugglev ith the robber Wo suffered a se-vere cut over the heart.

Wo I.if waa asleep in his roomin the rear of the laundry whenthe robber attacked him.

Man Sleeps In Same Room WithDead Man, Doesn't Know It

to bed McCain was lying appar-ently asleep. When Karlich arosetils moraine McCain had notmoved, and Karlich thought hewas sleeping. Tory went to wakaMcCain and when she shook him,

his mouth.fell open. Tory scream-ed and fled.

McCain suffered an attack ofheart trouble early last night. H»hag no known relatives.

CLOSEI^OOJS OPEN ,

TO A~"

JWANTw ; —pi•-";.*J Yon »can ten v reach ) the 5 Inner ost offices iofIthe buyer and 5employer by a Titties "want."

Along « with the ! Indispensable copy ,ofi the 1 dally paper; goes Iyou*"want :•A.'gQ&i&'fa&a&tfiJs

IP-\u25a0''\u25a0 Sueh Tads as autoe for sale, machinery for sale;situations wanted,;,etc., often receive the attention of the busiest men in Tacoroa when

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placed (in The Times.\u25a0:„'\u25a0'•',\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0; Remember, too, no iother Tacoraa ;paper reaches ;bo \ many }men ;in this vicinity as the Times.

: MOST EVERYBODY READS THE TIMES.