The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 15, 1905, Page 1

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EVERY WOMAN IN SEATTLE SHOULD READ The Pioneer One Cont Paper of the Northwést NIGHT EDITION. sources from which gifts come is neither justifiable nor prac ticable. x SYNTHIA GREY'S HUMAN INTE REST ARTICLES IN THE STAR SEATTLE FOLKS ARE BEGINN ING TO BUBPECT THAT ROCKEFELLER'’S GOLD | 8 NOT “TAINTED.” “A Million For the Foreign Missions!--- eee eee | THE MODERATOR OF THE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH CAR: / ; z RIES HIS FIGHT AGAINST ROCKEFELLER'S DONATIONS 1erowne under appointment a) } INTO THE OPEN CONVENTION—A MINQRITY REPORT 18 (| F TEST * *) 4 MADE ON HIS RESOLUTION OF PROTES iz phinaieich | ui LN ® Friday evening. 7:90 o'elock #] * Dev t € address, & BOO RERAARAERAA HAA AARRAAAERARR ARR S |, V, CG. Bartielt, of @ : The following is the much discussed resolution on a rs pe ge oad ern tle 2 7 money” introduced by Rev. Wa shington Gladden, modera * “er 2 _my Ea “ <— oe the a! ® the Congregational church, at t he morning session of the board @ e Saate p flo B Ca oa. LS D. | me caeey S| Saturday morning, 9 o'clock #| * Resolved, That the officers of the Board should not invite ® |) Pedi of ine anim cas ME nor solicit donations to its funds from persons whose gains are w/o UAE NEU! | ln til ie ter ®t MH generally believed to have been made by methods morally rep: & | Y LOT! OB Oe emt adders *| | & rehensible or socially injurious.” (1 + ant. Gown OC Aue DD. el * ot Si ‘ra taco. eport on SERRE RERUN EERE RARER ARERR RR RET en em ea of = *® Barton, and address, Rev. Wil *| ® liam Day, o! Ave elew i* RRR RARER RRR RR RR poe Moe ee aes mete id = *® upon the Home Department, ® * “Whereas, the Prduential © ommittes in its circular letter of oane elaesen “how Fe ® August 9, 1905, submitted for th ¢ consideration of the corporate pers Pre Ro Fy ® members, @ of principle a, which in ite judgment should & L: followed by brief Gaibeunes * ern the action of the office rs of the board in the matter of hon Gr ean ee | & gifts, to whieh answer was ma de by @ large majority ef such 5 ee ' : _ # corporate members approving s uch statement and which state- + Gemeedes rd Saee ment of grincipies is aa follows # sion on Puget sound, given by # 1 3 * The following is the substi tute resolution favoring the ac Sa eau Ghamea ot Cee % ceptance of Rockefeller money which the vast majority of the i, he j | #& corporate membership of the Congregational Board of Foreign Ege TOE at > & Missions are in favor of and which was introduced at the Fri- Tiecieah teninae, Wee a | # doy morning session of the boa rd by Rev. G. M. Fates, of Chi- Eetade ct Marthe Gens. < #t % cage. 4 die en ol a This is the one which the bisard will unquestionably pace, #| © Suaday afternoon — At 3.00 ¢) é Ee fete Friday afterneon, # bration of the Lord's Supper; @ ® Vireh—-Orgn a0 2 cor poration to carry on foreign mis- # at 4 o'clock, First Methodist #} % sionary work and to receive gi fts for that purpose, the Ameri- ap tga Tog gy eo # can Borrd has not been given the authority to discriminate be- | de under the anaplech of the Wete. hk tween those who offer such gifts, and thereby to judge the | aa’ Beane of tho Pacitle: a 4 © -& character or reput in of the donors. it is mot « beneficiary of | 5 saat Peet Preabyierien @ ® the gift, but only an agent or a trustee for others. l@ church. children’s meeting. & is “Second—While the Board cannot properly accept money © | conducted by Secretary H. M. @| | % from one to whom any of its of ficers knows it dees not belong, | @ Tennel. of San Francisco. *! ® # cannct, the other awn ty agi dl decline to receive money *& Sunday evening 7:20 o'clock #| % from its legal owner, provided ven for the purposes for te seonae woe pos seamen be % which the Board was esta shed and in accordance with its # |) h.,) William J. Dawson, DD. # “% rules. In the absence of legal proof to the contrary, it is neces | & of Loaden, Sagiand * ® sary to assume that money belongs to the person making the a s ‘% gift. Investigation by the Executive Officers to determine the ; * * “Third—By acting under the above principles, which require the receiving of gifts without compelling its officers to trace the manner in which the donor may have acquired them, the Board pronounces no judgment on the character of donors. Nor by the acceptance of gifts are its officers or members stopped from voices in behalf of the application of the principles of righte- eutness in all departments and walks of Hif on, philanthrop boards organized to promote re! | ae the kingdom of God in the world. i that the way should be made easier, and not more diffi- — for all to give of their present possessions and incre: wealth for the noblest pu! of principles be, and the same is hereby approved.” “3 poeteetenes Perrrrrs At 2:45 p. m.. Friday, Dr. Gladden }ed the fol'owing members "Began speaking in defense of his! Dr. Washington Pyerolution. He stated that he had|man; Dr. David M SRO Objection to the board receiving Adams. Rev. P. 3. Moxom. | Pee ry donations from whatever | John R. Thurston, W. W. Mills ‘source, if secretly made. His objec- | Guilford Dudley tion being simply against soliciting) money from men who haven't made Mt honestly ecutive session, imee? he expression “invite nor | board it” instead of “accept” for the | tiem ot a smasority f the board to son-of-a-sea, ched 2 vent run $1 to ithe ton and jeg } gimple reason that not one cent of|dispose of the matter quickly by | ™ is : ‘ oO ¢ do’ the donations received by the poard | turning down the resolntion and| “Well, Tit b at guy won't get] There is $200,000 worth of mod | Hhas been voluntary offerings. He|¢ven to smothering it. had develop-| next to me agair emarked/ern machinery on the ground, and board SOLICITS FOR! a highly combustible state of| Van as he drew an inwide|this we will just have to leave NEW MADRID, Mo, Sept. 12 VITES donations continn-| ffairs pocket. “Here’a $100, boys. Til ithere. unless somebody Wants Stun mune penver, from Meuphis, ~ | Prior to the committee meeting w you how to beat the ‘dips’"|buy the Unga, machinery and all : ee ally and that for two years it was} or ck = ttae-daliasaneln- dabeiind iep|and take a chance on digging deep. | *?°Mgred off this town this morn @fter the Rockefeller donation be-| DT agra ged pane to - 4 — ie an de ately bs ° ° - ing @nd four of the crew started ured matter at all. saying that t pile asunder calmly placed a . cane eny was. secured limportant that he should not do so,| half in each side.pocket | ne of the wise ones think | Scie A deputy halted them and In speaking of the majority reso- | Po ae .: | & ieee Dias ere down ve | told them the town was quarantined Mitten presented on behalf of the | snd that what he had to say he Now Jet that hyena go fe ‘ agullt southern ereft. ‘The Beaver P* member of the board who are in] Would state in public bre rfinteibege ~~ eee eee yen rat | men yirew revolvers and attempted ‘ . or| While the committee was in ses- | attempts t + aced for 20 yea is worked | | Gale ‘ollo ees Wee Rex er Tl «lon Secretary C. H. Patton, Aas im . won't and the company believes the | %4 ee i tat tee peaks money, Dr. Gladden aic hel ant Secretary H. Hicks, « paying days of the Unga are over, |04. niche Majority resolution 1 gong ag Srawas cam tr. Gaeree tard the tail i Only avout 100 men are em. | Yas Birente Tesition thai ol samaaeat : it y | Claremont. Cal., made < the shock caused b plored in the mine at present as noney received. b: he address of Dr agent 5 de tr |we have nm constantly decreas the board as donations is voluntar - the f The Ung located PP ge a =P pagepee~tlbes ing the force he Unga ix locater My given, whereas not one cent of *~ inland from Sand Point, beyond | hat more yo' men were! “high t | inte Sand Bult of sMigitation. | presented my t tot the gow | King ts fdentified prominently | | Sation for the purpose of brifig-| C*stiaa contract to bring the goe-| hoid of it tw the! ith the “Wild Goo Interesta, | _ seso! . A . nel to the 75.060.000 of heathens in sens Van sant 10 this city by ene} Se d do n } gee. thie very T to an issue.” | the world, he pointed out, although | of the men present ut the proceed. |82¢ J8 the owner of “Lodi No. 1") LONDON, Sept. 15.—A dispatch Dr. Giada: , ns business in bh _ | ines. and “Lodi No, 2 from) St. Petersburg says alarming Pight’against “tainted money” and + ¢eeeateeaeaeeee | | repouea are coming In from variow Phe Intends to force a thorough dis |* ERE RE | Jewish districts. The Jews through eumsion of the yetion on the floor) # The board afternoon ®/| & " 5 . P out the empire arming themselves | ft the conference. He has by ne & session a resol ition & ' ANK CLEARINGS. *) in response to Iterature prepared by @ieans lost heart, and if he loves out,| # thanking nt Roosevelt # 1 0 $874,296.75 | STAR WITNESS udents of wniversities at St ae there is every reason to believe \* for having succeeded in bring- #/ i 1904 920,584.46 &] | Petersburg and Moscow, summoning he will, he will go down with a|# ing about peace betw * *) |*he people to revolution Ueense of satisfaction at having done|# and Russia. A * se from last + His full duty and of having waged | # tion was also pai * ar $56,268.71 &]| ” .. . j “ | 4 NEW YORK, Sept ci w @ felenticss and unwavering fight|* of the late Secretary of ® ¥i Pp sah gs Now Youle Lire | EIGHT MILLION Aor @ great principle * Jobn Hay TR More “contideatial: 1 There were two reports offered | * * * jorgan's ee my man, . two reports offe a ala was the witness in the inguranc MAY BE LOST. ee menses fe bysrorsde aoe it se Malad WEATHER FORECAST. linvestigation today. He was pre-| ee, majority, teport favored the|"t, Written on parchment, was just - ceded by several who testified as to | majority report favored the) 4» pinding. As an flustration he| Fair tonight and Saturday; light|the transactions of the companies| ways ‘, Be —T BUb-resolution which favored acce | WASHINGTON, Sept. 15.—The a af P\told of President Roosevelt's ef-| west winds. or themselves as individuals who | state’ department. hax received a . oe ers forts in behalf of freezing peop’ participated. Perkinw testimony | statement of " ™) |statement of the boycott situation ie minority report stood by Dr.| eastern cities during the anth fi if, Hi D7 Gladden with a toe minoe themgog, | castern cities during the anthrac WATER SHUT OFF. mostly concerned himeelf, He spoke | a¢ Shanghal from Consul General } coal strike Water will be shut off Satorday|POldiy and without Feticence. In| Rodgers, in which the consul says The most dramatic point in the Sessions of the American board of foreign missions at the Conugrega Mona) church was reached Friday Morning, when Dr. Washington | the Gladden introduced his resolution | Sgsinet the use of tainted money Roosevelt.” he unwritten President recognized an con! ers and the people. When he coal and settle their Geiet that one could have heard a In drop. When Dr. Gladden fin mply with his demand bh ed reading it he waa cheered | comer rove exercteel. Capen, the resolut Guced out of order a few minutes after Secretary Hi. Patton had eqerort of the home de eg Davis M Falen, the substitute the acceptance by the legal own- referred to the busi- fear that Dr. Gladden’s be smothered of the United States army.” asurer’s report was Jones, of Hawail, shor the board. tures last year. to take such | Friday and Saturd ask if the com- the right to sub- made by Rev. .c informed tt would not ; that there yt to eut off di set coming before nettiement. élee mek steamer Geo. EB. Starr, They Friday afternoon th the eommittce ine business was transacted church, Hen First M. EB. iL bee Rev, ‘criticising business methods, or from persistently raising their “Fourth—The officers of th is Board, as of all other similar and educa- tion, are morally bound to use e very legitimate means to secure and convert money from other uses into the direct service of It is for the good ~~ poses. “Now, therefore, be it resolved, that the aforesaid statement POUO REE EE EE EEE PE SORE EE EEE EE EES dden, chair les, Rev. J This committee went into an ex and spent nearly | two hours going over the important | between the miners and mine own strikers and owners to furnish differences | Th . afterward he wan undoubtedly over while resolution was brief, and, | stepping his constitutional author LONDON St a eile die it was being read it was s0/ity—thank God! But had the min-| pate wys that the ers and their employers refused to | undoubtedly have exercised author. Through the courtesy of President | ity given him by the constitution was intro-| the authority of commander-in-chief — _ Rosso, 3,000 inhabitants, was would | stroyed by an earthquake, and it is believed th were many ¢ L- thes. 27 to the debit of It was shown that there | were $140,000 of additional expendi- Before the committee adjourned Rev. E. Lincoln Smith announced that through the chamber of com- merce arrangements had been made delegates as desired afternoons to Moxom, of Spring-|the Puget Sound navy yard on the alzo invited to go to Ravenna pari. report of on new corporate members was read, and other rout- Friday evening an overflow meet- ing has been arranged for at the The speakers «VAN GOT “TOUCHED” al of the Na- nia, reeently Now that the Car tive Bone of ¢ held at Macramento, ts drawing to a close, rumors the “big doings” | are beginning to arrive in thin city. | | Probably one of the He. attleites who | ings in State Senator attended the proceed A. T. Van De wehdennsdc ds suededecss*¢bbsecesnndsesaiesenesece sees Vanter, who was touched for $40 by |e clever “dip' at the ramento race meet. While the owner of the | Tourist hotel was “plun at the track he careclens shoved a roti of a side trouse pocket. The act was 7 c_| “ain.” who joatied against the ne Rey. | stor and manager of the Meadows and|'rack, and got away with the roll.| By and by the representative of Se oted le got very dry and sum toddies pecen Ho said that the board diserim- subject. Dr. Gladden waa visi 7 J {nated against caloon men, gamblers perturbed. and he was just as anx the » ed thetr class, but not against lous as the majority faction to have | ™#Tble topped bar “Rockefeller and his tlk the matter disposed of as soon as | *!F pet soon his friends dix avers ‘ Dr. Gladden, in explaining to a| possible. The extensive publicity | tat the ce 20k had faded Star man his resolution of protest| given the intention of Dr. Gladden from ne ac me gr o “ agai ‘1 Je ways that|to take up the subject before the |" who, ir 7 oarsely nee “the exprension’ “inv taken with the @etermina-| Whispered, “I'v ed! Son said tract from 8 teenth avenue north from Bast Ma 0a. m. to 4 p.m. on ison stret to East Harrison from 4p. m. to 6 p. m. on Fifte avenue north from Kast Harris | Bast Roy told age of Monte -, read wing edie dedn tee ted dee ae PARIS, Sept. 15.-—-Professor Maartens, the expert on inter- tional law who aided Witte to make the treaty, has reached here, He says he likes the American people, is grateful for their comrtesy, but hates their cooking, He says the first thing he did aboard the ship was to*order a civilized meal.” eee teeter eee | quartz In Western Alaska | gan‘'s firm aeteeeeeteeeke: * KHRHHHEHEHERKNERR BAKER CITY, Ore. ‘Sept. 16.— Robert Creil, postmaster and promt- nent politician of ‘Tipton, Ore. af pleaded guilty to wife beatin, was sentenced to be publicly Senin: ped 10 lashes across the bare back tomorrow. wore he Seattle Star SEATTLE, WA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER SHINGTON, About at Dr. Gladden Says Board Is Trying to Evade About “Tainted Money” THE STAR OF THE BOARD OF FOREIGN MISSIONS AND DECIDES THAT DR. GLADDEN HAS ALL THE T OF THE ARGU- MENT (JJosh Wine didn't get aw in a tubful of dirty water; no more his tion, when he heard that! cn ye wash @ Chinee's soul with the foreign mission board was to) religion paid fer by th’ « tine convene her He had hie teket! ture of Gint nded, polished up bie old sitk| O° courme, them miasion folks ain't tile, brushed the dust off his shiny! a-goin’ | turn down Mister Rockey frock coat and hiked bim down to| feller, Phey hev got it figured out| the Plymouth chureh. Here ts what, tht go long es its money, a few Jouh han to ray remurding the p blemtwhen, re er lens, ain't going ent “tainted money” discussion.) U be recognised by th’ Celestial Th’ major'ty sex ‘taint) What theyll probably do will be t sinted, but me fer | mix tt hundred thou. up with a Dec. Gladden, If I) bunch uv untainted coin th’ same went inter a resrant| way th’ commission man pute th an’ ord'red a dish of| rotten oranges in th’ bottom of th ham an’ eee an’ seen | basket, th cook's hands was My id friend, Unele Henry and I © dirty yer couldn't | hed qiite a pert talk "bout this mat tell ‘im from a@ re- | ter “other night, an’ Henry he new ® worker !yer | th’ motey ain't tainted. From what think I'd eat No, 1 kno#@ uy Henry, havin’ squared / siree, not by @ jug- | off with Bim at th’ checker board full | for nigh ente ten year, Die scruples rh't tainted money | ain't @heervable except with a mi- in & golden dish | cromcope. th’ reyal chef, & | ‘Th only kind o feller, an’ if bin h Heory objects t ts ain't dirty, TH eat my | able & get hold of, whirt, by heck spect he's @ good deal like them all right. What! foreign missionaries, with th’ ex t th’ enlightened | ception 6° Pop Gladden an’ a few can't clean a shirt} otherm day wane The Pacific Coast Steamship company is planning to purchase another steel steamer to take the | +] place ©& the Montana, which was captufed-by the Japs last month p definite arrangements have been ade fdr a steamer am yet, but the | offical state that one will prob- ably be secured soon and placed on | the Seaitle-San Francisco run CLOSES ‘The Unga mine, one of the oldest in Aleska. from which more than | | k Hi $4,000,000 in divi is have been jagnates oc 0 s paid, will probably within the next 4 _ two weeks close down permanently YORK, Sept. 15. —The Ram- | G. MH. King, known all over the| say-Gogld Wabash controversy was north as The King of Crooket | the guliject of dixcussion in Wa'l Creek.” arrived from San Jose, Cal! street ghis morning. One man| Thursday. He leaves for Alaska | closely connected with Ramsay says | Friday evening to look into (he af-|he wag requested by large stock faire of the Unga, and if he finds) holdere to try (o secure control of reported conditions true, to close|the ead. Rumors are current it down. | day that the Rockefeller interests King, who was the original dis-| w behind the attempt. It was coverer of the Unga. ia one of the/ at iefelier’s solicitation that present owners, and he goes by| Was made president of the authority of the Alaska Commercial | W; Should the Goulds and company, which owns the control lers lock horns ft will have ling interest la -reaching effect on the ral’ The truth of the matter is,” said) road and financial world. The fight The King of Crooket Creek.” in! may make it difficult for finanei an interview Thursday evening,! the new Western Pacific, Denver that the good old mine has played (San Francisco. Some say that out. For many years we took ott | Pennsylvania interests are backing of the Ungn some of the richest | Now the} Ra many long speeches he detailed the part | there aré about $8,000,000 worth of | played in the development of the| American goods in the mpany since he began as an-offiee |at Shanghai alone which boy in 1878. By close questioning |a market, and that all fore Investigator Hughes was able to/in Shanghai affected by the boycott | learn something of the relations be- | will total $25,000,000 in value. tween the company and J. P. Mor nnot find Witness Randolph statement showing ¢ York Life made $8 on joint accounte. MARINE NOVES Steamer City ef Seattle will sail for Skagway and Juneau Friday evening, carrying 30 passengers and | a full load of freight. produced a at the New Lin 10 years * * *® PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 16. * * Lincoln Beachy, in the airship * *. Gelatine, today made the most * &® sucheasful of many flights made * *® thif season, starting against a * - * * * * * strong wind, he circled about * the postoffice and tall build- * ings, the machine rising and * falling and circling at the aero- * naut's will x RHEE RRR eennne PORTLAND, Ore. Sept. 15 15.—The | prosecuting attorney today con- eluded the evidence in the William- son land fraud case, PORTLAND, Ore., Sept, 15.—The American Association of Traveling Passenger Agents in convention Steamer Robert Dollar, of the L, H. Gray fleet, sailed Friday morn ing for San Francisco with 750,000 feet of lumber and 15 passengers. Steamer City of Puebla left Fri- day morning for San Francisco, car rying @ full. load of freight and many passengors, and the steamer | here adopted lutions t 4 Umatilla arrived: from the Golden SLeATIn caliseca cioliay ot Pica: Gateveity Friday morning with | gent welt, censuring it as a freight piled on the decks and a full] movement to give the control of Dansenger list. ae commerce to @ political Steamer Santa An. of the North- is 1905 DUST PHILOSOPHER ATTENDS SOME MEETINGS! jimage grinning apishly from ap in rehouses | n goods | wR Rk toh * THE STAR 16 NOT REPUBLICAN, NOT DEMOCRATIC. IT 18 JUST INDEPENDENT, THAT'S ALL The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares¢o Print the News as CENTS PER MONTH Dean ad VOL. 7 Our Own Souls?---Dan Real Issue of Tainted Money Controversy What Josh Wise Thinks Spend the Million On Souls at Home STAR WRITER ORAWS DEADLY PARALLEL BETWEEN NEEDS Suppowe you knew a man named Brown who had a big family of OF HOME MISSIONS AND THOSE IN FAR-AWAY LANDS children and no food with which shen Tear BRE |} fill their empty stomachs (BY DAN DEAN.) Suppose Brown rustied asround/ings of the different missionaries; After listening for an hour to the among his friends and collected! for MORE MONEY, MORE MONEY, | addresses in the sombre church— |barely enough money with which| MORE MONEY, | thought of what| addresses that told of fortunes spen€ }to fill their clean-scraped cupboard.|tbat million of dollars could do injin ebanging @ yellow-skinner na- Suppose that, instead of sending| our own home country; of the thou-/|tive’s religion from his conceptiow to his own home the meat and gro-|mands of families it could relieve|of God to our own—I went down to ceries for the good wife to cook,/from distress and unhappiness; of|the corner of Second and Marion Brown only sent home enough tol|(he thousands of souls it could| where a little group of Salvation feed one hungry mouth and shipped] brighten with the luster of God's|army men and women were holding the rest away to San Francisco,| presence; of the thousands of home-|their missionary meeting. Their where he heard the was another! lees little waifs it could pick from | audience Metened respertfally to the family feeling the pangs of hunger. gutter and give a chance for| preachings of the shrill-voiced but Mind you their white ally! |earnest leader and, when the little He didn’t know the ‘Frisco outfit} A miilion dollars in one year for| band knelt on the cobblestones an@ except by, hearsay foreign minsions’ | prayed, an unkempt, whisky-soaked® And That's for the family over [n) man stepped out from the spectators |} In the meantime, all but one of] ‘Frisco! and knelt beside the bare-heade@ Brown's family starved to dgyth But | lieutenant What would you think ba] What about Brown's family at) That was a soul saved wort man? | ho raving! Crazy? | In the name of all that's just and! That was the one of Brown's chil | fair and decent, why not attend to|dren who ate and did not starve to inally negligent of bis loved ones. |our own folks first before starting | death And yet—what's the difference} out thousands of miles away to tarn| And then I turned down to Firs€ between this example and that set|the religion of the peoplew of other! and visited saloons in the rear of us by the foreign missionary board! jands, belonging to other nations which young girls were carousing now holding its annual convention| people already more religious than| with beardless youths. On the street in Seattle thie week? we will be in a bundred years of; corners 10-year-old boys lounged Bacept, that Brown had a better| home-crusading! | with the butts of cigarettes betweem| excuse. last year the Congregational! their yellow-stained fingers Away off in China and Japan and) church alone tributed $312,002.72; Down below Yesler Way Of course’ Bither crazy or crim the Mexico South Africa and In-|to foreign missions; three woman's | streets were mottled with drunken dia there are millions of peoplé. | boards gave 18,348.03; Sunday | men and painted women; the pawn- ach one of them has @ religion |wchools dug up $9,188 legacies,| shops crowded with the unfortue nates “soaking” thetr belongings fog the price of another drink Upstairs in a cheap lodging house I found three women and a mai, Rockefeller’s $100,000 gift | lying on the floor, stupefied by the | laid pedestal That's a nice, fat bunch of money|fumes of the popy-plant. Besides Bat }to spend on the subjects of Kaiser) the man was an opium lay-out, the He is their God, nevertheless, and| Wilhelm, King ard, King Al-| pipe’s bow! still hot from the burn- they, worship him. What does it|/fonso and the other European po-|ing paste. matter whether His history coln-| tentates, ien't it? Uptown in the fashionable cafes cides with the life of the God ac-| That's a lovely cargo of hard-|married men with other men's cepted by ue Christiane? What does|carned, round American dollars to wives were drinking wine and los- it matter to him whether His wis-| ship out of the United States, while | ing their heads |dom comes from the mouths of|thousands upon thousands of our| The merry clatter of cab horses | black frocked ministers and through | own flesh and blood are starving for told the story of anticipated carous- the medium of Matthew and Luke|the gospel; while thousands upon /els; the chug chug of the livery au- jand Mark and John? |thousands of hearts are yearning tomobile preceded a flashing; What does it matter so long as/for the light whitch is denied them. | glimpse of plumed hats and glowing the soul In you bows down in rev-| You don’t heart of Kaiser Wilhelm | cigar stumps. lerence before a Superior Being, to|or King Edward sending over any! All of them, Mr. Missionary, are | whom you acknowledge life and In| money to convert the Filipinos, do|the children Brown let starve ta whom you place your trust of the|you? The king of Spain is not ap-| death. | hereafter? |preciably interested in New York’s| In every city in the United Statesa | WHAT DOES IT MATTER SO/tenementa or Seattle sandspite, isin the smallest of villages and the LONG AS YOU BELIEVE IN Aj he? tinfest of hamiets—there ts work for GOD AND LOOK TO HIM FOR] Let's ask the churches of Ger-| you to turn your hand fo. In every YOUR SALVATION? many to ship over to the states a| home you can find plenty of oppor- And yet, while thelr own family| million to be used in converting the | tunities to preach the word you ‘ove, starving for soul salvation, the| heathen Americana. They wouldn't! Pack up your panamas; “your foreign missionary board last year) ev spend a postage stamp in re-) white flannel suits; your tracts and spent a cold million dollars in| plying. stereopticans—and—- whitewashing the souls of kinky Foreign missions! COME HOME! headed negroes in South Africa and| They remind one strongly of a| We need you here; we need thaf pig-tailed Chinamen in the land of|/ man knocking down a blind beggar| million dollars to save our owm the dowager empress in his haste to get to the next cor-| children. Charity to the soul as As I sat in the Plymouth church|ner to help a woman pick up her| well as to the stomach, begins at Thursday and listened to the plead-! handkerchief. home. Each one believes in a God. Of| $134.93 which, including other course, thelr Deity is not the eame| special donations, amounted to witb- kind as ours; He may be in the|in a very few dollars of a million form of a cow or a dog or a wooden| And this does not include John D. | re ) Sees | ered nearly two hours, and Judga |Gilliam's " instructions required | nearly an hour, because of the many, peculiar legal points of the case. J. B. Coyne, the defendant's attorney. fram Winnipeg, made the opposing LAWYER'S PLEA BRINGS TEARS IN COURTROOM “oe | |jury at the noon hour. Attorney | | Fulton plead for a sufficient amount NAN BYXE lof damages to support the maimed attle friends had sought trace of| child in comfort for the remainder tain we hoe eel eloquent and able|'hem, and located the maimed, /|of her life, and there is little doubt guments that hed been heard in|* arred, half-deaf and half-blind lit-| but that the amount of the damages tle girl etill in the pesthouse, her|to be awarded is puzzling the jury, the superior court for many months was that of Attorney Walter Fulton, | Friday morning, in behalf of little] 3 Anna Haustad, in whose| r ne suit for $40,000 damages was] me a "i own aeainot coe Conan Y= Di@d While Police Stood s . Off Frenzied Relations | mother dead and buried Attorney Fulton's argument coy- which is still out as The Star goes to press. year-old nd tle girl's suffering is a most pathetic] }one, and the most made of every detail by Attorney Fulton was eral of the jurors, during the largument, wiped the tears from thelr eyes and choked with sobs,| REMARKABLE DEATH SCENE IN LOCAL HOSPITAL WHEN A women and many of the men in the crowd of spectators | that thronged the courtroom wept as they listened to the words of attorney and looked at the pathe le all th while all th GYPSY BAND CREATE PANDEMONIUM IN LAST RITES FOR THEIR LEADER'S SOUL drooping little figure of the tiny plaintiff sitting patiently on a a], Frank Mitch. sy who was,azon and would have injured hing bench, her two chubby little legs| {ured as the of a collision | had he not taken refuge aboard the dangling over ita edge, and her, With an Inter ar car. | eight-dimmed big brown eyes star-[te" Junction « dnesd, Why for you not stoppe dese | ing hard in effort to see the strang Hed on Vriday afternc train!” screamed the woman as she } faces about her, Her hearing, too, | General hospital shook her fist at the train crew. A@ was impaired, and a queer, side He died under police protection,| a matter of fact the Interurban of~ wise poise of the head bespoke the|®% Clty Detective Sam Corbett was/ ficials say that the motorman made additional affliction he story of | #umie med by the ho al officials | a ord stop and the sengers | the shameful neglect and heartless|@t 4m early hour Friday ving, | were piled up like sheep, so sudd spirit of sordiness which caused the|&nd Patr sn Milliken guarded his|ly were the brakes applied, How- death of the little girl's mother and|bedside as he gasped his last} ever the train struck the rear of the left her a crippled and maimed th. gypsy van and it was crushed, | tle waif, friendiess and unprotected Can't you send an officer up| throwing Mitch 30 feet to the ground in a strange country, was gone over | here.” phoned one of the attendants) from the trestle. |by Attorney Fulton. He told how tere ‘Some gypsies makir |g *s 498 See Oe no set 0 n her fatherl \ . le The Britis! rra- little daughter from faraway Nor-| Since relatives of the injured man The Brith h ship Marlon Fra: 4 He x from faraway Nor) wore told that he could not. live,|* #¢f from Newcastle, with coal, # | way, to come to § je, whe k Ph on, started) * @ttived after a trip of 190 % had been secured in America; She ee an | they to their tradi in the beginning | Mitch en his She was 40 days over- # ®», and supposed to be lost. % journey across the} how the little gitl was a dimpled, pretty, | #tcred waters of the River Stoiko,| ¥ | laughing bit of humanity and th | whic h corresponds to the biblical) ¥ a | pride of the young mother’s heart;|River Styx. Because one of the| RESER SESS * nily be pretation of th sailed across the| members of the f the Canadian] Violent in his inte they had boarded how ocean and Just Wanted to Pacific train at Hallfax, the child| #acred rites that he caused a furo made happy with a bag of candy |!" the vicinity of the hospital the and the little Norwegian doll she| attendants decided to have him had brought with her; how they had/ watched and summoned Detectiv: beon crowded into a hot, dirty coach| Sam Corbett, Grouped around the and exposed to the contagion of|dyiig man's bedside were the fol- 7 scarlet’ fever; how the mother and| lowers of Mitch—his {mmeitiate rel-| | OYSTER BAY, Sept. child were both seized with the/atives. Candles were burned and|tary Loeb sald this fever; how the mother, clinging to| the scent of incense prevailed. ‘The | the president did not int to over- her child in raving delirium, was|monotonous chant of the relatives|@we Nicaragua, but only sent thrust from the train and hurried| Were only broken occasionally by aj warship down there to the pesthouse at Winnipeg; how,|shrick from the wife, who was the} Lee, at Panama, has been ordered within a few days, without proper) leader in the strange ceremony, Ac-| fo Investigate the affairs of Albert care, the young mother died, and| Cording to a tradition of the gypsies, Ocotal, and that he could only. go how $8 in money, all sho had pos-|@ dying man must be surrounded by| with speed If a ship were Ls sessed, was taken from her person,| the shades of his dead relatives, who] 8 other means of ti togethar with the unused portion of| are expected (o holy him naylgate| WHld take weeks, gett oh —— aaa th tickets to Seattle, and tamned| the troubled waters of the Styx. MORE TROUBLE FOR WATT. ove? by the railroad for the care} The police found it a hard matter of the c! in the pesthouse; how] to sUppres#@ the ~rituslg and the the little one remained there for| sypsies about wore the attendants} LONDON, Sept. 15.~Additional out, @| charges were brought against Hugh — When Conductor oe Sy of the} Watt im court this morning. , | Intérurban flask oflaccused of trying to @ili t| wikky to lps a the time of | kill his former wife, he: pay’ wi seated SDS seated enemy Ras, SEIN toh’

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