The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 18, 1912, Page 1

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and pla fant fl n. the you think fitted any wr if she was prc “ Dalton composed of “Would there & mature young wom of the who ch om his say arte to him out. He p , mumbling to hin 0,000 MOURNERS AT TOKIO. Sept. 1s mourners behind their With 64 offins. {residence in Akasak! today ip Aoyama cemetery oo : eine As the gun @m which Nogi'’s body wife, hundreds ‘Two polar bear cubs will soon letter at the cubs last spring in ocal 200. 200 yesterday received a @ Alaska red foxes which cam 4 pgp Ge steamer Victoria, : CAN'T GO BACK ON OWN CONFESSI Mecond degree murder char; dia and Rutherford to get to the overdrawing of Warrants, failed yeate Reonference with County and the the funds have Overdrawn to the air exten ? Hamilton and Rutherford SS which they be dA of permit the legal draw tcy Claims Granite Palle Cooper its schedu) States district court ? mE assets of $7 Nabilities of $7,491.06 mA An involuntary petition of b Setting out claims las filed in the same & Bulaburger & Son pang Packing comp and Bastard Of company acain @ Ditleveson, a Renton morchs in WPORTANT Aj STA (Contined on Dage 2) court this morning | trate father of a who preferred a statu] against John Saboe, a some the bailiffs rushed to ferest of Dalton's argu fase Went to the jury at bodies of Gen. Count Nogt and his | ~ Who committed hara-kiri here the funeral of Emperor Mut Were borne from their mod Rome to the tomb, was followed the streets of the city taining the remains thousands stood in dead silence passed. says that Capt. Andrew | the schooner Transit Sea and will offer them to oy leer of the supreme} id had a change of | ‘after the confession and con-| mother with Ler six children ie brought into court. She More Warrants i The atiempt of Commissioners Om ‘Of the state board of ex examiners the Puget Hunter Lets She became Mrs. Amada T. Wymore in July. But in September she | PHILADELPHIA a Drown idently decided that single bliss has certain advantages ov atri- | Wille a hunter who had told them ™Onial life, and, without bidding her husband “good-bye,” she left Se-| 2, AWAY and not interfere wit, | attle. So Joseph Wymore this morning began divorce action. ooting ignored brs e s = e ws ineceanal | Bip, Tefasing to go to thele newn Maybe Eve was made of Adam's rib, but 12-year-old Adele Weinberg ite fn his iannch, Robert Waat.|Of Philadelphia has had her spine patched with part of her own leg drowned in Det bird gunner, wag | OMe. by creek and a coi oo — Vanlon narrowly vacas, ih gcc Binghamton, N. Y.—A bottle containing 120,000,000 disease germs, | oe enough to infect a large city, has not been opened by those who ha FFAIRS OF VOL. 14. NO. 172, ‘LIGHT IN THE D cing irta He girl hav an? aims seat aced NOGI FUNERAL 000 the MOTHERS’ PENSION LAW SAVES BROKEN HEARTS and ear) was | By Henry Neil, Father of the Illinois Mothers’ Pension Law and Secretary National Probation League. After three years of continuous and strenuous work for **) pension for mothers of dependent children we succeeded in get- ting the Illinois legislature to pass such a law last year with- by | of} a out a dissenting vote. Last} month in Chicago 380 mothers F the Woodland park 100, ac- with 1,306 children received : $s letter received by Rol $8,145 toward the support of ee tl A a their children for one month ee at Poim 5 co | Next month these same moth ers will get the same amount and more mothers will be add ed to this pension roll of honor, a roll of good mothers aiding the state to keep their children! out of charity institutions Since this law was passed in Iiiinols, 1 have visited the chil dren's courts in the large cities in many other states, Including Indi-| the} pair e in ION, OLYMPIA, Wash., Sept. 18.—Tis ana, Oblo, New York, Pennsylvania, | iM sustains the convic lowa, Michigan and Missouri, and| ton of Eimer Drummond in the! found in each of them practically | county superior court of al the same conditions that prevailed in Ulinois previous to the passage HENRY NEIL of this mothers’ pension law, Hundreds of cases practically like this are being tried: A widowed | behind in| her rent and the landiord has ordered her out of the house. Having struggled for five years to earn enough money to provide for herself and) family, the overtax on her strength has broken down her health, and) she cannot entirely support herself and chi ' | So her home is broken up, each child is sent to a different institu- , and the mother, heart-broken, herself becomes a charge on the| community. Under the new law in Illinois, the mother ia not separated from) her children. Rather she is hired by the state to take care of them in her own home—thus giving hope, happiness, health and strength to the mother and bringing up the children under normal home cecn- ditions at half the cost to the taxpayer that it takes to bring them up in an institution. Does Washington want the mother’s help in bringing up her depend ent children? Keep in mind the economy of the mothers’ plan—WHICH IS HALF OF THE COST OF THE INSTITUTION PLAN—even if the humanity of the mother plan is entirely left out of consideration, The legislatures of a number Of states will wrestle with this proposition early next year; some few states may pass such a law, but MOST OF THEM WIL NOT becatse organized charities will insist ©\ that the funds be distributed by them or under thelr supervision Under the mothers’ pension law every cent the taxpayer contrib. utes goes to the mother. Under organized charity three-fourths of all the fands contributed go to “administration expenses not the road | rday Aud } ady | t of ' meuiiomsamen [___ SOME SPECIALS IN THE NEWS | At 57, Miss Charlotte Swartz of Athens. Pa., has entered Keuka in- stitute, at Penn Yan, and will go through colle v yank for ‘ourt ant examined at the police station. It is supposed it was being shipped | to a laboratory for experimental purposes, j go street car company, sued for damages by Wiil- ell from a car, day he muleted them of $1,500 once s out of joint at will, Officials of a Ch jam Reinhardt, who before because of his ability to throw his should it was two very obliging men who held up Mike Poulos last night. Mike is the proprietor of a fruit stand at 15th av and Galer st. He acked the hold-up men to leave him enough money to make chang hey very kindly dropped 35 cents back Into the drawer and then | Eva R. Allen does not believe In “seeing América first.” Eva is traveling in Europe now, The latest heard of her by her husband was hen she was admiring the Alps from the Switzerland side, Alien came to Seattle in 1909. His wife refused to follow. Now he wants a divorce. | Suffrage sisters will note that Mrs. Kate Sparrow of San Rafael, Cal, an election clerk, lost her job when she was seven minutes late because waited to frizz her hair. pte o | Los Angeles—Miss Margaret Neill, 16, is 14 ounces lighter, follow. fon at Columbia hospital, The child had a habit of chew- jing ber halr, and this amount was removed from her stomach, ¢ SEATTLE, WASH., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1912, JUDGE BLACK | THE WINNER! Judge W. W. Black of Everett t# the probable nominee of the demo cratic party for governor. Unoffictal returns give him a lead of almost 500 on first and second choice voter combined over Hugh C. Todd, the second high man. Ernest Lister of Tacoma has dropped to third piace Notwithstanding this lead, Todd in confident that the complete cam Yass of the returns to be made by the secretary of # the nomination. ures give Black 6,896, and Lixter The unofficial fg- 7 votes, Todd HERE ARE THE LO WIN PRIZES IN Mellen, of Briarwood, reer island, must be an accom lished love-maker. At any rate, he wins the first a box at the Moore theatre for the production af The Heart Breakers” Thursday, Friday and Saturday In the opinion of The Stara moat expert love specialist, George’ George prine |Cupid Commandment” in the best jth of the many hundred which Star readers submitted. Listen to thi “Thow shalt not make of thyself |a graven image—for even a quiet. Girl abhors a dummy.” George pulled that one, and it's a dandy. The longer you think about it the better it gets. But it's ms awful slam at those pompous lovers. We're handing June the second prize hunch she's a she) gets six te at the Moore. June, who doesn't give her address, puts this one over Cleveland ferred maketh the heart sick, a kiss deferred maketh the lover stick.” You've got to hand it to June for knowing &@ trick or two in the love kame. We suspect that Wilitam Davies, of 612 Seventh av., is a sad chap Bill gets third prize for his, four seats at the Moore. He com to bat thus “Thou shalt partake of no high- scented sweetmeats before thou makest thy call, lest she say, ‘Lo, | have snared me a wine-bibber.’” We are laying odds that A. H. IF YOU GET STUNG ON. te will give him yy and she (we've a} Remember that, though hope de-| ~The Seattle Star ONE GIRL-WIFE MAY ESCAPE ON UNWRITTEN RECTION 10 COUNTING OF Pormal objection has n filed by Jud. John BE. Humphries to the reopening of the ballot boxes in or f to Ket the total number of votes in the nonpartisan judiciary lection. Several other candidates ay tako similar action, Judge Humphries contends that unless There ts a bona fide election con tent filed by a didate the ballot doxes must remain undisturbed idge Jobn H. Yakey, of Kitsap eo to whom the recount pet tion filed yesterday was referred this morning signed an order citing wil 28 candidates to show cause on Saturday why the boxes should not We opened and the ballots counted | Af the boxes are not opened none the judges can be declared elect ed. The number of nominees will therefore be 16, instead of a smaller umber, and in November the pine petving the highest votes will be Wants Lights Out, So . His Hens Can Sleep ohn Sherwin hax asked the commiasioners to have the nN Nights tured of at midnight & rather uncommon reason. the lights turned off,” every | his ebickens go out under the electric Nght at the corner and | et on the crasshoppers that are | pted by the big lamp that! over the middle of the ft He has made repeated at pix to drive the pack to roost they cannot be induced to leave feant ul Pays Victim Back SPOKANE, Wash, Sept. 18.—A dressed man who called on J Hancox surprised him by an wuncing he was a burglar who had | tered the Hancox home two years | . fobbing it of $20.81. He | ed an envelope containing the | Honey. Hancox had told the leseness of thievery, while his oe Was being ransacked, and the n said he had changed his way ving after he thought the talk | E EXPERTS WHO STAR CONTEST {Sehultz, of 717% Eastlake av. ts a jmarried man. He just missed get |timg third prize, but he gets a jeouple of seats anyhow. If this j@oes not sound like matrimony we | lome | “Thou shalt not call thy future mother-iniaw an old hen nor thy sweetheart a chicken; for when) |theu art married it will be up to jo do the scratching.” Schultz and six other experts get two seats each. Here are the com mandments of the six H. H. Stone, Alki theatre: jehalt not nibble at take of the ap did before the George Thompson, 4436 38th av. &.: “Thou shalt not bear fi ness against thy rival. He may be) a coming white hope. F. C. Cahoon, Hotei Washington “Thou hee, but par- » ae thy ancestors Blanche Christy, 342 15th av. | “Thou shalt not boast of personal | bravery to a girl, lest at some fu- |ture time she talketh with someone who knoweth thee.” Mies M. |. Warren, 839 East 31st “Remember the opera and how e loves it; for while thou mayest | land be entertained by her for six days, the seventh day it is up to . Hs “Thou shalt not covet the position of her poodle dog, but endeavor to deserve it.” The winners can get thel by calling at The Star off A HORSE TRADE, | prizes DON’T GO T OCOURT, STING SOME ONE ELSE AT THE SELLER Sao THE HORSE Como 00 — When you buy a horse without a |guaranty, believing it to be a good |for the horse, horse, only to discover that you have been stung, it will not do you any good to court about it. Sting somebody else, This may not be good morals, but it is good law. John and Jane Doe Ek hada horse. The Hay Bros, bought it, It was testified before Judge Taliman yesterday that the horse was de ascribed to the purchasers as a mar- vel of strength and willingness, and sound in wind and limb. It could, the Hay Bros, said Ek said, pull two) Bros, cords of shingle bolts with ease, 1t}the horse at their Like to,| dismissed the action, not only could, but would, AND Woar THe -- BUYER FOUND OuT Visto, a So the Hay Bros, paid $225 jin faci | j | The Hay Bros, sald that, when |the horse was theirs it showed an unwillingness, or an inability !beth, to pull two cords, or one cord, ‘or anything at all, It seemed, they |nald, Incapable of more than five minutes of sustained exertion, This jabsence of enthusiasm, they satd might be for the fact that the ho had the heaves, They did not know, they said, the horse had the heaves when they bought it. Judge Tallman sald the Hay | having no guaranty, bought own risk, He THE BALLOTS j nothing of the sin of the world, I was happy for 14 un MEXICO CITY, & 18,—"I | shall capture the city of Mexico} Jand force Madero to flee. If the BAY CITY, Mich, Sept. 18 x Sny ter. second ‘courin to Portland, Or-—Mre. C. G. Hunt 9 apoplex nyder's widow ia came her f om M Iran, O} ad @ first cousin to Woodrow Wilson, Then she got where i eh f lo candic for preaident, - 1 ; ere oon ~— THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE hn aad alle, for police assletance in Jocating him s:, HOME EDITION NEWS STA LAW SYMPATHY FOR TUSBAND AND YOUNG. WIFE COLFAX, Wash., Sept. 18.—That Mrs. Winnie Brownell, the 17-year- old child wife who aided her hus- band, Wessiey Brownell, 25, in the murder of the girl's stepfather, A. Neeves, will escape punishment by invoking the “unwritten law,” is the general opinion here. The plight of the girl and her young husband, who tramped 100 miles for the op- Portunity of avenging a wrong | which they claim Neeves has been | guilty of is arousing keen sympathy. GIRL- WIFE WHO HELPED HER HUSBAND KILL STEPFATHER WHO WRONGED HER When the full story of the abuse jand the-shame to which she was sub) ed is m known, no fury jean condemn her action,” says the huehand. The girl-v is equally sure that her husband will be ac |uitted and restored to her and her wo ables, Samuel, and Marie, 14 months old, four months old. |. Winnie Brownell was born in Walla Wal She has had a hard struggle *r since. About two year ago she was married to young Wessley Brownell at Asotin, Wash her stepfather, formerly Colfax, but for the past years has been in various four parts of Idaho and at Walla Walla. He made the girl go with him, and it was then that he is alleged to have. trafficked in her shame. When Weasley and Winnie Brownell commenced an action against one of the men who had wronged her in Idaho, their own lawyer was bought off by Neeves, they assert. So, when thelr case failed, they deter ned to revenge themselves. Phe girl had her hair shorn close jand she dressed herself like a boy. | Their children we left with. Mra, ‘ at Gippen, Idabo, who had 4 from her husband. They commenced their tramp jthrough Idaho and Washington. eves was living temporarily with jaughter, Mrs. Charles Long, on ch five miles south of Colfax, Wesley Brownell and his young wife, who walked a hundred miles, from idaho to Colfax, Wash., to kill A. Neeves, the woman's step-father, who was accused of betraying her. This picture shows Mrs. Brownell with her hair cut off and wearing men's clothing, as she dressed, during her long tramp. The picture was taken for The Star just after they had given themselves up ~ = MY CONFESSION By Florence Hazel Moore | her regret thelr action, “The Woman Who Did Not Care” ell shot five times, three of bullets taking effect. Mra, Brownell shot once. Her bullet EDITED BY FRED L. BOALT {stxeet her stepfather under the left Chapter 1. ime ‘ Thaiether side of the stoty bas been told, Now I tell mine, | __Mrs. Noeves srtived hege tofay I shall spare no one, myself least of all with the childiea S00 Seo ae In making this, my confession, 1 am appealing. frankly for sympa- |" ¢T husband's funeral thy, God knows I need it! 1 am appealing, too, for that “square deal” | a ae of which we hear so much and see #0 little |FIND MAN WITH But you will not understand and sympathize unless you go back| with me to the beginning the notorious Hazel Moore € 1 was born in Louisville, Ky years before » wo the events in which I figured as an who did not care. years ag In babyhood I was adopted, and my foster-mother put me immed ly in a convent. For the first 14 years of my life I lived the cloistered existence in which the whole worl1 ended at the convent wall Guarded by the gentle sisters from HIS THROAT CUT Patrolmen Morris and Nelson this | morning found John Teeple, his throat slashed from the left ear to the front of his neek, lying in fromt of a Japanese poolroom on Maynard | between King and Weller. As they »;were helping him into the patrol was acting for| y - outside influences, knowing | entful years. now that it was a mistake to send me to the convent foster-mother, a devout woman, thought she 1 can se though my the om But . —_ a far greater mistake to send me, an unsophis. Yous" aon ee in They ticated, convent-bred girl, out into the world at the age of 14 | ppeai In the convent I learned much of music and books and the domestic ear ee virtues, But I learned nothing at all of life | “They went back to the saloon but 1 was at once eager and afraid to go. 1 cried when the time came! ‘ ‘ to say good-bye to the sisters. Yet I could hardly oelt, 1|sonsttel heopie soteeed ta aa a contain myself, I) hospital Teeple refused to say any- |thing concerning the cutting, bat the police believe it resulted from a fight over a game of cards in He | Yates’ saloon and that the negro His name | did the cuttin “GYP’ AND ‘LEFTY’ WANT TRIAL Was 80 eager to be And two hours after I left the convent gate I was a wife! My fostermother came for me and took me home. There was a young man there, scarcely more than a boy, a neighbor of ours. fe seemed a young god to me. He was Romance personified. was Clyde C. Hurley I remember that my foster-mother, havin, us together in the parlor. 1 reme: blushing and tongue-tied in the 4 was almost a man It was love at first sight with both of us. *& lunch to prepare, left mber, too, that I wondered why I was presence of this slim, smiling boy, who He stammered his salt and, trembling and amazed, we stole from the house. By noon ne} NEW. YORK, Sept. 18—Demand ee pay tia |for an immediate trial was made by yde took me to New York. He, too, was wild to see Life.|“Lefty Louie” Rosenzweig and Neither of us had ever been to New York. por uel but in fancy we pictured its |“Gyp the Blood” (Harry Horrowitz) We wanted to see theatres, restaurants, crowds, {before Justic Goff here today in . From seeing shows, 1 became stage-struck. Though y | ple: paar Pies 3 eealt iat ran ater | looked older. I haunted the managers’ offices. 2 ei ‘aney i ike eae ‘oe Cache i ctulaye aasther coming” nin About this time Clyde, never strong, developed tuberculosis, and|Herman Rosenthal, Both were re- = a his people sent him to Arizona - ; : I was left in New York alone, manded to the Tombs “Lefty Louie” and “Gyp the And then our baby was born. | Blood” were arrested in a Brooklyn When well and strong enough to fend for myself, I gave my baby | flat, where they were living with to my foster-mother and secured an engagement with a musical comedy |their wives, having evaded the po show, For three years I lived the life of the Great White way. Clyde |lice for several weeks. and I exchanged letters, and occasionally | managed to run over to| __ Louisville to see my baby. When I was 17 years old my husband died. For a year longer I Vivian M. Hedstrom, 5 years old, this morning began suit, through stayed in New York. No one who has not been through the mill can know the apprenticeship I served. The scales fell from my eyes. 1 saw life as it is, But there was no going back, The convent child was 9 dead. The show girl had her way to make. I danced and sang and | Her Parents, for $20,000 —arr smiled in the front row, and took the world as I found it, fever thppeg ite Bevin The complaint alleges that the car was |driven at 35 miles an hour. I never saw my husband again When I was 18 I joined a road company, (Continued Tomorrow.) Powell was shot dead by J. F. Elam aft-| ee RRR RK REE RR OREe year-old son. When Elam as him why|* Fair tonight and Thursday; *& N asked him what he was going to do about|* light westerly winds. Temper- * Elam thought Powell was about to draw a gun and he fired three | * ature at noon, 62. * times, killing him instantly EKER SAYS REBELS WILL . TAKE MEXICO | ADVERSITY assails us when we least expect it. We must, then, be prepared for the unexpected We must make every opportunity to better ourselves count for something. The Want Kansas City, Mo.—Andrew er he had kicked Elam’s 1 he had hurt the boy, Pow it | Kee U, 8. intervenes, I will kill every American within reach, join my| forces with the government soldiers | and fight the common enemy of the North.” This is the statement attributed | to’ Gen, Emilio Zapata, who, with| Ads present not one, but a great many op- approximately 5,000 insurgents, is| ie, threatening the capital of ‘the| portunities each day—chances for someone to step up a few rungs of the ladder of for- | tune. Are YOU making use of the “Wants”? Are you studying them? When | you allow the “Wants” to slip past, you Southern republic ASKS TO TELEPHONE, PRISONER ESCAPES SAN FRANCISCO, Spt. 17.—L. E.| . 5 Knapp, convicted of forgery in Los | are simply denying entrance to oppor- ADeCi tte. te the ouath deat iene tunity. Star Want Ads are the essence of Sherif George Keym, white en| what over 200,000 readers have to offer. route to the state penitentiary | Requesting that he be allywed to| Downtown Want Ad Office, 229 Union St. telophone Former Polles Commis| (with Souvenir & Curio Shop). Giu'eavctna "s*'== fl Qyer 40,000 Paid Copies Daily ped into a booth at the Palace hotel while Keym stood outside, A mo- nt later Keym, who had turned away to light a cigar, found that his prisoner had disappeared,

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