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00,000 MEN MAY GO ON BIG STRIKE BRUSSELS, Oct, 2.-—"Uniess our demand for universal suffrage ts granted, a half-million men will go on strike today,” declared Camille Hueysman, secretary of the Inter national Socialist bureau, in outline) »paleo con ing the socialistic plan of © for alteration of. the present sitution of Belgium “Four strike committees have al ready been appointed,” he declared “One will deal with the provision ing of food depots. Another is re sponsible for the raising of funds. A third is engaged in propaganda work, There is also a committee to arrange for sending the children to places of safety, inside or out side Belgium, until the strike is over, These committees are all now energetically at work.” SEPTEMBER A FINE MONTH The report of G. N. Salisbury, dt rector of the Seattle station of the weather bureau for the month of September shows that Seattle en- joyed weather last month that was @ little better than the average. The average daily temperature for the month just ended was 59.2, which is 1.8 degrees higher than the normal for the month. precipitation for the month w @.73 inches, the nermal for the month is 1.93. Twelve days of last month the sun shone all di twelve days It was cloudy all day and the remaining six were partly y. PLAN NITRE FACTORY It is now known that the party of financiers, among them J. B. Duke, the tobacco king, who arrived in Seattle Sunday, came here for the purpose of looking over the Puget sound country with the ultimate ob Ject of securing a site for a 200,000- horse power nitre plant. The party includes Dr. Samuel Eyde, of Chris- tiana, Norway, head of the nitre in- dustry in Norway, and the inventor of the process of making nitrogen from air by the driving of air through = electrically-heated —fur- maces, a process which separates the oxygen and nitrogen. The two ¢lements are then combined in wa- ter and nitric acid is made. SEATTLE MAN ARCHITECT FOR CALIFORNIA FAIR A Seattle architect, Mr. E. Frere Champney, will be chief designer of the buildings for the Panama-Pa- elfic exposition. He will have gen- eral charge of the architectural de- partment of the fair. Mr. Champney has had a good deal of experience as a designer of | fair buildings. Besides being the chief designer for the A-Y.-P. fair, he designed the work for the Buf- falo exposition and was assistant chief designer for the Louisiana Purchase exposition. He has lived in Seattle since the St. Louts fair. FIGHTING CHANCE MILWAUKEE, Oct. 2.—Although his condition shows improvement, dent which cost the life of Driver) David Bruce Brown when his Fiat car crashed into a fence at the| speed trials for the Vanderbilt cup race, is not yet out of danger. After skull the surgeons declare he has a fighting chance for life. BITTER THOUGHTS neers! Mr. world, Boozer—This all right. home to my poor, starving wife! The} trepanning Scudelari’s is a selfish Here I blow my week's wages in that saloon and they refuse me a pretzel to take TEE-HEE— ADOLF ISS UP DERE GOING To CATCH RED HOT RIVETS, UND HE NASS FoR- GOTTEN To TAKE UPA BUCKET Yo CATCH DEM IN. Go into a dim room ALONE. ! Close the door TIGHTLY behind | you. j Sit there quietly and concentrate your mind on the DEAD. | And in a few minutes, maybe, lyou will get a message from a GHOST! For—and here you had better stop reading if you're “skeery” of spooks—there ARE such things as The first big communication wil Hyslop. Osgar Pitches Red- ARE THE LIVING DRAWIN SPIRIT WORLD? GREAT PSYCHIC SAYS YES 1 be between lovere—Professor +ghosts. They sail around your bed- jroom at night and try to tell you |things of “the othr side.” Some- | times in their anxiety to communi- jeate with you, they brush you in |the halls or on the stairs, but you) | shiver and run away from them and wonder what “touched” you. This declaration, that “there are! spooks” In this world is not the as) |sumption of some saperstitious or! untutored man. Prof. Jas. H. Hy- | slop, late head of the department | of psychology at Columbia univer- sity, and now leading spirit in the American Society for Psychical Re search, is bimeelf responsible for tt. And Prof. Hyslop not only makes, this declaration, but he cites as proof “case” after “case” of testi mony. if you don’t believe in “spooks,” | Prof. Hyslop suggests that you try to get into communication with them yourself. If you follow his di-| rections, giver above, you almost) certainly will succeed, he says. | “The world has come to that) place,” Hyslop said, “where the| psychic—-the things of the soul—| are going to occupy more and more} attention. We are beginning to stretch our hands out to ‘the other side.” George Edward Adams, who, aft- er being paroled on the charge of embezzling in the government as- say office while employed there, and who has again entangied himself with the law in an alleged conspir- acy with John C. Webber to manu- facture counterfeit money, has de- cided to keep his mouth shut until he obtains an attorney. He says) that as soon as the grand jury acts) on his case, he will ask the court | for counsel, as he is too poor.| Adams aken before U. 8. Se-| cret Service Agent Thomas B. Fos-| ter yesterday, and they held a long! secret session. “REALLY DOES” PUT STOMACHS IN | ORDER AT ONCE--PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN Time it! In just five minutes there will be no Indigestion, Sourness, Heartburn, Gas or Dyspeps' Do some foods you eat hit taste good, but work badl ment into stubborn cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach down: Pape’s Diapepsin digest everything, leaving nothing to sour your stomach gets sweet, no gases, No difference how no belching, no eructations of und and upset you. badly your stomach is disordere you utes, that it foods without fear. Temedies give get happy relief in five min- ‘but what pleases you most is nsand regulates | gett your stomach #0 you can eat your | Pape's favorite r you relig imes—they are slow, but not Diapepsin is quick, positiy — and puts your stomach in a healthy | still sunburned and vigorous in fer-| condition so the misery won't come lumps and | back. 7\ . You feel different as soon as Dia- ‘s|stomach—distress just vanishes— gested food, your head clears and lyou feel fine. Pi G @ large fifty-cent case Diapepsin from any ‘drug |store, You realize in five mines an end to stomach trouble by | “The big question nowadaws is ‘AFTER DEATH-—WHAT And the one way to solve this question is to talk to—ghosts! “Since the death last August of | Prof. William James of Harvard, the famous philosopher, | have bad ences Prof. James himself has sent meseages to me that absolute | ly could mot have come from any. one but from him. And I have had D. Wright, late United States labor commissioner. “Prof. James, for instance, told a medium, the young son of a minister, that he should give me a pair of pink pajamas and a black | necktie for Christmas. This boy) lives in an out-of-the-way place and} knew neither James nor myself.! And yet the message is marvelo significant. James and I had had a! joke about bis once borrowing a pair of pajamas in England which turned out to be a ridiculous shade of baby-pink. It was a joke of which probably nobody else ever) heard. As for the black necktie, 1) was, at the time, wearing a black | tie which had belonged to James| and very few persons had any idea that this tle had not always been | NEW YORK, Oct. 2.—When The odore Roosevelt arrived in New York today he completed the long- est single trip ever made by a pres- idential He covered 10,870 m je 300 speech: to perhaps ten million citizens. Thirty-seven states have heen traversed by the Bull Moose leader One month ago today he began his swing around the circle by an ex cursion Into Connecticut. Thence he swung westward, zig-zagging up nd down to the coast, and then eastward and through the South, returning along the Atlantic coast. The colonel had a physician along with him, but he might just as well have dispensed with his services, and merely gargled his throat when it got tired from speaking, for he was in the same splendid trim to- day as when he left Oyster Bay— ery movement, “What I'm anxious to do- now,” said the colonel today, “is to get Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this | pepsin comes in contact with the |back to Oyster Bay, play a few sets jof tennis, take a ride or a walk, and jthen I'm ready again.” Throughout the trip, the colonel has worn just one suit of clothes. indeed, his wardrobe—and his sim- plicity was reflected in the fact that he carried only one big kit bag the one business sult and a frock peow vedless it is to suffer from |Indigestion, dyspepsia or any stom- ve ach: C4sorder, G CLOSER TO | eeeeeeeeeeeeeeetees coat. That one gray sult was sadly | PROF. JAS. H. HYSLOP RRR PERHAPS LOVE wilt BRIOGE THE CHASM BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH Prof. Hyslop says that love is the great moving force of the other world.” He says that the spirits there tell him that all our laws and traditions are of puny tmport—that only love counts; that love survives death. So when the first of the big communications be tween the living and the ‘dead’ comes, it may be be tween two great lovers who cannot bear that even death cut them off from each other. « * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * | ed my own “One of the greatest proofs Is the experience of a Mra. Smead, wife of a minister Uving fn the hills of Maryland. The place is a dozen miles from any railroad station and some tremendous psychic expert-|jt takes 24 hours for the news at! And James pomsenses the world to penetrate to it yet the same night Prof. died, Mre. Smead, who mediumistic qualities to a marked & spirit conversation with Carroll | extent, saw him pass before her in| cap and gown x months afterward, when she saw a picture of James and an article about his death, she recog. nized who her ghostly visitor was. Coneuiting her diary, she found that dames had been vi one hour after his “The next great object is to develop the psychic, We must reach out our hands over that ‘guif’ and see what we can learn from those over there. They may not be permitted to tell us everything, but as we go on trying, the means of our communication Nil be strengthened and we n marvelous things. We shall KNOW that the body is more than raiment and the soul more than flesh.” ROOSEVELT ENDS LONG TRIP; 10,870 MILES, 300 SPEECHES worn and wrinkled and creased and dirty, as its wearer ought to have been after such a trip, but the colonel isn’t much on style. black felt sombrero was almost jequally marked with wear and ' travel. Dinner time on the colonel’s pri |vate car—he had generally used by President Taft, | while the newspaper cabinet, as he |always termed them, were bunked |in another private car next to his was an institution. Roosevelt likes a hearty meal, and he likes to linger over an after-dinner cup of tea and discuss everything under |the sun from the making of wall | paper to the habits of Ursus Amer- jcana. And in that discussion ev- erybody joins. One joke the colonel admitted was on himself transpired at a Ne- braska town, He was addressing an audience of school children. “T can talk to the boys,” Roose velt said, “but I've only one girl.” jonel’s attention later thi Included two daught Longworth and Mi Ethel. | lated. “| was thinking about my|& feverishn |little granddaughter, when | said|#ealp, whieh if not that. Now look here, if you boys| causes the hair roots to shrink, and’ two sultcases—only contained | publish that and put me in bad with just disown |my family, you.” why, Wl STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1912. A newspaperman called the col- to the fact the Roosevelt family actually ‘*—Mrs. Alice “By George!" the colonel ejacu- 4 ARMY DOUGLAS, Ariz, Oct officers of the United States army are under arrest here today, charg ed with unlawfully entering the Hote! Mexico and a the proprietor, D, J. Ge or aid ing in arch without a, warrant i |for a rebel leader whom they de signed to take into custody. The county sheriff made reat of the officers, and in he jailed Manuel Cuesta consul, and Powell Roberts GIRL DEAF MUTE STRUCK BY CAR Mexican TACOMA Oct 2.-—Buffering from concussion of the brain and a fractured thigh sustained when she was knocked down by a street car last evening, Elste Slegel, 23 years of age, a deaf mute, is slowly recov ering today at St. Josephs hospital The girl was hurrying across the street to catch an inbound South Tacoma car when one coming from the opposite direction ran her down |She was unable to hear the warn |'nex given by the motorman ‘SKELETON FOUND | TACOMA, Oct. 2.-—The mysteri ous disappearance of Albert Klein jer, brewer, last March, is cleared today, the skeleton found In the woods at Julius guich having been identified as that of the missing man by Wm. Schich, a close friend of the Kieciners. The finding of a rusted revolver and a bullet bole in ene garments clothing the skeleton lead to the belief that Kleiner died Voy his own hand. — | { | You wit ses wast | | <uscsaeesse meneame BOISE, Idaho, Oct. 2.—A severe blow is dealt the Bull Moore party in Idaho today through the action of the state supreme court in issu ing a writ of mandate compelling Secretary of State Gifford to certl- fy all state tickets except the pro- gressive. Gifford is ordered not to certify the Bull Moone ticket until the present litigation, In which the all! progressive ticket is attacked as il-| * |legal, is ended |“DEAD MAN” APPEARS IN COURT SANDUSKY, Ohio, Oct. 2.-—While a suit was being heard to prove he was dead, Charles Bretz, who dis- appeared from Middie Hass island about 17 years ago, appeared in the court and convinced hin two sons of his identity. He was divorced |Retore he disappeared. In the be- Hef he was dead, the sons brought sult to recover valuable property. | WHY HE’S FREE VERETT, Oct. 2.—Because the His | complaint against him alleged that) the books of the company might be ‘he robbed a passenger “somewhere | between Seattle and Blaine,” Rich- jard Brown, a Great Nort | ter, is today a free man, rm por: The court the Mayflower, | held the place of the crime must be} stated specifically, for the trial | must be held in that county. 2—Four | chief | GLAD EvERY BoDy SHERIFF ARRESTS | OFFICERS of the Mexican government secret | nervice | The arrests are the result of the attempts of the Mexican authori ties to utilize U. 8. army officials to capture rebel leaders after and county officials had ref act, Col. Gullfoyle, rebel had been traced to the Hot feo, and it was there that ven the authorities oceurred Proprietor Genardini claims that he was assaulted by U, 8. troopers The rebel escaped COMPROMISE ON SHIPPING RATES| After a conference between rep resentatives of business Interests in Spokane, Tacoma and Seattle the various railroads in the state and the publl® service commission which lasted for nearly two days, an agreement is in effect today whereby all questions of shipping rates that have existed between Spokane and coast interests, have been removed. The Spokane ship pers asked for a decidedly lower carload commodity rate from the const to the Intertor. ment finally effected w mine rate, which becom in 30 days The agree GOSHEN, N. Y., Oct. 2—Burton W. Gibson, a New York attorney, in held for the grand jury here on the charge of murdering bis client, Mra. | Rosa Menchik Szabo. j Mrs, Szabo perished in Green-| wood lake last July, and investiga tion led to the arrest of Gibson who is alleged to have strangled | her / The grand jury i Monday. will meet next | AH, THOSE DEAR FRIENDS OF YOUR BOYHOOD DAYS! asee camer PA SERRE REED E EE HHH WILL TEST BRAINS * OF CHILDREN * CLEVELAND, Oblo, Oct. 2. ® Two thousand children in *) Cleveland public schools are * suspected of mental we clency. By propounding a ® series of questions to a pa ®/ tient, Miss Charlotte Stein. & bach will examine the chil- ®) dren, and those mentally lack- # | } seeeeeee a * * 2 * ing will be separated from nor- ®! * mal pupils and given special * | instruction. *. * (MeN ERE |KEEPS GOOD CHECKS FOR 20 YEARS | IREE. Colo., Oct. 2.—Un-| 8, some dated 20 years | ago, and aggregating several hun | dred dollars, were found among the effects of George Burgoyne, now in the county hospital suffering from paralysis, ° Burgoyne had a horror of banks, | as he lost money in a failure. Some} |of the cheeks are from the Union| | Pacific, and among his papers were| Hetters from the company asking! | him to please cash the checks, that} eee eed | balanced | Bobby—O-oh! llittle green snake. Mamma—Keep away from it, dear, It may be just as dangerous las a ripe one.—Life. mmal Here's a Thin, brittle, colorless and scrag- &y hair is mute evidence of a neg lected scalp; of dandruff—that aw- ful securf. to the hatr as dandruff. hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life; out fast. '25 CENT DANDERINE FOR FALLING HAIR AND DANDRUFF—GROWS HAIR DON’T PAY 50 CENTS FOR WORTHLESS HAIR TONICS—USE OLD, RELIABLE, HARMLESS “DANDERINE”—GET RESULTS, There is nothing so destructive was the best investment you ever Tt robs the | made. ventually producing rlance which is so beautiful. and itching of the| will become wavy and fluffy and remedied have the appearance of abundance; loosen and die—then the hair falls|but what will please you’ most |. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowl ton'’s Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter, and after the first application you will say it Your hair will immediately take on that life, lustre and luxu- It ‘an incomparable gloss and softness, will be fter just a few wee A little Danderine tonight—now | use, when you will actually see a any time hair will surely save your | lot of fine, downy hair-—new bair— trowing all over the scalp. = - >s \yen sures, Pare | PRSEES LEEL=ISRER SIRES OF LIVING? BEAN AcTeR a ee THE ONLY WAY “TO é DEFEAT THE COAL MAN MARYS LITTLE LAME WOAON'T DARE FOLLOW HER TO PAY THAT OLD BOARD BILL On ike SUE yE . (By United Press Lense@ Wire) ABERDEEN, Oct. 2.—Warrants are out today for the arrest of Charles Risk, a moving picture op- erator, on the charge of abducting Grace Shaw, a pretty society belle | of this city, who eloped with him yesterday and was married in Mon- tesano last night. The parents of the girl are irreconcilable. The couple are reported to have left Grays harbor in a smal! launch. in ce with Resolution % 3802 of the City Council of The Gt of Seattle, adopted September, 2% | 1922, the simple referendum . ‘oked by the said City G olf as to the following @ ORDINANCE NC An Ordinan ganization, man tion of the Fire partment! City of Seattle, and rg ordinances In conflict. BE IT ED i’ THR. TTLE AS FO Section 1, From and after i et AN RRC RA oN ae eR eae eR ee ond day of April, 1913, 0 % MURDERER MUTE | foveal, other than the Fl * TWO YEARS # | shall be divided jaws = * NTO, Cal., Oct. 2. w | toons, one to perfo % —Charles Carson, who mur- # | $P4 thyother te Rertnn ® dered a guard during a prison & | shail not exceed pee be * mutiny six years ago, has not # | ine net before eleht % uttered a word for two years, w| M, 8nd ending nol lee, * He was sentenced to hang ®/ night service shall not ex ® this week, but has been grant- #/ teen (14). commencing * ed a reprieve until November # | fix, (#) o'clock 1 the * 8 When told of the reprieve * that in the event * Carson made no comment, *& eulag oF uaueea con * Every attempt to compel him * OF Sach eS ae |# to talk has failed and the sus- #| ci is Oe tnd of the ae * picion that he might not be &| Department, shall have the pork ® sane caused the governor to *® exc eather! iad on suER a ensplo: & set forward the date of his *| Ty ty assist in the Pre ® execution. ® | hfe and property. In thelr aaid platoons shall alternate day to night and from night RRO aia each and every wha he e CONVICTS ESCAPE, (By Untied Press Leased Wire) Section Phere § ed suitable and hes abode for the employe 80 ployed while on . ‘ All ordinances OF, | ion 3 NORTH YAKIMA, Oct. 2—| {insofar an they Tay eed Posses are making a thorough) conflict with the previstens ® search for miles around here for ordina are repealed. three escaped penitentiary convicts who calmly decided to leave the} state quarry at Selah Gap yester- | day afternoon. They wore over- alls and blue blouses, like ordinary laborers, The fugitives are Chas, sna tc i NY ho NE ORO | Section 4, ‘This ordinance Ste take effect and be in fore oa ) days from and after approval, if approved by ths Otherwise it shall take effecs 6b | time It shall become a law : provisions of the city charter, Passed the City Council the r ’ 12. Sherman, sentenced to five years! @8y of § 1998, a by in open session in aw for burglary; William Gampbell,| tion of its passage (nis 16th sentenced to three years for rob. bery, and Tom Nolan, sentenced to five years for robbery. WORSE THAN A _ September, | on President of the City! Approved by me this 17th September, 1912 . GEO, F. COTTER SEA Filed by me this 17th day pt ber, 3. SERPENT *xsine") "12 w. ca VENICE, Cal., Oct. 2.—One of the} City Comptroller and ex Clerk. c Ry J. P. Agnew, Deputy © SEAL) ‘i “NOTICE 18 HEREBY. (ON rt uel a GIVEN that on Tuesday, | lay of mber, queerest deep sea creatures ever seen here has been brought In by a fisherman. It is five feet long, black and green in color, with a! tail like that of a shark. It has a dorsal fin and four feet shaped like those of a parrot, Its mouth re- Semablae Hat ot a gila monster,} Ci ¥_ Comptveltet ana 6% while its is a replica, on a} Cler cattol large scale, of that of a horned toad} ne Dae. 2f, fires publion tim election will be held in Seattle for the purpose o ejecting th f T