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SHOWPRS TONIGM ter, believe us. Page 3 ; THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE VOL. 15—NO, 35 SEATTLE, WASH., WEDN BHINGLE MILL | Re.arves FORBIDDEN oo PAY Levee ing has interfered with the patient's a reepiration, The pontiff constantly A young man applied at a shingle mill in Ballard for a job maive me one of your fingers now,” sald the mill superintendent, | P/cade with his physicians to allow [will take the rest as nceded.” his sisters, Maria and Anna Sarto, “Certainly,” sald the young man, and held out his hand Chop! to reain constantly at hie bedside | The man wrapped a rag around the bleeding stump where a finger, been, and went to work. He surrendered cther fingers from time Se granted. Vatican doctore fear for, ar the request has not been! for his work—and fingers—he received less than the minimum his life By and by the man, with his fellows in the Ballard mills, etruck for ‘ot as a minimum wage. Though the strikers committed no acts of violence mill operators hurriedly bullt strong stockades about thelr plants, d strike-breakers, and frantically called for police protection ‘ ‘ eoiyg (Rome Correspondent of the United Chg Pre aptain ROME, April thousand ters Ma ath , uM ay fe celebrat cnr Secretary Pa is right anc ore beak had but t t . ~ a n he t ‘ The was re ‘One young fellow in his early twenties held up his right hand, from : , only the forefinger was missing fee ance “t've been in the business only three months,” he amb now, The fairly restful nigh ysicians making {re At midnight his tem oyment as a result “The tieup is complete,” sa , and there will be none on our sl ) by peaceful methods,” the ’ vetors it the “ai: WOMAN ASSERTS SCHOOL ever, MRS. AG Loa STRAC HEMAN, FINDS HER BABIES AF TER SEARCH OF SEVEN YEARS, BOARD BOYCOTTS STORE um VAKE EVIDENCE IT WANTED TO PURCHASE IN FURTH CASE Mre. Agnés Stacheman, who owns |builfthg. They would rush down! he lot, and Tho W. Kennedy, the etreet, upse and act| ASKS COURT FOR THEM p »ple. p ple, s like a lot of hyenas. To curb this, Prof. Metsker strictly f rbade | 1 from loitering on thelr | ‘s court this morning ca! ber two babes. pril 9 Het ahts echt o little girls, Mary t ! " Epraine Span roe? | against it ain school equally {0 other stores as Bien be ris oon board. Well as the Ke 1906, 9 was taken up|. Princtpa Motsker and| Kenned } ments of op | Judge r, member of! old . THE FURTH JURY a that before f | Emil Strauch, farmer. night i ake: Has ty 5 fall | i G. Vander Griend, farmer. e said, theland c 0 one else oe W. B. ‘Kitten, ‘farmer, Heights | nearest to the schoc | Dur! Hugh C. Rickerson, shipping ‘by the ulo-tentt- Enter | bon clerk John F William Amidon, DEPUTIES ARE FIRED) SPEEDER IN COURT J.Ciaittes,milrean FOR KILLING GIRL Dora Chumiga, housewife. Ww. Du “gy niz Kennedy emphatically denies that bacco or cigarettes Ir invoked by echool in the y But {t ought to be,” says Judge n enforced as given three Callech “And all T war Mrs, Stacheman Corriga’ f Winsor wrot 0 ran yrosecuting attor « ial Prosecutor t These candy stores have | pe prods , been thought to be one of the naa ¢ | most demoralizing Influences | : seas" x » boycott | that have attached themselves | that the eged boycott is the fal to the public schools. The school ground will have what acheman's pr you call ‘picketing’; that Is, | than $4,000 tn absurd monitors to protect the children i Iam the only one! feaving the school grounds, to | ho has gone on re see that they return directly to | to pay her that their homes. Surely it has not | ywed with OLYMPIA ssioner Ol on the h as willin til t t, to cost and trou come to the point that the chil- a co o | dren sent to our achools have to dertake © ENGLAND FREES ” ik Th nev be sacrificed on the altar of against the Mammon to satisfy the capa- the pr clous or pecuniary greed of the Institutions that desire to prey upon them.” | Metsk ees AMERICAN GIRL: ‘ gece aos ome | PROMINENT MEN COME TO LO April - used last night from Holloway | ‘ dent fort er at rae andiggg Py aga Tn ggg Affidavits from a big number of; known filed in the superior wnt eae ‘or his t i "3 . ‘i London. The] doctors, sever wrers, a number! court, speak In the highest terms of aster! Mexico g 5a ge ay AMG ae eg A of patients, and others who have Nellie Kloss-Waughop, the six t ‘ and t r CRN Wormer. & MADER 0 Aner | day bride, whose husband, Dr in Europ wher 16 KE pani friends of Miss Phillip Wa p, is seeking an an 1 the exe > . a ” o we dlaple ed at nulment f marr J ent Dr. F a re ersor coll gel Bh 3 er Prov MOTHERS HEAR John fi. Smith and J. W. Levy , rn t ‘ cleat egg te arveniion. HF who made affidavits against Mrs embassy, planned to Waughop's character, are branded eae Fe r without as undesirable eltizens by a num nat an auto: ber of persons, including Rep. W Dean Hays of the last legislature, ht get an "mother's seph Gilbert, city editor of the ; eee ee nere| Elated at the response received Post-Intelligencer; Detective A, N gp eo throughout the city to thelr efforts|Mayou, Smith | cribed as men- AND THURSDAY MODBRATE SOUTHERLY WI DAY, APRIL 9, 1913. ONE CENT ON TRAINS AND SNUBS LORIMER; i = Agee eho PRINCESS ASKS ETTERS to a young wife think- ing of leaving her husband.” day on page 5. HOME EDITION By Fred L. Boalt A man from back East dropped into the ¢ n “A lot of { back where I cor row ate attle, for one rea- you'd have to show us wi So, having nothin t you've ¢ to do, acroplane That's the on y to see a city—f right perspective if you get up high enough. Eve = erything else when you're way up high. E to Later on, if you're interested in some one for inst uds for a close-up ok You can even look at -you can descend from the things with a microscope if you wish. But the bird's-eye view is the only BIG view. * * * n back East—it develc ay, where | d that he’s a manufacturer in a le Sam is building a $2,275,000 T took the man fr small way—first of a lock the man from hac Fast ich will raise Sal He was quick to grasp tl and lower Lake Washi “By jingo!” he said. “Dic room enough in Lake Was bay t know t lington a wor ae, oe. I called my guest's particular attention to Salmon bay. “We—the city, I mean,” I explained, “are spending a trifle over $350,000 on docks down there, which will be the Puget sound fishing center. There are hundreds of small fish- ing boats which haven't any home. They'll go where they can get the best and cheapest dock facilities—and a good market.” “Good idea,” said the man from back East. * We turned south, and in a tw king ‘ced the narrow strip of land be- tween Sa n bay and Smith's cove place for docks,” suggested the man from back hat’s what the harbor commission thinks,” I replied million dollars’ worth of bonds have been authorized to build ‘em. They'll be for deep-sea mer- chandise and lumber, You see, the biggest vessels afloat can come right here, discharge their cargogs of sik, tea orwohat-nat, and take on lumber. The mills, mind you, are just over yonder.” ast ** * First thing we knew we were over the watér front proper. The Easterner admired it tremendously “You wait until we've finished the central water front improvement,” I said. He wanted to know what that was, so I pointed out the public market, and ined that the commission would spend something like $750,000 for docks just below the market for the accommodation of the Sound mosquito fleet. “T see,” said the man from back East. “Sort of a union depot for Sound boats. Farm can ship turkeys and chickens and eggs and butter and garden truck right to the city docks, and the stuff's in the market and on sale before you can say ‘Jack Robinson ; “Yes; and no hold-up dockage charges, either.” We left the water front on a little side trip, then; flying over the city to Leschi park, which is to be the western terminus of the Lake Washington ferry. “It's really what you call a road improv nent,” I explained “The ferry boats will be floating roads. There’s a rich country back of Bellevue, on the other side of the lake, and farmers can drive their teams onto the ferry boats, cross, and drive into the city.” “Sounds feasible,” said the an from back I ~ * * Then we returned to the water front and continued southward to the East waterway, where great ¢ docks are going in, parallel to the Milwaukee's docks “Rut how,” asked t from the docks by ,land “Common-user tracks,” e Fasterner, “are you going to get stuff to or away T told him. “There's the railroad yards close by, and everybody gets an equal s * * * “What's that big roof over yonder?” asked the Easterner, “Moran's shipyard.” “Doing anything “Well, they're bt And there’s a vessel brought all in her bow And another from Tacoma, just launched. They're v ng a fleet of submarines for a South American republic. way from South America to have ports cut land. And that new steamer you see is the tking to capac at Moran's.” * * * From where we hung poised high in air we could hear the throbbing roar of the steam riveters, the tooting of donkey engines, the clash of steel on steel. We passed over Harbor Island, and came presently to Duwamish valley. “Crookedest river I ever saw,” said the man from back East. “Won't be long. It'll be straight as a string before the Panama canal is opened. That's one of the best things we do—taking kinks out of meandering streams. Yes, sir, that river'll be straightened and depeened all the way to Ren- ton, and then some. And there'll be turn-about basins, so that boats can turn around and go the other way.” “There ought to be some good factory sites down there,” said the Eastern- er. “It's low and flat, and what with the docks and the railroads and all, it sort of seems God intended there should be factories down there, And that's what you need out here—factories. Factories and rolls and farms. Get the factories and the payrolls, and you can count on the farmers.” * * * but he said he guessed he'd in Boston, I think he was ers would be impressed if they for a longer s T'd have taken the Eastern xo back to the hotel and send a wire to his partn impressed by what he saw. I think, too, that could see Seattle, the Seaport of Success, as we saw it—from an aeroplane NOTHER new fish out of Puget 6 4 RS i i Sound! This time, the Cable- | i i . 3 Cleaning Croppie. Some crit- Read them! They start to- POPE SINKING; DOCTORS FEAR END IS NEAR Pontiff Pleads With Physicians to Let Him See His Sisters AKEa Trip With Boalt Around Elliott Bay in The Star’s Aeroplane FEAST GOES ON. ae AID OF BRYAN pur eM evens: {by her unexpected early train mother men interested ¢ inbalasibed (ata) Lave’ ka & tie. word | ; in this movement, and those taking cat hobo UNGWOOD, “Okla, “April 9 . re the cou of training to save the The following physicians signed | py united Press Leased Wire. Charged with rryit two ‘girls | Ry vUnite e view with President Madero of Mexico ALMOST CAPTURES babies, gathered at the Bon Mar- affidavits of good iracter for| MONROE, La., April 9.--Because from the same cc mmuntty within, WAS RN, g the office abdicatec ‘ormer President Dia ss ban foe che 4:45 this afternoon for the s, Waughop: Dr. Carl Hoffman, | wy Larimer, deposed United |85 hours, Arthur Rogers of Ring-/sona b to ald 4 bdicated by f r President Diaz MEANEST HOLDUP 009.) tecture of the couras TV. Cole, Dt I. C. Moore, De | ' wood has t bound over Dis- | he el he band to pro usive Interview with ex-President Diaz In Paris ie : ‘ States senator from Iilinole, WaS|trier Judge Callison of i td pp 0 stories and letures of Uncle Sam's athletes at the {if | At the first lecture, week) J. A. Ghent, Dr. Arthur H, Gray, : *itrict Judge Cullison of En vide for her support was made here é anu Mieonhcln eWeden, =e W. Gerber, a guest at the New!ago, an attendance of as ex-| Dr. Roberta Wimer-Ford, Dr. A. BL{among the guests, Prof. Porey G./charge of kidnaping. He wa Ulga Hassan, for F nic vapnouncement of Dr. @rledmann’s cure for [ff| Richmond hotel, was willing to| pected. tnaténd there were Cunninham, Dr. Av. Rankin Holden, of Iowa, refused to attend fused by Alma Goodwin, it Is said Humphreys, of 4 a . 7 the stranger cents, When| The {natruction today included a : i s banquet given in his honor here,|@0d later married Miss. Cora fa cousin of ada riaia of a alta tor caper ov n Garmancanlention lt ted near the corner|lecture by a physician on "The| | FOUND,DEAD IN ROOM. Sond Te ate a hott hive, |Sehroeder, awed 18 years : annie tures of Walter Weliman, noted journal. jj] of M ith iv. at J o'clock | Care of th whe and a dew ck Mener, a labc 48, war : Rogers v tt were ried Day Siahtinienchune fue Bet onstration by Mrs Hickey &md|found dead in ‘his room in the Chi-| PORTLAND, OR.—Malcolm B.j father, who d 1 , } p aT i ed ak ful so Miss Herring on the way in which | cago he early th ning. The | Moea, resident manager of the Or- {legal and t t. | brid ce reache hia por a newborn baby should be bathed.| coroner was notified by Patrotman | egon hotel, Is today suffering from | Ro then zed 1 h M ¢ irned a foo Infants from the ery,|N. P. Moore, and the body removed | severe injuries, as the result of be-|ed to Misa Goodwin's home and jto make on his wife gx’ OVER 40,000 CIRCULATION tempted to hold him Hastiake av, were the|to the county morgue, Death re struck by a street car early to-|duced her to elope with him to|who says sho is willing to renounce fought and the strange demonstration, [sulted from asthma He ig expected (o recover, Canadian, Texas, her title upon payment of $260,000, se pes caer be ES. ee tae