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: : Pills 2 ’ a “Wappy, in prison garb, talks with Boalt. He recalls the time when he was voted the most popular man in Seattle. It’s , ry 4 . y n Nj : om . . an interesting story that The Star man has written about the ex-chief. It will be one of the big special features in tomor- .row's paper. If you don’t read The Star, you miss a big bet every day. nS ® 1OWBR TONIGHT AND FRIDAY MOT re OUTHERLY IN After the Swat | S From a Sad Democrat et . awat the fly, ur ~ 2e¢ > oC ACT : es, Cornish, N. H., is the place “Ang u've awatted all, “ VOLUME ‘15 THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE WOME "*inere Be | place New paper for the wait NO. 60 SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1913 ONE CENT 23, 0%2182,8°2 | EDITION wat ie ka Wianineteis a RAVING, SICK MAN DIES WHILE (—--e zeae," —_) THE MAN WITHOUT HOSPITALS UNWINDREDTAPE,~=---~ exe HOPE! HE'S DOOMED my lean roll I pald that f ‘. : F : ‘ : three (Thin is the second article of a series written by Fred L. Boalt Diefl, of an overdose of red tape, at the county hospital last night — Malcolm Mc With inward tears aed groans! during his visit at the Walla Walla penitentiary. Tomorrow's story Queen, 28. rle-weaver. | will deal with ex-Chief Wappenstein.) “Malcolm McQueen came to Seattle four weeks ago. He stopped at the Hotel Union, | lid of straw must take your - - ) whird av. and Washington st. He was a victim of tuberculosis. pe ; , , , Thin ait haw'am 110 splice WALLA WALLA, May 8.—You must Day before yesterday B. S. Paschall, Empire building, was called to the bedside of D the sick man. McQueen was in terrible agony, and the doctor diagnosed the malady from And t which he was suffering as spinal meningitis. The sick man’s screams reached the street. roll, or take a Brace row half the pric not know what thoughts are his. He is a Man x house was no place for a man in McQueen's condition,” said Dr. Paschall to! Wel! felt, we'll, not Without Hope . It is better that you should not notified the city hospital to send an ambulance for him.” The ins’ at ¢ —— ; ; ae a . Jones went to the lodging house, representing the hospital. He said the city | wu) “ even know his name, for others bear it. He from your“bummer : hospital co i not receive McQueen, as it was for transients, lair Dr. Paschall contended that McQueeh, having come to the city but four weeks before,) Well meet again next fall! was a transient, and that, even if he wasn't a transient, his condition was critical and de- / panded prompt treatment. ; ; Dr. Jones replied that, inasmuch as McQueen had lived in Seattle three or four years | before, he was still a resident, and not a transient Dr. Jones went away. A fellow shingle-weaver spent Tuesday night and yesterday Pwith McQueen, who was delirious with pain and had to be held in bed by force. The cit ital meanwhile cogmunicate ! with the county h@gpital. The city hospital 1 that McQueen was a resident, and therefore ought to be sent to the county hospital county hospital took the other view, contending that she was a transient and a proper Pte fot the city hospital to handle. Twenty-four hours passed—hours of angu 6 o'clock the cow hospital's a aken to Georgetown. n the ni quit the world he knew ten years ago, and since | has lived a living death. He is no longer a man, but a numbered thing—No. 3234. He had his day, though it was brief. Fora little while he moved among his fellows. For a space he stood in the limelight. And then— I do not know why he did the thing he did. True, whisky was partly to blame. But other men drink whisky, and some are moved by it to bulance caftled at the lodging house, gnd Mc- laughte r, and some to maudlin tears, and some to \tiresome garrulity. But him it moved to a Berserker rage, in which he slew—his brother! Though drink-sod- den, he planned cunningly and deliberately. And Q) STRIKERS WIFE when the brother was de ad, the monster was not § | KNOCKED 00 ) . ¢ content. Long after life was gone, he struc K and 1 MINERS CHARGE struck again, until the face of him who had been 4 ee cd his brother was a gory pulp. ai ae me W. Sorber. | Officiats of the Coal Miners’ 1 hat waa't viitahe Before that he a babies, all union, conducting the atrike at Renton, announces womay trey Grand Jury Quizzes Witnesses on Docksite Deal ~::"' h for McQueen. Baby Gordon was ighted. | b : Baby ands. ti would ask for a warrant for an talk,| and the arrest of Mine Superintend w sed © vd hha . ; rine See mas can un-| Joe ent Jones on the charge of ; s A jin-inw better knocking down Mrs. Paul re Fea f tell the court | writes to the fc dudeanich, wife of © etriking Peg ye Rocca ing Beeb P M you ever. had fia wisene 73)‘ communicate, with I miner, in the presence of her wiiew phan : = PD. Hughes. {Giiliam’s coart when the | two children, when she tried rt a upon to Baby Gordon decided he wanted |ia-law was to protect her husband. SM view the nove] surroundings bene bey eras: . They will also file charges Mra. Cle 5 Transfer Property Quickly Ry fom a new locat ed Wis! present # ee with Sheriff Cudihee against the k - aks at | f wing . M ( epe mb out of bh nton ok four deputies who are alleged the te from Wy. Chan ome , a 1 Maself on bis reap! tO Nave attacked Judesnick | ¢¢ ( Ntle the land| wasted bef ' tramaboomnd 1a h th baving defrauded |, : Mivtched out his ay Tuesday night while he wae : t rr ‘ I P I ih © J Pi ‘ iste, who was sitt! told Wilktan neat’. the shall paar |S 4 ‘ sa . ’ : ms s one of the crowd—outside. Inside Viteess: stand. : t with hie wife and chiidren t Fey = le ‘ k t as ¢ ng that impelled him to do that which "The only hap oan I : are . Judesnick says there |) : « were ed . fou arts, d that he the law says he must not do—take life. You shuddered Aca aon | ye eh mean a 7 ase * ; ee * when you read in the newspaper the awful details of his mectoualy | but was go ng to his home ¥ me vie crime. Then you forgot Gordon With hie’ wife and childrent Tells of the Deal. ‘ i He was sentenced to be hanged. The death warrant, when he was intercepted by A name Meah a “iby ¢ ned, is on record at the penitentiary. “Within Supt. Jones and the deputies —that is how it reads. He had Hope then, and it was justified. He was A PETITION ts bet he made «| FARMER IS GORED waiting and hoping in the death cell when the warden fal with a ape f TO DEATH BY BULL w nave yh came to him and said: the'tnsh. “wabthadl Weer’ 0’ Hite” cae Sinnited ee BW ag ; ue “Your sentence has been commuted to life impris- it waren paper en R, Bean, of Aagziz, B.( ed gored t oument ot nestles ~ ti aa. the wanuitiet * tata ; Then Hope grew strong. He was not to die. He a Holate bu a t wa hed GIRL had visioned himself hanging and swinging at the end of a rope. He was to live! IOWA GIRL SCULPTOR PRODUCES A MASTERPIECE, “THE WHITE SLAVE” arm and start. d TELL utine of the fell na a a motor boat institution. He mill, F LIFE money ise Young Woman Tells of Her Ambition to Make Statues of J me- Mrs. Knott American Life as It Really Is Today—She Lives Among ‘a han short ck | Poor Learn of Ther tera WITH JACK JOHNSON ‘ she's 10 ti a minute, CHICAGO, May 8 rt . r z or 36,000 times a and neatly nly We just took the stand TWIN BROTHERS «<2 or 10 years, ches to the dining lways to the sa place. He want to t locked in. Others read, or wccupy their minds, in their e up reading. He never wri » write to. His wife d long ago. trying testified asked | Set the brot j | wn up, scattered, and ashamed of the Man ]} And, If so, Is Riche nit I ° aa ‘occult sympathy for his * I saw 3234 at his at dinner, in the prison Three we ago a horse kicked 7 it before him. He paid no Joseph Costello infthe head t aughter around him. ll their one hour of play- ard on the wall said the guard ! Though a » at the city hospital to re skul nvicts were et to in the week. I was with “He always stands like t You Need a Good Joxeph Costello 1 M “Does sal will deste: Whe ae eG i He was committéd to the ingane Not lat Deny Cc oe RO i Ome yey ae leah ane Parcel Post Map | cll” Gon omc can ge wa ad, he went before the : vans And The Star has made arrangements le lo fused again and again. ¥ ‘ ; whereby it is able to furnish you one with- Pr The crashing looms sang always thought e o } ne and that he en out a cent of expense to you. With each He the movements 36,000 times a hoxpita!, where he yearly subscription at the regular price of week for 10 y eath, an eternity of hell on earth Dr, Baumgarte ae tal i = ined Joseph Costello $3.25, The Star is giving a fine Parcel Post ae clk naeand hel ausaag Guo Ie Taene Hi Pe al Map absolutely free. fot him t e for but death alike as sin A He passed me close once. I saw his eyes. They are as anid the doetor. te This map contains a map of the State expressionless as glass eyes. They told no story. It was as Mus Yor a of Richard Costello, plainly Insane P : NOdGK his. badd nh a vn , . a . 7 if the soul of him was dead, though his body lives. MISS EDERLF AND HER MASTERPIECE, THE anys he has no brother named Jo: of Washington, the United States and the . metdans - 4 ihciccteia me Shenk nd R ; (AVE, TASS: POR, VION OO ree a Panama Canal, shows the Parcel Post pen stose ’ SMB abla Bh tagl ench i i i Exub t Persons, These Tilikums! } l v A gi 5 Mong Fett at ‘LOSER TO. THING » exprens | Zones in detail, and gives full and com- xuberant Fe , t | in Final R ace lit terest into t ‘ " vlan Pee Reclama ; plete information regarding the Parcel Waving Derby Puts Out Member’s Eye ANGE, y at ' ; t ¢ niked,. ha Clee ped " se 0 P . A shade ont ag ¢ t t ‘ ow gravity | Régha ‘ ind determine : 4 5 the result of being struck In the eye by a derby swung i] , : 4 nit ‘ce. oy tn “Mt tt du ) occult Post. You need this map without a doubt by a man in front of him at a meeting of the Tilikums of Elttaes, i” . tt c path But you had better send in your order at Will H. Horsley, president of the ‘senior cla&y and former yell « ; hette vee | : 5 dth 1 leader of the University of Washington, may “lose the sight of cp Vb fede enya bers »| KUNERAL SERVICES for Rev once, as they are going fast and the supply oni ave nl ‘ | C. L, Hansen f th Nor : A The accident occurred during a demonstration. The hat tore i . 5, That ia why | wegian-Dabigh hodist — churet is Rmited. ‘open the outer covering of the eye, injuring the inner coating | Dt ey ters. 20. De ne awh In I nt tol who died. We Jay, will be held that blood covered the pupil and closed the sight. Horsley w | oe a “rig {riish and|do more things that are symbolic! at the First M urch next Sun taken to the Minor hospital, where an operation was perf racious In her artist’s blouse. jof the life of today " day afternoon, 1