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THE CHILDREN! WORLD-FAMOL 5 SHOWERS —| SOMETHING FOR TONIGHT AND NDAY; MODERATE SOL SEATTLE FE TERTAINING REAL HISTORY-MAKERS HAT'S what they are, these Alaska lawmakers who are visiting this city. They are the men who are mapping the future of the vast northern Trpire. Old 00 most of them, who have ven the best their lives to the new gountry. HOLD 3US THEY DANCE “NU-STYLE”’ GLIDES RIGHT of They deserve the best we can give ‘em. THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, MAY 10. yeare VOLUME NO. 62 1913 IT IN “NU-STYLE”’ DRESSES; NO, INDEED! Do a duck | ladies, along this line for stage And if you amble work. Jt is necessary for them the American glide, frisk ng in| to don sgympastum sults or tights the fish-walk wa ve your/and short skirts before they can dainty little 3s twinkle execute the more strenuous whirls dred other {ntri-|and dips.” throngh half a b ate figures. « the latest | W208 asked whether he agreed But not while - - es*| with dance censors who class the thing in styles Bulgaria modern acrobatic dances as demor ean learn t the airtest |), pond of capers to the tune of anakey |*/!#!n8, Prof. Douglass sald: gusic right here in Seattle, {f you! “Nothing could be mor> domoral follow the latest izing upon two dancers than an dress at the, old fashioned waltz, or a modern game time rag time version of the waltz, At least that's the ann cement danced to slow music where the of Prof. Douglass, who is busy in-/ couple clasp e other in a close grructing young misses of Seattle | embrace. These acrobatic steps F fa all the mysteries of the acrobatic |} demand the dancers’ attention, and therefore they must be less de Gances. “I am instructing several young | moralising.” A difficult dip in the new i " Another figure in ay the American glide. g ai) Posed by Miss Inez ra had Zimmerman and Miss Prof. Douglass. jarie Ks ARTIST STAR’ THEAST SUSPECT AS LONE STRE HERE IN SEATTLE, BUT LADIES DON’T DO | SA NEW TO SOUTHWE HEFTING STUNT FOR THEM TODAY ON PAGE & ARE YOU YOCKY —4 everybody yesterday winnl with the home ouver, league NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE HOME an tee ae AND fe ON TRAINS NEWS STANDS ONE CENT EDITION ee a a ee oe * For the ing the » of warn nat purp grand eke | lbe thin \* * Peer ee ee eee eee ee ee eee eee ations, mornin them in open He took occasion to mand the newspapers giving a ac of what grand jury “T want this to make «a the fudge. 1 want this jury to some others where a noticeab was 1 Ronald vened con art repri for ount the hay room a reson session to be cret Foreman Rutherford bri that every mem ber of the jury {# intent ox maintaining the secrecy the jury room HOSES EERE E EEE ERE EE ee ee WHEN LUKE M’LUKE CAME TO LIVE AT WALLA WALLA PRISON! SOME BALLPLAYER, OLD LUKE By Fred L. Boalt _ team ever had. boys. GOING TO BE OUT AT DUG’S MONDAY? Champs of ours! With fiends, with Fullerton consecutive game, and these batting Itt vw ng hie sixth team only one game behind Van leaders, Tealey Raymond brings week for a series with the leading So are we CALL CARMEN TO IDENTIFY MAN IN CELL The police think they've caught the polite robber who has been holding up street car conductors quite frequently in the past two months. | You remember, he’s the chap who wouldn't rob the conductor in the presence of a lady passenger. He made the bell-ringer get off the car, walked him a block or so away, and then cleaned him. been on the A Point all tleroy and North Qu ictors especially have elected as tims. Al- showed som of the n, so that th ce are sure the same man h. heen the man behind the gun in ¢ yf them. Once, at the request of a eonduc- tor, the man left him 5 in nickels so he “could make change” on the return trip | An Apologetic Chap. | “That's reasonable,” the stick-up d Another time the poll |butted into a convers a end of the line between the conduc- tor and moto an, and apologized profusely | “I am awfully sorry,” he said, j“but I must interrupt, for 1 need a little money.” He 1 another conductor told stil wasn't a really and tru rt a little grocery Liked Quiet Neighborhood. lite. robber’s method is to board the car at the end of the line when it ‘s empty of passengers. He | | middle-aged, mild-mannered man The description tallied with the |appearance of F. W. Gaddis, 26, |who {ts beld at the city jail today for identification. The man was seen standing at the end of the | Fauntleroy line Friday night by one car crew, just as the car was leay- ing. They warned the crew of an outbound car about the man. Sure enough, at the end of the line, he | was still there. And he boarded the car. The car crew told Patrol- |man Roselius of their suspicions, and he was placed undor arrest. }A gun was found on him. WIRELESS MEN SLIP ONE OVER | ' j | | WALLA WALLA, Wash., May 10-——The Walla As stated, the penitentiary team beat the Walla ; TE R Walla team of Bive Mountain league, had an| Walla team the other day by a score of 2 to 1.|_cusrses that the Steamer Als- Ly meda, which is enroute today to , | open date ently. So they piayed the penitentiary | {¢ you had asked the convict “fans” the day before! ietchikan, Alaska, has only one | nine. The convicts beat the outsiders, 2 to 1. The| the game what they thought of their team’s chances, | wireless operator aboard, have been 5 | feature of the game was the catching of Lu they would have told you !t had no chance at all wired to the secretary of commerce | McLuke Now, if they still had Tom Dolan—. If old Tom ang jabor by members of the local ' 184s TS Dolan was still on the team, to catch, to bat—. WhY,| wireless union, who are out on — Luke Mel rhe name is not familar. What) ‘Tom scarcely ever went to bat without knocking OUt) strike pean 3 3 s Leopold M n, e millionaire} is there, then, about the appearance of this Luke| a two-bagger at ast When the Alameda nut t ea ci | Br ated Besse esate (wire rec tried for dibar-| McLuke, bow-legged, stocky and big-shouldered, as.| The day before the game a traveling guard Te-|tate Friday, there was erest glee : Ch ‘4 tae dab yin r and acqu ® again in the | mitted and he braces himself behind the/turned with a prisoner. His name, he sald, Wa8/ among the officials of the M coll ’ mihee out ot his “npoke” rosie: Mmelight tn uperior court,| plate to receive the ball, that sends the mind back | “Luke McLuke.” company for, ar parentiy ite roe | "1 a i with attempt-|to season before last when the penitentiary had! He had held up 14 men in a dark street, one after| Qu PAny, for, apparently, two o taining $5,000 worth of gold extort usurtous rates of in-|a team that, for ginger, and sclentific play, com-|another. He wore a big black beard, That and a/ ‘Be Striking operators had deserted dust, while at the Hammond [terest ot 10,000 loan on the 4 favorably with eams of the major leagues? | gruff. ing vole ired to terrify h atime | ‘Be unlon snd “guys back. to works I tes piace te ad as Taste “ acinar tea wales fren | t on a $10.0 an on the | pared favorably | ams of gues? | gruff, roaring voice conspired to territy his victims| “Today the union officials ex. itn weres 8 e cost of repairs on the same, and Never Moore, a Seattle | Méarfon building. Stern ts the pro-| Luke McLuke! There was a catcher, season before | half out of thelr wits plithed that they. had’ sent tea am | rey on eon er permitting. In| the cost of operating the machinery r Ger Indictment | Prietor of the Northern Hotel prop- | last, who stood as McLuke stands. He was a tower) “Ever been here before?” the newcomer was asked. | Sorators aboard for a purpose and ‘ tions, Judge Ronald | amounted in the past two years to| woman, | le under Indictment | orty and other real estate, and does | of atrength. He seemed to dominate the entire! “No.” that ene ott inom Mak lett the ale _Mithorized e Jury to requisition| approximately $100,000. For this| here today. Jax much loan business as law bust-| team, How he could lace the ball to nip the petit) ‘The barber removed Luke McLuke's beard. 1t| (at one 4: jogt hatsre aha: aatiotee n service the county automo-|enormous sum, the grange finds Ben Dahl, the Koyokuk | noss larcenous aspirations of base-runners! made a remarkable change in Luke McLuke's appear. lee ae ee Ge for the purpose of Inspecting only 14 miles of road had been| miner, says the woman prom- In the case of the Thompson es ‘That catcher’s name was Tom Dolan. At any rate ance. Indeed, without a beard Luke McLuke looked f feuterge Rick seen en ee ised to marry him and eet him | tate against the American Invest: | Tom Dolan” was the name written on the commit: | exactly lke Tom Dolan ns ince of count wn @| Some of the machinery bought by bat loft town’ at meht by fe . | nt Co, which will be resumed | nt papers. The police said “Dolan’a” real name} Of course Luke McLuke isn’t Tom Dolan. He says charged. ¥ expenditures '¢/Commissioner Hamilton, it 18| Gu. Meg when she secured his | Monday, Stern is charged with hav-| was Barrett. No matter |so himself. It is merely a coincidence that he looks A mass of document test}.|Charsed, hardly turned a wheel one tree iant chee neat [INE Secured 10 per cent Interest and] Dolan was a pro. a few years ago. He played | like Tom Dolan, and that his Bertilion measurements 7 Slang umentary test!) 7. hinery has been iying| 2010.) At daylight the next | several fat commissions, amounting | with various National league teams. Ho was also | are precisely the same as Tom Dolan's presented to the probers| pac’ morning he e trail after to far above the legal rate of 12 per| a heavyweight pugtlist. Today he carries a caull He says he never heard of Tom Dolan ‘etary L. Cottrill of the| ile near Kent and Auburn, and On| her on foot. Taking short cuts i . a “ 4 ; pet 4 { J het nag ll ee hey les steady | cent |flower ear, And he was a crook Do you by any chance play ball?” inquired a grange, which will be sup- and traveling night and day, he | | hemanow. ne GONIGITE, Daly Batng: erookeds: Ste pause As Hamilton's friend, H..8. Notece ited by a personal view of| beat the woman here by five |SCHOOL LAND SALE great strength and skil) which mighthave won for him : r cLuke grt d acknowle¢ HL the grondition in Commissioner|seems to have been favored in the| hours and swore out # warrant OLYMPIA. May 10.—-June 7 has|f#me and fortune on the diamond or the squared bad eave trifling aici sth tone ee ld tas yd ton’s district. award of the crematory and county ain her. This “mushing” 4 a vune | ‘eirola he Nzed ry ae * o ad Monday, if ale now | Undertaker contracts. So, too, it 1s| record Ie sald to be without |been fixed by Land Commissloner hai he bait i in the gentle arts of burglary and rand what | paition es play?” epee . ‘Cote r * Ox! * " |Savidge as the date for the sale | highway robbery uke McLuke grinned again, and said that, while Cot re oO wv . hi feet r oa « , , ” : ted to ign ge Bae viteon st of sed manidioontly tn ploy ie ciniaeaaice © 8° lof 148 acres of school lands in| And #0 he came to Walla Walla he could play most any position, he felt more at home, peli by a special comecnh the purchase of the county road King county. The land, situated You gopd (feiss "Who “live, “on the outside” never |Somehow, nentnd Mrs sath “- tee, | e about three miles southwest of SAW a@ real “fan.” You have other interests and | iirerene a, pipers purge en Road Gratt. AWAIT DECISION Preston station, in valued at $60 an Ainusements. You scatter your Interests over a| When your specialty {x strong-arming pedestrians fa th . 7 rm pa OS acre. It will be sold at public auc-| Wide field | you naturally keep fit. So Luke McLuke did not Pa ere moos. diatzict eines, Wee Oe ert] | erveeoea.” Waa. -‘ay: 10-0| ton They were proud of thelr Tom Dolan at the pen. | need to go in for a course of training. He played vestiga- ‘ » aieg P | The tea year before last beat all come: { next day ton disclosed that C é r * ! b =p 2 ee ry | eam a st beat al mers with a ‘ommiasioner| was put in charge to operate {t.|After an exchange of public sta ridiculous © A > ght to ha 2 ' Islan ls roapousihie tor a eoct| The. coatne lg unde that one crey|ments conceraing the subvouchers|BEE STING 1S FATAL| fidiculous ease, |= 9 =) | And you ouglit to have! heart the old-timers yell | % approximately $5,000 per mifle|reported 40 days’ work against the|which former Labor Commisatoner COLUMBUS, On MEY 10-— | aia the tenn WOHt=tO: DIODE. ADE the comsinn, | were remiaincunt of tHe-peant, but Absent: ‘Tom-Dolan, | With a lot of new machinery, while|county, when, a# a matter of fact,|Hubbard took when he left his of-| Mrs. Jas. Thomasson is dead | sonia Gevaemetie Tae feerottally 7 tie beast s And, an: atvonty. twice athted “the outkidate, ware the same work could have been ac-|not a wheel was turned fice, and which the present com-| here today from a bee eting /roinn the best catcher and aibround tava the | beaten, 2 to 1. : ; fomplished, even with the old sya-| Ellen Castrow, colored, voluntar-| missioner, E. W. Olson, wants him suffered a week ago. Fifteen ° 5 ‘ound player the | bea 2 s ey ata of wagons and teams, at a cost|ily appeared to testify about police|to return, the sality of the act| minutes after being stung she MISS THEORA CARTER, or-|carry on a campaign urging the use | lost consciousness and never regained her senses. involved has been passed up to At $700 to $1,000 I protection and persecution of wom: torney General Tanner for deciston. Tn all, the cost of machinery and en of the atreeta. 1D 3 | May sacred to mothera—had nothing behind It but my bellef tn mer By Mary Boyle O’Reilly | and women as sons and daughters. Hventually it will create an y 10.—Miss Anna Jarvis, the mother of) all-nations brotherhood that will stand for the protection of the a cushion and a foot stool to insure my comfort| mother and child—the unmarried mother, the mother who works, the mother who Is widowed—for, indeed, thy preservation of the ; “Please,” ste urgea, smiling an apology,| home Itaeif! 1 had so much rather talk about Mother's “The white carnation wae chosen as the memory flower vecause | Day than of myself. ‘The flush of {unate jt grows everywhere and Its whiteness symbolizes the purity of a , hyness rose to the line of her pale hait an mother's love, ite endurance, her fidelity her trusting cat ed involuntarily to a : : ; ) 1 the hearth Through all ages and all sth mnaabted .to moth said Miss Jarvis| motherhood, for mother ‘ t “ak youn as the geat born. It atest force on this earth, ' a bad father’s inf € © diseounted by a good mother's not to 11 children. | was Da ba f fa . ‘ le “4 t, nipe times in ten, the children come all right. And most her baby. It is seven years since we los ¢ ' 1 het her r f pee sple have good mothers—Imdeed, moat of us had the best mother her is was her sitting room, these ber ho ever lived things ha adh daily Se contend that Mother's Day should be th rreatest of a ho The big, home-like room flooded with sup Bo ams grat : ne Lem fae! ¥ B Let Rail pecs hol | ght was crowded h womanly posses- | ays, ee Tou Snneye Der revuaye ene sry aout B sion rs by the open fire, luxurt Very tenderly, as one+who touches sacred things, the ‘mothe: J generous windo’y garden,| of Mothers’ Day” breught from Mer desk packetsafter packet of let a ANNA J pourri, low tablea| ters i P ing needlework and They come in hundreds. he explained books, 1 p ook & ever “Here is one from a‘eonvict In Honolulu, where they celebrate ple think falls heaviest on chil Mother's Day In the prison, He saya that the memory service In daughters . rie an {: is only the grown spired him to write to the mother he had tgrgotten for 18 years. and ho unde tand This Is from Kentucky where a girl about to be married asked me » “This Mother's Day movement--making tue second Sunday in | to decorate W@r mother’s grave with white carnations on her wedding ° n r ganizer of the Good Cheer haa arrived tn Seattle and soclety, | will|of the tooth brush Got Your Parcel Post Map Yet? You need the fine map which The Star This coup was pulled by the strikers here with the intention of exposing the lax conditions, and the of federal offi rcing the wireless reg “We sent these men without thefr |licenses to apply for jobs,” said Organizer J. P. Sorenson today, “and they were accepted at once without question, although the com- pany officials had stated thut strik- ers would never be taken back, and that if they applied th icenses would be torn up and thrown in their faces.” Reports given out yesterday that the offic Astoria had een opened were denied today, it being stated that the man sent there fused to go to work, | CHICAGO, May 10, the middle west are recover‘ng from an unexpected cold wave Freezing temperatures prevailed |scores of cities and towns Chicago and day. is giving away in i ‘ on- Read this. It came from a woman in Wyoming whose only son, | A Mae's Soni S your business It oe a lad at college, wrote home every week. On the night of last | tains a map of the State of Washington, | Mother's Sunday—there have only been seven so far, you know | the United States and the Panama Canal; he wrote his mother a love letter. Next day he went boating niga he P. . 4 | and did not return, The letter followed the telegram to that it shows the Parcel Post zones in detail | stricken houses word of comfort and affection from beyond the and gives full information regarding the The official recognition of Mother's Day has been wide and Parcel Post. You will find it a most use- satisfying. Forty state governors have become honorary vice presi ful and instructive article to have in the dents of the assoctation, half of them. having Issued Mother's Day h proclamation Col, Roosevelt, ex-President Taft and President ome. Wilson have written that they considered {t an honor to serve on And the best part of it is that it doesn’t the advisory board And wherever men have been concerned the cost you a cent. The Star has mi de ar | cooperation has been chivalrous. * a 7” Comrades,’ wrote the @. A. R, commanderin-chief to bis sol rangements whereby it is able to offer you diers, ‘the boys of '61 owe their inspiration defenders of their thi bsol 1 . country to their mothers, On “Her Sundéay” we will march to Ms e map absolutely free with each churcty with the white badge of memory in our lapels, carrying the yearly subscription nation’s flag.’ " | But the supply is lim you to order at once. regular price for a The Star, and the m at once. Mother's’ day will be observed by special servites In practically every Seattle Sunday will provide automobiles for aged people so they, too, may attend the services, It has been requested by all churches observing the day that eacn mem mbol of | church in Many ef the churches ber of the congregation appear at the church wearing the sy ithe occasion. at the regular price ited, so we advise that Just send $3.25, the year’s subscription to ap will be sent to you ee Se