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Willie Rite ene how he'll prepase for his nex championship fight. himself, on his typewriter, hie, dightweight cham. writes an article’ for The Star, He really’ wrote We've’ got the picture to prove it. Page 2. t VOLUME NO 71 ATHES NO MORE ‘SEPTEMBER 15 * ( Daagrigoanan SHOWERS SEATTLE, TONIGHT OR THURSDAY; MODERATE SOUTHERLY JOHNNY REB TELLS YANK OF THAT GETTYSBURG AFFAIR; THEY’LL GO BACK TOGETHER H. 8, Weaver of 4120 Maynard av. 8., Is the only Confederate soldier living in ie who fought the battle of Gettysburg. He will be a member the Seattle party that will attend the reunion Gettysburg to celebrate the 50th anniversary in of at of tay to pass; So anybody who now he |] the famous battle. 1M fentify the lake M ‘ as tember maiden d Aity © altogeth By Fred L. Boalt lay % oy avs Bg tga ren} We'll go back together, comra what ae oe. you pr nterior. He cant satisty himaelt,|S4¥?” proposed H. S. Weaver, the Johnny 5 gs 'itttle a as so many did Tuesday, by peer-|Reb, to his iend, Edward D. Phelps, 715 bs ely garment was her inno-/ing through the window Rabie dk. Ne. Mack sake MAN: med vaale eon We thought, when we told you! [ve hy eAbecig. ti ab: hack 1 becciy : came after 4, you were about Miss Morr 1 might war 4 pe v0e arned. We thought if you . oe Morn, which, t t € at way you ‘ cola Y 1 t way, ‘tie tra ing of & 1 < € tha y rue, | Preseating 1s in a You ke u did. But} which got a did you avert y gaze? You t NOT, You looked. We know looked, because we were th 4} 1 | it nind why we were there. | gel the They Look Furtively 4 sitabed her 1 You looked. You k what you pod would see—and you looked! We're| lad he e hat, even te Angr glad know ver, that, coat rolled F as 1 looked, many of you were] ght of,the G shamed. You did not look long Igoe, ot Second av, ¥ You looked at each other out of the| was on display corners of your eyes, furtively h kance, and hurried away af- oth car to tak r utes Some The Star uction — from a g that set Chicago by ‘ Ani othera, passing, saw you 4 re is." |rubbering, and they, too, stopped wi-the very We were properly but to look (rate Mr. “gtwood went right on. “art,” say the critics. | Mim te worst thing you could; “A woman without any clothes} _ was to put that dress on on,” says the Chicago city counc : you made it vulgar,|which passed’a law making It an/ offense to Morn ou did. You made a ful picture vulear exhibit in that city “Beptember | torney—Miss Reah Prosecuting attorney eon Leola them Whitehead. Counsel for defense—M May Blinn. Defendant--Arthur Swanson. These are the principals in a Z case tried in Judge Ron- ‘Wis department of t superior ‘aut today. A woman !s attorney “inthe state. A woman is attorney ‘fr the defense. have clashed i potnted depu ney the ty In the present case, police t each NOMEN ATTORNEYS. ARE. OPPOSED IN MAN'S TRIAL ry Rachmill, a Third av. pawnbrok recovered | Both Miss Blinn and Miss White-/| head have tried criminal cases be- fore, but this is the first t against Miss Whitehead is a regularly e they her. ap prosecuting attor-| Miss Whit The Swanson case sets a new head is assisted by Deputy Prose reedent probably in English jurie-|cutor White, and Miss Blinn has as/ , for, while Portias have associate counsel Ivan Blair There| time to time appeared to shed are two women on the jury, Miss iat in the legal forum, the most Blinn having excused two others era cannot call to Officer Cochran, who arrested re two Portias held S n#0n, told » jury, in the di fhearena at one time PSwanson is accused ond, of ha’ st Me Pacific hotel, Sixth ar best April 29, a kodak value: M44 violin of ab the same val Me The articles were sold to Har Whitehead with len Roy testimony that offered is charged w toar la Swanson Miss nh tted h Miss {gid crows Iso identi fied Swanson as the man who sold him the stolen articles. burg to figure out, if I could ny you licked | have changed a lot a bef | « f “No no; ¥ e wt You in the thick of it, those three days. You your WOTHER CHANCE Ak SIR THOMAS Summer nick ” that it so declared will is coming. ¢ fact here officially In be Cops Get Ready for Hot Weather =! « ‘} Thiet he Ran has y to akes Dr dottet Pree tensed Wire on June 1 loxnon, » Cabled ac: So every cop ts getting ready Myance by the New York Yacht) For summer brings a mi . Ab of Sir Thomas Lipton’s chal- change. The old must give w m Apton b the new, and the sack c t Wige for the America’s cup is re the place of the greater long! Sired here today by the Royal 1 pW club. September, 1914 fet for the races, w! Bev York club's present June 1 must be wor ling measurement an al-ed. This Soverning the cc button the Sener of Gosport, Ene 4 t alec tt atlmrnad HELP" Povice!!’ ~ BURGLAR Petsvenrns Ma Fit mney e, he os itudt les in effect during the win the summer uniform the chief has order n, 18 women, ns coat below means a two-inch a sack to the coat, extend walst FAIR BATHERS SCOOT AS_ HORRID FIREMEN COME“ five ne turn and roprietor of a Turkish bath are . far joker who fast night broke up 1 t | time whe women were splashing thelr hard-) n the firat were startled by the sound} ef by, some of them started to at a raid, fivemen buret in, carrying axes and The ci While ty Mowed a wild wcramble for shelter; _ women screaming Meh stars meres in a tions to hide bem arrow posts Me fir mae they were be nade the victima.of a practical joke, Walnigg yo, “tBMrew hurriedly qmd abeshed. The proprietor ts ex yet, ° ideas from books land cavalry behind Ewell’s To | there. did Johnny Reb H. 8. W we of the line hadn't 1 wait you and three d but th se j pass « ne ng <« t figured out, comrade, R Yer And Yanks nugh Lee ordered Longstreet to he said afterward to advance at 9 0 ning of the second day, Hut Longs until 2 In the afternoon. And Mead did, and we got lieked way we figured !t out at the time of the we had you we was the And Fit Round Top. Leastwise Said he gave the ord in th didr That's how thing Us? Beh between 1 mor m we tound Top, eb you. The was the ral of infantr th a ke nd the lir 1 you-all 7—and Dole's ind It | take Close sched be and us behind t gupporting a battery and cussing There waa a warehouse near us, and over | a fiag that showed It was a hospital. We ing hear groans and cries coming from It of fact, we wa'n't in much danger, because folke ‘d have had to shoot through the town t an, and wouldn't do that So | go p the warehouse yr 40 Yanks ed or dead, and they t i water, Gx drink, and I poured the fever And by and come to a boy th nearly half in two “Ho, Johnny Reb,’ he says, ‘them shells coming this way. Can't you move us?’ “| told him there was a flag flying from roof and the Yanks wouldn't shoot at a hospi “We've got a good position, Johnny Reb,’ says. ‘We'll lick you tomorrow.’ We licked you today,’ | reminded him. “(That's because we attacked you,’ “Tomorrow you'll attack us, and you'll get lic! “We did, too, comrade. We did! that poor boy didn’t live to see it we knew you yking into was that As a matter and I find he says. Though Twenty-two uch fire, | how | how But there ound oren't take | he clock treet jo got an | | | town lroad y in e in it fly could you ‘o hit 20 emuN it by 1} are the tal. he ked thousand we left on the field, and you as many. What a fight! And to think that we're back together, comrade, you and me ing car! . Did 1 do any fighting at Gettysburg? Well and I didn't The fighting the First Maryland alry did was after we re licked It was the Fourth of July, and the retreat te Richmond had begun, Though we didn’t the backbone of the Confederacy was broken know going in a din 1 cay yward it ver telling the Yank, Ed Phelps, just how it happened at Gettysburg We were escort a wagontrain. I can remem plain as anything, that as we passed through wh we could see little bi dots that d there were dead and dying men " the fences there were Mountain on be fore we top. It was he air was ¢ t ally and slithe down the far side h narrow trail, when al) of a sudden we heard yells behind us. Fitzpatrick’s men were after us, They came tear. ing down the trail, and when they reached the wagon train they had to thin out to single file, the road was 80 narrow, And they come past wa Dark? You couldn't see your ha face ¥ con » toward the We threw ade of fence r stand, Ther ed up the hi y t ards I and the first thing you know were in the dark, and you couldn't tell Reb from Yank “But some of us got excited and yelled » thing about blankety-blank Yanks, and that'd give us dead away “A man beside me was a Yank, and | didn't know It until he yelled, ‘Surrender, you this and that Reb!'—you know how men cuss when they're excited—and the man t’other side of me , ‘Surrender nothing, you this and that Yan And they were on him In two jerks of a lamb’s tall “That was a mixup! ed us 10 to one They They captured most of us were killed, but | never many. 1 ke ran, By listened Rebs. I hiding Gen, Will The Yanks outnumber. captured the wagons. A good many of us could find out how my and to ith shut, took I come up with whispering to the t a half a ¢ n and knew they were Next stumbled over a man And who'd think it was? FE. Jones, commander of our brigade The general, 1 remember, was some We'll make a stand here,” he says, and remind him that he didn't have any army a with That better hide 1 was born over th Maryland line in that section, Why But I didn’t dare whether they were hellish part about r-—clvil “But by and by I thought of that we Southern when Stuart joined the extreme walloped Fitzpatrick on Sound reorganized Thut ft rade, when I bitter, yesstr who made the all over and don shes and non em joined behind ‘em we a log you confused we had to to make a out a ‘Where says the asks, is my army” No general I reckon we'd and ed a few and I Thad cous go to miles away, just knew a lot of folks ns living all around ause I didn't know That's the em, be Unton or Southern war a family named Logan hid ne out awhile and back from one of his raids left of our line. run into and nd recaptured vat of the men Mountain, and 1 my company aftersa fashion use. 1 was. pr knew teh South It don't reatly mistakes with, and the h taken ater was wa'n't any tty bitter beaten. Pretty much. dlffere does, {t? and North and South com ke at Gettysburg m nee It's are one | again “And we'll go go back togethe say?” ‘k to the old battlefield, eh? you and me—comrade! We'll What WINDS ~The Seattle Star THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN WASH., WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1913 SEATTLE ONE CENT ON THAINS AN NEWS BTANDS SRIVAL PORTIAS ARGUE IN COURT FOR FREEDOM OF MAN HELD AS BURGLAR Here’s a merry fix. United States secret agents steal plans of British warship, get the original plans instead of blueprints, through a mistake, and Unele Sam, much embarrassed, Has to Give ’Em Back. Story on page 6. HOME EDITION MUNICIPAL LEAGUE AND THE STAR WIN THEIR FIGHT AGAINST THE RECKLESS EXPENDITURE OF PEOPLE’S MONEY | Attorney Carkeek, chief counsel in the fight against the court house fraud case, made the following statement to The Star today: “The Star is to be congratulated on the outcome of the court house case. The Star was the first to expose and lay bare this attempted fraud upon the people. civic aggressiveness, is to The Municipal League, which once again was quick to show its be commended also. It was the league which took up the case and fought it through the court to its successful termination. “The people are entitled to businesslike administration of their funds, and The Star and the Municipal League have made it possible for the con- struction of an adequate city and county building instead of a makeshift never contemplated by the people. I am in favor of a new court house, and hope a bond issue will be submitted without delay, which will insure the people the kind of a building they have a right to expect.” GOULD WILL BE SUED FOR THAT $9,000 PAYMENT Sult probably will now be start ed to recover the 00 paid out to Arc ct Gould n the order of Commissioners ‘itor and by the terms of $45,000 Rutherford. Gould his agreement, was to get | Although no work has been done on the proposed courthouse, and in spite of the fact that his original plans were discarded by him and an attempt made to saddle a three story courthouse plan upon the people, he was paid a partial fee of $9,000, over the objections of Chairman McKenzie The archi tect’n fee, according to the opinion of Judges Sm and Albertson, ¢ out of the $950,000 bond ts sue, which they have declared null and vold According to Attorney Carkeek sult ay be instituted against the commissioners an t he return of r will taken < of the Municipal /Won’t Impose on |HisSon Any more POMONA, May 12.—Leaving a |note, saying he could no longer {m se on his son for support, Fred erick H. Steele, 62, was found dead in his back di here today, his net scattered in a walnut tree eath which he had shot himself vith a rifle. who refused to That BE. J. Ross nswer pertinent questions relating to bribery of milk ectors on the ground that {t would tend to {incriminate him, told him he had paid out money for protection, was the testimony given by Mayor Cot the council committee the health depart ment The mayor corroborated evidence given by A. BE. Flagg. [he latte testified to a meeting in the may or's office, at which were preseut | terill before investigating | ‘on, Ross and the mayor, himself rence lasted about R said the witness that ome money to Milk |Inspector Henderson for permission to put deficient milk on the market He spoke of Henderson as a “che skate because the latter raise the score 4 on his milk ten mall amount ne left $5 on Hender me a Ross said bh |son’s desk, at which Henderson was sitting at the time,” Flagg tes tified. Mayor Cotterill said that Ross ‘id him he had been “badgered” and “grafted” by the mili in ectors: Testimony by Chief Sanitary gineer Stevens, who attacked < th efficiency of D. C. K ler, one of the complainants, brought out a statement that all the employes in the garbage department who as LORIMER WANTS “TO COME BACK CHICAGO, May 21.—Tt was an nounced today that within a month {Former Senator Lorimer will open |nis campaign for the lt senate Lormler will seek selection at the republican primaries, MAYOR COTTERILL TELLS — PROBERS STORY OF GRAFT age exaggerated ghly the $950,000, © opinion lli- sione x ect fraudulent con- Architect Gould, wh ted $9,000 for plang unty will never use as ¢ , for causing a “flamboy h” to b to beguile the voter In order to popularize this project, the architect draf of his glowing conception for campaign use,” the opinion reads. The margin of this dreamland creation n up-to-date ‘Excelstor’ banner. Officially indorsed by county and city A flamboy: the bottom begul the voter to believe t this o' justice would eventually reward th faithful with a return burnt offering. It warmed and glowed w the alluring No burden to the taxpayers, Assured in pays interest bonds Partisan zeal scattered these pictori over the o y, and they were held aloft as orifian paten orators and pamphleteers The court reviews the history of the $950,000 bond | >, and makes the statement that “It seems most unlike rom the idence” that ven the proposed three-story structure now contemplated by Arvhitect is emblazoned with every stage of and bore as a cr lege at nd re s broadcast es of war by cam res Gould and Commissioners Hamilton and Knudsen “can be erected at a cost within the present bond limit en If the three-story bulld could be erected within the limit, the 1e8, It wot at all suggestive of the rocket ction sh portrayed in the ded like an un antial for ng < 1 th f the 2 well prom. ree-story building can be erected | sioners,” say Judges Smith and Albertson, “on the whole block, or a bisected six-story structure on half of alone, without any rental feature, the proposition in effect submitted was either a farce or a trap. escape in law or mo prayed for by the plai The suit was started by Frec by Attorney Vivian Carkeek, assist baugh, Irving Clark and Robert C nicipal league. Suit may now be started t ty commissioners and t bon partial fee to Architect Gould In the opinion of the court there is no 1s from the conclusion that the injunctive relief ff should be ‘Sie > Mu- the Municipal league against coun- ds n to recover $9,000 paid out as The matter will be taken up at a meet the ling of the lea Saturday Kee eke * IMAGINES HE'S A DOG * * ONCE EVERY YEAR * * ATCHISON, Kan., May 21. % * —W. H. Hedgepeth, an Okla- & * homa armer, became al. we * ly unbalanced on a Bur n®*® * train east of and & * jumped from * * He said he 1e oe sisted in pre ng the graft|* * charges, are for removal. * * Superinetn Murray, who|* le & bore the brunt of the charges, cor-| * his * roborated Stevens in this matt * ame terror-stricken #& He says the men spent city time to |* ig attacked her * prepare ovicence against bis de * *¥ *¥ ¥ RH MR RH HK partment : ape — Wednesday the testimony will be |} va theronghin concluded arguments will be |? argest made Friday it genre Get Your Pen and Paper Right Now and write a letter to The Star, ordering one of those fine Parcel Post maps, which are being given away with each yearly subscription. You will have use for this map almost every day. It contains a map of the state of Wash- ington, the United States Canal, shows the Parcel Post zones in detail and the Panama and gives full and complete information re- garding the Parcel Post. Remember, it doesn’t cost you a cent. It is given to you absolutely free with each yearly subscription to The Star, at the regular price of $3.25. But the maps are géing fast, so you should order yours at once. at COURTHOUSE BUNCO GAME IS STOPPED -