The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 1, 1913, Page 1

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com. odd sets, AND WHAT NEXT? and Norman, The Seattle Star’ 1913 “Follies” wearing nothing but a muff. See page 3. odd Jackson The knife Ml, a logger, was stab- ‘ assailant HOULD i , oO 1 n iT ie ee course you shouldn't do anything of the kind And when you sa nat you "t 4 . ¥ ‘ ' mean that you haven't a worry in the world } ; Prk instance, does the man or woman to women's suffrage write long letters about it or make dengthy They do not They saa simply take a convenient stand and yell mee pets \ & ig I should worry, I shoyld fret, T should marry a suffraget! ! 1 ne 1 And the suffrage agitator, man or woman, comes right back with EART SLICED BY j KNIFE; HE'S ALIVE ger After He’s Stabbed; ‘When Do I Eat?” Victim Asks Today. With a horrible oath the ruffianly scoundrel, brandishing his rang upon his helpless victim and drove the biade deep into siiced through Hleast 123 persons died as a result} be of the heat wave is indicated by | pen. uly Hibs close to the breast bone, | st qt the left end of the liver,| " the pericardium (the | ich; 9m taclosing the heart) and 4 Into the heart itself. Ws Only a Pump stry GR Tegarding the heart Speak of “joyful hearts” ud leet Bir ot tae ne 4 pump Another are a great many popular | The and when, as a mat the heart knows neith fOr sorrow, being merely a} delusion is that when a 4s shot or stabbed in the heart, Menge of course. Roasider the case of Lozuer a ‘amp 1, Blakel mate enough to liv of advanced surgery ey laid him on a t Bt into a sound, drew KL. Holtz and w. ¢ him, tinkered him up with th He's Hungry Again to be dead, grinned Flags! hy and said When Commenting on the « Per- | who | Speldel and ¢ minimum of 4nd the maximum of dispatch, | this morning Percell, who, | to the accepted notion, wry do 1 eat?” mets ne toda 10x15 Hoits fald: “While 1 do not + be understood as favoring excess, | vound to that Percell came tt ronal ihe mon exceptionally well, and it Probably because he was When the stabbing ox urred te SCt# somewhat ax an anes 8nd 8 person hurt while hot thres rout & Ph, and consequent ravate ry, as would the case if 88 sober This knocks still anot Notion inte AN COMP, the use Orica! names {or Care, food lifted tenderly Into an ambulance id) city hospital, where the doctors patched him up so neatly | should worry,” Of I should worry and lose my goat, Nevertheless we're getting the vote. WEATHER FORECAST FOR SEATTLE AND VICINITY New York correspondent, saw a girl in the _The Sea THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE T SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, JULY 1, VOLUME 15 NO. 105 1913. oo *# & ence—haw, haw, haw!—(oh, our Miss Moore is variously described. and a@ scream. ¥ very funny, and gets a ridiculously enormous person in the crowd th siggle. WORRY AND GET GRAY! JUST SIT DOWN AND FAIR TONIGHT AND WEDNESDAY; ‘HAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS * Ladies and gentlemen—ha, ha, ha! (excuse these loud guffaws)—we take i . ho, ho, ho! (honestly we would, stop laffin’ if we could)—great pleasure in introducing Miss sides!)——Miss Florence Moore. y In the language of the press agent she is “the funniest woman in the world”—har, har, har!—and in the jargon of the profesh she is a riot, a knockout Possibly she is also a piercing shriek, but of this we are not sure. | We will now subdue our cachinnations long enough to explain that Miss Moore, who is very, of the several stars of the “Hanky Panky” show, , : show at Metropolitan park, Fourth and University, at 2 this sunshiny p. m. up a collection in the crowd for Mother Ryther’s home for children. i, | The Star offers a reward of $100 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of any afternoon who, having seen and heard Florence Moore, does not at least Here are a few more examples of the rhyming wort I should worry, I should weep, I should lose my beauty sleep! We should worry, we should fret us, We should stand for oil on lettuce! I should worry, I should stew, I should grow crow's feet like you! We're looking for the very best of the couplets that carr And we'll pay a dollar for the best one sent in each day two week beginning tomorrow Now come along with your “I should worry” rhy couple $1 for the man, woman or child who gives us the best one for tar LIGHT VARIABLE WINDS; MOSTLY WESTERLY ttle Star HOME EDITION ONT \rws AINS ANU TANDS. he ONE CENT * s | great pleasure in— Flor- y for making folks split their sides, and who is one will be among those present at The Star’s free Chorus girls will take NEW YORK, July 123 Are Killed | TN by Heat in East; | Ry United Pree Leased Wire nck nd | CHICAGO, July 1 That at Today ts July 1 Today was fixed as the time for the judicial exodus from the court house, away from worry and over work, to gentler climes Today the judges’ vacation of eight weeks was to begin. But hark! Fight of the nine judges failed to vacate or vacationate today. 1.—| Bight of the nine judges found |their calendars unmanageable, and had to return for work this morn cities of the Middle West, The fol-| lowing is a summary of the known deaths Chicago 50, Cleveland 13, Pitts-| burg 9, Columbus 2, Cincinnati 4, La Crosse 1, Peoria 4, South Bend ity United Prose Leased Wire 5, Detroit 11, Grand Rapids 7, Mil- LONDON, July 1—The dis: waukee 3, Scattering 14. Total 123. covery of a euffraget murder plot which hitherto has been | known only to members of the | home office, Is announced to- day by the Daily Express. It Is alleged that the mili- tants plan to avenge the duath of any militant through self- inflicted starvation upon mem- bers of the cabinet. ‘Should one of the militants di the publication say: “while under sentence, the lif — of no member of the cabinet would be 'e, and the lives of cade tt ote ee (INJUNCTION GETS — be in the g ” | TALK OF MURDER 300 Veterans Prostrated GETTYSBURG Pa, July Terrific heat and high humidity to-/| day swept the field of Gettysburg | 0 . oad years ago it was raked by|ins. The general exodus fell down a 4 up to noon more| ™iserably. The even two months the Gray had been treated for pros-| Hight of the nine judges heard tration and weakness brought. on|cases today. Fight of the nine will by the blinding sunshine, which | hear cases tomorrow, too. |poured down on the blood-soaked! And eight of the nine judges will | teld hear cases day after RAP BETWEEN EYES The faithful little brother of the big corporations, the Writ of In junction, got a body blow in the superior court this morning old days when an injunction against a labor some corporation. lawyers didn't have to the Remember the union .was so easy to get that !do anything more than telephone order? Hut there was no presto! Attorney affidavit To issue a restraining order at this time,” sald Fulton, “would be to deciding the case on its merits without a full and open which these union men are entitled 4 why Judge Gillam dented the restraining order, after to arguments Friday night and Monday night at special ses to hearing, And that latening sions of the cou é The day of the injunction by ex parte procedure, without notice to the opposite party, seems doomed, JUDGES ON VACATION? OH, NO! THEY DIDN'T GET AWAY Tis different now. Judge Gilliam actually required the Belknap | e« Co. to prove acta of violence, b ponderance of evidence, be issue a restraining inst the union, the Building Trades council and the abor council, A strike has been on against the company since May 1. A raise of 50 cents per day for six men is asked Enter the company into the superior court. The usual charges | were made {n its affidavits—violence, picketing, etc, Petition is made for restraining order Walter Fulton filed counter Jers don’t know the ‘Send Mail Now | With C.0. D. Tag) Mae her is the own girl to in Seattle. the local office from Monday, and a C. O, D. department also. And who knows? Maybe! was immediately established some of them will be unable to get | collect-ondelivery system permits | riage, away for that vacation until week either business houses or individu: | of contract jafter next Judge Mackintosh was the only Washington luxury for two years. mallman collect when the delivery PLAIN INTOXICATION graduate of the Bridget’s academy carefully brought up. New York politics. Pennants Coupon No. 3 to the became involved » with Hoe alleg she declares, by Any four coupons clipped’ from The ises of luxury, Star, consecutively numbered, when presented at The Star office with 15 apartment which he her on Seventh av cents, will entitle you to a 65-cent | says. pennant. A different pennant every week. Pennants will be sent by mail were jewels and out limit. worth of ’ if 5 cents additional to cover postage is enclosed. | Then, her Christma met him to marry two him, and 1 what remarkable case of Mae Sulli van and Arthur Ingersoll Hoe. WRITE; W ELL PAY I THE SLAVE HUNT Evelyn the white slaver. Nesbitt tells in a most graphic manner how she was plied with liquor and finally trapped by Page 3. TELLS OF WOOING BY MILLIONAIRE | New York to make of know al Now she has sued him for $150,-) The 900 for breach of promise of mar and $75,000 more for breach to support her ais to send packages and have the | rate of $50,000 a year for life. Heir to $5,000,000 at the judge who did not hold court today, |g made. |_ Hoe, who is the son of the late | He left Inst week for Alaska. Each matiman delivering @ parcel|Robert Hoe, the great printing post package will be required to press manufacturer, from whom either return the package or the|he Inherited $5,000,000, defies Miss money to the C, 0. D. department, | Sullivan to prove her charges, And By United Prose Leased Wire If the money {8 collected, it will be his wife, formerly Evelyn Perry NEW YORK, July 1 Three | forwarded to. the sender of the 4 actress, who took a college policemen bitten by Louis Voight, package in the form of a money or-|Course before her marriage to fit sai0 to ‘have: hydrophobia,. were | der her for her new social position, |relieved to find that Louis was bit stands by her husband |ten by a dog five years ago and| COMMISSIONER REYNOLDS of| The papers filed by Miss Sulli only remembered it when intoxt-i Kansas City has decided that a/ Van say she met Hoe one day in| por ‘October, 1910, when she had run| eit - si over to New York from Wellesley college to buy some clothes. She was an orphan, only 17, a recent fashionable St and had been Her father was the late Patrick Sullivan, once register of deeds and prominent in Flirts on the Street On the way she art museum in a street He persuaded 8, to stay over for a led on her during that New York home. Then, protests of love and by turning her head with prom he induced her to give up college and live in a lavish furnished for Immediately he overwhelmed her with money and gifts, she There was a $6,000 mo- tor car, which she sold one day for $400 when she happened to need a little change, and there clothes with: She now has $35,000 diamonds gave hé@r, she declare: story goes, just before A months Hoe definitely that he after she asked her the wedding Girl Reveals How She Left College for Love and Luxury, With the Bills All Paid by Married. Man. was to take place in one year. And claiming the right to support her as his future wife, he made her an allowance Of $1,000 a week, so she who, according | claims. story, left Wellesley college to become the fiancee of | Beginning today, the new parcel | this young millionaire, not post C. O. D. plan became effective | ing that he had a wife and children, Tage were received by |and was supported by him in re He paid promptly, she says, and in fact spent $67,000 on her in the course of a year, She lived in sev- eral princely suites, and had five servants to look after her wants. The next December, she relates, Hoe wanted to postpone the wed- ding. She finally me susp! cious, and in February, 1912, dis- covered that he had a wife and two children Offers $50,000 a Year Naturally, there was a scene. And the upshot of it was, says | Miss Sullivan, that Hoe signed an agreement to pay her $50,000 a year, during her life, in order to “do the square thing by her” and maintain her in the luxury to which he had accustomed her, And then he didn’t pay—-wherefo she has brought suit against him, Miss Sullivan maintains that her relations with Hoe during all this time were perfectly ins nocent, and that Hoe supported her, and gave her all the money and presents, simply be- cause “he was desperately In love with her. ‘GEORGE TRAINS ~ TO BE AVIATOR Unwittingly George sailor, established a record. which few people will attempt to equal when he jumped off the sidewalk on Jackson st. to the glass roof of the Great Northern station, He sailed right through the glass to the ce |ment platform below, and picked | himse a bit dazed, but unharm- ed, , Peterson was running away from some other sallors who threat- ened to attack him In the past year two men lost their lives at the same place when they climbed to the glass roof to recover their hats, blown off by the wind Peterson, a NE ORLEANS girl who had slept for three weeks Was awaken: ed by injecting alcohol into the base of her brain

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