The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 4, 1913, Page 1

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E BEAUTIFUL GIRL WHO WOKE UP IN THE STREET AT MIDNIGHT And Met—but Wait Till You Read It Yourself in “The Sign of Venus,” R. W. Chambers’ Story, in The Star Tomorrow SHOWERS TONIGHT OR SATURDAY; MOSTLY SOUTHEASTERLY WINDS. More than 40,000 copies of The : | Star are sent every diy into the No newspaper in Seattle ever has, 1 h af Seattle and. vicinit It’ or ever will, offer to its readers any | ST hona-fide Spaie efecailation Me The such splendid, and costly, and inter- lstehetfing’s out Advertisers can esting features as those which appear s & . daily in The Star, the paper that’s come any time and see the books. different. That’s why people read it. THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1913. ONE CENT oe s"s! NUWH ST BOY'S LEG BLOWN OFF BY TOY CANNON PICKETT’S WIDOW TELLS STORY OF CHARGE © VICTIM OF FOURTH (———" se or ss] WOMAN, THEN FIANCEE OF — siS RUSHED ACROSS REBEL HERO, SHOWS NOTE LAKE T0 HOSPITAL HE WROTE ON BATTLE EVE J a Earl Morgan, 1Syearcld son of C. O. Morgan, superintendent of BY LA SALLE CORBETT PICKETT. Die. the Hewitt-Lea Lumber Company, was the first Fourth of July vietim Widow of George E. Pickett, Famous Confederate General. i The boy's right leg was nearly torn off at 9 a.m. by the explosion 4 i of a toy cannon which he was firing at his home at Bellevue, across Lake Washington. He had fashioned the cannon out of the barrel of an old musket. Several times it went off according to program, Then, while the boy was standing over it, ramming another load home, it exploded. Or, Davis of Kirkland was called, and attended the boy as best he could. A launch brought him to Leschi park, where Bonney-Watson's ambulance met them and took the lad to Providence hospital. it will be nv 'y to amputate the leg. iden’ in Seattie had been report bed to the pers. at noon, VOLUME 15 NO. 108 Tho ME a : on | EDITION Your Soldier Would a Million Times Rather Be Back leep for All Time in an Unknown Grave.”—Gen. “But for You, My Darling, There With His Dead, to Pickett, After the Battle ‘ansemond, for I hadi r’s army, I Should Worry Like Jakey Furth on oa Sata ou or’ Ike Jakey Frurt “ x postoffice. On Gain pa, | € er bors f whom rushed up to me 4 and Always Get My Money’s Worth; | | ae! ’ H € t batt 1 nia; nothing now : but to ma H : v it is a proud day; ; at Une Gets the Money loday for the general'and for your uncle, the colonel, and the aii We are beginning to worry Star! I} } This “I should worry” stutt has | ROSE M. RE ‘ he p was kept q @s running around in a circle 1143 ¥ and, r ¢ € villagers Wonder how ays you can| 1 should worry and make some | ath gay—I should wor should ‘ Zy, we should worry, you sh | : ( ; ' 4 Worry, they should : Help! G 2 T have oni m the ferry and Yes, there is no doubt o' " \ statione t Suffolk is that they ei “How old is Ann?” diacu 1} | should worry, but | shouldn't pe > nd that ‘Pickett’s divthion: a) alae . Joony line stuff have passed into cry, : I c livi 2 the dim distance and all you can As | for the summer bid my me : 3 a see now is this worry dope. It has wife goodbye. 1] Taking 1 tter ‘T general on the north- 3 nto like a derrick and every SEWARD E, ANGIER, | "Ward march and sent by ground route, I turned j and bis aunt or rather every-| 6531 18th N. E. | XD) Recs od home ti Shas 1 18 OVE? ae : Body and their aunts are wri ting! 1 should worry and look quite “a: eis ig Vee, 4 *em. far m ¢ 0! i . written on July 3, just 5 Out of the mass of letters receiv.) If | shouldn't get my evening : . be the great charge, I read: a : i ed today the following bas been Star. ks MRS. PICKETT “The officers and men are all in excellent condition, bright Picked as the winner of the $1 | IDA C. PEARSON | and cheerful, singing songs and telling stories, full or hope shou! | 1 shout , | should stew, | , sing sony rr ae as ky boners | Aver a Macca don lane os and courage, inspired with absolute faith and confidence in our success. worth. through. _ WHEELER'S NEW YORK BATTERY GOING INTO ACTION IN THE BATTL. E OF GETTYSBURG “Though almost exhausted by marching in the intense heat, I felt that the exigencies MISS V. TILLMAN Oo. H. TOM - —e demanded my assuring Marse Robert (Robert E. Lee) that my men would be equal to ; — é ee ane aepgtallhed Secugeed MEP dows Lg vio : anything he might require of them. 4 jull worry away ould worry w + Mice s 5 aq | spouls worry, phrase! The Big-Little Paper Full of Good Things | ,.\¢!..77 svcetheart, at q Well, that’s enough, But, just the same, it's all the o'clock the awful silence was a Get ready for the Pottatch aca ee a a Pelkey, the new champion, poses for The Star. Page 2. broken by a cannon shot and . Real live stuff. 5. BRUCE BONNEY, } Final chapter in Evelyn Nesbitt’s life story, on what happens to “the girl who goes wrong.” Page 3 then another, and then more d ALAN MACQUARRIE, 4125 Brooklyn av A greeting by wireless from a prisoner in a land where it is 25 below zero today. Page 4 than a hundred guns shook |: Hothell, Wash. § should worry if | didn’t get A soul-stirring poem on “Gettysburg.” by Berton B: Page 6 ie hillle from creat to bes 4 1 should worry, | should sigh, my ‘raise, When the criminal hears his own voice prove his o Page 7. the hills trom Crest ase, Reading “news” tn the P.-1! For | bet bits on Frenchie How John Rockefeller acts when he goes acalling in the country. Page 9 answered by more than an- Loree bey myeell a Viens ‘uate other hundred—then absolute All about the Blethen Chim +E a y | then grim and grue- 1 should spend my hard-earned 3 West 57th | _ " | — silence, th 8 t gr ¥ “mon” 1 should worry, | should fret, | | | some low-spoken commands— For a copy of the Sun! And get sixty days for making | RD HIT TING IN U, S$, FLAG | 5 (CARS TUNED uP | then the forming of the attack- Nay, nay, Pauline, | laugh har! a bet. jir 4 columns. e A aoe 4 t _— phy = 3 “My brave Virginians are to i n e J ill tc lad eceinnens " me anemate UP CANADIANS FOR BIG RACES. attack in front. Oh, may God i | jin mercy help me as he never HOTELS CROWDED; esi. ee est202 Pah Ratdidata (omg ta ay ps in its efforts to o 7. “s ae | + . July 4—Lowering | lin. Seattle champions m firet) . NNIPEG, =A ‘ 7 ‘in | the wyorta's apaere OH x road ace tie have ridden up to report ‘. i when with the ba 01 Steaidtes toan wp sy" BI tzen "Seas No, 2a mile in |street). I shall give him this Wale chee oe eld fenc “<u Th npleasantness occurred ad 7 seconds here today, in letter to mail to you—oh, my AVED I HI IRL: ‘ ; cain] While Ca nidiers were | Practice darling, do you fee} the love i the next inning the Beavers again) 70 BN cnn | TACOMA, July ; ee od « and Fullerton ¢ : ~~ ; ’ " | w will. take rt of my heart, the prayer, as The crowded condition of Seattle | rul cording to her story to Capt.| Way ¢ n, ar qb = Doone ond Ba “ “ t ' a write that fatal we rd It is ¢ hotels at an early hour this morn- | St ant Mason at po-|the la } i Alan “ 1 to t cu for the word « almost 3 o'clock. My soul ing saved a I6-yearold girl from I n 0.0 4.7.0 0/0) | ONIDS ee Ate tte Amnon: {tomorrow morning fay there| reaches out to yours GEN. AND MRS. PICKETT IN THE FALL OF ’63 j F | ae ‘ d with R. M. Tay 6 2.0;0'1 0.9] “pusete a8 ul pract tuning up of mo- “four SOL DIER. | lor, 19, about 2 0’ ch this more. Batteries—MeCrary 1 Kon ( Mite o "i and a testing of machines. i ext letter was that ‘written on July4, the day after the battle. The ‘general wrote? meng eb time, Soe yp plbobes is Fullerton, Peterson, Cadman request While it ts declared by man “My tcave boys were full of hope and confident of ‘victory as I led them forth, forms i other in the lower part of the city | away the fore 2 apitn Bie cee iarmbo uate ing them in column of attack. rooms Wen Ae et peel tolinwike the eas ay it will be “Over on Cemetery Ridge the federals beheld a scene never before witnessed on this conti- a i e girl, Taylor has | itched the flag and trampled |® four-cornered with the man/nent—an army forming in line of battle under their very eyes, charging: across a space F 5 i ¢ st. He was rescued |W? favored mi luck taking | nearly a mile in length over fields of waving grain and anon of stubble and then of smooth ae hotel New York i pice stern 8 4 Th “experts declare that upon | ¢xPanse—moving with the steadiness of dress parade. 4 1) PARIS, July 4.—(Spl.)—Mlle. night dance”! Washington p> venpeye OR rat past performances the Montamara “Well, it is over now. The battle is lost, and many of us are prisoners, many are dead, 4 Germaine t fame eauty » she was “flus-|New York 0 = bd | FIAT CAR WINNER thon lies between Tetzlaff Burman.) many wounded, bleeding and dying Your soldier lives and mourns and, but for you, my - a por windoe shen Hateeriee-—Greom — and Hentai | Hughes and Coopge darling, he would rather, a million times, be back there with his dead, to sleep for all time Foon crake bee. that, she insisted, she says,|warhop, Sweoney and Gosset BULLETIN hy ) YOUR SOLDIER.” ie beauty the he was to get a separate room | ee SACRAMENTO, July 4.—It jin an unknown grave . 5 F Be R. zatz” ball S or her | At Cleveland le reported that Driver J, M 5 | Gen, Pickett came up from the storm of fire and returned to fill in the thousands of . contracted ‘ . | Detrolt + soveseese 2 & 4 ; | J missing names on the rofl-call of Virginia troops. The vacancies in Virginia hearts and fe ceremonie car's ba WHILE THE family was away, @| orevelat F 8 1d ese Mlhigge | eer Ne. ey heritage eae kG i Te idee tens and sad ¥ i when she ced nude | ts ss nsacked the home ubuc nd Stanage has been killed at Fresno. | ), July 4 he terri-| lives would be jones * amy " eer x he tn lh ee etal in the cout(e ene a ie the sain VB. 5 Ne ‘ sie jtory east of the Rocky mountains | On the 15th of September, in St: Paul’s church, amid the chimes of bells and bugles of the B 1S ON eee eae led end of seventh—rain tAMENTO, July 4.—Car No. |{8 sweltering in one of the hottest! and the blessings of the good people to whom my, soldier was a protector, we were ; oe Porndgs hep Tipe iraday afternoon. He got . + driven by Frank Verbeck |days of the year, Sufferin in-| married nde , 4 watch, gold ch : Humm, was firat at the|tense, Four deaths and 25 pros. - . G agg sera a NI binge Fagg At Boston o| 06 at ny Senay, Mapes fis |trations belie reported::ia Gnas As we went down the aisle, loving words and prayers. were showered upon us; black- fn Quarter beauti t PUASOMIIRIR «+004 #208 « ‘7grounds, hurtling In at 11:18, and]up to noon, with the moegeury still/robed women saying as they touched my. soldier's hand, “My bo s with you at Gettys- 0 secognition of a mode a u : oot whe § ( 1 for lunch end venth, {completing the 444-mile automobile jelimbing. s¢ attered showers in} ture!” sad-faced girls sobbing, “My brother fell on Cemetery Hill! Out between. lines of was Germaine’s ¢ t ; ' i atterfee—Houckg ckoff and|race from Los Angdes in the of sections of the heat belt brought] oidierss we passed, the bands playing and the bells chiming. ‘ This year’s Pile t ° | nna Bediont Cady Ificlal time of 11:18:16. a lo relie! 3 Povsvially id one + be kes re jleo Mewaxe. eg |— ~— Paso ms On the field of Gettysburg today stately monuments keep. guard over the dead and pe cause of the close. comp ‘ ed | ( s over undying memories. The peace of God. dwells. in. theit. silence and reigns among the = NATIONAL LEAGUE | | Some Ideas on How to Have a Noisy Celebration on |} ji!]s around which thundered the guns of half a century ago, “For, that peace we meet to P “Ay } —$ a Sane Fourth col ie anh ob i ations op the semi-centennial of the greatest battle ever foughton the t Pittsbure western hemisphere, But to us the ceremonies of this reunion raean much more, , From all the states of Pittsburs 20 3 Gs N 6 Called for lunch end 11th, | oupon. INO. Hiatteries— Burke, Salleo and] our great ution we have come to celebrate the welding of a tie, that can rfever be broken, McLean Rot » and Simon, All hearts are joined invefealty to. that country whose life once hung in the balance on this | field f I Any four coupons clipped from The Star, iA “ pe Apt ve ¥se/ ip Waahiie sili caput we . ria iea iy Ne “Keekigphage uta Agu gat i| trooklyn our ation, Hie over US. WeVves the -banne re) ic 1 | consecutively numbered, when presented at The po PAN | petitity of our nation, while over us waves: the ‘ 1 ed ya | . heey eee | whose wile, blue sky shine new stars in ‘glory that, God willing, shall never | fade. Star office with 15 cents, will entitle you to a BrOOK dy oe le | : eae | 65-cent pennant. A different pennant every Wilson; Yingll wi g, Curtis 4 ur, ci artis and Miller,| dancing the new datices. | CATHOLICS BARRED be the penglty exacted of tore) DESPERATE PERSON a2 ; fl Week. Pennants will be sent by mail if 5 cents ]) Psat | FROM TURKEY *TROT) ‘ric eaict, toad froin every Cath-| pargroi. ‘sues vita cwneny al | additional to cover postage is enclosed. Bring }}\ ,,,\\.,., i tes’ | os lle pulpit, in ‘us oly, Same direct ui catab arrived hece tobae ot cal * Boston 3 3 10 2} PIS, July 4—The turkey} from the Right-Rey. Thomas Byrne a a bef eet te Ey Seattle Star, 1307 Seventh Avenue, | Phi arith pense He" Pe Sei ¢ ‘ | tx bunby hug. and the tango/of Nashville, bishop of thig diocese. | tintdentified woman threw: a suffra: near Union Street. earide Kili Jare forever barred to Memphis) He condemned the dances as. yul-/get petition into the royal carriaga, \ t % lier and Rariden; Seaton and Cutholics. Excommunication will] gar, vile and lewd, The woman was arrested, i °

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