The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 7, 1913, Page 1

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_— a SS et in killed and Great, wasn’t it? “The Sign of Venus,” Chambers’ short story Saturday. You're an to know how it all came the rest of it is published today on page 3. . We Robert in The Star us, no doubt, FOR SEATTLE AND VICINITY: GENERALLY FAI refer to Ww. Well, out. VOLUME 15 NO, 110 SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JULY 7, 1913. R TONIGHT AND TUESDAY; EASTERLY WINDS. ON TKAINS NPWe STANDS AND fe > MAN CONFESSES SEVEN BRUTAL MUR ‘Admits Beheading of Girl for Which Two Students Were The Seattle Star THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS ONE CENT DERS Executed Over forty thousand copies of The Star are sold every day. circulation is on a cash basis. The Star’s It has the kind of circulation that gives a newspaper a backbone. The circula- tion books are always open, as is the HOME press room, EDITION Boalt Finds an Old Acquaintance Among the Delegaies to the Charities Convention; and the Time When Boalt Was an Official Dad By Fred “Remember ‘Mc Wetters Judge Addams of the } Bate te the National Conferen Cleveland's juver T called on Judge Addams at new an old acquaint begun * inexperienced “off fathers. Remember ‘McWatters The story y throw Poe ‘pm of the wayward boy. ee McWatters’ methéds were shockingly ingly successful. Good church people sled that Mike would come to no goc MoWatters was a millionaire cl a known “police character, intonefor a mother. MecWatters, Addams (who wa) the first “offictal fathers” to be late Judge Callaghan, the firs Mike. MeWatters’ home was a palace-like mansion on Euclid Heights, They Gossip of ‘ ‘McWatters’ Mike” Mf court ts the cago being the first city to try the great exp Mike’? light on one eng Sroblems that the conference has been called to discuss given the fashion took him bh fit residence district te a with hi Bot fi Mike that seen McWatter the and and L. Boalt. et ot he tc tore ted bh new clc © court, of Cleveland, O., ts a dele ¢ Charities and Correction here, second oldest in the country, Chi riment the Frye hotel this morning when he and I were ardent biggest bed he had ¢ ~ and my MeW tor a t t ‘sere earde we e barn. Now, Jit hough curls and pretty clot attors od Judge Addame Wat ie : the most tmportant The by eid. ai pt ; the prob 7 : ‘ in Jimmy's butler nned Time! shouted the butler fight whtle it count In t th round. eee asted. Mike put Jimmy MeWatters openly down for unorthodox, but surpris rejotoed in the shook their heads and prophe- end ner. Mike, at the age of 12, with a drunkard for a father and a the Monday MeWatter world bave tw how t to work Kid" 1 M avigne, tore. The same day npion Hghtweight of the * sent for he told Lavigne. # not a judge then) and | were among Tea sons” and “daughters” by the A month later Mike t juventle judge. MeWatters got Mike backsiid man Once Mike away gambled and fought nmy fought McWatters never lost patience away a long tim He sw MeWatters stormed, coaxe and a draw He ) STAR'S WIRE HUMS UNCEASINGLY OF | The Star's sudden death A dispatch from London reports that the Bulgarian army | is slowly driving the combined forces of Greece and Servia' back, although mecting with ¢ wounded durin, fighting is 40,000. “square miles. At least 100,000 Diplomatic relations among all the Ba broken. The armies are fighting hand-to-hand filled with dead and dying men The charging columns) “trample under foot comrade and foe alike The ground is red. The rivers run blood. The Servians have retaken Kivolak (who ever heard of Kivolak?) price in human lives, There is a lack of physicians and nurses, and— gaid the too fa “Play it down,” man. “The Balkans are “A dispatch from Berlin,” sald fePrepared to mediate, and “Shucks!” said the telegraph editor. does?” i A message from Douglas, Ariz. tells of the bombardment of Guay- mas, across the border, the insurgents t the Gulf town, where the federqis the roof of the American club. “Any Americans hit?” Jacksonville, Fla., sends word t Smith, a necro, to a spot where he } Cherry, of ( county, “Boll It, Remarks Tahlequah, Okia.: ment of a Sunday schoo! class, The congregation followed to killed. y Will Johnson, brothers, d “Not a bad yarn,” commented An italian named Pete found dead in bed with 10 bul fourth Italian murder within a fans, and-——" “Two lines, Phoenix, Ariz, special parexican arrested to) The telegraph editor yawned. t wire today told stories of battle, The fighting area extends--over 5,000) asked the te riddled him with bullets, #0 irs and cut off bits of the ears for souven said the telegraph editor Florida.” aie Following a dispute over the manage- four men walked out of church to fight watch His father, Matthew Sanders, r Canello, remarks Bloomin oy Mh said the telegraph editor policeman stabbed to death by Mexican. | oe Mrs. Vencentall Palacio and her husband, Samuel, fought murder and fesperate resistance. The loss the past week of continuous non-combatants are homeless. kan states are The trenches are i but paid a tremendous 1 telegraph editor to the desk-; away ‘ the deskman, “says that the kalser ar Who cares what the kaiser! urning the captured cannon on were intrenehed. Shells tore into | legraph editor. hat a mob of 1,000 men took Roger, 4 alleged to have killed Sheriff T. § mutilated the body, “They're always doing that in ' Sanders was shot and Henry Henry and was fatally stabbed the telegraph editor. wa holes in his body ‘his beink the r, the police are disarming all Ital- ce pe Oe ee ae bk jeered and forgave reasoned There's R000 class merchant or a first-rate « Hy and by Mike was man today prow a fu and mat McWatters bad be But we it Or was he than and ttked and under in bis ct own tter inch tuck ator arge? min ¢ the Cleveland F father” fever pretty ba The trouble him Suny ta bo to trust rley He pointed had ne at a ww when | BAI dre Charley of being a th ight Charley Charley,” he cents’ worth of stampa And he gave him a $20 b That's the way to show after Charley had gone for the Come back? Of course he'll cor said, the very wrecked and many window fronts jing the door, and the crowd inaide couldn't get out until the wreckage was removed Mra, Paul W. Howard, of the Belvedere houseboat, tried to get ashore, The mooring® broke, and Mrs. Howard, on the gangplank, fell Into the la She was’ poacued Three boys were in a sailboat in the middle of the lake. The boat The boys were picked up| capxized by the steamer Urania “Lam unable to explain the wind storm of yesterday,” said the! eet with knives behind locked doors, and both rece! eived many, though fatal, wounds a ata non i ame Seer Wreckage at the Madison park dancing pavilion where the roof was biown off by the cyclone. “Hot wot og coin oS Scene near Madison park, on Madison st. Small stores were i | blown in. me the etd that Frank Bailey, an actor, had| ried in wie, Maisie Bawa rda, well known In vaudeville, and then com-| we in Seattie know little about! Washington, tore houseboats from mitted wuicide, Halley wn edit fcture 1 the cyclones. They don’t visit us often. |their moorings Fine!” sald the telegraph sce, inmee Mt Naaisle(e:pletute ts tn the|earre sede eee tts ie aunert ial «Polke i ter sarcow ‘path’ of. the nil. dhameaadindlaall os scratching his head and trying to| tornado were knocked off thelr feet hs remember when the last one struck! The wind demolished a garage at ge ene 37th and Madison, though another thore occurred @ real baby tornado.|The roof the pavilion at Madison Coming down the bill from 32nd] park was clipped off by the gale HT AGAINST jav., tt moved small batidings offjand the cupola tossed into the their foundations on Madison at,| street turned trees upside down, toppled) | The Red Rock pool room way wel REC ALL TO COURT telephone poles, shattered fences, filled when the wind struck it. The | rippe ba roofs und, hitting Lake’ roof of the porch collapsed, block- Judge Dykeman this morning, upon application of Attorney Walter behalf of Sheriff Cudt order citing County Fulton, ir signed ar Auditor Phelps to show cause next 1, why he should not aring the re p sheriff, in rges filed yn Hoo atrikers at net him r, represent the Renton and Ballard In the complaint the contention fs made that the sheriff must be convicted in court of malfeasance or ‘or miste in office before dhe eecall m » invoked & The charges against him, on file vith the auditor, set out that he is) 4 iilty of such malfeasance and mis- feance ‘by alleged unlawful interfer ence in aid of the strike-breakers Transparent Skirts and Flesh BIG PLANT BURNS | Tights Latest in Women’s Wea Py United Preas Lensed Wire OMAHA, July 7.—The erywhere were low necks and six-story stylish women of Paris been so plant of the Omaha Packing com |] frank jn their costumes. This novelties were pany in South Omaha ts on fire.|1 estimate for the summer of draped velvet kimono oe ly , there appeared 1913 is based on their cut fow in front and back. They ee ae, (ams as F eau 4,|| ance yesterday at the Pri were hardly more than fichus no chanee to gave the Dulldings: 1 Orage at Auteuil, recognized as ending at the w which are valued at more than|} the most elegant social func- Several of the women whose $500,000. tion of the year. lace skirts were absolutely The present fashion is to transparent wore theatrical le, and tights, and they were the cen- It looxs like some guy is kept|| wear as little as posolb mighty busy inventing new frock | to have that diaphanous, Ev- ter of interest. [things for women to do and wear, weather maf today. “Such disturb- lances are rare in this vicinity.” |RUNS IN THE FAMILY | jay wu | LO Lambert, {ed 560 pounds on her 2ist birthday, in a descendant of the famous giant ted Prem Leaned Wire DON, July 7.—Miss Alice Daniel uambert, who welghed 729 pounds. | THE COURSE of study in the | Alabama normal schools Is to be radically changed to include such |nubjects as: Rural sociology, bi- jology, domestic selence, domestic jart, brary methods, school gar. [dening, and agriculture through club work, of Leicester, who weigh-! ager war iforr ZOWIE! THEY SAID SEATTLE } NEVER HAD CY CLONES; LOOK WHAT HIS TWISTER DID AT MADISON PARK LONDON, July 7.—A suffra- get plot to burn London has been discovered by Scotland Yard, according to the Even- Ing Standard. The paper de- clared thie afternoon that It was proposed to have several French aviators fly across the English channel and drop phosphorus bombs on the prin- | cipal buildings in London. It le stated that certain avi- | ators who were approached | with the scheme refused to have anything to do with it and notified the police. BUNCO WITNESS EXPOSES SLEUTH SAN FRANCISCO, July 7. Sworn admission that he commit ted perjury at the direetion of Wm A. Mundell, Manager of the Pacific Division of the W. J. Burns de- tective agency, in the conspiracy cases resulting in the conviction of Detective Sergeant Arthur Mac Phee and Patrolman Chas. Taylor, | was made in District Attorney Fickert’s office here today by Loulsano Rovigo, the -bunco man |brought here from St. Louis to tes- tify against the two men. Rovigo was the only witness jclaiming to have paid graft money direct to the two defendants. |WON’T READ BIBLE; HUBBY BEATS HER SOUTH BEND, Ind., July 7.—Be- cause his wife refufed to read the Bible with him, Charles Duval gave her a thro ching and now is under arrest charged With assault and bat- | tery. Duval, it, is said, has suddenly be- come Insafie over religion and ft is probable a lunacy commission will be appointed to examine him, SWIMMING LESSONS, sex, hy- giene instruction, aviation, and wireless telegraphy are some of the |new subjects in city public schools jas reported to the United States bureau of education, WOMEN PLOT TO |nicky, at Tar Flat, near Springfield, \o., BURN UP LONDON olicen as with a near-half-wit, t mind his ther, ts of ouldn to an thing to into his at failing, At any rate n the midst of a ailed utterly. Once, ‘aught bim winking et his what in the light » was surprised and an- cla) hush as father rent He d ta do m was an unduti- eheaded in the ran away and p was my turn to shed crocodile tears. SUSPECT RECITES |the country, stine confessed were: ricke and wife in Bellefontaine, O., with an axe, and stole $8,000 from their home. |ledo, shipping the body to Cincin- | nati. Tyrell! at Lima, O., Body never identified. |Fletcher and Eari Butler, farmers, |at Kenton Pike, O., lof GHASTLY TALE OF CLUBBING VICTIM Los ANGELES, July 7.—After declaring to the police of Venice that he is guilty of the murder of |seven persons, including Pearl Bryan, whose brutal jslaying at Cincinnati, O., 15 years ago aroused the entire nation, Simon P. Helfens rome a complete in e. |checks and it was while he was being questioned in this connection that he recited the story that may clear half a dozen murder mysteries in Ohio. ine is held here to- ation of his ghastly ‘or passing worthless Helfenstine was arrested The body of Pearl Bryan, girl victim of the Cin- cinnati crime, was found headless in the Ohio river. The head, which had been cut off, was never recov- ered. Two medical students, Walling and Jackson, {were afterward executed for this murder. The murders to which Helfen-| = May, 1896—Killed Captain Ded- 1898—Killed Pear! Bryan at To- 1900—Killed Frank with a club. December, duly 22, 1905—Killed Joseph Fi- robbing him of $2,500. September 5, 1908—Killed A. C. robbing Fletcher $1,500. Helfenstine declared that since; We should worry! W his crimes he has wandered about mont Sorry! ee ae the Potlatch Bug had ‘em going but this Worry Bug is proving a danger- oni to Calif going abroad, but ne ornia, spending a greater part of his time in Los ous rival. Owing to the thousands jAngeles and San Francisco. His who are worryin ying about that dol- story came unhaltingly, with con-,jar. it w . sary vincing statement of details ey RisiaSh wheather. j!sh erimi man, grewsome n | with the statement that he was mar-| |ried three years ago to Mrs. | beth Newton, lives with her daug Augustine age Rell Centre, O. food supply jdiers above Guaymas are subsist- ing ports. own experience, but It te who profits by’ the experience of others The wire shorthand at Hyatt dv to address all worries to the Worry | All efforts of the officers to en- Raitor. Th |tangle him in his story failed, and! 4. y) Jolson ia heen they are convinced that they either wins the dollar today, This is his have captured one of the most fiend: " offering: als unpunished, or a mad , with a wonderful appetite for rderous detail, man concluded his narrative | should worry if some mishap Should wipe Tacoma off the map, The From some others who have been worrying Eliza-| who, he declared, 1 should worry, | should sigh, er at 227 San| There's no lazy law for a single st., San Jose. guy. Helfenstine is about 40 years of His parents, he sald, live at 70, CARL ARVIDSON, 373 Colman Bldg. 1 should worry, do you get me, Steve? It will never a pain nor a care relieve. WRECK STOCK EXCHANGE LIVERPOOL, July 7.—The cellar of the stock exchange here was partially wrecked to- jay by a bomb. Suffraget liter- ature wai found scattered about after the explosion. NOGALES, Ariz, July 7.—Their cut off, Mexican sol- J. A, MUIR, 5208 Brooklyn av. 1 should worry like “The Gas Trus' Get gre Star on my trail and on snakes, according to re- “1 should worty—please ae me tomorrow; If you give me that dollar | al have to borrow.” GEO. W. GosToRF. Bremerton, Wash, PENNANTS Coupon No. 8 Any four coupons clipped from The Star, consecutively numbered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitle you to a 65-cent pennant. A different pennant every week. Pennants will be sent by mail if 5 cents additional to cover postage is enclosed. Bring or mail to The Seattle Star, 1307 Seventh Avenue, near Union Street. It is a wise student who profits by hie wiser student student studies bookseping and a, 4th and Pine,

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