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— . A GREAT PHOTOGRAPH Taken five minutes after the start of the fire which wiped out the plant of the Freeman Overall Co., at Binghamton, N. Y., and burned up 63 women — ia : and girls. The picture appears on page 6 of today’s issue of The Star. FOR SEATTLE AND VICINITY FAIR TONIGHT AND TUESDAY; MODERATE WESTERLY WINDS. Ny Ww P p Ww y Think! 40,000 Daily Everett True Is hese: | VOLUME 15 ‘THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS ee NO. 128. SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JULY 28, 1913. ONE CE Investigate page HOME EDITION [ON EMAINS an! SPW MTANDS fe "NOBODY'S GOING TO GRAB ALASKA’ sc HUNT WOODS Woman Dodges Bullets, Wrecks AMERICAN IS Siow Weald You Like to Be in NOT IF SEN POINDEXTER CAN HELP IT! EXPLAINS ~: and Bandit Bands in a Thrilling | on Uncle Sam’s Coal Dividends? BILL TO OPEN COUNTRY 3 FOR CHILD’ S Escape Across Line From Mexico SHOT; BAIT a ASSAILANT FOR WILSON? 4 | tell r _— ‘ volun Deputies in all lumber camps in ' r Snohomish county are today watch. By John E. Nevin. (Editor's Note—Did you know that this great territory of the United Ing for the assailant of the tt-year- | (United Press Statf Correspondent) States to the northwest is 800 miles wide and 1,100 miles long, and that je id daughter of Mr. and Mra. Henry | WASHINGTON, July 28.—There it contains 590,884 square miles? a (i leely, who attacked her in their te ne Here necsenlty fer Moniean in The time has come for Uncle Sam to open up this great country to th g home Saturday. The girl, who| tervatiod: than Shove Wa & enth his sons. The government is preparing to make it easier for the Amerl- © any fought until exhausted before sub- ago. The gituation is serious, but can pioneer, for the ambitious young man, to get into that rich fand of promise For that reason you will be interested in Senator Poindexter’s bill, mitting, will recover. not eritic tinue hist tigations in “bik individuals to go ahead in Alaska and harder for giant corporations to | brother fashion, which has not grab the whole country. Correspondent Gardner has told you of the lyet considered “force of arms.” chief points in this interesting bill. In the following, Senator Poindexter At the executive offices today al himself explains his document.) report that Wilson is considering a dual for intervention submit By Gilson Gardner yassador Wilson was WASHINGTON, 28.—In anewer to the numerous ‘nquiries rd which reach ie bie s reference tg the Alaska bill which he has t shooting in Juarez of nt ed into the senate, Senator Poindexter of Washington today oo ene The girl's parents were ew Was washing | t he man en boked » old bro Dixon, an American Im tal, is considered tn an a probable Wilson's hand and The bill was introduced to meet a pressing need. The people of the country, an Pacific ¢ and in Alaska, are de. manding that A ; same time, pecially on the askan resources b He Is described b ntervention such opening to use must be properly safeg American ped» Pp spt about 5 feet 7 in height, and p assador Wilson's ple will never tolerate private polization of the natural resources ledge, wavy hair, Mexi City, which of Alaska knew h face, with a on's release and demand The immediate requisites for develop Alaska are that a tran po “ is chin ¢ says he hment of the men who ortation establi and t the coal lands be opened for it ore black clothe as not been made public mining ns two » programs have been suggested. 7 - | One for the gc mt t stablish a transportation 700 REBELS DIE IN BATTLE | system and then get private interests to operate it; to open the coal MEXICO CITY, July 28.—Wi lands to entry and sell them to private in sts to exploit. The other HERO OF “THREE ee from Monclova nay | program is for the government to ests rate a transporta: 4 were killed and 1,000 jtion system and to open and operate all the mines itself 3 eh WEEKS T0 WED 18-hour battls, which | “The bill which | have introduged,” continued the senator, “em- yesterday in the Canon Har’ ' bodies a program which is neither of these extremes. It provid | : j This is a dollar's or of coal 10 prog ch is neithe ‘emes. provides 4 tell B del Carmen, Coahuila. ¢ Manx What pin 4 : bei ms Bes - that the government shall establish and operate a transportation ‘i N st peat | ft ts Geclared, ¢ etely | wy ne ane opepliged h-setex system and divice the business of opening and operating the coal |” é Pe ial eg Bose scatteeee| d the rebels. | There is 65 cents w of labor in it ‘: | mines between itself and private parties under lease. Half of the a man? Gas acitoone wth ane al | There is 10 cer rent in it | coal lands are to be developed by the government through a mining . sf 0 -— The s 1 c ' ! . machinery in it.| Service and half by private lessees.” wh" Wie” ee eee frkeg ENTIRE TOWN TO Engg ci ngs psa ros thik oiler 40 went In explanation of the plan for profit-sharing in the government | ma mont Jocelyn Preston Arnut, and in 8. GEO. 1 HAN STOP EATING MEAT is PROFIT mint ‘ Meigizal (Miah ecnhoaied sin this plan was suggested by Mr. justy New York a Paul Allen, is t> be MRS. GEO. I. HAM NEWINGTON, Conn., July 28 What will Uncle Sam do with this profit? He proposes|James MacKaye of Cambridge, Mass, a Harvard man and scientists a bey U SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. July 28.,8 pliysioal wreck and went to Residents of this town havede | 4. give § ts of it to the MAN WHO MINES THE, Under this plan, the ‘mining service,’ {n.developing its half of-the coal 4 Elizabeth Golden of Boston, fian-|_}\\ tas of lentton % sci Frases Aer tided to quit eatin 4 fo. 8 ba schd Gghag teppei Th arp ere 3 : to be 4 to obtaln . 5 y aus ot the golden Raived here. onid Bearing tales of looting and other) France to regain bis baalth. q eating meat until GOAL -lnvad sitipdnns to his wages, and 5 cents of it to the lands, is to be organized to obtain the welfare of two, and only two, sets incidents of the warfare that is Ham held large property inter. || Mere Js a fall in the price, Vege of people—the consumers and the operatives. Operatives include both D2 today that she would marry Paul | stirring Mexico, Mrs, Geo. 1 Ham, (ests In and about Mexico City and || ables wit! be the standby MAN WHO USES THE COAT aw wrebate _« | laborers’ and managers. A minimum wage (or salary) and a maximum oe September 1. He is to go te work! wite of an American banker, who his w journeyed there to} DOESN'T THIS BEAT GIVING IT TO THE GUG-| price are fixed for the ‘mining service’ by the president. It must do Just like any other young hosband,| pad been att pting to reach the! straighten out his affairs. On the } IM COAL TRUS | business between these limits. she said. nited States from Mexico City way she ed th -NH . oie All ipts over and above the costs of operation, maintenanes, Senator Poindexter’s bill for Alaska ie that Uncle Sam, tn! ete. and 5 per cent interest char; are put in a ‘dividend fund.’ Halt in ompetition with private lessees, shall himself dig coal 1 sell it to| of this fund goes to the operatives to increase their minimum, or orige since April 17, arrived here recen r BIG FACTORY BURNS jy" trom! Hatioa, Mexico ed for public “at lowest price consistent with the maintenance of the| {nal wage, and the other half goes rebate to the consumers to : aausiie | Fou years ago the ba f «hich two wrecks. Eventually » ‘ TACOMA, Wash., July 28.—The| Ham was president, failed for sev-jordered to return to. the United waters of all operatives (workers) at a high level rease the maximum, or original price charged fi whal {s still investigating |eral millions, and he wan . rown| States, but managed to reach Mex This ¢ shows how this is to be done. It is based on figures The share of the operatives is distributed the fire which destroyed the North-| nto Belem jail and kept th with-|feo City. On her return, she had in the 191 neus, For every dollar paid as the maximum (initic') | tion to the respective amounts of their ori, wage, and the share of mong them in propor. western Woodenware con y's |ont trial for three and a ha raimany narrow escapes from roving ——- price for coal, 65 cents goes to labor and a dividend fund of 10 cents the consumers is distributed among them in proportion to the amounts ye factory, the second largest of ita|despite the appeal made to the|bands of bandits she encounter ST. PAUL, July 28.—The three! {x earned. Half of this fund (5 cents) goes to labor and the other haif| Of their respective purchases ~ kind in the United States, causing a| American authorities When reb-| “lam so glad to get ba mn who attemp to hold up the | (5 cents) goes as a rebate to consumer. So the real (final) wage The senator said that this provision of the bill is designed to pro loss estimated at $200,000. The or-|els captured the city six montha| American soil that I don't think I| East-bound North Coast Limited on| ts increased from 65 to 70 cents, and the real (final) price is decreased | Vide a specific Incentive to efficiency of service igin of the blaze, which occurred|tgo, the jail was thrown open and) shall er leave it again,” Mre./the Northern Pacific Saturday | from 100 to 95 centa “The more efficiently they work,” he said, “the larger will be the y Saturday night, is unknown. Ham returned to the United Statos| Ham says night, near Homentak Mont.,| For the first Ume in history the laborer has an Incentive to work, | dividend fund, the higher will be their final wage, and the lower will be have been traced to Butte, Mont.) The more he hustles the higher his wage, and at the same time the low-| the final price to the consumer. Hence the interests of producer (laborer | by a sheriffs posse, according to! er ie price to the public; thus the interest of producer and consumer! and manager) and of consumer are made identical. Hi |W. J. MeFetridge, chief special | ts made Identic al | “This bill makes monopoly impossible, furnishes coal at the lowest __ ea e Oy 0 ecame enera y 1S | age mt of the Northern Pacific ji | price which conditions make possible, promotes the general develop. 4 |Nothing was secured by the} ment of Alaska, aids manufacturing on the Pacific coast by providing | bandits. They uncoupled the ex cheap fuel, furnishes government employment for thousands of unermm ] A e can press car, but left their dynamite | ployed, and, perhaps more important than all, affords an object lesson aring ea ers ip in en ra m ri [behind on the platform of the js the relations between employer and employe which may aid in the | smoker. solution of that problem. ~ — War Is Now Off on aSearch for Treasure ALAS, POOR GIRLS EVER HIT IT OFF RIGHT? cunioary costs | AUTOS CRASH IN By Fred L. Boalt | was his old comrade, Chamoro, sec HER 3 FINGERS ON, July Wash-| George N. Salisbury, Uncle Sam's on "July 12, he missed ‘et of op ° Brigadier General Cliff Sands, yi ge B= away off. PHILADELPHIA, July 28.— i tom ix in mourning to-l weatherman in: Seats, batted .767 | Predicted ‘rising temperaturecit |] CUTIOWS to know what was in a - They were glad to see him—and! university freshman, and the young- so were all the other gray general 7 est military strategist in the world, isxsimo and colonds and majors | as over the news thas the Beau | inthe forecasters’ league during the | was 68 the day before—and it fell brought home, Mra. Frederick They made a g over the| Brummel of the White House aide | ¢irgt 25 days in July. to 56 degr inte: tried. to pry It open “with A mir who helped make Nicaraguan his- still beardiess Generalissimo Sande.|*taff, Major Thomas L, Rhon Olt of 26 Umnes at hat with pre! The oth Tarte wih culous escape from death r machines collided in the tory in the Estrada revolution in two times he bunted 1909-10, is going treasure hunting. ' hi ind wined him.|!ad been ordered to Winchester, | 26| “safeties. was one degree| In a few weeks Sands will leave ri fh pore As sd alae in the| V.. for duty I" hs sini lexd ; ab say 18. and words Fie Ane epee AAA weernd red Hines re hore, Coerlenced by the-Griss iam for Cusco, Peru, at the head of = bi For some time the air has been! “nen’tame four of the 10 times|g ay Mad eee |] of her fingers. It was a railroad brothers, two auto dare devils, at company of 25 miners, to search for ‘All of which pleased the boy very| thick with rumors that President | salisbury predicted, and twhee |< struck out July 25th |] torpedo Tana park Sunday. Although both ne gold. cA much | Wilson's expressed opinion that! when he diane | when he predicted showers, From | hey were pinned beneath thelr General Sands is 22. When he Hears of Gold Deposits. jmilitary aides were an unn | The temp ire has been so gen-| the 15th to the 25th, George made a| euvy cars after a drop.of several was 19 he was graduated from the It may be that {t was in Manague|*®TY krandeur for a democratic] eraty even | Seattle during the | hit every time up. neither suffered sd ch xa ‘ Lincoln high school here, and left that he heard of the gold farther to | President, would include the major,| month, that the weatherman was| Lots of folks don't think the| tch. A big crowd saw the ac ‘ immediately for Nicaragua, where) the south, in the Peruvian hills, On) but the ladies hoped against hope.| oniy inepir redict three tem-| weatherman has so big a hitting av | cident he joined the revolutionary forces| this point he is wisely silent. For a|. This is the beginning of the end, Wach time hel eras 767, which means guess e - The Greggs stage a daring ride, of Estrada. | boy he is not loquacious for the rest of the White House dicted warmer weather, and the |ing right three times out of every |, OLYMPIA, W ash, July 28,—-That jin which the two machines, both i Estrada Now a Fugitive. | | “1 was a ttle ashamed of the|*ides probably will be returned to st time at the bat on that score, | four the state itself, as well as the pub-| leaving th top of a steep incline q 4 Since that time kaleidoscopic newspaper stories about me when |their regular posts, pede a le, should give recognition to the | sim taneously, turn a somersault —] 7 PP occurred in Nicar-| I returned from Nicaragua,” he| paroled and discharged prisoner,|in the air, in’ which the rear car | + a with the help of ousted Madriz. Es y a fugitive in} and Diaz, who} . is in power. } ands, nself tod. city, by a cause T believed in. I hope I Off Stac k; Li ives be made by Herman Ross, a mem _ it well, That's all. Yet they -| “ ng ae mere ol te ft together | iy 5 and give him a chance to make| passes the ove which originally lef down there. I tried to do my duty MINERS $ RIOTING F alls 110 Feet. | ood by finding state employment] tn the lead . ‘or him, is the recommendation to q Independent _tax!, automobile,| ber of the state board of ght with Sand newspapers—made me out. al CALUMET ne % x ontrol ix Impossible to say at this| enviie ewnsttibckiar’ > Sant tice eee Mich. July 28 an ; jand ordinary wagon drivers will| In an interview here, Ross de ot t hat were the like ft : ‘opper mining) GRANITE CITY ITY, 1, July 28.—A . “ clares himself in favor of giving 10 WES regions can today when strikers hereafter have the same privilege 2 ft the old rebel, Katra ada, “As for this new project, It 18 &| attacked a number of nonunioniate| though he fell 110 feet from . au the Beattie Taxi Us, with ,{ the prisoners as much local s« —e first cast eyes on the slim, prosaic business venture. There! about a mile from Calumet. Troope| top of a smokestack and crashed |‘ : } regard} government in the institution as is) SAN FRANCISCO, July 28— beardless ful American boy is nothing interesting about it. We| were rushed to the w« p to soliciting business at Seattle | consistent rene 1 > with officials ' « hrough a roof, afte ich he went “ ‘ have formed a company, of which ne and dis-| through a roof, after which he went) 4, So the license committee} jouthern Pacific R. Ry, the Iam the manager. We go to Com app the stril but several) down 18 foot further, Rdward H rl eecaed is Gepentnay ands ha hack Saale of the vote of the 5,000 em. mundo, Peru, and thence by rail to!" Siittiamen caught three men ap-| eT, Mil! lives. He has @ fractured |) °°) km esa | ployes on an agreement to strike ig Curso, where we will file claims and| |” a aus tree MeN AP-| skull, dislocated elbows and prob-| ter will now go to the council for being withheld here today. It is” a whom he put in command of a wing ave . of bis tatterdemalion forces A Comrade of Diaz. Sands’ fellow commanders were yroac’ e Isle ‘oyal Pi e »prova rhe , , | fer , hice enw’ predide nd Chamore set up machinery proaching the Isle Royal Powder | apiy ‘Internal injuries approval, ‘The practice, complain jsaid the meeting will take place @ 4 Diaz house today, They were arrested | ed of, was to let the tax! compat ! P hist hat they © expect to employ ‘ Sevocat lan the accident happened at the it pasha oe company} victor Berger, former socialist| Within two or three days. The ager psc ily for Indians—to perform the labor after firing several shots. Several] niedringhaus ater! works, while | 0 on the dock, while the independ-| congressman from Milwaukee, will| Vote followed disagreement regard y te yta have been made to blow} ‘ing , »), ents had to remain outside. i he - a t - % 4 wag the American miners will Ronnie, Wondae tea, blow] Horner was ascending the stack to| ents had to remain | uiside. In the] speak at the Dreamland pavilion] {ng the status of employes of the rah preoe yer uperintendents and guard ' _ ; hear the | paint. it aide. ’The bill wea’ fachna ut [next Sunday night jelectrified divisions who ask for ernment | Pecaident Hesketh» (“there by | “Herger is the man who Introduced | the same wage paid steam road > They pressed ia oT nlution in the house of repre-| employes capital town of Princ put varnish carry whole pages of en= 17 Ata: pUUMG webebtiod te 25 2 dreds weresturned away from the] thusa “ig public reception t#* the plan i * b of the Chamber of Commerce when | pea ie Several hundred ollars Malanete| Dy amland when he s the steamship Victoria, the] When Laub! Neemb! I-year.| Silverware, Jewelry and. valoable Alaska 8. 8. Co., which carries 117 otis sh so aot ace nthe home} | J. War Seattle excurslonists, who inapect spiced 1ageelre rd © here last tan ’ rebels were beaten; the town taken Sands, with a bodyguard of seven men, held the north end of the town for hours. Sands wae taken prison- a ing GET BAGK HOME S70. Dcur A THOROUGH JO ayy» qppoaTs = ane a mining mil. ere stolen fr¢ ‘ of Omaha, is now in Seat-| Jold Finnish girl, lost her job aslot Dr. D. A. Darling, 2 ed Alaska’s resources, bert re | housemaid at the home of D. K. Me-|N, early Sunday morning. the two flying boats 3 er and condemned to death ag 3 noon Tuesday, Tho bt he ae Donald, a bank clerk, whose home|. The family had gone to Tacoma | from the Christofferson , brothers, PENNAN I 4 COUPON = At the psychological mon ent Gen the paeden tip ta the eunelas Stipe: along lfor the weekend. When they re-|one of whom, Harry, is at present | NO. 26 . eral Irias was stricken with Bright's passage, owing to the fact that she |i 2cross Lake Washington, she de-|riined they found the front door|making daily flights from Luna| » ne Oe tier eacbes, Pee e sled to Carey att ae the | cided lite was not worth living, one, ‘The house had evidently| park. Silas, the other brother, has | Any four coupons clipped from The Star, } foust Haat, no ely arto ra | North Ro ape: ene oie je nap ae been thoroughly rausacked and | already Ie 5‘ for 8 n ‘rancisco to consecutively numbered, when presented at The | “ McDonal¢ , TeRcue s| nothing of value was overlooked, | supervise the construction of the i unless he pardoned and re | Star office with 15 cents, will entitle you to a | i nd she was taken to the City hos two flying boats at his factory { CIRCUS IN) BALLARD fyi hare, tne recetven a hat ice ae ee ck unto death, Irlas capitulated | Real live cowboys, with “gating” |dozen offers for Jobs, and Leubtl de Flying boats sell at $6,000 apiece . 1 Sands, prepared to stand With | whato by Ham! is tt Nn) suns strapped to thetr beltw; wild | lded that the little world wasn't so Hahne is purchasing the two ack to a wall, facing a firing ERAL CLIFF SANDS, IN) piays boats” for $11,000. G not tn | In their blood-curdling war) bad after all. She left the hospital, md, wax told he was free. He rym UNIFORM IN WHICH HE) ye hing the air, and auto polo.|smiling and happy — goattle. FOUGHT IN NICARAGUA liats, have taken charge of Ballard KB. N. Phillips today reported to] A heavy iron frame of one of the 65-cent pennant. Oregon State Pennants now out. California Pennants out next week. Pen. ff nants will be sent by mail if 5 cents additional for H o each Pennant is enclosed. Bring or mail to The nds entered the Unt a ‘i day ‘ g this afternoo | TACOMA,—A search ts being in-| the police that a Japanese boy was] plinos in the soclalist hall, Seventh . q sity of Washington. He played mer, when the tus ws Nica anon. Ane’ pertanaahe {his afternoon, the | tuted today for Chris Mussen,|drowned in Lake Washington near| and Olive, recently wrecked by the) |, seattle, Star, 1307 Seventh Ave., near Union St. ; B littie tennis, He went yachting round, be return earagun | Chow, given by Arlington @ Beek: (driver of the auto which crashed|Clyde. rioters, fell on Rouben Hedengren ‘ and camping with student friends, He wants’ in he didn't quite reach |man, Oklahoma Ranoh, was held, |into @ pole in the downtown dis-| ‘The bod¥ has not been recovered | age 6, brenking the boy's arm, H i] He wore “frat” pin, Ho still ital etty won Ai , asm Col, Zack Mulhall, who is known as|trict Saturday night, killing W. R.|/nor could the name of the boy be| was pinned under the frame for 4 wears it Whee oe wae ee ee out, Disa, |the “Father of Oklahoma,” heads | McClellan, © member of the eity|learned. The luke will probably belover an hour before bis shouts were Goes Back to Nicaragua. Estrads, the flery, was out. ‘engineering staff. ° irugued for the body, beard Sut he waen't happy. Last sum- ‘the dignified and brave, was 4a, Bo! the show,