Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
anG very »ped lient seat an eel ires, A not | 1 i Kk, sh es \ 4 $193 mode hed this They ronal /hit fe} General Felix Diaz, nephew of Porfirio Diaz, who for a quarter of a century exploited Mexico to satisfy his own greed, will arrive in Seattle tonight, en route to Vancouver, where he is to take ship for Japan on a mission of state. Felix is a great man. It was Felix who, convicted of treason against Madero’s government, was thrown into prison and sentenced to die, and who, reprieved by the man against whom his intrigue had been aimed, poner ig revolution, was delivered from his cell, and led the uprising that resulted in Madero’s ownfall. We remember the foul murder of President Madero. And how Huerta, co-conspirator of Diaz, was elevated to the provisional presidency pending the popular election this fall, in which General Felix Diaz is expected to be the leading candidate. It has never been established just how prominent a part Huerta, Diaz, and their gang had in that final tragedy that wiped out Madero. But he is a great man, is Felix. He will have a regal suite of rooms at the Washington hotel. » Jacob Furth, our well known financier, will care for him while he is in asked to do so by Felix’s bankers in San Francisco. and tell him what a fine manner of man he is. THE STAR, TOO, WISHES TO PAY ITS RESPECTS TO YOU, FELIX AND UNDESIRABLE. We know your record as chief of police of Mexico City. hearted servant of the moneyed grafters of Mexico. We know you believe in the robbery of the poor for the benefit of the rich. worship at the shrine of gold. Down in Mexico, General Diaz, thousands of men and women are starvi ing in order to win liberty and remove the chains tered a liberty loving people. FAIR TONIGHT AND SUNDAY; WARMER SUNDAY; LIGHT NORTHERLY WINDSS NUTT 725 Ree TT /725 = 2 Ss A = PAULINE FREDERICK IS = = HOW MANY PEOPLE DO = = INSHORT STORY TODAY = e e a om a = YOU THINK YOU KNOW? & = Yes, she's the one we've been brag: = = A thousand? Perhaps, If you're pop- 3 == ging about. She posed before the cam. = = ular. The Star, with its more than SS == era to illustrate Gouverneur Morris’ SS = 40,000 circulation, talks to 150,000 ev Ss le, “Holding Hands,” on page 8 today. Ss wii a Zz ery day. Ss INUUv.Uunuatvuaviovaeieavvvangeansegnn tS VOLUME 15, THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS __| Home 7M UCT NO. 139. SEATTLE, WASH., 1913, ONE CENT ohwi'i intr. SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, ‘MAY FOLLOW LIND’S WAR DOCTOR FACING ARREST Warrants were issued by the Prosecuting attorney this morning for the arrest. upon the charge of unlawful cohabitation, of Or. L. Fred Lundy, with offices at 417 Walker buliding, and Mabe! Ellam Driscoll. | The warrants were issued upon complaint of J. J. Driscoll, husband of the woman. Driscoll’s story to the prosecuting attorney tells of a call to Dr. Landy fm March, 1912, to attend his seven-| year-old child, who had been taken | suddenly itl. “I kept Dr. Lundy as family physi- cian for my children and wife,”| Driscoll related, “until August 7./ 1912. On May 5, of that year, I sent) my wife to the Providence hospital | in charge of Dr. Lundy and she was) continually under his care and/ treatment until my discovery that} the man to whom I had trusted the| care of my wife and children had | deen false to that trust and had} wrecked my home.” Says She Was Drugged. “On August 5th, Mrs. Driscoll told me.” Driscoll related, “that the doc- tor had drugged her in his office and that she was unconscious for two hours. On several other occa-| When J. Belford Wailing, famous artist, declared at the Washi: young lady pictured above. Does Seattle femininity sit in these impor It really grieves J. Belford Wall- the. Washington, is compelled to/ed, deeply. sions she came home or was) ing. state the facts. Now, don't misunderstand Drought home quite evidently under| It is annoying. don't y’know | J. Belford has no fault to find It isn’t the size, shape or contour|each other the influence of some drug. | J. Belford hates to say anything! with the beauty of Seattle girls. In- of Seattle girls’ feet which annoys ARRIVAL IN MEXI SEND ULTIMATUM TO HUERTA NATION PREPARES FOR ARMED CLASH; PRESIDENT IS FIRM Oh, Oh! English Artist Visiting in Seattle Says Our Girls Don’t Know How to Handle Their Feet; He Offers Em Some Free Advice girls don’t k now how to Randle their feet, he m and see if he's right. him.| South pole, as though fleeing from EDITION. —s| By John E. Nevin. | United” Press Staff Correspondent. WASHINGTON, Aug. 9%.—While the speed of the battleship New | Hampshire is slowed down so that John Lind, President Wilson's emis- sary to Mexico, will not reach Vera Cruz until tonight, Nelson O'Shaughnessy, in charge of the |American legation in Mexico City, |is actively preparing for Lind’s ar- rival He has notified Gen. Huerta that is attack on Lind and his mission bo ee ong gag nation and that Huerta will be het responsible for any personal insult |to the president's representative. | Lind Kept Advised. Ever since it left Galveston for Vera Cruz, the New Hampshire has been in wireless touch with the Ar- Mngton station and Lind has been fully advised of the developments in the situation. President Wilson is convinced that Lind’s courage is equal to Huerta’s and Lind will go to Mexico City tomorrow or Monday. Roth the president and Bryan ex- pect that Lind’s mission will suc- ceed, but senators familiar with the president's plan are skeptical. It is generally believed here that war prove it. He posed the North pole, and the other to the! badly, rudely hurt. The interview: | er promised to publish his prescrip- tion for correct “feet” position: “Now, there is another beautiful ‘Sit on a chair that allows your ‘She had the appearance of one /disparaging of beauty. But really, deed, J. Belford opines they are the beauty critic |young lady, But, see! Her feet feet to.reach the floor comfortably. | is imminent having taken morphine and I asked | don't y'know, the truth must out. rare specimens of pulchritude. Nor have I any fault to find,”|are wrapped around the chair Place them lightly on the floor, un. € her if the doctor was doping her. | And J. Belford, being that famous It's Not Their Shape says J. Belford, “with the way the | rungs der the rungs. Keep the heeis clos- Foar It Means W “She did not answer me then, but| English esthetic who {s viswing at| “But their feet!” J. Belford sigh- girls of Seattle are whod. In Ber-| J. Belford’s sense of beauty was|er together than the toes.” Both the army and navy are ready GIRLS WILL TELL STORY lin, that was the fault Interviewer Takes Peep J. Belford really hated to tell But The Star interviewer finally se. on the following day informed me} that her apparently doped condition | had arisen from the fact that she had taken overdoses of medicine containing strychnine, given her by | cured his confidence, and out. it Dr. Lundy.” came. During the summer Driscoll in- Girls, you simply allow your toot stituted divorce proceedings sies to shock all esthetic consid. against his wife, but, determined | eration when you ait down. J. Bel ford 1s a keen observer, you will to punish the man whom he ac-| cused of breaking up his home,| watch the cou- SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 9—Act-| ing on the theory that counter tes-| notice. |. He wanted the interviewer to take a peep, a low-down peep. in the restaurants, and fee cream parlors, WITNESS MAKES Detectives Watch Pair | room and cafe ee 1. Men, timony loses ita) shattering force SLIGHT MISTAKE Wrap ‘Em Around’ Chair Driscoll at 703 Columbia st, and Pg evidence sal ‘Prosecutors || , SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 9—]| “An, there, you nee!” J. Helford “peep” holes were bored through 91 Jurymen, | Special Prot jore | “Just point out the other man || remarked. “Your girls use their feet a door conneeting the two rooms. | Ae for the government, will (Caminetti) who was with Diggs |/as they would never think of us ing their arms, See this girl, who has her feet folded, feet crossed, one up in the air, pointing to the “On August 3, 1913,” the report of the detectives reads, “Mrs. Dris- coll came into her room, was sing- ing and started to clean up her when they came to you to rent the cabin at Reno,” urged At- torney Roche, in the Diggs case, when A. G. Mergen, Reno real | withhold Marsha Warrington and | Lola Norris from the stand in the | Diggs white slave trial until close to the conclusion of the prosecu- ee room. When she got this done she | tio “i estate agent, took the stand. had bought and laid them on the) until Tuesday. pointing a n finger of ac- ' cusation at a man cowering in the sha Judge Van Fleet's desk. that’s the man.” Judge Van Fleet joined in the gasp of shocked surpris parently bed and smoked a cigarette, and, while lying on the bed, tears were running down her cheeks. Offers Doctor Drink “About 11:15 p. m. on tho same To Call Girls Tuesday. According to Roche, the two girls probably will be called Tuesday to tell in detail the story of the flight | of the four from Sacramento to| | Dr. H. F. Titus was released from the county jail shortly after noon today, upon furnishing a $3,000 appeal bond from Judge Humphries’ order him , Dr. Lundy and Mrs. Driscoll the life of the cloping| committing for six aay, me Narayana Mes DeMecd Reno, and the fo ag aged The young man spinead “ost months and fining him $200 for vio - |] was mes yan, ie ui ating the anti-speech restraining sat down and talked a iittle whilt.| Conin, where they lived as hus- h ,T oe | Then Mrs. Driscoll poured out &) handy and wives before being lo Ate fe "moh hed gp enh | Coie re, rae anne, or. and offered it to the| thee 5 orrison, Alexander J cell tox inal a , cated feos ary a avenger, Martin Mergen finally pointed out Cam-} Allen, H. O. Haukos, J. G. Brown loctor, ‘od saxe'aanen| Ser . inetti, who had been parti and G. K. Tilton, Judge Humphrtes “‘Come on, Doc, and be a syort. Beasley, close friend of the War rington family, who took the trail fall?” |Of the Diggs-Caminett! party from ‘The detectives remained in the! Sacramento, and was instrumental | with Diggs and Caminett!, are de room adjoining that of Mrs. Dris-| i) joeating them at Reno, will ap-|clared by many witnes#os to hay: col] until August 7, and the report) near Tuesday. |stopped there as husbands and| of the alleged conduct of Dr. Lundy | Crowd | Disappointed. wives for three Gays prior to cocu: and Mrs. Driscoll was submitted In| aoiy far the Diggs trial has|pying the cabin concealed by Diggs. —E——~, accepted the bond without objeo- tion Can you take tt TWO VIEWS ON ONE SUBJECT full to the prosecuting attorney. | . disappointment to sensa-| 6 crowd craned forward. melvin There are four children in the| Proven & dsapp |last some of “that sensational/|| .)Well, Fred.” ald one local Driscoll family, all of whom are un | “The two girls went to the dining stuff’ was coming, oe » the other, “how der the care of their father room to get drinks,” testified F, A.| “I told the bellboy to get the girls business have you done hiding your light under a bush- . for the first week of August?” - »\drinks from the bar,” the clerk Augus Andner, clerk at the Riverside | dr Not muc * year,” replied gd a 2 ese ets hotel at Reno, r@ferring to Miss hor be as cae crowd took another |} 4. on mt h He y a of pe has made the | art ic o,|hiteh forward i Uither people are pe ever manufactured Warrington and Miss Norris, wh aI a Judge Causes Laugh not moving the way they used - = 5 ———_— = | “What kind of drinks?” asked |}; t° OF else my luck t# against % Roche for the prosecution me. t CQUPON | “Lemonade,” replie Lindner, | ur luek fs all right, Fred,” PENNANTS smiing at the manifest disap-\f| Teplied the other, “but you are NO. 37 pointment bis answer had been to|}) bt one me up who has seen. The S the crowd aH, Why don't you run a want ‘our upon: ped om tg ‘Do you know, as a“matter of ||) 44 In The. s nder Expre: Any f ae : clip fr aan The fast, whether these eon and the and Tran#er, like I do? That consecutively numbered, when presented at The Hii) iept toxether while at the | what gets me my Increased | Star office with 15 cents, will entitle you to a [| note?” asked Devin of Lindner, |] business. | Always having some | who had stated that the four had Pennants now out. Pen- that ad, Only costs a few dob fed two rooms 65-cent Pennant. Alaska H il i ” answered Lindne: lars a month, tq. nants will be sent by mail if 5 cents additional for fv. stron, tney | Phone” Mal 0 and ou each Pennant is enclosed. Bring or maii to The ff) 105.) aii, do you?” intorfectod | agent will call with prices and | information on Star advertising. all fled clasal Judge Van F to The answer of laughter, Seattle Star, 1307 Seventh Ave., near Union St. Igst in a wave! | | __... |and Times today make editorial de- |mand for the resignation of Gov. {funds in Wall st for the expected clash and ex- perienced officers who are opposed to a war with Mexico admit they fear the worst. A studied attempt has been made to fulfill the president's orders and to prevent even a show of warlike preparation, but orders for troops and ships are all ready for signa- ture. Both Bryan and Wilson are be- ing criticised because of the secre- tary’s actions in the Mexican situa- tion. Republicans and some democrats say the administration is trying to NOBLE HOSPITAL CLOSED TO FRIEDMANN PHYSICIAN Followingua meeting today of the) mann culture was sold to an Amorl-| board of directors of the Noble hos-/Can company,” said Dr. Noble, “its pital, Dr. C. §. Noble, chairman of administration has been commer- TYRANT AND UNDESIRABLE! town. Furth has been All the high and mighty folks will kowtow, , GRAFTER, TYRANT We believe you to be the flint- We know you ng and dying and fight- with which you and others of your ilk have fet- CAN CAPITAL ;make a patriotic question out of @ party matter. Favor Lifting Embargo. Members of the senate foreign committee considered the situation this morning. The majority favors lifting the embargo against Mexican importation of arms. The president so far has been able to keep a Tes olution to this end off the calem dar, but each day his task becomes Mexico City newspapers are bit- terly attacking the United States, nd in case. of. troub omorro’ many doubt “whether a Serious tempt to protect Americans be made. Calis Conference. It was stated today that, as a Te sult of criticism of his course the president has invited the members of the senate foreign committee to confer with him on the Mexican sit- uation tonight The conference is regarded a8 an official acknowledgement of the gravity of the Mexican situation, The republicans will be taken into the administration's confidence to learn the reasons why John Lind has been sent to Mexico City and will be given full details of the — steps arranged by the president and — Bryan. They also will be told that the president opposes intervention. President Wilson is plainly great+ — ly troubled. a He thinks that Huerta miscon+ ceives America's plans, and intends to disclose everything to the com | mittee. NO FEAR IN MEXICO CITY MEXICO CITY, Aug. 9.—No ape prehension is felt here for the safety of John Lind, special emis: — sary of President Wilson. The pop julace of the city have made no threats against Lind, and Gen, Huerta says he will do everything possible to safeguard Lind. Hi will treat Lind exactly as he woul any other American citizen, and ‘expects no demonstration. . clalized on a gigantic scale, and es- the board, announced that he would pecially in view of the fact that its disclaim all responsibility for the efficacy has not yet been satisfac- visit here next week of Dr. J. J. torily demonstrated, we ‘irectors Meyer, of the staff of Dr. Fried- of the hospital have determined mann, discoverer of an alleged cure that we will not be identified with for tuberculo: the cure, or with Dr. Meyer.” The Noble hospital will be closed | Dr, Noble was sent to New York to Dr. Meyer, who had expected, av by The Star at the time Friedmann cording to a telegram to Dr. Noble, was demonstrating his cure there, to test cases there for pay. and became much interested in the Since the secret of the Fried DEMAND RESIGNATION OF GOV, SULZER OF NEW YORK Lowman and That Will J. D. Lowman, capitalist Chamber of Commerce: “I a NEW YORK, Aug. 9.—The World, out by one firm through the pay- ment of L. M. Josephthal, a Wall st. banker and a member of the Sulzer, because of the revelations | governor's staff, of a debit balance yesterday before the Frawley In-|of $: vestigation committee, | It was announced here today that Witnesses testified to the use of|the governor will reply early next speculation that | week to the charges of malfeasance were subscribed to aid in the Sulzer/|in office, and that he expects the campaign, the subscription in ques-| Frawley committee to Institute im- tion not appearing of record iy Sul-| peachment proceedings against him. zer's sworn Statement of campaign] “I see no reason for further pro- receipts, It was shown also that ceedings,” said Senator Frawley this the governor hnd accounts with|morning. “We have the goods op three different Wall st, concerns and | Sulzer and his impeachment is only that he was saved from being sold/a matter of time.” GUST OBTAINS WRIT | WILL FORM LEAGUE Adolph A, Gust, whom Judge FOR FREE SPEECH Humphries committed to jail for failing % pay $3,000 court costs, se-| A free speech defense league, sim- cured, throug bis attorney, G. W./flar to those organizations which Saulsberry, a write of habeas COr|y ive heen @ 2 pus from Judge Stephen Chadwick, |"&®¥e been established in San Fran- of the supreme court. By ghe terma|¢iseo and Portland, 1s to be formed of the writ, Gust will be brought be-|in Seattle, A public meeting for the fore Judge Mackintosh Monday for | purpose of effecting organization hearing for Sunday night in room 104, at the Labor Temple Ihe public is Invited. “J. D. LOWMAN. William Pigott, president to expend all of the time and along the development of Ala would be almost fruitless as secured by The Star, of all United States. In my judéem greatest thing that has yet be curing desirable legislation for ther@ should be a probability o bill or of some measure of the Jhas been called Curb markets help the bridal couples on a bit in their buying. Se for Any Legislation to the desired end.” ee “While we of Seattle should be willing, and undoubtedly are a Pigott Are Open Alaska and president of the Seattle m in favor of any legislation that will open —_ Alaska, whether this development shall be done at the expense of the government or at the expense of private capital. TI do not believe, however, that private capital could be ne duced to compete with the government, but this would make no difference if the ernment would itself build the railroads and do the work af development. The important 4 thing is that legislation of some sort should be passed at as early a date as possible, and we should be thankful for every influence that will lead Seattle ‘Car & Foundry Co: energy at our disposal to help ska, I believe that our efforts compared with the influence, of the Scripps papers of the ent this is far and away the ren done in the matter Of see \laska. With this influence f the passage of the Poindexter same general nature.” more difficult a 4