The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 12, 1913, Page 1

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rison Fisher, the artis ANUUUEUvcnececnenceceteentetttt ty, Some Big Family, This! With its more than 40,000 circula tion every day, The Star is read by not 50,000 people. Get the Rennie MUU LLL LL VOLUME 15, NO. 141, Great American Surgeon Surgery Without Death) The graybeards of medicine are sitting at the feet of a young American from Cleveland, O. This young man, It appears from medical journals, has all bet BARREO THE ANGEL OF DEATH FROM THE OPERAT- inG TABLE. His name is George W. Crile. [}Despite his youth, he has long lbeen a noted surgeon. It was he iyho wee called to the deathbed of €. H. Harriman to decide if wotion would save the rail- read wizard. He decided that it not. ee, ee ee The news in the medical world is that Crile has invented a method which frees surgical ions from shock—from the thought, perhaps, that the chloroform and ether and forms of anesthetics keeps an operation. It does, but ie ti ONLY WHILE THE ACTUAL " - OPERATION |S IN PROGRESS. > The use of ether or chioroform Nas never been able to free the from the terrors of an- % ting the operation. They N ¥ Uy} not softened the awful» NN Np, of pain and fear immedi- DR. GEO. W. CRILE. following an operation. in they have not been able to prevent a terrific SHOCK to the human anatomy. And time out of mind you've heard of oper that were entirely “successful,” but the patient died of shock. Dr. Crije’s discovery has just been formally announced before a Meeting of eminent surgeons in London, where his method his name were accorded the greatest honor, Following that meeting the London Lancet, the greatest medical In the world, secured from Dr. Crile a description of the new . His paper in the Lancet was lengthy and was written espe- lly for the eyes of medical men, but from the article we have se- the following brief account of “Surgery Without Shock.” When the patient comes to his hospital, he examines him care- i. He finds out, first, what operation is necessary. Then, if he that the case, in his opinion, is one upon which can properly he pla the patient under treatment for a day or two. treatment of the patient consists of putting him under the operated on. He falis into a pleasant s.eep, and when he fee next day the same thing is done. By the time the third day the patient has lost his fear of taking the stuff the doctor Gives him. This time, after he has falien asleep, he Is wheeled into the op- erating room and the operation is performed. Then another sub- j is injected into the tiss round where the operation has taken place, which prevents the sensation of pain, and this effect of of pain lasts for several days after the operation has been ed. After the work of the knife Is completed the patient is put back In bed. When he wakes he doesn’t fee! any pain and he is not con- teious of having undergone any unusual experience. By the time the effects of the drug wear off, so has all r for pain. The preparation Dr. Crile uses to prevent pain during the hours tnd days succeeding an operation is quinine and urea. In producing — for the patient, which is in the form of a protection of the pa- Ment against the knowledge of the actual operation, ether or nitrous tide is used. Novocaine is the preparation used before the oper- ation to prevent pain. That the method is a success Is shown by the fact, Dr. Crile |} Points out, that in 2,600 operations in which it was used, the death fate was 1.9 per cent—a lower rate than was ever heard of before. In the last 1,000 operations performed by Dr. Crile, THE DEATH RATE WAS EIGHT-TENTHS OF ONE PER CENT NEW YORK MAY HAVE TWO RIVAL GOVERNORS ON JOB Dr United Prove Leased Wire will resume his office. If he Is NEW YORK, Aug. 12—New| ousted, Giynn will fill out his term York today faces the probability of| Friends of Gov. Sulzer say he faving two rival governors, as the| Will ignore the report of the spe | clal session of the legislature to !m- Muult of attempts to impeach Gov. | oxen him and that If the re#olu Wm. Suizer on charges of malfeas-|tion passes he will remain In the Mee In office. executive offices and issue orders. At 12:15 o'clock this morning the Tammany Lacks Strength Membly, after an all-night session | At last night's session, opponents & vote of 65 to 35, adopted the! of Sulzer could muster only 64 of wiley committee report con- votes necessary to impeach pGming Sulzer. This was follow-|and a hurry-up call was sent out by Majority Leader Levy intro-| tor New York absentees. Ing @ resolution calling for Sul eat oe ops impeachment. It will be vot A NEW YORK WORLD juizer to Stand Pa’ The state constitution provides BLAMES TAMMANY - Lient. Gov. Glynn shall be-] NEW YORK, Aug. 12.—Denuncia le acting governor automatical-| tion of both Gov. Sulzer and Tam Wit the impeachment resolutic Plees, and eet eet tn tee | many Hall ts voloed here today in aay, until the end of the trial an editorial in the World, one of} if the governor {s vindicated he! New York's leading newspapers. PENNANTS “g3°" NO. 39 Any four coupons clip from The Star, consecutively numbered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitle you to a 65-cent Pennant. Alaska Pennants now out.» British Coumbia out next week. Pennants will sent .by mail if 5 cents additional for each ennant is enclosed. Bring or mail to The Seat- tle Star, 1307 Seventh Ave., near Union St. liuctant to go behind the bara, these ges a 1 do, ngwine, }haved themselves for more 44 them than ony HE WHISPER!” A STORY OF LOVE AND HATE DOWN IN CAVERNS OF NEW YORK’S CHINATOWN HAT’S The Star’s next summer short story for Saturday. It , “the most beautiful woman in the world.” You read Gouverneur Morr e Whisper” is. When you start reading it, you won't lay the paper down until you've finished. Don’t miss it. In The Star next Saturday. The Seattle Star ‘Discovers New Method of | SPEEDS; HE’S WRITES OUT | Jall senten: | bed Chauffetr Johnson at First av ment and tel! him to get every- written by the famous Robert W. Chambers, and illustrated with a pose from actual! life by Pauline Frederick, the actress, called by Har- story, “Holding Hands,” in The Star Saturday, and you liked it, didn’t you? That’s the kind of a story PROBABLY FAIR TONIGHT AND WEDNESDAY; MODERATE SOUTHWEST TO WEST WIND: <Q MWHIHITTrrucenecc cee Fine for the Trusts! The United States Steel Corporation thrives and grows fat on that supreme court “dissolution” order, See story on page 3. MMOL ULL LL L is RZ ayumi THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, AUGU 12, 1913. Fi ONE CENT ohwiissos HOME EDITION. IRLS WHO ELOPED WITH SOCIETY MEN WILL TELL OF RUNAWAY TO RENO NAB IS WITNESS IN DIGGS TRIAL CHAUFFEUR HUMPHRIES |2izes in Courtroom, and Young Police Chief Testifies Woman With Whom He Lived to Finding Couples in Dishabille in a Cabin | THE MAN—Maury |. Diggs, @ dapper, nonchalant blonde man of 28 NOW IN JAIL DAILY TALK ohnson ts r. ange § upon whose smooth, florid face, with its prominent, staring eyes, a? Abe on ie . chautteur, | When Judge Humphries this { | neavy Jaw and small mouth, ts wri tten the clash bety the sensual- bs ‘ahalieesiaeae with exactly. morning denied a motion of Atty {st and the aesthete. He has the ance of the spoiled child, : : ware whose every whim and appetite bh amper His bump of years McMahon for the teamaters’ union, wWapaper writing old, ‘and lives at ing of the fop about him, 8 noth vanity is highly developed, but there a and a asking for a change of judge, there | | Like a boy seeking courage, he leans close against the shoulder of the 7, beng 8 ft Wa ne One Savy: She Gthorney pee st t father, who throughout the trial has never left his side. ry, being a chaufte' ‘ vt ld ope 1 wae arrasteg ent in the courtroom » the judge |rHe GIRL—Misi ware eae: 20, an assertive, strractls eo and fined. He ¢ heatin. dictated the following speech to his forine erate Abpea esate papper ers fan ae Yeaterd ya burly an had stenographer, instéad of delivering mento family, Defiant even after the ar four in the cabin him up © court {t from the bench, and personally | at Reno, she tossed her head at the detectives who came to take her Guilty,” salt Marry gaily, Just like that. da copy to each of the news er men who saw him later in| » morning, informing them that it} spoke was the speech he would have de-| were intro- home. “What, those two boobs?” she sald, when they duced as the law's minions. | cee ee SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 12.—John L. McNab, former United States e “I fine you $1 costs, — Ju ine Kellogg a had there been an audience district attorney, who lost his office in the preliminaries of the Diggs- Acone Gear erly downcast nt In the courtroom Caminett! white slave cases, after charging Attorney General Mc- ‘sy Pe gt 0 you to serve one Right at this time the people Reynolds with delaying their hearing b of “pull,” was the prin- day tn the cx ja are in a fever heat. A man cipal witness heard today in the Diggs ca Harry gasped called me out a day or two ago day he is in a cell, thinking it} and took me out In the middl of the street and talked to me is the first time in Seattle'’s| in regard to these soapbox ora- history that a motorist has been| tors and thelr following, and he sentenced for speeding. Must Send ‘Em to Jail ‘Look here, there is no dan- Following The Star's recent agt | ger of anybody making an at tation for more strict lawn to pro | tack upon you personally un hibit auto ding they can get you out In passed an ordinance making it ob-| the woods or some place whei Mgatory for courtroom. Not a single nd Washington was clicited A buzz of excitement went around word of the disa in his testimony But if the sensation seekers were foiled in ane direction, they scored in another, for McNab was utilized to identify certain exhibits that made the prurient minded among the courtroom crowd crane their necks They were bed clothes from the bungalow at Reno, where Diggs and Caminett! were discovered with Marsha Warrington and Lola Norris of Sacramento, after their elopement to Nevada had laid the the judge to Impose| there is nobody around, and 7 - do gate for the charge of white slavery under which Diggs is being ped aspen bk a: pineouls oe ee ee ts aliens 7 The whole of the evidence taken today centered about the actempt vieted. naly COM | dencer; be | em ehectately of the prosecution to prove the white slave law actually had been vio- Speed eich sinn?* ea | “Geeasintdeaie | le: sien « toneeean lated by the commission in the state of Nevada of immoral acts. peeders,* naturally ‘being te-| trembiing y~ Ravenna Further evidence on the point from the Warrington and Norris girls expected this afternoon, although it probabty will be late in the day before the girls take the stand. Before a barricaded hall leading y to the courtroom, 300 men, women three months. Then, yesterday, Pa-| town, oop | want you ayy “y trolman Gordon and Peterson nab- see the chief of the fire depart- The trial of the case of jand Columbia st thing ready, that any night . ee! jand children were massed this the United States against F. | They testified he was going 30| there Is tlable to be a confiagra- hele ; lot the a Meigen gd footage ners Drew Caminetti will attract miles an hour tion here, to get his apparatus ; ‘ ye tony Pigg nen tena bsg particular attention through: Six othe ‘ hh only 48, that being the seating ca o ab se bie ix other drivers pald small fines| ready and have hie water ready, out the country because of yest y afternoot because th le a ; | pacity sterday afternoon caus peop! ire get Crowds Walt for Admission the action of Attorney Gen- leven more we ting des Boy ting iake raiaatnn se ing nothing at stake, are liable | Many of those in the line had eral McReynolds at Wash- ——— + = to set a fire in the business |been waiting since 7:30 o'clock ington, in asking District part of thie city, and | have Men familiar about the Barbary | Attorney McNab to postpone great fear on that account.’ Coast resorts brushed elbows with action. | club women and young girls. McNab resigned as United Of all the hundreds about the| States district attorne: epor eached Seattle SS } courtroom door, just six women] sentiment at nicht Ror, Whitchorae. teltog nt] ment, a0 1 said nothing to him Maury |. Digge In court: listening GABEMeA | mace thelr way in when court|| forced the withdraw, f an unconfirmed rumor at that place| @bout It, but this man was very to testimony that may send him to | : began. endy haan he that 16 men and 14 horses had been | Much alarmed. Now, in thie |... avadetary Waddie’, te 'abdets: More than a score of others ale veg pa 1g of the c. ‘hawned. on the way from Cordova | newspaper matter that came up, @ penite’ ry et ; ree \their stand outside, eagerly await en pit pr ees for his ac- to Samaras. E 1 was informed before the pa- |¢d a wife and babies to elope from ¥ ts a | ing a chance of entering, which 5 attorney general Sacramento, Cal., to Reno, Nev., by might come should any seats be announced that the Pos The local agents of the White | tain persons were conspiring to ked by 7 are © with Marsha Warrington, a Sacra- 7 | blow up the office and building s vacated. |] Pomement had been request- e first witnesses called were | ed so that the father of Pass & Yukon route w Dod + nt sey | and that they were going to |™mente high schoo! girl. Diggs went |Theodore Kytka, the handwriting|} young Caminetti, A. Cami- had haa monea va ding In the company of F. Drew Camin- expert, and R, J. Semin, postmas-| netti, Ponenie joner gen- to the White White ; upon ettl, son of the commissioner gen- |ter at’ Sacramento They corrobo- erat Cheol alaratlon at l horas, gothin of con told the party who told me, who ; jrated evidence they had given a’ , Reston Wee tive aces he eee | pretended to know about It, to nade Aisi ovina te hice early sessions of the trial i) fends) his Affaire at Wash- cetved there | gee the owner and inform him | Norris, also a Sacramento high Finds Then Undrecsed I] be mont In vcatttornta The report is said to have been | that he must look a little out orris, ig |_ Chief of Police J. B. Hillhouse, of ducida tae dak alifornia picked up in a wireless message by| 2d they did, and the owner In- school girt ' 3 | Reno, was the first new witness. | 9 . |the operator of the steamer Hum-| formed me that he had three Both men are charged with vio-) ‘ wats . He told of the discovery of Diggs, ——— |boldt. If this is so the captain of pesca al Ge belidine and Ge lating the Mann white slave act in| ‘ i Caminett!_ and the rie in oy | the eame: A nade no rep ol he * . cabin a eno, where a he said Ley cate te. the Mumiboide son office and that he was looking | ransporting the girls from one state fs, 5 ’ were in various stages of undress. | PHYSICIAN WON'T | ship Co, here out for tt. to another for Immoral rare ik ‘ : | One of the most significant 1 \tions of Hillhouse’s testimony was | 9 Page Warrington, Sacramento, his reiation of a conversation The Old Veteran girl, who eloped with Maury I. | which occurred when the quartstte | - te your neck dl former state architect, who | of elopers were being taken to t he | Lane Sgt Hons dope Aig deserted his wife and child. Diggs’ | depot at Reno. Rapidly will attack the reputation, “Well,” Hillhouse declared Diggs 8 5 ma When your cuffs grow limp and | 9 of Miss Warrington, and tenderloin | said, “it is up to you girls whethe GURE IN SEATTLE Peds tee aa He With. crasny | characters of San Francisco and| we go to the pen,” and to this th plac jouble up as ’ », Sacramento have been summoned witness said Miss Warrington re-| pp y J. Mey v phy: When you feel as if a line | |tot stify during the trial. igo “We'll stay with you.” | Meyer, traveling physt- Of steam pipe san long your [| jcian for ‘riedmann Institutes, Girls Were “Happy” | After a rather brief examination, | Who came hére for the purpose of yee. taek. SORE ) IAAP ARO By John E. Nevin [sly by the Japanese government | ntie,s was taken in hand by At [giving a demonstration of the you'd ike to pinch the || (United Press Staff Correspondent) The reason assigned is resarded peep Pech for the defense, wo | Friedmann treatment, will leave to- boss, WASHINGTON, Aug. 12.—Direct as a mere diplomatic way of sayiag it fe natttre were in a “hap |RiSht for Idaho without giving any When sen’ long with all your |\reporte from both John Lind and|that Diaz is not wanted, and it 18) ‘There was no change in the con-|ny" frame of mind, and that they | Seattle patients the culture suet Charge d'Affaires Nelson O'Shaugh- thought here that the enthusiastic dition of Thomas Ratigan, 13, who| pave no signs of having been in) The fuss stirred up by Seattle £ ror a trip up to the Pole, nessy that affairs in Mexico City) welcome to Ambassador Guthria tn was run over by a freight train | i, 7 re Hai y fled ae ri not care to eat, are quiet was the encouraging news) Tokio was Japan's way of express: Monday while sweeping up wheat ee | a a at ee tang sa Tedatlegrs f responsible for this Cannot sleep because of heat, received at the state department! ing disapproval of Huerta’s attempt at the Hammond Milling Cr lwith Hillhouse -when the elopers| © sr ost one part of Dr. Meyer, ason for it, See? today. to use Japan as a club to force rec-| the Providence hospital today were discovered in Reno, following | they will lat oe were “a here now, Despite reports to the contrary, | ognition, tgan's condition Is serious, one log nie chief to the stand. His testl| rie ster wen, Sle Dr. Meyer to Lind has made no positive predic-| Open suggestions from Mexico having been badiy crushed. An ef-|mony was substantially the same. | are baat and so long as there tlons regarding the ultimate out- City recently that Diaz has been! fort will be m however, to save The next witness to be called aor oe cities waiting anxiously Get your name on the pay roll come of his mission commissioned to negotiate a secret | the injured limb. The youth lives! wag@dohn Le McNab, former | int not sant tie peeatment: we again. Use a Star want ad to tell he report from Toklo that Gen.| offensive and defensive treaty with| with his parents at 1722 E. Mad-| United States district attorney | 1." atinwacn time here, the people you want work. | Felix Diaz will not be recelved offl-' Japan displeased Tokto. lison st | here, who resigned his position neat a, bt aha io “~ tents ES i anid e , patie the office following charges that McRey- | of Health Commissioner Kraft. Two LONDON LADIES ARE TAKING THEIR CLOTHES OFF) 222 2'sse"Rotcionst some ese neta unduly because of “pull” exer | scores of patients at our institute, It’s Fault of Suffragets; Half of ’Em Taking Off; Others Putting On| “‘wento'wss ervected to sim Yon vit. Dr Raymond one ot ine ply Identify certain exhibits In | jeading doctors of that vity | the other section, as a protest) aituaticn in London is as bad as it: sake of display,” he sald, “It is an : 118 ae By y Ed L. Keen tne | saint this method, proceeded to|has been represented. “If there Is athletic (ESHER hetah airninorel |! Phat teeet tack ay lunch recess] 8S t80_treatment® regulariy (Lenden = Correspones: accentuate thelr feminism by re: lon of —Immod he one. I-look upon clothes as the | until 2:30 p. m United Press) vealing to a greater or less degree | says, “it Is because fat and ugly badge of our disgrace. The ideal | Becta 4 ss LONDON, Aug. 12—There I® nolthose features which distinguish | women have been wearing dresses! would be to have no clothes.” question that London bevat ff Py toe them from the opposite sex. whith do not suit them.” ape Bbiuciaazaicl WILL TRADE champion city of the world for di-| fia el . : ‘ Another who holds similar views aphanous drapery. PR fea een cadens Bobs deed ___ {is Laurence Housman, author-poet, ACREAGE FOR | The s hark Recent visitors from Parls, Vien-| E1004 | ir ext ee anaes F bedy Alexander, wife ot Ene. who recently startled folke by ad | 2 he Bo andinavian Prot nerhc vd ot | Cl e yerience arcs jand’s en 4 2 ager, defends) y "7 p . eric cific i order, if {lon of female landecapery in Bond | © agp Pd tea Aho ot bia cer saying: “What does It matter what men into giving them the vote. : There are many such oppor. {|@8nual convention today. Officers street and Piccadilly surp ny- yg t, ayishy, tras nen ‘abrio8|we do or don't wear under our, “Ag to the question of present-|| tunities In The Star classified heresy ny beeline and thie thing of the sort they have ever|{y4',ar0 Ho | Plies sslstiNg |dresses 80 long as we look nice? day dress,” he said, “it Is a rather || columns. Have you a farm you || *{ternoon the delegates wor taken been privileged to see. be. Imag Wearing fewer qlothes is much startling change. | think, however, || Want to exchange city prop. || Op, ets fine a at tHe city, So ee eget suffragets and otr-|. This view i# upheld ‘by one of| more healthy than a lot of trailing! that the present vogue le in a way || erty, or city property you want |). Un Qn yenlon Dosim in the cumspect, unfrivolous Right Honor. | London's forem@st nerve spectal-| petticoate to plek up dirt and ml-|to the good. It has got rid of to trade for a farm? If so, de- || Me aay Sap Bas pert hehe Able Herbert Henry Asquith, pre-|{sts, who declares he adoption | crobes. ‘ certain amount of — superfluous || cide quickly that you will try a) int Og out ing ‘cons iuittaaae snor of Great Britain and Ireland, | by the militants of masculine or $8 skirts which can only Impede wom-|| Star classified Ad and send tt | ey nanet was. tenhared, tha tae have bean biacied fOr It. ail nearmasculine attire has caused a| In'the furlous public discussion en's tegs. |} in to us, and you will be sur- |la.iceates in the evening, CG. J Anauith, refused to give women| reaction, and the non-militants | of the subject, an unusual note, for)” “No doubt transparent stockings || prised at the replies we will ra agra Mi 9 Hepa ERR, the vote have thought it thelr duty to pro-|a minister of the Gospel, is struck! are allurements, but If we are not || bring to you, Star classified || St Brand president, presiding: ‘Thereupon one section of the te-| claim thelr femininity by a whole-| by Rev, C. H. Grundy, who sees) shocked by evening dress expos-|| ads have brought hundreds of SAN .FRANCISCO.—The — Ani- male population felt comnetied to| Sale process of ufdressing. | nothing immoral In present-day | ures of neck and bust in the ball buyers and sellers her. ma today ewtered emphasize their claim to equality aed | dress room, why should we be shocked|| Phone your ads, Main 9400. protest yull-dogging” with men by appropriating their Lady Duff-Gordon, writing from “| think it is quite as much a| by minor exposures of the lower Bill will be malled you. steers 1 ia state costumes as far as possible; while|l Paria refuses to believa that the! matter of liberty of limb as for the| limbs in the otreet

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