The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 20, 1913, Page 1

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fall for none of them; it takes a man of high-class mind to lie without betraying it, and such a man you'll always find too wise to be essaying it!—By Berton Braley. FAIR TONIGHT; SUNDAY INCREASING CLOUDINESS FOLLOWED BY RAIN; COOLER, i fvery Saturday There's a Good Story i T takes a brainy man to lie and freely get away with it, to twist the honest truth awry and very blithely play with it; the stupid man who lies is caught and people soon get wise to him, his fabrications come to naught and “failure” well applies to him, In fact, the ordinary chap who trifles with veracity discovers soon he’s in the trap made by his own mendacity, he’s tangled in an awful mess of whopping fibs and little ones, and lies that seemed a huge success prove very frail and brittle ones. And so, unless your intellect is better than the run of them, the folk you meet will all detect your lies—and You'll Like It Better Every Day! NE of the many reasons why you EAD “The Little Misery.” on the back i O should be a subscriber to The Star, |iill | sage today. it's a Chambers story lies In the fact that over 40,000 per | R You know him, Every Saturday you'll Mi ||| sons buy it every day, and each day adds | j e just as good—better perhapa—by to the list. Send in your name and read it wale who has proved himegif VOLUME 15, ” ‘THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS. HOME pvery day. You'll likestt tt NO. 176 SEATTLE, WASH. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1913. ONE CENT. 2xyt"{ixtt’?, | EDITION | igrUses MAYBE YOU DON'T MIND PAYING A NICKEL| 0 TALK But What About Mrs. Larson, Who Works Nights Scrubbing Off Jacob Furth’s Desk? Boa company and James B. Howe, and It is 5 o'clock ! “ my work's done, I'm too tired. By Fred L. It. in the morning before Mrs. Larson, and her friend, So far, I've always managed to “The other day | got on the car. | had just one At 8 o'clock Mrs. Emma Larson, | Miss Anna Samuelson, jalntress of the third floor, have the dollar for tickets. But it’s | dotiar, Even if the conductor would have sold d ,| Janitress, commences her nightly belie Geattio car for their homes at been a bother sometimes, because a paveid te buy thats ot ME op phe pe Man Arrested on Charge of | duties on the second floor of the Several hours after thie Mr. Furth rolls down: dollar is a lot of money. Sometimes | down town. $0 | paid five cents, and the com i Killing Two Men Keeps Pioneer building, where the offices | tow" 'n his automobile. | | when I have spent a dollar for tickets bag) Ad Maveatee Sint ef dine: Ones 1 aae TT Silence. of the Puget Sound Traction, Light | it was while Mra. Larson was dusting and pol- I haven’t any money left to buy the | to the smith drug store to buy tickets, and they || — » loca ishing the Furth chair and the Furth desk last | : ” | didn't have any. And again the company got the || WILL RECOVER & Power Co. are | ted. night, that | Interviewed her on what it means things I need. . * Fe " extra cent. And still another time | took a car WIFE At about the same hour Mr. Jacob | to a janitress to have to buy a dollar's worth of And sometimes,” said Miss Sam- | to the general office, Eighth and Olive, and Examination by Frisco Detec- tives Fails to Move Sus- pected Man SAN FRANC!SCO, Sept. 20.—No formal charge had been placed to- against A. R. Coulson, who himself up to the police late thirteen hours wack and Wm. Acker had Deen shot dead, and Coulson's com mon law wife, Katherine Gallagher, had been seriously wounded as the theee set together at luncheon in . | , that Furth, president of the Puget Sound | *¢*t <a" leeae Sa lmetice Rue Dune le uelson, “I haven't had the dollar, and | bovght @ dollar's worth, and so, of course, tha Traction, Light & Power Co., at his | ciimb the stairs to the third floor and get the had to pay a nickel. It’s easy to see Mra. Douglas earns $25 a month. She and her stone house on the First Hill, views of Mise Samuelson, who at the moment why they won't sell six-for-a-quarter | husband have brought up a large family of ¢ ae ; | was cleaning the offices of Stone & Webster. | dren leans back in his chair, after a s. Stone & Webster, as you of course know, are on the cars any more. They want to “When the children were little,” she sald, “we : " | the real owners of the traction system in Seattle, | couldn't think of buying a home. The children fying dinner, and, with a contented Tecate, VERA aaacuaiiinghan, Ie the Nort make it so hard for us to buy tickets | couldnt think of buying & nen PFO Re ia bl sigh of repletion, lights a four-bit | weet, and have tremendous holdings elsewhere that we'll pay cash fare. Then they | and we hope to get our home paid for before we're i They make Boston their headquarters They are too old to enjoy it That's why | work. We etil! cigar. pao of the electrical trust get the extra cent.” owe $2,000 on it. So you can see why | need that Across the hall from the traction offices are | P"T'.\pucet @ound Traction, Light & Power Co. Both Mra. Larson and Mise Samuelson sald 1 | one S400) on SG rit more than the company the stately rooms tenanted by James B. Howe, rich and powertul as it Is, ‘ea pigmy compared might use their nam: dene, attorney for the traction company. Mrs, Lar. | (ic) Aad Rowerlel ae It le le 6 plgmy co tene ah “I don't like having my name In the newspaper,” | “°C ae never had my name in any newspaper, pose Ug ut; ble Sect ee ~~ ~ | Webater’s faithful and well-paid servant said Mrs. Larson. thos pay s —_ . Peabes | but | don't mind a bit your putting it in The restore to genera! cleanliness an: order the i. ” : working woman, an pt quiet an minde my 1 hel for- h fices of Mr. Howe. “I suppose, aid Mrs. Larson, own business. Gut 1 yap Oink. wit do ny | S27,” © wit Sep Ee ctevereqnete ae, te ane oereee. So it is well on toward midnight before Mrs. hile Miss Sam d, if you think It will help get shefor-a-quarter | | age. he ae H sialdnin. ty vehe. | 9004, If you think It will help get slx-for-a-quarter . ‘ ? He was unlikely. the police fait || Larson untocks the door to the office of Mr while wed re tegied be ont 8, the way we had it before, then you | This morning I interviewed a iat a charge will be pla intl | Jacob Furth to dust the mahogany chair wherein | Ment agreement, ‘that rich men can use my name, and welcome after the Inquest Breept for two slips, the privoner Would cot utter a word in response that important figure reste during working hours don’t realize what a difference it “That's the way | feel about it, too,” sald Miss prominent bu: iness man tho claims and the mahogany desk whereat he reckone past : lik Samuelson to be public spirited. traction profits and schemes for more in future makes to working women like us Mre. Larson lives at 4023 18th av. 8. W., and “fo questions beyond the sentence ; fi , . a... ane eee rene 8 men St Oey es | Waeeer We ride for four cents or 028 19th ay. 6. W. “{ don’t mind telling you, confi- ju ‘abou : P , ‘ Makes Two Slips. the time Mra. Larson |e dusting the Furth chair | five. Later on | Interviewed Mra. Hilda Douglas, | dentially,” he said, “that I consider ‘The exceptions were in reply to 8 mpid fire of questions, the brief atever: “I did not know my wife and desk, and putting a polish to their glazed “Mr. Furth is a rich man, and | | second-floor janitress, Bailey building, Second av. this ticket business a damnable out- surfaces, Mr. Furth is falling asleep, with a long, said Mrs. Dougla sant night before him In which to dream ewee | don’t suppose he ever uses the cars | 4 to walk to save rage. But you—er—understand how ‘wes out in that automobile or any ms of dividends. : : fare. | know @ good h . ’ \ good many women who walk, e and & he min There are other offices on the second floor of anyhow. J would ride in an automo to save four cents. Sut ! can't walk now. I'm 1 am situated. Please don’t use my | spent |} the Pioneer buliding besides those of the traction ‘ bile, too, if 1 was rich. | getting too old. And when morning comes, and | mame. | the day walking about downtown, when I read of the ett to my attorney's office.” ee Pi 3, walked into Attorney | offices at 3 p. m. yester- after they had conferred ers <2 =": YOUNG QUIMET NO, THE JUDGE WHY MR, M’GILL, NOW LOOK WHAT|FAKE PRIEST WILL foresee" WEA! JIMMIE SAYS. | FIGHT CONVICTION eas — 18 VICTORIOUS WON'T BE THERE THE VERY TEA!) JIMMIE SAYS | ON MURDER CHARGE its, of clean life and entirely unac PROOKLI eustomed to prison existence, it : . Sept. 20 Judge Siashed 4 | Francis Outmet of Boston, aged 20 land rit the report to th Methodist con b ty of 8 e. official | Was evident that his surroundings | scare nn amateur and former ead-| Dreamland rink jorrow night jin the r > © the The city of Seattle, as an official ae / Were highly unpleasant. Gy, today won the American open| sine” terre tle cam that ME ference Friday of Rev. O. H. Mc governmental agency, might just} NEW YORK, Sept. doce ete | Eyes Fill with Tears. golf championship by taking the ee sriereohgerg ag deemert, nad a rece bart parece he hyde as well pack up and take to the eee eau siane Soniae Once when told of the woman's | Digy off with Harry Vardon and Ed-| fy iermon’ F. Titus, on the ques: 0% Puget Sound, to an alliance be | 1a pines, confessed murderer of Anna loyalty to him and of her state ermo on the 4 tween the employers of the state! "1 io sound Electric com-| Aumuller, surprised the New ward Ray. two of England's best tion of free speech, will take place ment that she believed he had ws af n ~ and the church got a “rise” out oy won't mins it at n York police today by Intimat- Maved her, his eyes filmed, but he|S:ifers Oulmots Prt as babe | Sige debste all they want.” lof most_everybody present. pain fact. says James B. Howe, at-| Ing that he might fight to es. com: i2 a hizzoner said morning Bishop R. J. Cook, Revs » Mar f ‘ tte i es beapttal to which she was | ay 78 not running around to all the|Dishop Fo. cee. any others, cou. /tMey for the company, the city cape electrocution, despite hie ae Six thousand persons composed tines thoy Ket u No, I'll not be . eo re. | Sovernment’s usefulness has pract! y y that he ow it was sald Mrs. Gallagher! ing gallery and they gave Oulmet a ng 7 & v with the motion that th 1 | Cally entirely ceased was ready to die at any time. probably will recover . * ¢ the at ere and not acceptec The city could pven & e Conversing with fe! ris. Her real husband, it was learned, °, rhe m wee a tt don “he | The question = of the enthusiasm cal aed ar Taconite be care oners today. Schmidt sosertea Was a Kansas (City contractor oe vs fleld ever started In the his Ived, ae at . nr out of Mr. McGill. He insisted that There's 06 wee Of dinc ng com that District Attorney Whitman yd left six gros She tory of the American game. *P vai thy, Behe as plese oe i 7 mon user clauses with the city] would “find himself up against ‘oulson soon a erward at Ouimet was the first amateur ever caries saainat king at n belle : nto the dda, deter ate or indeterminate, a stone wall” if he tried to get Seranton, Pa, and they have lived winning this event Bot seh. aa Pik wouldn't come Into the derinite or indefinite franchises, ex anything out of him, The together ever since be salvs Wil be fied There tensions, ete Prisoner's manner had changed Coulson's wife, Lucinda, is In the Adm after some further dis) "7 ‘Uktah mies b eres! ce al The city, he says, has nothing to] completely. ‘ — ’ | wi a0. ees a the report was referred tO! 4, with these matters “I'm ready to dle now, or a F Coulson has two sons, Carl and a committee. Authority over these subjects| month from now,” he said yes- & 8&8 F BF FSR 2B Walter, aged 7 and 10, whom he | _— MENT |!# entirely centered in the astate| terday. rites for in a Catholic tnstitu-) gax prego, Sept. 20.—Chas, R ST RUCK BY AU 10 ROLLS OVER RMBANT rly Tir.| public service commission, he told Attorney Koelbe today told Drummond, member of the million-| a the co francht committe Fri Schmidt he could plead not aa Gallagher has a son 13 yea: teen persons were Injured, some a1 | aire tobacco family of St. Louts, !8! two persons were hurt when an|‘een persons mer irae mt da Quilty, and the state would be aa in the city jail today after surren: | auto, driven by John Pettiton, 2323 day, when two Pullmans and two Howe appeared for the company forced to corroborate his con- dering to a policeman to whom he foyiston av. N., akidded and F of an eastbound Rock| With « to relay Its tracks| fession. n le av, in the Ballard dis crowded with tourists an enibankiiont trict, and the matter was put over a week to give the residents a 5 explained that, while intoxicated, he| turned on. Lakeview boul married Miss Carlotta Vincent at/near Nelson place, Friday on, Mo., December 8, 1910, was son was pinned beneath t cted ble fined nd 1 Mra. Mary L. Lewt 3 FRATER WILL TALK char t RENO, Sept. 20.—Marvin Kinti 1 to six month aa: wh q i iy n Griffiths n ced x months w boulevard, who was or will delive the Councilman { ] + Aran clerk, is dead, and Ger He paid the fine and was Ik, was struck by the ons at the Madrona/that the cor ask faa | i incart unconscious in a hos- | parole ‘ he auto. She was car ement club's meet: | franchise added that here, as a result of a collision r role ha haw uestevege ° home su ng painful|ing Mo’ night at the Ma . franc sees e oe for oth le they were | failed to have It renewe e says Presbyterian church. The annual|er_much-neer nstons. ; agen, at 1 8. m. to-/it is for the breaking of this parole ttison was only slightly hurt. election of officers will be Howe then explained he didn't itbat he is now wanted pers ——_—-_—___—_~ — consider city franchises worth any en PE eae carsecccmnce abe SAT TST TT ET GIRL CAN’T EARN ENOUGH; KILLS SELF || And, Just Before She Dies, Says the Funniest Thing CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—Seima Peterson, aged 19, friendle and alone, asphyxiated herself in her room here today. She w a garment worker, earning $8 weekly. In her note book w fouhd the following memorandum LARS LEFT MARK TACOMA, Sept. 20 —It cost Lars Olsen today to leave his foot = MRS. TRIE! — WHAT IN THE Meals, $3.15; room rent, $2.50; carfare, 60 cents; laundry, prints in the sands of time—not 4 AR xy $1.00: clothes, 75 cents. Total, $8.00, exactly sand, but in the newly laid F -1SAM HIL € You “| asked her why she did it” reported the doctor, who concrete pavement on the Puyallup | BURNING OvuT reached her a few minutes before she died, “and when | did she road, upon which he carelessly said the funniest thing. She whispered: ‘Doctor, did you ever live six months on 20-cent din ners?’ stamped well defined ground plans of hig pedal extremities. Lars ad his error and handed over ATAT A Al County Engineer Caldwell ts now | PENNAN I COUPON looking for Joyriders who took down NO. 73 his barricades and left the indelible jimprint of ther tires In his nice concrete. THERE IN THE KITCHEN eu Any four coupons clipped from The Star, consecutively num- bered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitle you to a 65c Pennant. New York and Colorado Pennants Out Any time anybody thinks he can Monday. A few Idaho Pennants still left. Pennants will be sent by |/y eat the law by going to Canada mall if 5 cents additional for each Pennant is enclosed. Bring or ||), haw given evidence that he mall to The Seattle Star, 1307 Seventh Ave., near Union St. should be detained in an asylum| -_— for the insane Clerical Vestments, ht, ‘Y, th Which He Faked. speakers as the 1 | movement av. W., was at First av. and Denny way, Friday night, severely beaten and robbed of a gold watch and a bunch of keys Hans Schmidt, Self-Confessed Butcher of Anna Aumuller, in the) 7 CJ) > >. “Oo rr SAFELY | IN AUTO Fire Four Bullets Into Union's Business Agent in Broad Daylight. THEIR VICTIM DYING Police Puzzled in Their Search for Motive for Bold Attack. CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—Four men drove in an automobile to the headquarters of the Paint- e and Decorators’ union to- day in broad daylight, fired four bullets into the body of George Cameron, the union's business agent, fled down scape, and made their get a way in the machine. Cameron, who is dying, lost consciousness shortly after the shooting. Before lapsing he told the police that he knew of but one man who “had it in for him,” but didn’t believe that this man would seek his lif He gave the police the name of the man and said that he (Cameron) had caused this man to lose a job of decorating for the coming packers’ ban- quet. The police do not believe that this incident is the cause of the shooting. They believe that other interests were anxious for the removal of Cameron. The men who did the killing, People who saw them say, were evidently of the “gunman” type. They fost no time in their work, which was over In a moment or two. Cameron is rominent in union labor circles, BULLETS SHRIEK SAN BERNARDINO, Sept. 20— The Rev. Father Brady was shot through the hand and |sbrieked about the ears of a thou sand citizens whan seve cartridges stored in the National Guard armory, a wing of the munt- cipal pavilion, exploded during a fire early today, that destroyed the pavilion bullets ‘al thousand Police cleared the streets for blocks about the pavilion, which burned to the ground while firemen | Stood outside the range of the bome bardment, The damage was about $50,000. “FOR BLAGK RACE TACOMA Sept ” 20 —Hailed by st important fecting the black race in this country since the emancipas tion, a nation-wide campaign to re instate negro government employes at Washington. D. C., was launched here today. More and blacks attended a mass meeting presided over by Mayor Seymour and adopted resolutions of protest, which were transmitted to Presale dent Wilson han 200 whites Simultaneously with the meeting here, it is said, similar bodies, both white and black, took up the fight in other cities. TOOK HIS KEYS, TOO George E. Kenyon, 416% Third acked by thugs at If We Offered You $10 For that old range in your kitchen, would you take it? If you spend 20c or 30¢ in our WANT ADS, you will get sev- eral offers for that, or any other old furniture you have. Just try. oor —— “Wwe, z FOR ONE THING, IT'S NOT A ROTTEN, Ssrosiei Keep your eyes peeled for sus-| just right to him The men, suspected of being|returned shot for shot, and, with! putting off They jumped, but Mullen fired two shots at Averill, | ioe” i eiracters™ aid the| It was just « hunch—that’s all nee up” artists, failed to make Hamilton, headed for the Northern bilae a the boat and avam bac i to and finally the latter dropped his | were ‘riday afternoon to F. J Hey, boys,” he called, “Just alii. estaway after a desperate at-|racitic freight yards, followed shore, temporarily | disappearing gun and declared himself “all in. - sergeant Fri —. Hic ginal Gibheane their getaway after a despera Mullen under the Stetson-Post Lumber He said he couldn't run any more, | Mullen, who ts a new ? ‘ the ha EaeNavdaiich. “Alia ammina tempt to board the tug Ohio, as it Many Join In Chase | Company's dock {antl submitted to arrest We Ee ae oe ee eee wine aint. odd apa cartlad oA through the left the San Juan Fish Company's) fy tnis time over 100 employes on| In the meantime an emergency| Efforts to locate Hamilton proved yegas, dips, strong-arm or erp . ™ et gfe Ast Galt Pavel dock the water front Joined in the hunt, squad, consisting of Motorcycle! futile until Patrolman Web discoy- Ml : Heth, nd ine ewe towns vere carcied by the suspects, and, Mullen, who has been on the force hut they did not pregs the fugitives) Policemen Blaine and Webb and ered a board missing in the dock, al 5 eigen De poy © Fy ee earner cop whe Had a only two months, stopped them on hard. The bullets were too thick Sergt Mase, and former Deputy and, sticking his gun In, yelled for winter be agen bg putting Mullen |“hunch," and today the police de-|Firat av. 8., to make inquiries. He for their comfc Sheriff, Liner ecial policeman at Come out or I'll shoot.” he The sergeant was Nokened mn easel ir Powe Pen It haa. two placed one hand on Hamilton, when ~The — suspect thelr revolvers | the Sears uck Co., joined in the; Hamilton came out ; wine And Mullen s Loe y endl meget in meat Averill Averill turned, Mashed a n, and! drawn, ran round and round the box| pursuit Police records are being search- n: tentive H $0, ‘ape Hamilton, 20, cap. Commanded Mullen to get Hamilton cars, Mullen keeping right after When the fugitives reappeared, ed today t@ get a line on Averill Halle Two eerengers: al big revo Metin cutee go. The patrolman complied, and)them, The three reloaded as they| Averill started to run down the and Hamilton. Both Chief Bannick m er ea Maat clert 1 ar wn ay reaiae cunnitie due! with Pa-|the men ran down Lander st ran tracks, Hamilton fired three shots and Captain of Detectivea Ten- First a 8 ; Mull 1 never saw trolman Mullen, in which 29 shots Mullen jumped behind a telegraph Finally Averi!l and Hamilton took at Mullen, and again disappeared annt are convinced the men have \them before, But they didn’t look|were fired and no one Injured. bpole and started to shoot, Averill|to the pler, where the tug Ohio was| under the dock, |been in some scrape recently. oF. 4

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