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RAIN TONIGHT AND TUESDAY; MODERATE SOUTHERLY WINDS | The Seattle Sta > Jj) the game “right.” It hap dat Deimoni. || They’ re Talking About It! ( ] About that stuff in “The Towr in Review” | column In the Pink. You won't get It all un- you follow it from day to aay, There's Ht —f co's, Where the blg fellows eat. Sulzer says ii erial about that Spelger & Hurlbut mouse |i re wouldn't wear the collar, and right after " ; rap, with a er chapter toda And ne rculdn't wear the collar and right ater args aes THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS. some Vi isreentteanatir, ster, edo. And a i senna tne NO. 201. SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1913, ONE CENT. pwatstts EDITION. }ffij_'*48" | MRS. PANKHURST PROMISES SHE’LL BE GOOD } AND IS ADMITTED ON ORDERS OF PRESIDENT LP LAPSES VOUIURNO BUREING TR SiD-OCEANA Ii ii N WRIST AT . WON'T G SWELL CLUB ROUGH HERE | Clar-A-nce Thought He Was) American Suffragets Had Running Rainier Club, Threatened to Appeal to But He Wasn't. Wife of President. FLOOD OF MESSAGES Senators and Prominent At- | torneys Proffer Services to Militant Leader. WASHINGTON, Oct. 21.—The, New York immigration authorities* |order, exclucing Mrs. Emmeline ‘a |Pankhrust, leader of the English . | militant suffragets, from admission, to the United States was overruled’ |today. She was ordered admitted immediately. The ruling was made after Prest- dent Wilson b erred today with Commissioner General of Im- |migration Caminetti, concerning jthe case. Mrs. Pankhurst had beem |detained at Ellis island. | The president, Caminetti and eve, ery other man in an important govet jernment position here, as well as \the wives of many of them, were |deluged with telegrams and special delivery letters, demanding Mrs. : Pankhburst’s release. Mrs. Alice Paul and other local = equal rights advocates had discuss =~ ed an appeal to Mrs. Wilson, ators Offer Aid “4 Senators Chamberlain and Lane of Oregon notified the famous Eng- lishwoman's attorneys that they were ready to assist in obtaining her admission. Many prominent lawyers also offered their ald. The immigration authorities who | ruled against her admission came 3 lin, incidentally, for some very se ere criticism. 4 Before discussing the matter A Lifeboat of Rescued Volturno Passengers Coming Alongside the | With President Wilson, Commis wise Here is an Astounding Snapshhot Taken From the Deck of the rosser Kurfuerst. It Shows the Burning Voiturno (Ship Indicated by BEAT HIS CANDIDATE Arrow) Surrounded by Some of the Eleven Great Atlantic Liners Which Rushed to the Distressed Ship's Ald in Response to Her Covey of “8. O. S." Messages. For Hours These “Samaritans of the Waters” Were Obliged to Stand There—HELPLESS to Rescue the Volturno’s Pas Harry Treat’s a Nice Fellow, All Right, But Backer Gets Him in Wrong. | They put skids under | ClarAnce Blethen at the Rainier club Saturday night And identaliy they put ‘em under Har Whitney Treat, too- mot because they bave anything Against Harry, be they haven't—but because the role of ampaign for cor Saturday was election day at the er club, and for some time arAnce had been very busy in framing everything #0 there would be no mistakes. Hervey Lindley, vice president for the past year, was to be elect | ed president in line with the prece- | dent established some years ago. Here is the First Actual Photograph of the Burning of the Voiturno—the La Catastrophe to Blot Out a Cargo of | This left the real contest up to the! Human Lives. This Remarkable Picture Was Taken by a Passenger on the Deck of the Grosser Kurfuerst. The Great Clouds of Smoke Can | vice presidency. Be Seen Rolling Up From the Bow of the Vessel. This Photograph Was Made Only a Few Minutes Before the Final Destruction of the | Looks Like CiarAnce Se SNE MAYOR'S PLANINIGRIFFITHS WILL LIONS AND TIGER -HUERTALWILL BE friends of “Jack” Eden, known so- vc a so oe" CHARTER MIX-UP RUN FORMAYOR; WILDINSTREETS CANDIDATE FOR But Eden wasn't a very active) | candidate and didn't care whether | | | he was elected or not, and it look-| IDENCY ed an though ClarAnce might be | | | It is hardly probable that May-| Couneliman “Austin E. Griffiths! LEIPSIG, Oct. 20—Elght lione| VERA CRUZ, Oct. 20.—Despite successful. No one cared very much, matter of fact, who filled the office or Cotterill'’s sug ion, in Bis| will be candidate for mayor in the #fd a tiger were liberated by a col- ali hin promises to the contrary, it of vice president, but they were in-| speech at the Municipal league Sat spring. He will resign councit-| [elon between a circus wagon and terested in the presidency a year urday noon, to call a charter revis-| eS noriy, though he hae two |” street car here early today, > to the jon cony | ‘4 today t from now. As the one led to the jon convention immediately, will be| 114 9 naif years more to serve. Within five minut . malin senicd foto Page AEE Sade recy was considered practically certain Provisional President | to suc other, there grew a feeling that it adopted by the council , elty was in an upr was about time someone did some| The mayor's plan is to have the ia comes “Two of the lions leaped through ceed bimeelf at the election next | Grosser Kurfuerst. Note the Smooth Surface of the Water, Due to the|Sioner Caminettl had granted @ thing to ClarAnce. convention consist of representa His candidacy will be mad the plate-giass windows of the Sunday, Oct. 26 Oil Which Was Pumped Onto the Raging Waves by the Two Oil-Tank| hearing to Mrs. Pankhurst’s lawe They Frame Up a Job tives of the various civic and com-|+h6 issue of reorganizing the pres. [lucher hotel, where, after fright The constitution prohibits the Liners. yers, in order te sei, to Me a So some of the older members|mercial bodies, who should meet/ ont aystem of city government.|°M!BE everyone from the office, same president from serving two complete record for submit Of the cled got. together Friday |tWiee a week and immediately be-/Grimiths saya he Is convinced the |they roamed the corridors. The| terms in succession, but Huerta the Doentlomen,” cal naa 4 night and before they were |Kin the framing of a new charter. | Konia will adopt the new charter Kuest# barricaded | themselves in preaumably wil reaign in a day or ; entlemen, sa ir. 4 through, had the signatures of 150 In December, under this plan, 15/404 that by July 10 a new set of thelr roome and shrieked from the hae to we oo . poe 0g his — Je be hd gsc = men who had agreed to vote for |freeholders would be elected a8] orricials will be elected. The term “!ndows for help Nears till oadnekae hie cach ented, ‘che win Gok George Donworth for the vice rs vas os beck as mayor, under the March eleo PE A ed eee ed PR ay phn ae eae eet caiiioRey r nae prover wa eprmaeand <a ——o From Deasisher until: Marek the bat oh there last but &) Wore called to the hotel. The Hona| Diaz's arrival was the expectation. , will commit no untoward acts?” that all of the opposition should be revisionists would continue with opinion the present form | Yee lassoed and tied and finally Pes wes Re geen gg late this |, Sttogeae eres Se re) ot centered upon the Blethen candi.|the work, and in March the vote on/ of government has broken down,” | 0th were taken to police head. | attermoon, ani neither hiv ‘ elec dk ae, date the adoption of the new charter, a8 / said’ Griffiths, and I am convinced @Warters under orders to be exe-| ers nor tne her e 5 pie is cm 2 at = o t the White They liked Harry Treat all right,| Well as the new officials, can be/| shail be of greater service to the “MOG ites rave pois ag pre that Mrs. Pankhurst, will be gta and, withuct the Blethen support, /had at thie same tffithe, author of| “ity; Hf 1 can bring about a needed | actvarg seat of an Automobile bus,| The gunboat Zaragoza, which| PLYMOUTH, Mass, Oct. 20.— t. 20.—, had been given, asserting he believ-|her treedom on her own recogni there would have been no objec-| Councllmeme a new charter, is| nAPse than, by remaining in the tno ariver plunging headlong to the| Huerta sent to Havana to bring|Damaging testimony to the defense ed some of the poison had been giv-| ance eek strenuously opposed to the mayor's bye 1 pavement, A policeman shot the| Diaz back but which he refused to|was given today at the trial of Mrs./en tne admiral from two to six) Secretary of Labor Wm. B. Wik He is & popular member of the + ie pe din ag POP go is sent rong A for | jennt | board arrived here last night Jennie Eaton, charged with poison-| hours before his death son said he entertained serious club end members agree he would | P Te scutes hese to us nand tee may’ oh es ' _— w “ng fore | The other five lions were shot in ling her husband, Admiral J. G ~ doubt as to whether Mrs. Pank- make a good president, er caatioe. ak toe apeed Lek er ake tian cate the mzeuth by. pulaamen. and-us | Eaton PIONEER RESIDENT DIES _hurst's acts in England constituted ‘Twas Too Big a Load ‘and that to do so ma prove tatai ° orittiths cares ". "Beattie 4° official big game hunters Prof. W. M, Whitney of Harvard moral turpitude, adding that if she F ClarAnce was too big @ load. for commission government 1n06 a ie & layer by profes — orsity was today’s first wit John R,. Williams, one of the broke the laws of the United States So on Saturday they went to the/| No Confusion Now sion oid few remaining pioneers of Wash-|she could easily be arrested. polls and. wrote on their ballots! Under the plan as now worked AFTER| TAMMANY OLYMPIA, Oct. 20. — Ralph "He testified that he examined the fngton, died at the home of his son| | Co mmissionet Sacer Caminettl the name of George Donworth. | out, 15 freeholders would be elected| TWO MAYORS WILL TALK Pierce and Hugh Todd for the peo- stomach of the baby adopted by the in this city, Saturday, at the age|then ordered Mrs. Pankhurst’s re 1] when the votes were counted in March. They would have two pce ple of Seattle and James P, Howe |Eatoas, but found no pol Mrs. of 86 years Heas : Saturday night it was found |montns to prepare the charter, and| Tuesday evening, at the annual) NEW YORK, Oct. 2—Acting ona for the Seattle Electric Co. made Eaton had charged that the child er picawee: is 7 that Treat had gone down with his |i, would be voted upon at a spe- fellowship meeting of the Brother- recent demand by Charles F. Mur- their closing arguments before the was poisoned by he usband. f a manager, ClarAnce. 4 cial clection hood of the First M. E church, | phy, | a Cammane Hall dudes | cents public service commission| A vetter addressed to Whitney, || - PENNANT. COUPON 3 was oe ment fo Shin, «mene 7 would be no confusion of/Mayor Seymour of ‘Tacoma wili| Malone ordered today a sweeping this morning In the matter of the | written in 199, and i : J 7 | NO. 9o7 = ray > ndidates and the charter revision speak on the “Commission Form of investigation by the grand jury of application of the city of Seattle |Eatou,” was intr ne t said ‘4 a danquet tendered the club tuue at such an election.” said Government.” Mayor George, F. charges by John Purroy Mitchell,| tre the return of the privilege of the writer was ous to prove Any four coupone clipped from The Star, consecutively num E later in the evening by the new crirgens tnis morning. “This spe Cotterill, who has recently return- fusion candidate for mayor, that purchasing street car tickets upon |the admiral was insane | Bered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitle p president, Hervey Lindley. cial election would be held no later ed from an extended trip in Rurope,| Tammany Hall planned to {mport |street cars Prof, Whitney diso examined.Ad-|| Jue a. Sbcent Peanert. ornare oo. aan = Ma big man of than July 10, in all probabi and will address the meeting on the eaters” to accomplish his de At the close of the hearing the|miral Eaton's stomach. He swore || heb ihed biol vig pe by mail If 5 cents additional for Pen- st a thy therefore the 1915 budget same ubject as it applies to this|feat in the coming election, Wit-| chairman informally announced |he found arsenic “in practically ev-|/ nant ls enclosed. Bring or mailto The Geattle Ota venth ‘ he wi city, kiving impressions gained re nesses probably will appear for ex-| that the decision would be given at |ery organ arsenic could affect.” | Ave, near Union 8t. ne ne Reet "made up with the new cha th and P Aavt op mind. cently from foreign municipalities. amination tomorrow the earliest possible moment 1 He thought more than one dose |——— ST ENS Here’s the Statement We Give Them to Sign NEWSPAPER CENSUS OF SEATTLE ‘Yes, We’ re aa Them All Up With This | to verily Publishers statements to U.S. Postel Deperyne Census; We Show You How ‘We Take It S eee There are sixty homes in the South Park district shown In this diagram. The newspaper census taker found that seven of your family paper Perr 1) nine Le the occupants were out when he called, Of the forty-five homes can- BV ail ed, thirty-eight take one or more dally paper 0d or brought homme by some mem f the family The Star has not had a solicitor in this district during the past six months. Star xX Times 0 Sua: ie Ponstuaslignenn The following statistics were complied from statements made by the occupants of these thirty-eight homes. The same are on file in the office of The Seattle Star: oS Seedey Timm — O) Sunday Po NUMBER OF HOMES, 38 NUMBER OF OCCUPANTS, 143 Number of Star Subscribers........ 33, or 87 per cent | Number of Star Readers 128, or 86 per Number of Times Subscribers . 18, or 47 per cent | Number of Times Readers. . 68, or 48 per Number of P.-I. Subscribers +.+..10, or 26 per cent | Number of P.-I. Readers........... 53, or 37 per Number of Sun Subscribers......... 7, or 18 per cent | Number of Sun Readers ...... " or 23 per STATE OF WA Lhe sant And say ns follows: ‘That on the i ee a rentals E danas, deine duly oworn, Gepone see ee’ of the distelet wounded by EXCLUSIVE CIRCULATION (where only one daily paper is taken) epee ater 3 Business Manager of The Seattle Star, being duly sworn, Wulltyan St the no n on the south, Kighth Av. §. on the east and A jepone nay 8 on Fitth Ay Bon the west, we shown In the dingram printed herewith, and that 1 Homes taking Star and no other....14, or 37 per cent | Readers of Star and no other 33 per cent ob tee cae tet te ee ce ane Thala non tare taal ‘ained '& written statement from an oecupant of every home, except in (he care 44 eg taking Times and no other... 3, or 8 per cent | Readers of Times and no other 5 per cent — affien of The Senttle Star, 4 per cent above figures show the t rp ap, Kjaer ; Ata the 4; and that the above figures are a /, 5 Homes taking P.-I. and no other.. 1, or 3 per cent | Readers of P.-I. and no other ap me ; y of the statements ‘ Homes taking Sun and no other .., 1, or 3 per cent | Readers of Sun and no other....... 1 per cent peadire mii a ot and ie Seattle x ¢ ie ned « hy anid occupants, Signed alinthal wit dancksttc kaaad a FAMILY PAPERS (the paper all the members of the family read and like best). ped and perce ‘te, Worer®, she thle (18th ae ee eer rele ee aa é atthe. Out of 38 homes, The Star is the family paper in 26, the Times in 8, the P.-I. in 2, and the Sun in 2, } Public tn and for the State of Washington, residing in Seattle, Sunday Papers—The Times, 13, the P.-I, 15. n expires January 22, 1916. Notary Public in t omission expires January 22, 1916