The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 28, 1913, Page 1

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comeae } i ( teresting article on page 2. Read it. | HAT’S this war down in Colorado all about? RE you reading the latest adventures of Diana Correspondent Shepherd tells you in an in- A DWpickles? How she is grabbed by Uncle Sam's officers? Second chapter on page 4 today. W FAIR TONIGHT, The Sea WEDNESDA (ff ny Ht i A Word for the Pink! forenoon all but one telephone wire out of Ludlow was cut, leaving that as the town’s sole means of communication with the F outside world LT There was flerce fighting between strike sympathizers and mine guards all of yesterday at Berwind and Tobasco camps, in the vicinity of Ladiow Two More Miners Killed Sheriff Grisham of Trinidad, with , his 30 deputies, their two machine guns and armored train, were re pulsed in an effort to run the gaunt let of the strike sympathizers and reach Berwind camp, where a force of guards was besieged by strike sympathizers. Sergt. Hoc 15 militiamen succeeded, by e | i | \ { The Star \ Ther omething In it every night that | i We mean the circulation of The s H {Ht git aumeet t6 you. And you can't get “The | i They're coming in from all parts of the city Wil town Review” anywhere else a ii || —from the hills and from the hollows, It | see what the “Review” man has to say TUL = mn A re oe oe - —— - . - —————, |i] have It at your home every nigh yo . i we ve atwaye a laugh and alwaye a litte | VOLUME 1:5 THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS |) call up Main 9400 and ask for the circulation SE eee car vette weil like tyseeel i ME ts . HOME [fill Genartment. A polite young man will take i Ih Ht NO, 208 SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1913 ONE CENT Siwo'sraxvn. be EDITION. | {i] your name { i H a i ! | Ht | | RAAT R KARE ee ee AR hhh Rah hhh hhh hn hhh i" | — - 8 - om — ' °° | | oF | e e | 9 e ut | rom fil tops; acnine | | He Confesses It ter la ing Vown-and-Vuter d |} ’ HH e | e e "y G B r ut1 to Hear Dr atthews at Nevival Meetin l uns Da n Neply, aie ita | aie aa Therefore It's Proving Diffi-| g : BY FRED L. BOALT. swt Sulzer Says Stillwell Feared ; ‘i ‘ Pi . . . es LUDLOW, Colo., Oct. 28.—Civil war on a small oi, ig Select a oe pas Death Would Follow As an evangelist I have failed miserably. As a worker in the vineyard I do not shine. I tried last i] @ scale prevailed through the Southern Colorado coal Peter Miller Trial. H -F8 Acer night to snatch a brand from the burning, but I imagine he much prefers to burn. ii @ fields today. : ; “ On Sunday more than 1,000 persons at Dr. Matthews revival signed a pledge to bring, if possible, of H Word that Gov. Ammons had proclaimed martial OPPOSED TO KILLING MURPHY WARNED HIM at least one man to church every week. While I di d not sign this pledge, I took a friend of mine to Dr, a H law and was sending in troops reached here at 2 a. m. Seta ta Matthews’ church last nght. ~ a Union leaders counselled moderation and ad- ~" ¥emreman Insists On Charges Pardon Was Promised Perhaps it would be more accurate to say a nodding acquaintance. ae : P- II@ vised sympathizers to disarm voluntarily before the paige, Pig Murder by If Stillwell Would Keep sgh orvae I have been cultivating his frtendhip cuekduonely: ago Ue views, I fancy, my advances with sus- . . S + ali a r tales of adventure. soldiers’ arrival. the State His Mouth Shut. picion, albeit he gladly accepts my hospitality in exchange to : or. Me f the m however, were unmanageable. | shingles All I know of him is that he is a wandering Englishman who left home before he was man-grown to sail the seven oat Sb hge agains oe oe paras 3 "| i ats ama Pebbegt OOcagg el NEW YORK, Oct. 28 ting| eas, and that he came to anchor in Seattle a year or so ago—a derelict. i They declared the governor’s action proved that he) rtm ar ge bali that oxState Senator Stil oft If ever a man needed “saving,” he does. } sided with the mine owners, some advocated resisting! [iam at noon today. The state NO* YOrK. now fering a term in} | Dr. Matthews preached on “The Waiting Mother.” He told the} Ht th iliti d f f bi A th A tes. exhaueted pang sak aH the Sing Sing penitentiary, W®*) biblical story of Israel in revolt against the rule of Canaan; of the i e militia and a few were for burning the mines. ain parunadary chaltaneae ane’ \t 1 with assarsination If he) Canaanitish army of 30,000 chariots and Its defeat by the Israelites; of 1 Among the women, the rad- | — | the defenee bit one of he 12 » Tamn ex Gov. the flight of the general of the vanquished host loals found many sympathizers. Juror after Juror is being re : Llp He came at last, you will remember, to the tent of a woman who n “Run the militia out of Col jecld See Gece ies Ron ag Te fed him. Then he slept. And while he slumbered, the woman drove a d orado” was their cry as the | cause in almost every instance . , each | tent nail into his head, and through, Into the ground. HE, tent colonists turned out at | gira, eeredentians seme: i 1 removal x me Meanwhile, the general's mother was waiting at the latticed window dawn. | d rding to Sulzer, Sti of-| for her son's return } Battle Is on Today SURE T0 COME | The. ecbtachagiantare kan Aedes th make 8 conteniie, Cor oe nie CRY are hie chariote #0 long In coming? Why tarry the wheels of he former's term a Ibany, in| his chariots?” if Soon after daylight today rifle 5 1. by passl the antihanging which he said other Tammany men iasacare: oth oth: | - c je & one amany me o today, who wait at the latticed windows. | men opened fire from the hills on w, that the death penalty {s id be exposed, if Guiser. would We may have feresiten them, , wrong @ people of the woule te ee 5 e ule nay have forgotten th but they have not forgotten us. They are ' the guards’ campe at Berwind and} wrome, ene peers he state @® first pardon him oldfashioned, ana their Ie an old4ashioned Christianity, against the e | a whole view the act of h ing 9 y ag t Hastings, according to the guard's anging © sinatl 7 whlok ited | beyhees. - account. |man by the until he is dead His Death Threatened | exactions of which we revolted in our boyhoo | | The revivalist made a strong plea for the old-fashioned Christianity The strike sympathizers’ version fas as medieval, barbaric and inef: Friends of Stillwell told him | of our mothers. He spoke feelingly of his own mother, who Is dead. War tae tbe ee onined Wa! wiatnron, oc. t0-—Amert| Ce s a det e of crime that the prisoner wae afraid to of Know that my mother le In heaven, waiting for me,” he sald, “1 i eir machine gv riticise the System make a confession while in oe rf A fierce fight raged between the can intervention in Mexico seemed! put the law ts t retroactive.” | Sing Sing, because he had been perryrt thie oem ee ees Con ae or Coreen a working their machind nearly inevitable today. Govern) A man found gui rned that if he did con Hy and scores of men who #ent ment officials in the closest touch | murder tt @ would not get out aliv After the sermon, after the songs had been sung, Hy volley after volley of rifle shots In 111) the administration admitted as| Chime was committed af 1 was subsequently informed | the prayers said, Dr. Matthews called: ‘All who 1 thelr direction. } ’ ialature pasred the anthhbaggiog sald Salzer, “that Stillwell had been} f thi * hands!” i ‘The rang@wasteo great, however, much openly law, bat if the crime was commit advised to keep stil! and that mg} ‘want me to pray for them, raise your hands- H and little execution was done. Gen. Felix Diaz's appeal for) te » the parsage of the successor would pardon him. A girl on my left raised her hand, and began to i Later parties of sympathizers ap American protection, could not be » hanged Letter From Stillwell HH peared In the vicinity of the disregarded, it was sald | * not asem to ap) 1 Sake dra as softly. ify, Delagua camp, and fighting broke He owned to Consul Canada at)! ‘the Intelligence of the men tn piper a iat Lager I looked at the brand. His lip was curling. | Ht out Lg pay OR a Vera Cruz, that his life was in dan. = 1 w . en called to the court to hate beak ‘writes jane ‘guna ev, ef ee | i wi e at on the ould ate show their qualifications to serve on written and signed by i if | battle on.an extensive scale, | sion to the consulate — +. | «No, ‘When I'm dead, I'm dead,” he eaid, doggedly. ay, with 2,000 or 3,000 men involv. Since he did not consider himself} “Have you,” the prosecuting at “1 have been promised an aWhe- Whe youth . “Sone | ee ed and a frightful death roll. there was nothing | torney any| early release by agents of the | «don't know. It’s none of my businese—nor yours,” he said, His| | During the in distracting the men's 3 from the camp, and furni i guards with fresh ammunition Another fight ensued, i which two Greek miners were killed and } five deputies wounded This brought the number of kill ed thus far during the strike up to 12. Twenty-five or 30 have been wounded. Lost articles “are usually found by Star want ads in the “Lost and Found” column. safe, even there. to do but American Vera Cruz President Huerta was expected to the at to put him aboard Wh warship ling, {demand the fugitive’s surrender to him. He will not be surrendered, it was definitely stated Sécretary Pr: today instructed Admiral Fletcher, commanding the American naval force at Vera Cruz. to learn where he wishes to go, and advise the state department TRAINS COLLIDE One en a caboose were terailed eer Cantzer, in harge of train, is thous » have. bee aly ear-end colli ific near ning. T t taken to Snohomish wa The line upon which wreck to the wattle running occurred runs from § Sumas Both trains were north when the collision the work train plowing Into the rear of the Everett freight The caboose and the work train ngine deralled occurred were | THE STAR A CLOSE SECOND H il LCL | ea FINELY __ IF A is Ot eee al . WED FF. ! Pine Oe diagram. The in when he calied. one or more daily papers six months. office ef The Seattle Star: NUMBER OF HOMES 40 {FP 1 4 EXCLUSIVE CIRC mes 'T ar There are 55 homes in the Hillman City newspaper census taker homes were empty, and at six of the homes the occupants were not Of the 44 homes canvassed The Star has not had a solicitor in this district during the past The following statistics were compiled from statements made by the occupants of these 40 homes, and the same are on file in the ULATION (Where FAMILY PAPERS (The Paper All the Members of the Family Read and Like Best) fe the family pa Jistrict shown by thie found that five of these 40 take regularly NUMBER OF OCCUPANTS 141 Only One Daily Paper Is Taken) ie tar and rin 18, the Times tn 16 asked again and again. conscientious scruple against the dominant power. Word was death penalty? sent to me before the recent po- Yes litical agitation that the gov- “Murder by the State” ernor would be impeached, and Could you subordinate that that my prompt release would ruple to the e follow.” and the Instructions n this case? No. 5 man inst calling tt rder by the state,” despite all lefforts to ahut bin isin! cha deen ine | It fe not Hkely that evidence wil! jer the captio! An Oversu | be efore Thursday at the| 207!or Judge,” Collier's es Weekly 4 current issue, paya ele {ts compliments to our own Judge | Humphries, and reproduces the The B an unpracticed eye,” says Sues Col te at first glance WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.—That, in hot John re t Wilson and Secretar Honor's an plan a “w of Interest” of pe of the all nations in the Western hemis art whieh is phere, was the ir retation placed | 0 sa y flattened at the jon the president's utterances Sat- pole urday at Swarthmore coll Phil adelp and yesterday in Mobile as Helen Davis, field executive It was said he and Bryan belfeve) of the national board of the Y, W. they can put a stop to the frequent|C. A ived {n Seattle today from uprisings and revolutions in Central) New York. She will remain here {and South America about 10 days ‘STAR WANT I Posivivecy GFUSE WD WEAR THEM ANY MORE. | THEY MAKE ME LOOk ¥ LIKE A CHINESE A HERB DOCTOR? bay ¥ WITHOUT YOUR GLASSES! YOU KNOW WHAT THE OPTICIAN SAID! NOW YOU PuT THEM Mm OM QUICK $ —AND WHGN YOU GeT THROUGH READING, PuT OvT THE MILK BoTruss! 4 ADS BRING RESULTS | | got a sixpence ahead, | bet it on the: gee-gees. fo} AVE a look at the brightest, snappiest, livest sport page in Seattle, on page 9. You'll find it just as snappy every day. ORRESPONDENT SAWYER tells Star readers how a sourdough has contracted to haul Uncle Page 6. H Sam’s coal to tidewater, 800 tons of it. Y RAIN; LIGHT EASTE RLY WINDS. ttle Sta Growing Every Day! tone was surly. “You didn't like the sermon, after all,” | told him. I did, | liked it fine. But—but—why, dang it, mate, it was all about a general, and not a word about ‘he 30,000 soldiers who drove his chariots “A woman double-crossed him. Well, that’s happened to many, high and low. His mother was waiting for him. She was rich, and had a fine home, and perhaps he was the only son she had. She was a good woman, of course—it's easy to be good when you're rich, And it's easy to love a boy when you've only got one. | “Do you happen, mate, to know anything about that part of London) called Bermondsey? If you do, there's no need for me to tell you what | It's like, | was born in Bermondsey. | “There were seven in the family that | some that died young. | had several fathers, one at a time. coming and going. My mother used the same ring for the lot. a lucky woman in that neighborhood that had a ring. “You know, don't you, that among the poor in London the women drink with the men? That's the first thing | remember—going with my mother to a public house and minding the baby outside in the rain.) When the baby cried, my mother'd come out and give it a penny drink | of gin. aA won't tell you much about her cursed, It was only what other women of her kind did fun they had | “1 don't know what has become of my brothers and sisters. One| enlisted—a dog's life, and the scrap-heap at the end. One went to Dart- mouth for stealing, and may be there now We lived In two rooms, somtimes one. It was cheaper to move than pay rent. By and by, when a new father moved in, my mother told me | was big enough to shift for myself, and to clear out. “| did clear out, and I’ve never been back. | never hear from my folks, and | don’t want to. “That's why, mate, what the minister said went in one ear and out the other. He wasn’t talking to me, anyway, but to you and to the girl on the other side of you—the one that cried and wanted the min- ister to pray for her. “She had me guessing, that girl, and that's a fact. Pretty, wasn’t she? And good, too, It was easy to see she was good. She's never! been tempted to be anything but good, Then what'd she want to ** Mrs. Sulzer Declares War Upon Powerful Leader Who Has Disgraced Her Husband And since then I've! By W. H. Alburn (Copyrighted, 1913, by the News-| remember, not counting They kept | It was If she drank and fought and It was the only Mrs. Sulzer Today | done every rotten thing a man could do, “It should have been me, mate, instead of the girl. It should have been me wanting to be prayed| for, instead of her. It’s a rum go, ain’t it—her get-| ting all excited at the thought of a mother waiting at a window, when her own mother’ll kiss her before she goes to bed tonight, and me sitting there like a There was no grandeur now, She was just a tired little wom : r in a plain white shirt wat rin paper Enterprise Association) | 9.) 2 aist an ' lump and not knowing or caring whether my mother Paper Enterprise Association) ng dark skirt, sitting amfd the ruins of is alive or dead? teap from the luxurious dignity of Ne? household gods, without “But if your mother had been a different kind?” '"« {Scheie eaten Albany | next home aout to H to the cramped humility of a room uid oe I touched ge _, ear ate lin the Hroadway Central hotel In| pyget Willd blue eves were dull “Hf she h te, i Naw York € ere little lines of care im she had, mate, if she had! ut how er face. Teve ae I : ; Be d h th could) I talked there with Mrs, Willam| Der face. Even her graying hal she be different—in Bermondsey, where the poor are | sujzer, wife of the governor whom | S'S peegeioteer gh tassel i “Chief , ‘ove from office. 4 as started @ always hungry? Say what you like, poverty makes (yee i Ui artes thelr arrival, death grapple with Tammany,” people hard and cruel. And it’s the mothers of the) and 1 asked Mrs. Sulzer a bitter Murphy toot, OS: < ® ” ie Murphy, toc generals who wait at the window. aweWhere would you” rather be—| Instantly all the weariness slip. | |= ped away here or in the governor's mansion? ling to Tamman we stand together. TEXAS TRIAL TRIP SL NGwE A HONEYMOON The frail Httle woman: stopped “Where my husband goes! * ROCKLAND, Me. Oct. 28.—The|VOS ANGELES, Oct. 28—W. H.]unpacking lingerie from a trunk) WII go,” she answered. “His risa _ | Shultz, on his honeymoon, was ar-|and stood erect, a sudden picture| enemies are my enemies, s new superdreadnaught Texas, re- rested here on a charge of embez-| of dignity and strength “They say that in all the ‘3 turned after its first trial trip, with zling money from a farmers’ al-| “IT would rather,” she said, hundred years that Tammany a record of 22.28 knots liance of Colebrook, Ariz “infinitely rather, be here with has corrupted. and tyeannized = op Pech EEE incisions ———- | my husband, under the present over New aes no woman has ve - || humiliating circumstances, in ever fought against it, V: PENNANTS COUPON |] Be istesta othe vexocucing | welll. ..eiwill “fluke: Satara | A ~~»: NO. 104 || mansion, at the price of trugk- And Wifi and | shall win. For | Any four coupons clipped from The Star, consecutively num. “For here,” she continued, elt is all a shameful commentary | bered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitle || we are free. Our souls are our jon free government, PB c € ove F olitical you to a 65.cent Pennant. Chicago Pennants are now out own, We have our@elf-respect, jbossism must be destroyed in Pennants will be sent by mail if 6 cents additional for each Pen || and we can fight our way up America or our institutions are | nant is enclosed. Bring or mail to Tho Seattle Star, 1307 Seventh agai doomed, The boss must go. My ‘Ave, near Union 8t. Then she sank back into a rock-| husband will do his share in the! jing chair, rather wearily, | Might for honest government!”

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