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tell him where evil could be found— race! there were immoral women! % muck and slime and vice will find it! DUWAMISH FOLK | PROTEST GIVING NEW FRANCHISE; Oppose Puget Sound Co. in Application for Light and test against any blanket and exclusive franchise asked of the county commissioners by the Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Co., for extend- "Wig “ita fight and power system to that territory. The valleyites do not want to he shut out of the privilege of obtain ing city light and power, and they contend that the commissioners ar ever that means. de betng a Chevalier with the Order of the Dragon (China), Order of St. Anna hise. Rather than be subjected to the Famine Rellef commission. its services into the valley In odd moments, whe Many = >! of tote jun ae a heavily on his hands oe ete a eet trot | ed found the Chinese b - end Pine Aart that you know as Dobie’s Lament th } AVE y soticed in the newspapers the Ni Hi sobful stories about his football team i] H Ser osaek Dab aie cect. The Ae ii sage ete at Fg ele get hh tl VOLUME Hi Hi NO jot the Chinese government Burdened With Honors He is burdened with high honors, |{n Japan | @tfonnewr of France, and decorated the Order of the | Sacred Treasurer (Japan), (Russia) ongs to a number of learned so- | to his governmental | Chinese. apt to give the traction company os such a franchire as will, by su In eddition | preme court decisions in simflar| dutles, he found Ume to translate | cases, amount to an exclusive ‘ran- | Steele's Chemistry into As chairman of the Centra with Japan and the United States man or Heb sit is purchased. when the ictpal Mghting de He built ratiroads rtment e ready to extend) Has Been Quite Busy time hung collected and help Red Cross RAIN TONIGHT AND THURSDAY; MODERATE EASTERLY WINDS 1S 209 THE STAR—WEDNES And he has found that in a city of 300,000 souls, vice exists! He has found that after numerous introductions, he has been able to place a bet upon a horse He has found that by getting the proper pass word he has been able to And in horror he holds up his hands and vomits forth the story of his nocturnal wanderings! * * * * N ALL the world, whether it be a city of 300,000, or of 30,000, the man who delves and digs for | He makes it as he digs—for in the underworld there works the law of supply and demand, just John Ferguson of Newton, Mass., Tell Boalt About Affairs in China, Where | John Was Velly, Velly Big Politician Power Extension. B on is, we will get on with the tn-jwhile the Orientals too often think} By Fred L. alt | terview without doing. But now the Chil Though John Calvin Fergu I asked for inside Information nese have kened, and they ar ’ | ‘ nform nese have awakened, and they are THEY’ D RATHER WAIT son, formerly of teh sage Westin about Chinese politics, but this Fer- both thinking and doing achusetts, but now of Peking, Kuson refused to give. ‘ o w i ow! Undergo Hardships| China, has tived in China many t am out ait woe be ant to Do Busine : Ave they anxious to do business Until City Is Prepared years, he still talks Bostonese. said. “It could do no good, and | with us on the Pacific coast? y i Ferguson is visiting in Seat = might arm, if I were to express Race adie wus tain tak be. to Furnish Service. tle, and has given me an inter. jan opinion, tn view of the fact that norne in mind: That the financial | A view. In order that you may 1 was a servant of t ernment | yy oy ot Okina: Was. Beale den’ tance of it, under the Manchu dyt 1 car oF aa we | f the Ouwamish appreciate the impor ” ors be h down by the revolutio fi hich Residents o Paw 1 must tell you first who he Is. lonly say that the republic under the Manchan ware avarthrown | valley, at a meeting of the He has held many important of-| President Yua Ki seems to be ‘ are many, and her| Civic league at Foster Tuesday | 1; in China under the Mancht|on a sound foot and I do not oak ale hha Meal night, entered a vigorous pro- dynasty, but ia now retired. doubt that, given time, it will work | money American business men He holds the second-class button | out its problems what R olution Broken “The revolution? ‘Is broken. Dr. Sun Yat Sen ts The other leaders have fled the country.” “What can you sny of the Chinewe Double | adaptability to the change?” “The Chinese are, and aiwa;s have been, the most democratic people in the world. They have ne titled or a land: nobility, as in Europe. The Logion | and the He} way has always been open for even the loweat-born to rise to the highest office, under the history of China nces of poor men, China be rais erms of such a franchise, the val. ©d nearly $1,000,¢ obscure men, who have risen to byltes are content to forego the He was foreign adviser to the, eminence, authority and pow- fonveniences of electric light, they Viceroy of Nanking. He was pro er.” pay, until city’s auxiliary plant of the Shanghal Daily What of the people as a whole? is established, and the Lake Cush He helped revise treaties! “A philosophical and a religious people. Between Occidentale and Orientals there ts this difference We woo often do without thinking, OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE WE, BROTHER TRUE, WHAT Did You THINK OF MY SERMON THIS MORNINGS 2 ~ SHAKING HUERTA OFF HIS THRONE WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—Pres!. dent Wilson was considering today the wisdom of sending an ultima tum to Mexican President Huerta, demanding his retirement. In view of communications received from them, it was believed England, Ger. many and France would uphold him in such a demand. If they did 80, Huerta probably would be forced to quit. to think this the best plan for elim: inating the dictator without using force. JOINS S, A. ARMY | LONG BEACH, Cal, Oct. 29 'Mre. Elizabeth Wood, a wealthy young widow and society leader, announced that she will leave Sat jurday for Chicago to enlist in the President How announced today that by January 1 teel will have been substituted for wooden sleepers throughout the sy+ tem. | Special Real Estate Section Tomorrow If you are looking for a home of an investment, you can sure ly find it in our special rea |! estate section tomorrow. The || beat buys from leading real es tate firms are represented there, so It will pay you to read it carefully, Take ad || vantage of same of the big | snaps offered, you can't lose U.S, CONSIDERS. The president was said to incline | DAY, OCTOBER 29, 1913. It has been so man trai a house in which who would reach out after Chinese business must expect slow pay: ments for a time. There must be confidence and credit The Chi nese business man is as moral in his onsinoss as be is in bis home ife—and that t# high praise.” No More Opium Smoking “The oplum traffic? | “It {# stamped out. Not only! have the public smoking places been abolish but private smok ing as well) The cultivation of the poppy has ceased. No more opium, comes in from India. Indi or rather, Great Hritain—is the only loser. | | | “If you would realize the propor-| tions of the task which the Chinese | goverament undertook imagine our! ernment trying to abolish | the Hquor traffic | The country is better off. The land (hat was formerly put to pop-| py-growing now grows cereals. The! icoat of ving has come down.” | WEST SEATTLE WILL GET THAT. FERRY ERE LONG Rida will be opened by the port commissioners on January 2 for the sale of $200,000 bonds for the West Seattle ferry The plan to place the bonds at popular sale has fallen through, be cause the denominations, originally! “goelety In Vaudeville” the voted by. the ple, were $1,000, | program billed for a ben per and to reduce the same to $100 ftormauce te given at the Seattle bonds would necessitate another Press club Thursday night for the election. It is understood one firm has ten tatively offered 98 cents on the dol |lar for the bonds home orchestra the Grandma Gorman children Wagner's been secured, and poor has ‘We recognize the ne: much haste as possible Commissioner Bridges, benefits held in this city. The best local talent available has oven secured. There are to be acts ‘rom the Pantages and the Em. ‘owing to the inadequacy of traffic ac | | commodations to West Sea | Press. | January 2 is as early as we can Billed as one of th uding num fix the date, because of the legal bers will be the La ra Sisters, | requirement for advertising for | who, in a short time, will fill an en | bide, and other preliminaries. gagement with the new Tivoli the | am In favor of purchasing the atre. These sisters, native daugl present ferry if it can be ob. |ters, have often performed before | tained at a reasonable price. If not, the port will have to bulld its own ferry.” ttle at public entertainments r act will consist of singing king and dancing, The show starts at § o'clock PAY "EM SALARY? 19 BOOST FARE? resolution requesting that the te voters be allowed to efther vote for, Unless the city hurries up and or against paying salartes to the| buys the Renton line, Scott Ca ah ane seetion thee eens houn, recetver, will ask the public mously pted by the Seattle Com. | Service commission to establish a mercial Club at its nieeting Tues. | “zone” system, so an extra fare may ‘ night. The resolution urges be collected at Kenyon the old the commission to give the matter 1 place on the official ballot, if it can be done In accordance with the eity voundary line, and also to cur tail transfer privileges 80 he told the couneil committee Tuesday utilities COUPON | PENNANTS Gunes | Any four coupons cilpped from The Star, consecutively num. bered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitle you to a 65-cent Pennant. Chicago Pennants are now put. Pennants will be sent by mail 4f 6 cents additional for each Pen nant ls enclosed. Bring or mail to The Seattle Star, 1307 Seventh Ave, near Union St. healthier, cleaner, more_mo § |SHE’LL SING AND DANCE TO AID GRANDMA GORMAN’S CHILDREN entertain: | ment promises to far outdo similar | The Seattle Star owen. THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS ONE CE FKAINS AND AND Ge oN NEWS 8 as in all other walks of life! nee ince time began, and will be so until time ends! And so, with his nose down in the filth which decent people cannot scent or see, this young his rotten way. * * PRESIDENT WILSON MAY ORDER HUERTA OUT = : = Seas but subscribe for The ity name and address The Star's circula- his voice y wi and thank you sweetly tion is more than HOME | EDITION {il daily | THERE’S ALWAYS FILTH IF YOU LIKE IT! N AN effort to bolster up a charge that Seattle is vice-ridden, and that immorality exists and thrives under the protection of Seattle’s police department, a young man has gone about the city, sneaking into alleyways and up dark stairways, betraying confidences secured from people of the underworld, seeking and gaining introductions to those who could introduce him to others who could * # AVE we who publish papers lost all our civic pride, that we must take the little vice that Se- attle has today and flaunt it forth to gain a reader? Do we not all know that Seattle is cleaner today than ANY CITY in America? And do we not know that Seattle has an honest chief at the head of its police department? Why, then, this further turmoil? i Why not, when we find vice that can be cleaned away, take word of it to Bannick? - Why not, instead of gloating over the fact that Agnes drinks her beer in the American cafe, that Johnnie Clancy makes a book on the races, and that Maud and Mable can be found | av.—if you have the pass word—express pride in the fact that nowhere in the land on Second is there a Ic Ethel La Farra ROMANCE MOST ‘UNUSUAL, BUT ‘TTENDS HAPPILY | This is the story of an unor- | thodox romance, with a somber | beginning and the happiest kind of an ending When Lizzie Ergler was 15 years old, she liked a good time, and went “joy riding” with boys. Her mother was blind and could not control her. She was pretty and pop- ular, and—net “bad,” but only | fun-loving. For her own good she was sent to the Lebanon rescue home, 1110 | West 65th st, Ballard, where she promptly made many friends, She is now 17 Some months ago’ she school Berdell young contractor It is ugainat the rules of the home for young women to receive “gentle | men callers,” but Ronk ap: | Mrs, Libbie B. Brown, the \for special dispensation Mrs. Brown lives across the home. There Ronk ler were permitted to meet twice a met at Ronk, a strictly Sunday matron, friend who from the week, from 7:30 to 9:30, properly | chaperoned - | They became engaged and the date for the wedding was set Jor last night, at the home. Mrs Brown is leaving the home shortly, and she wanted to see the voung people married before she teft Fifty guests were invited, i eld ing a number of girls who formerly lived at the home, Rev, B, H. Al berts performed the ceremony Afterward Mr. and Mrs, Ronk went to the home that he had pre pared for her, at 7702 18th st. N. W accompanied by a number of the guests. Ronk had everything in readiness, even to the laying of the fires, against the time of the com 4ing of his bride. * | FREDERICK, Okla, Oct. 29. Walls of a well they were digging caved in, ‘juring two, ty than that in which we live? and Miss Erg. | killing five men and in LABOR PLANS -AREVOLUTION Insurgent Faction Will Attempt to Smash Alleged Tyrannical System at National Convention Here. abor leaders with over their followers has passed, that the working man of today has been educated to know his condl- The eyes of 2,500,000 mem- bers of organized labor, and of two or three times that many millions of people who are di- absolute power rectly interested, will be turn- tion, and is in a place to take ed on Seattle next month, active control under a local system, when the 33rd annual conven- Another great question which tien of the American Federa- will be fought out at the coming tion of Labor opens. There will be something doing | tion every minute at the Hippodrome The insurgents favor abolishing during the two weeks the conven-|trade unions and organizing by im- \tion is in session. This meeting, | dustries, or the industrial unfom it is said, will mark a turning potnt } system. jin the history of the federation. | Important to Nation With the wonderful increase fn the ranks of organized labor these conventions of the American fed- meeting is the system of organiza- other form by the brewery workers for years, and has just been tried by the shingle weavers, millwork- ers and woodsmen, under the lead- eration have gained in importance ership of Pres. J. G. Brown, with until today they occupy much the great success. same place in affairs of the coun try as do the national conventions| Expect Thousands of Visitors of the great political parties. | About 1,000 delegates are expect+ There are insurgents” and | ed at the convention standpatters” in the ranks of la-| Preparation is being made to @n= bor, too. ertain several thousand visitors, The insurgents want to turn the | Gov. Lister and Mayor Cotterill will federation upside down, giving | welcome the delegates: power now held by the leaders and| The largest uniformed band ever heads of International organization | seen in Seattle pieces, will be to the rank and file of the unions,| assembled here by Musicians local Want Local Contro! No. They point out that the day for tion 76 to play during the conven- AS MANY STARS AS ALL OTHER SEATTLE PAPERS COMBINED! There are 47 homes in the Renton district shown by this dia- gram. The newspaper census taker found that five of these homes were empty, and at five of the homes the occupants were not in when he ed. Of the 37 homes, 32 take regularly one or more daily paper The Star has not had a solicitor in this district during the past six months. ” The following statistion were of thowe 32 h and t complied fr e same are on pante mes the office HOMES 32 NUMBER OF NUMBER OF OCCUPANTS 124 Number of Star R Number of Number EXCLUSIVE CIRCULATION taking Star and no ther paper M Numbe aders Where Only One Daily Paper Is Taken) 1 of Star and no Homes taking Times and no Hom P.-1. and no ther Homes taking Sun and n other paper 1 ther FAMILY PAPERS (The Paper All the Members of the and Like Best) The Star ts Family Read of the $2 homes, che in 6, and @h day Papers the P.-t paper in 20, the Times in & the Times 9 This plan has been used In’ ane p