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Circulation Every Day =I Ee) MMM Correspondent WOMAN RAPS STANDARD MORALITY THAT HAS SMILEFOR MAN-VAMPIRE We don't know Mme. Sophia Mitscherlich of Magnolia Bluff, but we would like to. We would like to because she has sent to us through the mails a letter which we in The Star office al! have read and which we are printing here on the first page of The Star today so that all of our readers may read. We think you'll agree with us, after you have read it, that it's worth this prominent position. As a protest from womanhood and a striking message to manhood, It leaves behind it something to thing about ieateleesitntens Ed frain The Star atten or from the inderstood expects such wed who, decided before marriage ar a a compact to be lock ss marriage Yearn for Pure Children | Failing which, c Whose purity did she want to se-| preferable, to my mind cure or perpetuate? World ts Waking Up Let me suggest that Her course {s not uncommon, but with ev woman r8 ago such questions were moth ve in her it enly spoken of except tn have heen her highest sense of| medica! lectures, ete. The world duty to b g none but the healthi | is waking up. . a purest children into the; I tell you that women are world, and that, onless she conld| SICK of furnishing the sinews be assired of her husband's co-op-| of war, precious, expensive eration In such a lofty mission, she| food for destruction on the decided they would better be child-| battle fleid, in the mines, the less than to bring 1 sing such| factories. in common the unfortunates as we see on every They are SICK of filling the side—children cursed from birth world with degenerates, of fur with physical and moral wesk nishing sia for industry. They LOATHE standard generally accepted that sourns and brands the woman victim and graciously smiles upon the man-vampire She is a wise woman who exacts as a prerequisite to marriage ner sacred rights as a fs, as an individual, shall her husband de for Child's Rights nesses and taints who, (or before), become of s , or its victi This woman was evidently | well informed on the subject of the conventional, artificial, academic standard of morality. She knew, no doubt, of the double standard of morals and was a pioneer in the rebellion against such standard. that double It is not evident from the ac I plead for the universal recog count what confessions her pros-| nition of these rights, and for the pective bridegroom made to her, if|r v 1 to be well born any standard of true But we may feel assured that a ralit man makes such confessions only, The world of thinking people has AFTER securely winning a wom-|long since of the cant of an’s love, only when he feels rea- rs, scheming sonably hopeful that his lapses lotting will be condoned. y Moreover, she may have required rights in the prospective father of her every children the same unsullied, un-| statutes books fathe sustained virginity that he exacted/ same gentry fs an u of the mother of HIS children onspiracy to defraud womanhood Not only so, but it is the normai|and childhood of the gestating mother to|MME. SOPHIE MITSCHERLICH. ded the sanctity of virgin Ma, a Buff longs to bring in r or #8 woman The Real Mother-heart tell you that the rea And PRICE QUITS THE SOCIALIST PARTY || emotions, hung with its et me Millard Price, the man who VOLUME 15 ossness ts | RAIN TONIGHT AND SUNDAY; HIGH SOUTH SHIFTING TO ead the First of The Star’s “Lamplight Stories” SOUTHWEST WINDS ,40000] The Seattle Star THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS NO. 224 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER on Page CTH LLULLLCL LL LLLL LLL LLL ALLL = 1 ill EDITION SMO Uc = =| MUTATE in El Paso Tells Story of the Capture of Juarez HOW JOHN'S ARS MUST BURN NOW! Congressional investigation of the coal strike in Colorado was de. nounced as useless in the conven, tion of the American Federation of Labor today, by Delegate J. 8. Hall of Idaho, who sald similar Invest! gations of other strikes had resulted in nothing Hall's speech waa made on an ap « Brown of New York igation way to get results ts the game and send men halls of .congress, who will listen to the appeal of the worker,” said Hall Predicts Revolution The workers of this country are getting tired of useless investiga tions by congress. If things keep on have going tn Wi and Michigan. result in this revolution. of the United ntry Dele and that Walke Mine W rs took issue with Hall and sal e congressional Invest! gation Wert Virginia had re sulted in hour day instead of ten, In getting a check welghman to keep the miners from being cheated, and in securing recogni tion of the miners right to meet fand organize. | Brown's resolution, which re- | ferred to the Standard Ol! Co. | as the owners of the Colorado mines now involved in a stri | | | and to John D. Rockefeller as a “sanctimonious hypocrite,” was referred to the executive coun- ell, WOMAN SHOOTS SELF IN HOTEL Friends still unable and to acquaintances ‘ount tod acc the suict Mrs. Cornelia 32, a we knowr court stenogra pher, who was found dead in her room In the Seattle el Friday aftert She shot herself through the Mrs, Noble was She came te aA te: aetine th uiiding le note or any hint as ‘ of het, suicide. Her London nd stepfat have been notifte THE HEART OF A WOMAN In “The Confessions of a Wife,” a real woman is going to, for the first time, disclose with absolute truthfulness, the long unlit galleries of a wife's secret joys, sorrows and was enjoined from selling so memories! » claliet papers at the corner of “The Confessions of a VW the openin chapter of Pike and Westlake, and one of HRT ati ebaiae in thls OM ioe Pah Mig st ea 0. ali cited fi con. Md f oe 7 pe ene c " tempt ‘by Judge John ®, Hum |] fesaios THEY ARE CONFESSIONS WHICH phries, is today a man without CONFESS! 4 ph ge iol They are not the usual! “confessions” which are yale rg ; rhe written for commercial purposes—simply to cater gathere his ends t to a craving for something “intimate at a meeting of the “Fifth They are, instead, the GENUINE heartaches of which Fries and heart-joys set down, day after day, month sisal iphenieghay Fas gag pede after month, year after year, by a REAL WOMAN question of ¢ vin from | in her own diary from the night before her wed- further activ , ding until—now. er seetson of the sox N ne can doubt ifter reading them. We “Bolsterous and Unruly” a Hee Me RETA woniany resign from the rea inced Then we asked her Apathy athroed ¢ t a printi f ther ¥ “To let girls know what marriage REALLY is, once and i deta for alll” she replied “There is a free masonry of silence which prevails re. 9 garding life and | want to puncture it with my pen; | want to let the light int elde tolT ingtit And I can ‘ ind it ou ) ha t tting my diary ¢ e diculous pro hbalancek “Margaret Haatin ad a way always of looking wan ‘ave. || life squarely in the then asking it pointed ques ‘ ‘ont !\] tions! evar : = anes age LIFE HAS GIVEN HER THE ANSWERS! F epagi ed ag You will find these set down so honestly and candidly and Ot the oy ea eee Lin “The Confessions” that you will thrill with the power of their truth Read them! The first will appear in Monday’s : ara Star. “The Confessions of a Wife’”—the love- 37; Brown 0. Princeton 2 vard, 3; history of the human heart! it Vir-| | | Yy - - | Im the center at the top ts the! 2,000 REB SOLDIERS IN ATTACK (By a Correspondent of the United Press.) PASO, Texas, Nov. —I will it hap- | The morning paper boys had got their final edition off, and were sit- ting around the offic: gossiping about where they'd go for their | breakfast, Two-thirty a. m., to be | exact | Came the sound of distant shoot- jing. It grew in volume until it was) a steady rattle. It was a som |we in El Paso have heard beforey |It meant— A battle in Juarez. Just Across River The Mexican city of Juares, across the bridge from El Paso, is \the strategic point of military strength in northern Mexico. I€ |was but a few months ago that the: federal troops took it after an ene gagement in which scores were@ | killed. We jumped for the teleph From the window of our. of across the black of the river, | could see occasional flashes. Thi reporters went down the-stairs the run and started for the I got my “flash"—the bull news of the affair—off, and waited Americans Are Shot The telephone rang. It was on# of the men who had reached Juaresy “Three Americans shot,” he said, “One of ‘em named Herrington, They got him while he was ri through the streets in his auto.” It was a novel attack Gen. Pancho Villa, of Carranza’ ces, at the head of 2,500 rebels, took the federals b} surprise. fought fiercely in the streets, bus were quickly routed, Ville personally authorized me to | | (GEORGE WALKER “AFTER TOGA AS: "A PROGRESSIVE latest portrait of Miss Margaret liven ant today that American Wilson, the president's eldest George H. Walker of Seattle, | {ves and property would be pros daughter, who will be her sister's) recently, appointed regent of It was } “ |maid of honor; to her right is Mise # pmbossible to: lente Adeline Mitchell Scott, daughter of the University .of. Washington /number of casualties amoneiaal the Princeton college professor, by Gov. Lister, will be a candi. | Mexicans, but it was believed that Wm. B. Scott; on the other side of date for United States senator | not 1 re voweren ee Miss Wilson is Miss Marjorie on.the progressive ticket Villa. intended to en Brown, daughter of Col. E. T. Brown an hi 2 la intended to execute his prise of Atlanta, a cousin of Mra. Wilson; er eer tao ser tice! yarnron| Gnere below, to the left, is a picture of ae Di did ae 1 ae san CCM: Scott in Charge another bridesmaid, Miss Mary fi! Z ar 6, F le A Gen. Hugh tt, commanding” G. White of Baltimore, and to the ; is se ge an rc le the American ler patrol, tools right in Miss Eleanor Wilson, : ee ssihiiiliee. hatte ‘eles adastighenpl es of the guards § —— ——$—_—_—_—_——— —— es ee |p llities, have signed Walke along the river front to see that no | 2 * rf ie petit mB, a have urged him to} more Americ ans entered the dane ‘Wedding of Miss Jessie Wilson; Says “ss: La ss, .smone | 9 ident progressive | under cover of darkne vemant a. of the first) peared suddenly in t hee 3 9 e e fo Sane . : sht for| skirts of three sides of the t e € ooked rather’ city, and charged, shouting inister Who il lie the Knot, Wul Do™.-:". | obs he hig a 9 e was one of t t am-| Th n was taken Come pion woman's ge, v hair-| pletely off its i the rebel sive co tion |had gained s I ons by the ore Goo a es He | oan ha es A Ww. W M “ity aay pre ce a att stance, Wilson, Eleanor R, Wilson, Jessie fison, Mar. | ¢ 8 erly prosecuting tiff fight when he final By W. H. Alburn. garet Wil ttorney of Pleroe county. eded in rallying them “ PRINCETON, N. J., Nov. 15.—“Presi- | % e only other announced candi ours the battle raged Jent Wilson if uc My faves! Miss Jessie is a girl of strong religious th ogressive ticket Is 5 n : ; convictions, combined with a lively interest Congressman J. W. Bryan Hundreds of bullets sang over Ell r Jessie is Feats she he She taught a Sunday school class, was active or CUBE | in various church organizations, and did much “4 anne ‘ | for missions and Y. W. C. A. extension Beach 1 ag | After she was & ated from G co) the W n | in Baltimore, Miss Jessie traveled < who is going | try considerably in furtherance of Y. W. ¢ perform the ganization work ding ceremony | 1 not help observing the earnestness Mis the White House howed with regard to PRACTICA on Nov. 25, al reform she is ONE the MOST PRA‘ Sitting in his TICAL CHRISTIANS I bave ever known. She t study in the old | watistiet with folding her hands and praying for t ivy lad First | regeneration of the world; she wants to jum; Presbyterian | and help to regenerate it herself. church, at tf | Her coll training along soctological lines edge of the Princ: given her a good foundation f 1 service, t CEMAER ee her la experience as a social Philace pus, Dr. Beach | phia and elsewhere has brought her face to fa hile Lod hapiyt | with actual conditions her admiratt | “She is not by any means a mere enthusiast briketieke ve or theorist; she knows what THE MASSES t have’ known | NEED, and she wants to help them get it With her positive, aggressive personality sh Miss Jessie well for eight year a strong influence on ajl with whom she comes he said, “ever since ontact, and her FATHER HIMSELF IS NO BX [left Paris, wher | *TION i was pastor | “In anether way, too, Miss Jessie's in the students in fluence is fine and powerful. Just. think the Latin quarter, what if means to the country.to have a wed- and =6came te | ding In the White House in which the princi- Princeton She pal figure is a gir of such NOBLE CHRIS. oined the ehureh TIAN CHARACTER, and in which all the ust after | came | wedding arrangements:are in keeping with The whole family her character is still on the | membership list | “In this wedding there will be NO frivol ere are thel Rev. Sylvester Wi Beach who | ity; all will be in harmony with the best names: ‘Woodrow! wilt marry Jessie Wilson at the | | traditions of this sacred ceremony | Wilson, Ellen A.| White House November 28, | “AND SUCH AN EXAMPLE IS BETTER (Mrs. Woodrow)g @| THAN A THOUSAND SERMONS.” in social problems and much executive abil- ity. She was not only regular in her at tendance at religious services here, but was one of our most efficient church-workers. ©, but no one here was hurt. ‘ t 4:30 the city was completely j rh v co! heard intermittently for another hour fodee finial Gen, Villa established a provise and: Deputy onal government at Juarez at 7 ay White blushe when ™ «ter firing was heard from Ph Werororer, Gata present. the direction of the race track, but ax hla eneea asking that the it proved to be only a brief skin ‘ost ld not be charged against, ™!S? Harry the broker found peer cuilty of selling unfit vanned meats. MEXICO CONGRESS We are not o me,” 8 Tworger, “that Whit on) WILL MEET AT 3 P. M. a jury trial, in order his moire E ual hit with MEXICO CITY, Nov. 15,—Preste Marcus was 1 $100 and costs, dent Huerta had not indicated at Iudge Ronald taining the fine noon what his program would be mposed hy Justice Brown conce*ning the congressional seg« sions scheduled to begin at 3 p. me It was belleved in some quarters mediately after that the election of hia presitent, vice president and theta NEW YORK, Noy. 15.—The body was unconstitutional, Cunarder Pannonia, Capt. Capher, - today took 300 passen from the KILLED BY ELEPHANT steamship Balmes, off fire off Cape LONDON, Nov. 15.-;Word waq , Race, according to Wireless mes- recetved yesterday that Jack Parr, sage@ received here. famou ‘nelish big me hunter, Tho Balmes ts a Spanish ship. It) had been killed by an elephant im was bound for Bermuda Rhod PENNANTS o-"2o Any four coupons clipped from The Star, consecutively num tered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, will entitle you to a 65-cent Pennant. 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