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at the theatres ? See page Confessions of a wife! A new chapter on page three. e HUNVUUANUUEUUU EEUU — } i MMMM VOLUME 15 |) WELL, WELL, IF |AWoro To THe oe HUERTA--DRUNKARD, DOPE ie d n 5 “ }law. [I don't know which of you the case entitied “Jennings f aid it, and you all deny ft, but it - va. Bailey,” Judge Humphri }happened just the same. Now that x Saturday virtually threatened [is contempt of court, and ground 4. former Deputy Prosecuting At (for disbarment I want you to torney Caldwell and Attorneys | und and also, that I cannot be % Helsell and Anderson with con- terrified by anything 1} that, | tempt of court and disbarment either proceedings. There's Will Thompson. He has! "No newspaper reporter could khown me fora long time. He can} Rave understood that case,” the/tell you what kind of a man I am.” said. “So one of the lawyers The case Involwed the Interpreta- Must have explained it to them.|tion of contract, which Involved I don’t think that's good conduct! about $200. » Judge Ronald this morning imposed sentence of five to 20 years in the penitentiary on Frederick Lewis, convicted of manslaughter for the th of his common-law wife, Annie Lewis. Lewis was accused of hav-| frequently beaten the woman, and a few days before her death he kicked her. She weighed only 90 pounds } “1 do not believe he intended to kill her,” said the judge, “but it} ‘was manslaughter. He did not treat her os he should, and it Is not a ease for clemency” j _ FEDERAL FORCES HEMMED IN, } GIVES LEWIS 5 TO 20 YEARS EL PASO, Nov. 29.—The ru- { with the rebels under Gen. Caho pressing them from the mor persisted today that the | federal force, recently beaten | ; by Gen. Villa’s Mexican rebels north.. Assuming the reports at Tierra Bianca, were hemmed true, military men here said in at Villa Ahumada, between there would be a battie this | Juarez and Chihuahua City, ‘ afternoon or tomorrow. PAY REWARDS ON M’NAMARAS SACRAMENTO, Nov. 29—A warrant for $10,000 reward for the capture of John J. and James GB. McNamara, dynamiters of the Los Angeles Times building, was drawn here today by State Controiler bere. it was made payable to Pye Crich- Sea rte Wht come Roce 96. the agent of Detective Wm. ¥ VOTE MONDAY TO STRIKE} INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 29.—With; Two hundred extra deputies were feamsters scheduled to vote sworn in today, the authorities ex- . on the question of a walk- peeting trouble to follow the im- the new city administration portation of 1,000 strike breakers today to handle a strike, The teamsters were acheduled to Gad started hy forbidding crowds hold a monster mass meeting to- to gather in the downtown streets. morrow. MICHIGAN STRIKE NEARS END CALUMET, Mich., Nov. 29.—The end of the Michigan copper strike | ‘was forecasted here today | A joint statement was issued at noon by the operators, of- } fering to concede ai! but two of the demands made by the strik- ers. The concessions include an eight-hour day and a mini- mum wage of $3 daily for ail underground employ The operators, however, refused to recognise the union or abolish | eman drilling machines. They agreed to not discriminate agains* fIDDIES TRIMMED BY ARMY YORK, Nov. 29.—The Na-| grounds here today The Army) Mring of three successive vic. A Tmonster crowd, whicn filled all avatlable space, crowded inside the | Samsal gridiron bat-\ te nour baseball plant. Among the| was broken to| celebrities present was the prest-| B the Middies went down | dent, who divided his time between | ) defeat on the Polo the Army and Navy sections, WILL USE CITY LIGHT > ba ON smaller units than the Puget Sound Traction, Light eat the city light plant has secured the contract from the ion for the lighting service on all port projects in use next fe contract Amounts to nearl y $3.000 per pear. On between the private company and the city was nd ‘same eneral rate was made by the two, but the city’s ler unite, and therefore was more avalable. o MIDDLEBURY, Conn, Nov. , found little Ciara Belle | 2ged 4, sitting on & steps of her grand- house, with her jap full OF The were from the same Her mothér Weed to climb, a ‘Was Beacic Webster before they tock her to lethernfield state prison, BE HANGED, The pitiful shack, standing among the 00 the beautiful shore of ) was just as wn then, only more iy, at the little girl's face, he: her instantly PWAS HER MOTHER'S FACE! MOWere the same dark brown *: Heh Prunet complexion Wk bails; tie name facial con. Pand fuli curve of the lips. And the baby softness I fancied AW hard, weary lines and the Shadow of the ¢, j, “is mother? shyly, hesitated, Movver locked a saye mov fr In prisor ed up, for long long time “And do miss your mother, rar ° Budden} spilled the ap Blea trom her lap and ran tn 00% and hid her face in her seetmotber irt, sobbing Poor little giri!” murmured vo hall Webster. “She cries | Little 4year-old Clara Bells and 6-ye or her mother, when she State of Connecticut re ° t ‘ ~ a “The Girl Who Swam F ri Uncle Jack’s Circle Cynthia wn: lhl an- on eg Bd Stewart i Md s] f littl folks. fe] “rs to correspondents. Edwar ite on page With the Sharks,” on St ar eatures for little” folks. On || sewers to " Edvs page 3. | z:cc0 | The SeattleStar |xis". been made by J. D. Ross, superintendent of lighting, for a franchise from the county commissioners to extend the light and power serv- necessary, to make Ros to give him specific authority to ask for this franchise. It will not be at all amiss, gentlemen of the council, at your meeting Monday, to pase the required resolution in behalf of the clty plant. There isn’t any time for delay. “pone sn me), HO a “Bil Dalton, Who Wears $1, 500 Gowns on the Diplomat Who Knows Him Tells WANT MUVVER,’ CRIES BABY DAUGHTER OF DOOMED WOMAN) * <<: ycata TELLING JESSIE AND HER RAIN TONIGHT AND SUNDAY; COOLER TONIGHT; HIGH SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS 2A) UUNNAENANAOOUOUUUUOTEEAAAOUUONUANOEA OOOO EDTA TAT TT LE NIGHT THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS ET IMM Dc NO, 236, SEATT WASH., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1913. ONE CENT fiweitrahon's. application entirely legal, for the council Man It Is Stage, Fights and Chews Tobacco When Off; Vv" Tce deel Julian Is Anything But a Ladylike Person, 0:1 :s::cwsisz nu: me mo most of his time for a quarter of a century in Latin-American capitais, nares has written the following.) ~— By Fred L. Boalt | Who is Gen. Victoriano Huerta, dictator of Mei : ? [Bete deer gh aap lonadetes Mexico, now a world-known figure by the simple (‘4 * ’ e I] not a pleasant grin. It wat OLY virtue of his swaggering defiance to the great United ' etly 1 “ d it in. ["Whoreupon the Fascinating | States? Widow called the Metropolitan Well, first of all, he is almost a full-blooded crew sbout her and made « little Indian! wget This fact Huerta plainly shows in all instances. ae ae ie ot tine Widow |He fights like an Indian, lives like an Indian and The e was in shirt sleeves and smoking thinks like an Indian. There is not an ounce of re- 4 | tigen tuh me," she said, |finement in his whole make-up. ; l fixing with a baleful eye the | Treachery and assassination are no more to him, stage hand who had grinned “i'm gonna be here two weeks, |@8 & means to an end, than they were to the copper so it's just as well that you |/natives Balboa met as he first cut his way to and | should understandeim |Pacific amid showers of poisoned arrows! It was another. | may be a female im. | ¢ nm personator, but—the first guy |born in him to be so. | that makes a crack at me I'M This is illustrated forcefully by Huerta’s treatment of old Gen. GONNA HAND A PUNCH IN | Reyes, the very man from whom he got his start! THE MUSH! | AM"—with em Huerta, it will be recalled, put down for Reyes an obstinate in- phasis on the personal pro- | gurrection in Yucatan. i noun, “ME!” Then Huerta lost his commission through bad behavior, but Reyes — And now no stage hand grins. | gig not forget him. eee No sooner had he been dispatched by the Diaz administration than — Julian Eltinge, who is the Pasct-| Reyes took Huerta to Monterey, where he was in command. He turned [nating Widow at the Motropolitan| over to the Indian soldier contracts for building roads and laying pave- theatre this week and next, bas ask-| ments, ed ms to put him right with the HUERTA, BY BREAKING THE CONTRACTS AND FAILING IN world. EVERY WAY TO KEEP ALL HIS ENGAGEMENTS, GOT AWAY “Tam,” he admitted, “a little sore. | wiTH MUCH GRAFT. 1 have endured—how shall 1 ALSO HE BORROWED MONEY FROM EVERY ONE, NEVER scribe what I have endured | PAYING ANY OF IT BACK. Nothing you could put your thumb) = HE LIVED AN UTTERLY DISSOLUTE LIFE IN THE TENDER- on.. A lifted eyebrow. A shoulder) LOIN, BEING teed OR DRUGGED HALF THE TIME. shrug. A covert sneer. “| “You “eat’t punch a nian on the In return P favor, Hoste, Huerta, the |jaw for lifting an eyebrow, moving helped arrange 9: general's assassination la shoulder or curling @ lip. Ant he réd>. ta: the lace at Mexico City d ‘sud Me 16 you,oire. a ies tad whe |February hostilities! get @ thou Huerta got back into the good gra of the Diaz regime when | eee ceo nere a fac, | administration began to realize its was on the wane. Di ‘ Pe eee edeay and’ had to | about him some of the less notable generals—men whom hh fear would try to wrest his power from him. One of these w. shave every day, and pik il | And Huerta ventaaty turned the trick! by word, look or gesture, called |_ Huerta, of course, really owes his final prominence to Mader you an effeminate s se Eitinge | The latter knew of his prowess—for Huerta Is a great fighte frveeny be as sore ae Eltinge fn him his most important general. it put up to him to vi ¥ ~,|Quish Orozco. Huerta did beat the rebel leader at Bachimba, but 0 { hs 4 matter of fact, seoacgety? co escaped to the north. It is said that this campaign netted him rere akira’ art BAC TON, tween $5,000 and $10,000 a month illegally. In his conflict a ate Benn oat roevier| 2@Pata, Huerta gained his chief glory by firing at Zapata's ti afi—we'll call him ereafter’ while the latter was in parley with Madero Thus Indians rec! Bill, I say, war a member of the | gale tne rater» | Firat corps of Boston cadets when,| "The white blood in Huerta crops out, as it nearly always does $i ten years ago, they gave amateur | naif. breeds, in bad traits. woman yn) (ok the Part of al” He fights like a wild cat. That's Indian. | He drinks like a fish. That’s the half-breed. hims Lf 1 Bill Was Born Pretty He is a most licentious man. That's also the Bill's pretty He can't help it. any He was born pretty. He was such | ~~" * |a bit that first show that he took ‘ women's parts in subsequent per breed. ‘i formances. And by and by he got Of these things Huerta Is not ashamed. Indeed, on the eee & professional offer at more money | h@nd, he is proud of them! is dissolute, always has been di than he could hope to earn any and intends to remain dissolute to the end of his day: a other way | ___ONLY RECENTLY, IN A GATHERING WITH SOME FELLOW, ” He traveled around vaudevitle| OFFICERS AT A GRILL, HUERTA, IN THE SPIRIT OF JOKING! ciro tits, in thik countre and abroad,| QUIRED IF ANY ONE REMEMBERED THE TIME WHEN, ON ! FIELD, HE SEIZED THE WIFE OF SOME ONE OF HIS PRIVAT! and finally took out his own show. AND, WHEN THE SOLDIER BEGGED FOR HER, HE THREA’ Walloped a Scene Shifter TO EXECUTE HIM. os — -- Every time he comes to a the A Lased Lesendd —9] \~— ee eee cont ee ae a Woman's virtue or man’s integrity, as conceived by the | The teacher, who was giving ONE CENTURY OLD i lerew before him and makes a| century Ls ah gota means absolutely nothing to the man Ba the primary class a nature talk, NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 29.— | |speech similar to the one described am in the inquired Mrs, Margaret. Kidney, 100 | | When he arrived here Sunday his matter of fact, Huerta intends to have his wa mnie, how does a na w ASHINGTON, | Nov. 29.—The | years old, yesterday prepared a | /hand was swollen from punching a/ thing in his life, He likes a cough, licenti | territories committee of the house | ‘Thanksgiving dinner Thursday , /gceno shifter who “made a crack’ | tg on the “threne” of Mexico for exactly wi aoe replied with em: | Friday reported favorably a bill for | for relatives and friends, and | |in the city. where the company | He doesn't cape anything about the “reco: phasis 4 government-bullt raflroad from Iped clean up the kitch. payed before coming e. | only for m@ney—"swa: “Awfall—Jndge | Cordova or Seward, Alaska, to the it was over. | Among stage hands he has tho| The more he can get, the better. It is said os | scarcely ever pay: contractor unless double the amount wort the taken from the state coffers! Washington, D. C., Nov. 29. 1913, @ upper Yukon pputation of being surly and quar relsome. They don't realize tha during all the years he has bee: Bill packs a punch. He is a fair He said he'd be good to her, |1Y Clever boxer, too, and has hi | goes to bed. She just can't | raise. ahs 1) get used to doing without her.” jan’ he said his wife was paralyzed, many a pleasant mill with such | Then Clara Belle found her jan’ he was old an’ lame himself, /heavies as Jeffries, Corbett and 1 I others whom he has encounter volce again. “I want movver jan’ maybe Clar He could be use to put me to bed, like she used | ful waitin’ dn I told him 1)0 the circuits ; to,” she said, peeping from be. | guessed a little girl four years old| Off the stage his voice is low ii hind the sheltering skirts, “an’ [couldn't do much waitin’ on any-|And a little gruff. He isn't at all t say, ‘Now | lay me,’ an’ tuck | body!" |‘sisified” looking. He swears : att me in.” Then the sobs came Clara,” I then said, “I want to little, drinks a little, smokes black | re cEN again take your ploture. I want a great Cigars ahd is trying to cure him-| viet ues CHEN) RENE ae: sr arta 0) yas & Little George. Mrs. Wakefleld'n| Many people to see it, xo they will /self of the habit of chewing to Following a long conference | bands playing and colors fiyii six-year-old son, looked on stolldly,, ko0W what a nice little girl you are, | bacco. between Charge d'Affaires [ocean liner George Washi He stands it better,” sald Mra.|@24d how lonely you are, and how O'Shaughnessy and the Jap- | sailed for Hurope today, with: ater He ain't so tender-;much YOU WANT YOUR MOTH ister here today, it cis B, Sayre and ‘his. bride, form ted.. But he's a hard time of| HR. Agd then maybe they will paloma ‘sal d chat | Miss Jessie Wilson, among the it, bein’ lame an’ havin’ a bad back,| help to get mother out of prison | was persistently rumore jsengers. The couple eluded Yo where his father kicked him when | and BRING HER BACK TO a Saveleenene, of Sie wee |paper men and shotopraphied was a baby. He can hardly The sweet little face brightened Fates tut eure. Gs hs oat it Wil boli Wait,” sald Mrs. Webstor, “till | by his. daughters aide Bleanoc Pa and me has trouble takin’|) wash her face and n’| a put a clean Nor ‘ 29.—Just vile care o° them,” she continued Vel dress er.” WASHINGTON, Noy. 2 ist | son, and Dr. Gra: es: do.the beste tan. a3! thoy have| "Ee" Cie ood patientywnte| fiom, gina, frauniona ree ig, tng tetre te sure A x | | de orta is fis g to preven Tha ‘ a home os long as we have one.| grandmother washed her face an | j dent i ina Bt pe renting. was | pene dock wae. thnnged a I've had 15 children o’ my own combed t hal: 1 tt the dtssolution |president was given at Seale I'm. used to {t. Hut we're gittin' |.” ay Pe g ti and Ged a indicated in special despatches re-!'The Sayres had not artived om id tow, What's git’ to come of|tiis tres ee neat And now the curtain drops avon ike toda the Wilsons went below a em 1 don't. know When Cie f In all the noodle shops These sald the papers controlled | waited ; A look of despair settled on tne| Thee og faa acres rhe out | F by Huerta in Mexico City were! gayre and bis bride, by mingling worn, wrinkled, old face. po Rn atl ea an for the! yo, that’s the order. No more) printing stories that a revolution | with second-cabin passengety ate “i «og ay «| DI Jourtains in noodle joints, They've! is in progress in Amertea between | ped aboard the. ve A man was here the other day i ped ssel_ unseen be said Grandfather Webster, “sayin been ruled out of saloons and cafes|the white and black races. tthe reporters. so) he wanted to take Clara Bells to Carrots clear the skin. for some time, but the chop suey “The race war is spreading President Wilson left thé diner | ps ahd we anal se Seba ———— —-—~- beaneries clung to them with the! rapidly in Indiana, Colorado as the band played Mendelssohnia - me) K2 Satie mo tenacity of a flea to a bubonic rat.) and Texas,” said one of th® | wedding march. He looked back Rut now comes the license com newspapers. “President Wil- (at the couple séveral times and PENNAN I COUPON mittee of the council and Chief} son and Secretary Bryan have | erinned 2 | NO. 131 Bannick, and suddenly, with one), no time now to bother about | eel eng 4 Ww * e ukase ise ples suc feo.” wi Any four coupons clipped from The Star, consecutively num. ane ee an Samoa 8M - Mexico the ead ae restos bered, when presented at The Star office with 15 cents, wil! entitle 4 ie eatin aekaeeratin 2 KILLED IN AUTO 62nd st Methodist. Hpise | you @ 65cent Pennant. Mexico Pennants are now out. | sca ha Pelee 9 STOCKTON, Cal., Nov. 29.—The}church, Fifth aw N. Wa and | Pennants will be sont by mall If 5 cents additional for each Pen || nmerons protepta. lad nr ao oF whens sary of Onkland|at. wilt halen “ J nant Is encloned. Bring or mall te The Seattle Star, 1207 Seventh Calved: that the curtain 1 mails In hi orcas de hea Ma Bl, ik ene a 7 hae u iY annual, holiday sve, near Union 8t noodle joints were he starting | was killed a au waar Tuesday cronies ar-old George, Whose Mamma the || i | points in the downward career of| mobile in which she was a passen-'ternoon and oath Says Iu9t Hang |! Ur UaMRY bn what fl * begets is Kip nee ‘young girlss ‘ger skidded into a ditch, * and & Jey