The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 3, 1914, Page 1

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This letter came to The Star yesterday. “The Seattle Star—-Gentlemen: SAU cv tena earnetnee ance at | More Than 42,000 > Paid Copies. Daily DOTS Han THAN PIM 5 2 2 i VOLUME 15, NO. 292. READ THIS, THEN--- By W. G. Gurley. eb Rose TRINIDAD, ¢ Her | had not learned that | olo.. F eme wml ng ar her ld) years she at a we ix a er r, When that soldier | happens to be the head of state of shooting working men « in Colorado on the grave errand Into submistion to Rockefeller extortion to Jail It} says a warrior officer LEVELED That smile sent Rose Slater J obliged her to dodge a kick which she AT HER HEAD from his horse | | It brought close to her dodging head the saber slasges of the Colo- | | rado Cossacks who tried to ride her down who i# but 15 years old It gave ber a smashe | where a burly soldier jammed her with the avy, crnel butt of bis gun “I marched in the parade because | eved it was a crime in old woman like Mother Jones in jail for talking,” dd come from the convent schoo! she attends } to join the pa } | “When Gen. Chase's horse stumbied, | just had to laugh,” | she said to me. “He looked so funny—until he rode towards me and KICKED AT ME AS HE RODE. Then! ran. | got be hind a telegraph pole as a soldier rushed up and STRUCK AT | ME THREE TIMES WITH HIS SWORD. Then soldiers with | guns came, and one of them brought down the butt end of his { gun on my foot. Then they grabbed me, tore my coat and cart- | ed me off to jail.” ent, 15-year-old | \ ym her father to Chase , Mrs. Maggie Hamm 1 huge gash acrows her f ROTH HER EYES ARE BLACKE wa ne yarade when the cave ude vita With others vhe was jam med on a narrow porch in an effort to oseape from the maddened and brutal soldiery The sole s followed, using their guns and fists A BLOWsFROM THE FIST OF A SOLDIER BLACKENED HER EYES and biinded her She was dazed and doesn't remember how she got away from that| crowd of terrified, struggling women, upon whom these mea in uniforms Were raining blows with their fists and beating with thelr guns | When she did get away, across her forehead was a huge gash looked, say the doct Ike a saber cut | ‘The cavalry had sabers. The ONLY WEAPONS OF THE WOMEN | onet. MARCHERS WERE BANNERS declaring their foith that “Surely 4 Below, Manuel Jaramillo, Bay-| will set us free—-and the protection which civilization gives to woman oneted in the Hand by a Soldier | hood. Neither that faith nor the womanhood carved that wound, which at Trinidad. | WILL LEAVE ITS SCAR AS LONG AS 8HE LIVES. COMMISSIONERS [JAP EXCLUSION | WILL PUT END TO | AMENDMENT IS At Top, Mrs. Verna, Who, 1t| While Carrying an American } Flag, Was Stabbed With a Bay- VISITOR FROM EA By Fred L. Boalt |" She teaches | A friend of mine from the Rast |Droadway high school | is visiting me. te lives in AkrOR, | sophical lint.” Oblo, one of those benighted back- | East towns where imbectles, luna tics, habitual criminals and women are denied the franchise | Vaudeville or cabaret?” asked) my friend last night when we had dined WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.— Placing patriotism above par- tisanship, the house of repre- sentatives, by a vote of 203 to 54, refused thi make any declaration on Asiatic Exclusion policy aimed By a unanimous vote the county And t commissioners today decided that private undertaking firms in the city cannot take bodies from the City hospital for burial and later Florentine her.” the pat's the Well, he wanted ward reducing business man The quiz was already in progre: Adele Parker in Command the men from must be stopped in Seattle. They heartily endorsed the new | law passed by the egunty commis WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE PECTING POULTRY ITS A WONDER THEY DON'T SEATTLE’S YOU OUGHTER ZAT WAIT TILL SHE | YEP,IT ISA GETS TANGLED pose KETCH CorD!~ | | WONDER }~ UP IN THIS A REGULAR SCREAM! THEY DON'T HAYE | bt I SHOULD BREEZE !! TOO MUCH ON | | WORRY AN WHY SHE - ETc. CPR Co THESE DAYS GIVE THIS ONE THE “ONCE _- HERE COMES & SOME wREN ot) te > fe) + hue faeye | Up and down the roaring Pa sion. Water will be shat off from Who, J. B. Chan y SER TOS OOD the tanks supplying South park \ anified lady on the il) at ease Meanwhile the skeleton in many| Wednesday from 9 « m. to 3 to be running the|pan, and t n man’s closet is a gorgeous waist-| | p,m | all over the auditorium coat that he dares not wear. — 2 Parker, the chair-| barrasement, the candi Schage, bis-|so smooth and date k \ h : We in the office just sort of felt as though we'd like to have you folks see it. unappreciated, This letter is written on the stationery of Ironside & Co., Inc., general insurance, 207-208 American Bank building, E. H. Boyd, secretary. It follows: of bese " Kindly have your boy leave me The Star at our office and collect for same here. desiring the news, | wish to give my moral support so that you may know that your effort to aid the rank and file of mankind is appreciated. The SeattleStar THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1914. T LIKES THE WAY WE FRY OUR CANDIDATES civics at the 1 am not but I believe she is a philo- | questions, one who is putting the| which to make a speech. white-hatred onét” referee She's 73 and awful brainy Adele candi are going to send them to the county morgue Kither would bore you,” I re rincipall n. ee, pool c with a bill for services in the event| Principally at Japan, =| ited. “Instead, 1 suggest going to| Wiites books and Is mentioned In the case proves a pauper one. Hayes amendment to the Burnett-|*hf Young Men's Christian Asso Those furtive, scairt individuals King county will pay no compen: niiingham immigration bill cjation, and hear the Women's! wie are they? sation hereafter in such cases. Un-| Rey Raker introduced his anti-| 7004 Government league frying Tt uc * a hey are counciimanic dertakers taking charge of bodies | sa nanose bill. a sub for the Hayes | Counciimanic candid It's [00 | gecon, Hush! Th do so at thetr own risk and : ~ ear ‘em sizzle. dates, wh ne must amendment. It was snowed under fry one. prepare them for burial, whether|1) « vote of 182 to 6 Was persu and now con-| er or not ad os - that he hee aueat few eves He Scratches His Leg ae - House leaders now believe the i a . County Coroner Mason and City | Burnett bill will be rushed through | '"%%,9* J The first candidate was F Health Commissioner Crichton |i, an early vote | When w auditorium | Shaw ‘ a were agreed, In statementa before A vote on the literacy test was found filled, the | He et qo the board, that “body-snatching’| syected this afternoon well a candidate? his share to- It was a king an onto thi | | | | ‘2. Slater T he was allowed, secord- |ing to the rules, five minutes in It was such a good little speech, gllb, after his} answers [halting and dix to questions, that the crowd knew | he'd prepared it beforehand and) knew It by heart. Nevertheless, tt got & generous hand Progressive Questions ‘Say, whispered the man from Akron, “I don't get all this, In} this meeting Republican, or Demo cratic, or what? 1 rebuked him, explaining that, though party leaders might lead the | proletariat by their noses In the East, in local politics, it didn't go] in Seattle Came, then, C. Allen Dale, under suspicion of being « standpatter tn | progressive cloak | Alien Dale is Fried Watch ‘em cook this one,” 1 whispered | Did be favor day or contract 1a-| bor for elty work? He trimmed | and squirmed. He favored both at is, he favored neither. By which he meant he would employ both methods, or one or the other, nelther, depending on cireum: On the other hand you believe in peaceable ng?” | No.” | For that answer he was hissed. | Would you extend the city light! ne ds upon the admin istration Ob, bosh!” said the man from Akron } Dale Is a Trimmer | The crowd agreed that the an swer wae bosh Where do you stand on the cafe} question? | i That is a hard question for me! 1 am in that business to ans my They stuck a fork into him and flopped him over, ‘This first side was done crisp. It was a silly an wer. For Dale is the proprietor of a cafeteria, and a cafeteria doesn't sell booze. | “| must say,” declared the man from Akron later, “that | | wasn’t impressed by your can- didates. They trimmed too much, But | liked the crowd. | never saw anything like it be. | fore. Back East we vote, of | course—that is, if we don’t for- get to. But we aren't interest: ed enough to go, personally, and ask candidates questions to | find out whether we like ‘em | or not.” | “You approve?” “| SHOULD SAY | DO. It's the right thing to do. When I'm em-| ploying a man for a responatble | job in my store about him, how he looks and acts, | and what he thinks about | These men you grilled togight are simply applicants for jobs, IF YOU DON'T GET GOOD EM.) PLOYES, IT WON'T BE_ BE-| | CAUSE YOU HAVEN'T TRIED.” _ se OME | vestigation. After acknowledging receipt of the letter and resolutions, the “states- man” from Seattle has sent this reply to Miss Emma Sager of Anacortes: “IT IS MY JUDGMENT THAT THERE HAS BEEN EN- TOO MUCH OUTSIDE INTERFERENCE IN THIS MATTER ALREADY.” IRELY TO GIVE CAPITAL 2 1-2 CENT FARE Representative Robert Crosser WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb The nation’s capital as an example to every city in America in. the | municipal ownership of street rail THAT IS QUITE LIK Three-cent fares—maybe two rides for a nickel! Washington may show the way to that also. There hasn't been any shouting over the radical moves for street ratiroad reform in the capital city Congressman Crosser of Ohio has| been at work time, and District Commissione: Newman and Siddon, who are mayor and council in themselves, are heartily with him. 4 is for the municipalization and operation of all lines in the District He has made so good a case with his proofs that the home district com- mittee will report favorably “The house will pass it,” said Crosser to me. “I think the senate, as now constituted, will follow suit.” “The Washington car lines,” con- tinued the congressman, “can carry | passengers for less than 3 cents—| probably leas than 2! cents! “IT say this because the Washing ton Railway & Electric Co.'s prop. erty is about 50 per cent water.” HE MAY RECOVER At noon today the condition of Jules Redelsheimer, stricken Sun | want to hnow all /day by paralysis, wa@ reported very | much improved by the Providence hospital authorities. His chances for recovery are favorable. Annie Scroggins, age 14, of Ft. Worth, Tex., has just married her ‘ond husband on them for some rosser introduced a bill in con-| Because it’s a mighty big satisfaction to us to know that our efforts do not go The Star seems to have the knack of getting on the right side of life, and besides Yours truly, E. H. BOYD.” CENT opts aN WOMEN ARE CUT DOWN WITH BLOODY SABERS; HUMPHREY SHOULD WORRY! | REPLY OF CONG. HUMPHREY While brutal Cossacks in American uniforms are pitilessly riding }down weak women and innocent children in blood-soaked Trinidad, ruthlessly cutting, slashing, and shooting them down; while monstrous onslaughts are made daily upon defenseless workmen who have the temerity to buck big moneyed interests; while soldiers are ordered to shoot and kill men because they are fighting for a bread and butter ex- istence; while kind-hearted, whole-souled Mother Jones is kept in mili- | tary captivity like the worst of animals; while the country is shocked by | in one of our states, Congressman William E. Humphrey, of Seattle, com- | placently strokes his beard, draws his government salary, eats his sump- tuous meals, promenades along the boulevards, feasts at banquets, and, en- | tirely self-satisfied, declares: A few weeks ago, socialists at Anacortes sent a letter of protest to |the brutality, inhumanity, bloodshed and barbarism which hold reign | | W. E. Humphrey, congressman from this district, in regard to the out- / rages committed in the copper regions, and asked for a congressional in- executive order, raising the embargo on the transfer of arms and a . nition from the United States across the border into Mexico, was perelael ently reported today. ‘ rance, but it was said they knew the plan had been decided on. ‘PITY POOR OLD JOHN! A UUNTOOOOANVEUNAUEANH AUETOAEUEUAUEOA AONE NIGHT e|=EDITION-= EMM = “1 should worry.” WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—That President Wilson was preparing Members of the senate foreign relations committee professed igno- The it is said, will be issued tomorrow. im CLEVELAND, Feb. 3.—John D. Rockefeller called on by the local tax commission to pay $12,690,000 taxes on an estimate $900,000,000 _ | of personal property. state law the oll king has Mt established a legal residence in Cleveland and rendered himself liable to the tax. The commissioners asserted that under a new ‘WILL SURPRISE °’EM CHICAGO, was promised here Rapp, Jr., when he files his answer to the application of his wi Schumann-Heink, the sing Feb. 3.—A today sensation |absolute divorce. by Wm My answer will be filed within 20 days,” said Rapp. “The public . Mme. will be surprised when it hears my , for an ‘side of the story.” | ' | Jochman eS e in New Location E. A. Jochmann, the well known tailor, has removed from 500 Union St. to 1612 First Av. | To introduce his new location, Mr. Jochmann is | now conducting a vigorous cut price sale on high | class Suitings, for both ladies and gentlemen. | For instance, he quotes $75.00 suits at $35.00, | and $50.00 and $60.00 suits at $30.00. His se- lection of patterns and fabrics is complete, and comprises the newest things for the coming sea- son. Many Seattle ladies will undoubtedly ap- preciate this opportunity to buy their new Spring | Suits at such a marked saving from regular | prices. Full details will be found in the large | oor ad which appears on page 3 in today’s | tar. ; NEW PENNANT COUPON BILLIE BURKE POSES One coupon and 15 cents jor each Pennant at Star office and 1320 Second Ave. Twenty cents by mail and at branches. Bathing Girl, Co-Ed,e Flower Girl, Stage n I Beauty Matinee Girl, Office Girl and Dtbutante 2. ie

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