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request every man, woman and child in the city to attend some church on Sun- day, February 8th. Church-going is no doubt influenced largely by habit. It should not be left to the hazardous and questionable influence of habit. Church-going ought to be con- sidered a spiritual duty. One ought to go to church to worship, to secure spiritual * benefit, to be equipped and fortified against the temptations of life and to be made ready for the aggres: e life of righteousne ity and service to mankind. | 24) CUNAUUTUAENUOONENUUENOOOEEETOUENEAOOUUNAGUUOONOCREAADUN ue I l More Than | 1 42,000 Paid Copies Daily SUI NAU HOLLAND re PRISING | BREWS IN CAPITAL President Huerta Makes Prep- arations for Defense of Mexico City. GUARDED IN PALACE Machine Guns Mounted on) Roofs for Stand Against Approaching Rebels. MEXICO CITY, Feb. 7.-—A crisis seemed near here today. Two! thousand soldiers surrounded the national palace. Inside President Huerta and his advisers were i" conference. It was reported Feltx Diaz was} behind a new revolt } Around the arsenal, where Diaz started his fight against the late President Madero a year ago next Monday, the houses had been clear ed of their occupants and machine guns been mounted on the roofs. Sleep Beside Guns Beside these guns federal sol-| diers slept last night, ready to fight at a second’s notice. Courtera from Guadeloupe, four | miles north of the city, confirmed | reports that the local garrison had | revolted. } Federal troops were rushed to) the scene in armored automobiles. | Batteries were being mounted on/ the hills surrounding the city com-| manding all approaches to It. Evidently Huerta expected a speedy attack. Get Ready for Battie He certainly was making thor-| ough preparations to resist {t Foreign diplomats _belfeved | Huerta faced another of the recur | rent plots which show the favor tn whieh the people hold him. Few slept in Mexico City last night. The streets were filled with noise. Bodies of troops passed and re-/ passed constantly. Cavalry clatter. ed up and down the city. Cannon) rumbled by. Officers barked or- ders. Private houses were com- mandeered. It was a sight of terror. IF A MAID WEDS ! - ANOLD MANIT’S BUSINESS DEAL Granting a divorce to May E. Williams in her suit against her aged husband, Paris A. Williams,! wealthy land owner, today, Judge Humphries declared he would con sider the property division claims Sunday, “while other people are at church,” and announce his decision Monday | H “All this talk about this man pe-| ing Inveigled into this marriage! rim i immense asain has nothing to do with the case, i said the court. “Here is a nice | « looking, well-built, vivacious, well rounded-up woman, and he knew that when he hunted her out, she had not done anything unbecoming | to her station in life. However, we all h | ye some com know that a} up, and pret ty well educated, is not going to marry a man who |s shriveled up, 61 years old, just for love, If she does marry him, it fs partly a bus {ness proposition. And, if it was,| she is entitled to the benefit of her bargain f [Don’t Miss Th s!| “& Man, a Maid and an Air-ship, the serial story by Fred L. Boalt of | The Star staff, which begina Mon- and ends—heaven be thanked! —Saturday, has been submitted in manuscript to Cynthia Grey. “We must now admit,” said Cyn-| thia, “that Boalt takes rank with the Immortais—Shakespeare, Dick- ens, the elder Dumas, Paul the Apos-| fe and Laura Jean Libby. ‘A Man n Maid and an Airship’ is a cla It may be so, but—Read the first chapter Monday yourself 2x ‘ THE BIG CITIES. RUSSIA IS FIRM -———_____- = STN INUNAUAUL UAV erent “POR SALE—Baker's business; good trade; large oven; ST. PETERSBURG, Feb, 7.—Th wooD AIDS GRIFFITHS present owner been in it seven yea good reasom for leav- cxar's government positively will| Judge W. D. Wood will support ng, pee advertisement. Reasons seem to be good enough. not consider any proposition look-| Austin E. Griffiths for mayor tt 8 2 ing toward the adm m of Jews 1 beliewe you to be the most Into Russia, from America or any-| jogically entitled to the law and or mare. olga, I wae sated, bate) ee en eee cial ownaranty vote _ NEW PENNANT COUPON today, » Griffins, “I will take : he wrote Gr 4 pleasure in uring all my friends to U — WANTS “REAL PUNCH” unworn sou BILLIE BURKE POSES J. V. Holton, candidate for the TE One coupon and 15 gents for each Pennant at Star ay nae Mca © atement to 63,000 REGISTER eoffice and 1320 Second Ave. Twenty cents by mail and the effect that the Wardall anti ‘ * cafe ordinance i® too mild "ike Registration at 6 o'clock Friday at branches. ae : - F says he stands for a law “with al night reached a tagal of 63,298, ex Bathing Girl, Co-Ed, Flower Girl, Stage Beauty _ teal punch to it” to make the|qpeding last year's corresponding ebuta cafon cease to be the “melting pot| period by 12,000, but falling short Matinee Girl, Office Girl and Di nte, of the white slaye traffic,’ of the 1912 record by about 2,000, f DON'T FORGET TO SET YOUR ALARM CLOCK TONIGHT! | °* M. A. Matthews | HE MINISTERS’ of we ty daeetlies with all right thinking people, most earnestly | | RAIN TONIGHT AND SUNDAY, LIGHT SOUTHEAST ERLY WINDS. The SeattleStar [ess PUM THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS Nama VOLUME 15, NO. 296. THE STAR SATURDAY FEBRUARY 7 “Nothing to Investigate!” |WOMAN EDITOR , Congressman W. E. Humphrey of Seattle finds aman to inquire into” in the Colorado coal strike. “There has been entirely too much outside interferencez omy saniecta cor on |ifved. there unt ist fail, when Ye] An excerpt of the Teter, a cop in this matter already,” he says. No, there is “nothing toz 2" clita = investigate” EXCEPT SAVAGE MILITARY ATTACKS ONE WOMEN AND GENERAL DISREGARD OF HUMAN2 RIGHTS ALIKE BY FAT-HEAD MILITIA GENERALS AND2 | RED-NECK GUNMEN FROM THE THUG HAUNTS OF | DIGGS TIRES OF i LIFE IN PRISON 8. fries | low | Maury Diggs did not try to hide the |fact today that he was growing |veey weary of prison life, His! in the society of the other prison ers, it was clear that he was not at all interested, The hearing was* scheduled for jumption Monday at 9 a, m, It is ompossible for a man to go into a church and reverentially worship God without being benefited physically, mentally and spiritually. Spiritual food is essential to the development of the moral and spiritual life. Church-going, consistently and persistently practiced by every man, woman and child in the community, would lift the community, bring to it peace, harmony, physical, mental and moral development. We urge the people to begin tomorrow—Sunday—and continue ever afterward in a worshipful attitude toward the churches and things that are right. Please go to church tomorrow. 1914. ONE CENT ‘viwn' te awine ‘se oo SAYS TRENHOLME SEIZED HER PAPER Because the State-Wide] Democrat, the local party or-| gan, made a bitter attack upon jhim and cartooned him as the} black sheep of the mayoralty flock, J. D. Trenholme, eandi- date for mayor and chairman } of the county democratic com mittee, is today charged by Mrs. Lena Fleenor,/ assistant An Old Man’s Letter to Mrs. Glenn editor, with a plot to suppress this week’s issue of the paper | Didn't Know It, He Says j_ Trenholme, expressed absolute Letter from 68-year-old romancer, William Lambie, writ- jamazement that he should tn any |} ten ¢ I Beact Dec 1912 v M |wine be connected with the affair, en from Long Beach in Dec ember, 2,. to. Mrs. a aude declaring positively that he knows | RK. Glenn, and introduced in the Glenn divorce hearing be- nothing about it, and that the story [fore Judge Dykeman. The “Margaret” and “Blondy” in & pure fabrication elreulated | referred to are “girl ftiends” of the old man, as shown by with malicious motives. He declares he was unaware un- | testimony and other letters til informed by The Star today that “Dear Sis: I had a letter from Margaret the ears. bev ay) attack snot him in other day and Ma has seen Blondy. She thought ae die ota. cack it, ike she was real nice and pretty, but, Lord, I couldn't \Fieenor said, to the extent gf « get stuck on her in 1,000 years. ting a sult started against Mrs. “I want you to lay your plans so that you and~ I can take a trip together or live close neighbors so we can be in each other’s company about two hours a day for two months. By that time -we would know for a certainty whether we suited each other or not. bertice apart for a change. | Helen M. McAvoy, the editor, who “I don’t think I out get beamed all out, of has been confined the past week tn ithe Swedish hospital, and is in a | serious condition, and directing the! |deputy sheriff to selze about 1,000 | j coptes of the paper. | Nothing else was taken, accord: | jing to Mra, Fleenor, the typewrit-| lers and furniture not being dis) turbed, Nor were aby previone- tej] . Pp py Ma, and if: _ be get ie would take f years at least to get rid of your gentle image.” $220, was started Wednesday by | Neil Boyle, a democratic war horse,! New names popped up yesterday? na ‘ | whose son is understood to be in| afternoon in testimony in the di- charge of the Trenbolme campaign | [in Ballard |vorce hearing before Judge Dyke- | Boyle was one of the men said|man in which both Mrs. Maude R.; \to have pledged Mys. McAvoy their/Gienn and John Glenn, U. 8. A.) support when she started the paper |retired, are asking for a decree in last fall the sult originally brought by the Local. democracy {s agog with | wife. excitement over the development,| The case was continued until/ and a wide schism in the party 18| Monday. threatened William Lambie, rancher, world! Charge Effort to Oust Her = tourist, of Lewiston, Idaho, Ba A week ago, the State-Wide Dem |view, Wash. and Long Beach, C ocrat printed’ a cartoon, showing |Fay F. Lewis, a rubber plantation | frenholme, Charles Heifner and U./O%per on the island of Mindanoa, S. District Attorney Allen looking | PhiMppine islands, and William | jover the edge of a cliff to see | Dietz, musician and traveler, fig- ‘whether the editor, in an open|ured in the testimony as the three boat, would be dashed against the men who made the acquaintance of rocks. | Mrs. Glenn on the steamship Min- Mrs. Fleenor charges Trenholme | nesota in 190%, as she went to the and Heifner with an attempt to| Philippines to meet her husband. Suit Baced on Note { The suit, based on a note for! oust Mrs, McAvoy from control. — | Had Arm Around Her Trenholme vehemently stamps} “Mr. Lewis visited us at Moilo, the story as absolutely false. the Philippines, where I was sta- | “I am not an indorser on any! tioned, in 1910,” said Glenn. “He note given by Mrs, McAvoy he | took M automobile riding says, “I know nothing about the/and to one p paper, have not seen her for » and another, I considered him a guest. When he and never at any time attem left he sent some money to help to take over the paper, nor h defray our household expenses ever had anything 'to do with It. Sol while he was with us. I told my far as 1 know, Neil Boyle has nO wife to send it back to him and tell son. And 1 know that he bas noth-| nim we were not running a board- ing to do with my campaign. ing house. j Money is being raised today by) “at one time I saw him with his friends of Mrs. McAvoy, tt is a0-| arm around Mra, Glenn as she sat nounced, to have the paper printed | 4+ the piano. He was trying to and published in spite of the pend |sing jing suit “Later I found letters from Lewis |? to my wife, which had been hidden Fe the leaves of a book. I made isa back in the book. hen | discovered a letter Traina from the East continued to| rae Peppe Puya, who is a haif- come into Seattle behind schedule; breed Spaniard-Filipino. He today, owing to the heavy snow in| was acquainted with Mrs. the Rockies, With the assistance) Glenn. One of his had 18 |gether I found a letter to her from of several plows, a large crew of| crosses for kisses at the end. |Lamble. It was so obscene thatwl men is engaged in clearing the; “We returned to Fort Worden in/locked it up in the basement, and 7 {intended to have him prosecuted, T tracks in the mountains | 1911, and in 1912 moved to 7 ‘59th’ st., after | had been removed| won't say she stole it, but it was Mrs. Maude Glenn “While we were still living to was introdu in evidence, It |told of Lambie’s experience with = largaret.” asked her what she meant by jetting a man supposed to be a a in if father to her write such a dirty let- jter. She cried, and said she couldn't help it She wrote to ‘Lambie, and he said it was a fool- SE ITI e -% jish thing for him to do, and that | e in : jhe ‘didn’t blame Mr. Glenn for be- e ing vex Calls "Em “Home Breakers” Glenn vigorou denied that he had made money grafting in the ed by Attorney red he and his wife }Were congenial until she met the “three home-breake} William Lambie took the stand. -“Well—yes, I guess women are y weakness, | like them, and some of them like me,” chuckled |the old man, v Friday, [packed up for good How much was logged-off land worth 10 years ago, in 19 Compare the prices with those asked today, then figure out how much money you would have made during the last decade if you had invested in these lands 10 years ago. Makes you stop to figure just a little, does it not? Do you figure the next 10 years will affect the values of land in Washington?” WE DO, With the Panama canal completed, and the vast wealth of Alaska being poured int® Seattle, population is bound to increase, and with this fncreased population comes a natural increase in land values, For real live farm land values see ‘The Star's Farm Special issued Feb- ruary 14th, Worth Waiting For “Terminate this cross exam- ination!” ae Judge Dyke- man, in disgu: “This man is not a good character witness for himself or any one else. Buzzards! When @ e reached the age of this one they fondly think they understand young = marriea® women far better than their husbands do, and broken homes. result.” | AN FRANCISCO, Feb, 7.—~| | nd, Walter Gilligan, was not al ‘ed to associate with him, and,