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The rebel general, Villa, has captured Torreon, Mex., in the greatest battle of modern times. Yesterday The Star printed absolutely the first photographs of this battle. Today, on page 10, there are more of them, direct from the scene of the fighting, and taken by The Star photographer. There is, too, a complete account of the battle, in which hundreds were killed. Always get The Star for the FIRST and BEST pictares of ANYTHING that happens in the news. SHOWERS TONIGHT AND SATURDAY; LIGHT TO GENTLE SOUTHERLY BREEZE. 2 UHveetenretev revenue ts ANUUANUUNEEASEETAH NOUNS More Than = = 4 = 44,000 | Ca : Paid Copies Daily = ~ = ULJLUAUOOUULAUEULALUUAEEEUANORUUEUEUUALEUNALD Ee THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS al VOLUME 16. NO, 33. SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1914 ONE CENT oiws'ttihs eI | NOW THAT SEATTLE KNOWS HIM, WHY DOESN'T H b FRANK, IN SHADOW <ovsevees wax ano nis wire) OF SCAFFOLD, SAYS | HE IS WRONG MAN “My Life Has Been Clean,’ He| oti Tells The Star Correspondent. “I! ’ Could Not Have Killed ssid Dr. Waldo Richardson, superintendent of the King county hospital, big, strong a Phagan.” young, astride 55-year-old David McKenzie on the floor of the county commissioners” office iF PRN “Yell ‘Enough’,” cried the athletic doctor, knocking the old man's bloody head against ATLANTA, Ga., April 3.—Thousands of influential American men ik and women, and many leading newspapers are pleading with the st: the floor. a ee rn ee Seeemer Sein leuk 8, "Doaielal eer ver “Enough!” surrendered McKenzie, weakly, pe Leo M. Frank himself sits in his death cell, waiting to be hanged on The big man on top was not satisfied. He banged his victim's head again, and again, ee ee ak eae rete, arene aed one lagain. He rubbed his bleeding face this way and that on the boards. “Say it louder? : } | an employe in the factory of which Frank was superintendent. shouted. Only an extraordinary motion for a new trial stands between “ENOUGH!” gasped McKenzie. : y Frank and the gallows. He has been tried and convicted in the county superior court: for a new trial denied by the Judge of the trial court; later by the Georgia supreme court, A paralytic, an inmate of the hospital, says Dr. Richardson stood by and bossed the job | couple of orderlies choked and beat him. The doctor says he doesn’t remember about that. doesn’t think he did it. We're willing to take his word for it. We'd hate to think any big, hulking |lete like the doctor would be in the business of beating up cripples. | The Star does not think Dr. Dithardiod is she sort of a man who should be left in ¢ , od lof our aged dependables out at the county hospital. sane ar apt i ea Sy | THE STAR SUGGESTS TO HIM THAT IF HE WOULD TENDER HIS RES| acer e INATION AS SUPERINTENDENT OF THE HOSPITAL, IT WOULD BE™ “DON'T MI83 THIS, "| [MIG HTY GRACEFUL THING TO DO. “If I had been what | am charged with being, If | was low and vile, | So ERLE ES You Belong to Brotherhood of Man? DETECTIVE TOOK ‘Frank gave what he termed physical and psychological reasons Hania ntuwraaees|Are You as Goodia a Member ¢ as Herman? y i and his appeal for a reopening of his case before the supreme é court turned down. Frank is probably the firat white man in the history of the South who has been convicted largely on the testimony of a negro. WIFE SEES HIM DAILY Interest is added to the case in the faithfulness of Frank's wife, who visits him daily in his cell. “My faith has not been shaken in God nor man,” Frank declared to The Star correspondent in his death cell “I am a living argument against my conviction “My youth was clean, | married early, a good woman, ‘ Southern born, who was accustomed to the courtesy of the South, where men pay homage to women. She was bred to de- mand thie gentieness of men toward women. “NOW LISTEN HERE-—" He paused as he paced his coll— Leo. Frank OOD Bon kai aaa “Gould guilt took and talk as |'do;" he sald, “and sleep 10 King opehe chapigrninens, The quack removed Joe's appen-). * hours every night? “My training, my life, have made me aesthet- By. Fred L. Boalt. “I ind sened nto waa firnd-!Hemagtoben, normal ... rr ool ix aa ts hie bank roll. Both were ie, Mot callous. | would be the first to feel remorse and show A friend of mine buttonholed [shaw dying. Hemagioben, Bradshaw . S\neat operations, Joe recuperated it. De! seem a haunted man? nd wanted “Pretty wick, yes?” sald Herman,| Of hie Iife’s blood Herman gave at the county hospital. He ts by HE STILL HAS HOPE “Dying,” said the doctor [2% pinte-—about one-fifth of all he now so far recovered that he de- : “The desire to commit such a crime as the murder of Mary Phagan hood of Bull-peddiers of Ameri- “Why?” Herman asked had. It took «en hour. lights to give his fellows demon-| i does not spring up in an instant,” be went on. ca, He named a number of rea- want of blood.” Then swiftly the tinfest of tiny | strations of his prodigious Bn Officer Al Humphrey, be- aot We tenec 4 divers and sundry ‘My youth and my college life show that I was clean. | have proved! gons why | simply couldn't af- “1 wish be had some of mine,” |needles flashed. The neatest of} when Joe complained, It was ex- | onged tO .the, -olty iy “squad | valuable consideration.” L my ro. oe ees ob say that > man without tnherent vice) ford to stay out of the order. said Brother Herman. stitches were made with the finest! pained that he, too, might give <* | aacig the previous administration, | Miss Fleming declares that a “poe ep aes ceed : ag could not have killed her, because “Why, see here!” he said, “If He swelled his great chest, | silk The test of brotherhood was) hin blood. was today charged with accepting phrey wrongfully placed : Fe ache inden) lifes thought In the vicious way, that is nec-| you were far from home, and broke, |*tretched his fine, strong arms, and | ended | ‘Tomorrow Bradshaw's arm will! $25 from a girl as compensation for arrest on Nov. 7, 1913, and 10 a Apsley ts Sedans or sick, or in any kind of trouble. ali |!#ughed Me Bele Bh lagain be opened. Tomorrow the|his efforts to secure her a reduc- the bond would probably be He atood, his hands behind his back, looking straight at his hearer you'd have to do would be to look} “Would you give him some? + the | Bradshaw's blood was again ex-/10'r) wit cut deep into the thick tion of bail. at $50. She says he -— | through the iron bars of his cell. He turned, walked back and forth a up some brother Bull-peddier in|@octor awked amined. And this is what the doc-) i oF Joo The charge is made in a suit take $25 from her and ¢ make an Sow Steps, and faced bis interviewer again. that town, hand him the grip, ana| “Why not?" said Brother Her-|tore found mod the doctors, “we can get {filed in Justice Brown's court by tempt to have her bail Aue SeRH,” be nit, simply. he'd help you out of your difficulty.” |man loud eonnt before treinatenien | Fa Fo et oe can ae | Lucie Fleming, through Attorney from $80 to $25. ei phe it fine loda 5 ai cells | Glenn Hoover. money is sal \6 As elon tar et Tanta I puesset| Dr. W. C. Spledet operated. Dr,| Blood count after by yong Bradshaw will have a fighting| S"" Coaiaint sets forth that “it sentiin form of a money }1 wouldn't join, because | already |/E. P. Fick, state bactertologist, and | 1,380,000 cells | chance Fa been the custom of the defend. it is charged that Hump belonged to one brotherhood, and/others helped and watched. A nee | Hemagioben before transfusion Tomorrow thé brave heart of ant to accept from various women | cepted it after he had one was all 1 had time for die pierced Brother Herman's wrist | 5 per cent Brother Joe will pump good red/ whom he had errested or was his part of the agreement What one is that?” he asked three times, giving the numbing | Hemagioben after transfusion blood into the famished veins of a about to arrest, coin money, post-| The case is returnable in ¢ H UGHT:’ SHE. “The Brotherhood of Men,” | aid. | anesthetic ae 23 per cent i dere, checks and’ ow April 16 It was my little joke, | am Hurt? | Bite ae Soon they will go their several convinced now that it was a Nein,” sald Brother Herman.| When Joe beard what Herman ways—Herman and Bradshaw and very poor one laughing and wincing {had done he was vexed Joe—Herman to a ship, perhaps, N fiom MISSED THIS! For there is a Brotherhood of An incision, two inches long, was Why didn’t they ask me?” he Joe to a camp, and Bradshaw—we 4 : Men, and pose | am a mem- made in the wrist A similar cut} wanted to know ‘Has Herman Bradshaw may have to take th ber. It’s the finest order in the | was made in Bradshaw's arm, Side | more blood than I? See how strong Long Journey before his time. We! 9 | | a a kage 3 complaint today) world, bar noi I'm afraid | by side they lay—the bloodless man|I am! 1 have been sick but once in oe all take it sooner or saver. al rs. Anna B. Nemitz accuses Rob-| ¢hat, so far, I've been a poor /and the blood-full man, members of |my life. jut wi oe oe thoug! 4. soap lla gtidinarpey April 3— ert H. Nemita of carrying a loaded| member of the Brotherhood of |the Brotherhood of Mon _Joe is an Americanized Russian e will ; az mene pisiee revolver and frequently threaten-| Men. | ran across a couple of Artery and vein were coup- |Falling ill--it was the first and always be this bond Setinoe them: | : ee eres ie 8 ee lag is eee “brothers” yesterday, and their led. Pump, pump, pump! went only time—be left the lumber camp| THEY ARE MEMBERS IN GOOD peal ca acute 94 chute are pamnty ot: tullete loyalty to the order made me the strong heart of Herman. |and came to Seattle, where he fell STANDING OF THE vabetienc ct led, according plenty of bullets in i. Is it unscientific to believe jin with a quac k. HOOD OF MEN. to figures given out today. | here to kill us both,” he maid, ac-| #hamed of mys ® that, with the warm, red blood, | MT. Vv RNON W Wash., April 3 | Presenting a 1 nee scale . |eording to the complaint, on Mare | i ‘iv fig Ts oest Minsent i mplaintson March) Bradshaw was dying hr orleans ey Mer Positive identification of Charles | | ams ence Ser oar i" $58,663.50 for last Octo- Edith E. Wilcox deciares she|apyrnictous austin the ‘dector| smd muayancy ef the man whe | Hopkins, the “tattooed bandit,” as nually is $1,200, and ets a land Charles H. Wilcox discovered a|'PeTnicious anemia,” the doctor} and buoyancy of the man who | Hopkins, oe Neneh os oe cg Union st. tine, Included | mutual mistake had been made |*4!d. And, without going Into de} gave it? eon jthe man who Lpugeicoak ony Olson |Grade Teachers’ se Se pe In the municipal system, held up | #00n after their marriage tn Feb- | t4!!*, re the oor yr oi the col bd hear McMurray, Wash., early Sun-| i.i6q the board of education f re its end with a total of $29,715.10, |Tuary, 1913. She says they had no|°F Of @ lemon and the lips like| Sear with me, now, a moment, |day morning, was made by John increase from $1,100 to more than half the amount earn. |Community of thought. chalk, and your blood is water ‘in/ while 1 become highly technical. | Freeman, Olson's companion at the! year. ed by the Geary st. line. | Lena Gladys Hudson accuses |Your veins, you—well, you might) Even as they watched by the oper: | time of the hold-up, who was dan-|, L08 Angeles, Berkeley and It is not half the length of |Vern A. Hudson of nonsupport as well make up your mind that it's | ating table, the doctors saw the lips ——-—- Ine of the hold-up, who was dan-| | 4 ware oied as aie Sl cia cad did not dent ane ~ curtains for you. jof Bradshaw change from white to] When he entered the county poor |younger days, held an important | erously wounded at the same time.’ 3} 999. maximum ‘ sixth as much as the ry st. | Bradshaw lay dying on a cot at jred A hint of red appeared in the|farm, A. Bod, 86, had $3.35 to bis | position as engineer for the French | Freemau is not yet out of danger| grade teachers. San fine. KILLS HIMSELF the county hospital yellow cheeks |name. After being abused physical-| government. Old and poor as hel or geath, but he bas recovered his| has @ scale of from $1,164 t Sia There Brother Herman saw him.| There are in a cuble millimeter|ly and mentally for eight days, he|is now, he has wWhtihlast week Complaint was also ma oe e /Brother Herman is a young German |of normal blood 5,000,000 cells, In| declared this morning in the county |avoided becoming a county charge. |8e08es, and was permitted by the 16 great a difference existe DOG BITE KILLS GRANTS, PASS, Or., April 3.—Ar-| who has wandered far from the Fa-| Bradshaw's there were but 600,000. | commissioners’ office, he was held| He lives in a little shack under |physician at the McMurray hospital! seale paid to high school jnold Becker, president of the Alt-|therland. He's been sailor, logger,| If the amount of hemagloben|up for $3. |the bulkhead at Sixth av,, between |to discuss the case with Sheriff) and rade. teachers. TACOMA, April 3—County Com- house Placer Mining Co., which has | miner, longshoreman—a bit of ev-| (coloring matter in normal blood) is} “They didn’t ask me for the|Pike and Pine sts. He fell il] and | Wells and Special Detective Al G.| will consider the request. missioner H. C. Martin is dead to-|extensive operations on Althouse|erything—since he left home. 100 per cent, Bradshaw's had but 5 | money Bod said. “They, just an officer sent him to the Emergen- | Ray, and James J. Davis. = day as the result of a mad dog's bite | er near Holland, committed sul-| Brother Herman looks like an|per cent in his. Thus we have took my purse and gave me the cy hospital. From there he was A photograph of Hopkins, taken | at Puyallup last week. cide last night by shooting amiable “white hope.” He's 180] Cells. | small change, and kept the $3." removed (o the county hospital, at the jail, was immediately recog-! aot property? He died at the Tacoma General Broken health ts supposed to have} pounds of stout Sone and clean, | Blood count, normal 5,000,000; Hod is well known in Seattle Friends of Bod are tetsandinginized by Freeman as that of his as- Ra gre og fe | gee hospital. been the cause. pink flesh. He had risen from a! Blood count, Bradshaw... 500,000 He is a Frenchman who, in his'that Richardson be fired sailant taining: 98. beat.—Adverttnemenee DIANA DILLPICKLES IN |: “HER ULTRAMARINE BLUE COIFFURE” | A 4-Reel “Screecher” Film| “How FUNNY You 4LL ACT — AS (F You weren't "Il DON'T CARE WHAT THEY THINK, I JUST HAD TO MATCH MY BLUE | THE PALACE CORDYVROY DRESS. , “ANYTHING CL T mono ha OTHING CO. MATCH 'S ACL TReSS6S, Twe STYLES Starts a big sale of — Clothing, Hats, Shoes and Furnishings, to- morrow morning, at 10 | o'clock, in which they | promise to give some rare bargains, Full par- : ticulars, prices, etc., will ad on page 2, in toe day’s Star.