The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 11, 1914, Page 1

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MORE THAN 44,500 Paid Copies Daily The Seattle Star THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS WASH.,, = The Star Bill- Sticker’ Ss Feeling L Logy— [LGRIFFITHS CIGARS, rer BIGGEST FIGHT OF WAR ON Rebels’ Entire Army Engages Forces Under Government General Velasco. FIGHTING IS FIERCE| Five Rebel Generals Combine] Forces—Heavy Slaughter | Reported in Battle. | | JUAREZ, April 11.—Gen. Ve- lasco and his fugitive federal garrison from Torreon were fighting for their lives today at Parras, midway between Torreon and Saitilia, a¢cording to dispatches from the front. Tremendous slaughter was re- ported in the battle. The battle line stretches from Parras, on the Torreon-Salti!lo raf} road, “oath to San Pedro. The fight is fiercer than the bat- “CHICKIE, IF YOU WASN’T BORNED ALREADY YOU'D BE By Fred L. Boalt. OT FOUR months have passed since we celebrated the birth of Jesus Christ had turkey and cranberries and pie for dinner My small son rejoiced in the possession of roller skates and a nickel plated velocipede,| EASTER EGGS." } We and gave grateful thanks to— ESTERDAY we observed Good Friday. upon the cross to save us. SANTA CLAUS! So we dined on fish, telling ourselves that fish is not flesh, and considered our di done. sieealeneetndatnaeieitiaemen tinea elearene enn empettimennentdinhindetiet en cael diem dam alemetl ee Nearly two thousand years ago Christ diea|™ Gen, Velasco was said to hare been reinforced. from Saltille and Monterey and to have engaged practically the whole of Gen. Vil- Ja’s army. The combined forces of Generals) Benavides, Herrera, Cos, Ortega and Hernandez were said to have attacked simultaneously in an ef- fort to annihilate Velasco's entire army. Should they succeed, both Saltillo and Monterey are expected to fall speedily, and probably without even attempting Fesistance. OMORROW will rose from the dead. My wife has a new hat. She will wear it to church tomorrow if | fine. It cost me a pretty penny. She will observe other hats Flowers worn on hats this spring, though ribbons and plumes are popular Tomorrow morning my small son will search the house for marshmallow Easter eggs and chocolate rabbits. we commemorate the most wonderful event in all history. Christ the weather is are not much HIS WEEK the bandit Zapata, leader of the rebellion in Southern Mexico, threatened! to crucify Bishop Campos unless his friends raised the ransom of $50,000 demanded. Earlier in the week three young Russians assaulted and then crucified a young! Jewish girl, nailing her hands and feet to a cross that stood above an open grave At Atlanta, Ga., the state proposes to crucify a man for a crime he probably did not commit but of which he has been convicted on manufactured evidence ONPETITIONS FOR | When Pilate asked: “What will ye then t I shall do unto Him ithe King of the Je * the people cried: “Cruc him! Crucify him!” RECALL BALLOT There is no lack of reminders that the crucifying spirit still lives And on Good Friday we ate fish. And Easter we celebrate }marshmallow eggs and chocolate rabbits . whom ye call with new and hats, “Of 125 voters in the Vashon dis trict, 100 signed the Hamilton recall petition. The other 25 work on the HEN the Sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, Mary, county roads,” said Thomas Meade, . at the recall headquarters, in the Salome, came to the sepulchre at the rising of the sun Lippy Arcade building, Third and/ selves: Columbia, this morning. | “Who shall “Everywhere, especially {n Ham fi Ho. si fiton’s own district, the reports are OF at wa that the voters are rapidly signing But when they saw an angel, who and the mother of James, and} They asked among them roll us the stone from the door of the sepulchre?” heavy looked they saw said: “Be not he is not here; away they was that the stone was rolled away Entering, affrighted. Ye seck Jesus of Nazareth which behold the place where they laid him.” eee for his recall. In Meridian, Coving-| ton and First Creek, for example, 95| -rucified. He is risen; I ONG after, as mortals reckon time, the buckled sought with the sword to wrest the Tomb from the hands of the infidels to estimate ‘the number of signa-| The failing, they sent their children, believing that faith and innocence would tures already obtained. University recall On eS have been established at 4144 14th per cent of the voters signed. And and Meade is satisfied that when th | prevail had And the children perished of cold eade is satisfied that when the| av. N. E Crusaders on their armor, | sword not and hunger and thirst. | where might they died there are almost as many who are signing Knudsen's recall.” Because most of the petitions are still in circulation, it ts impossible 450 petitions are returned to head- Or else were sold into by the robber barons. And not one child returned! quarters, there will be more than They beautiful enough to recall both Hamilton and | i Knudsen. The customary slavery for a ideal salutation of that was: “He is risen!” And the answer was: “He is risen, indeed.” Who are the infidels today? The Turks? Or are we the infidels—you and I, and your wife and mine, and your child and) who will tomorrow remember the Risen Lord with new hats and marshmallow | | day It doesn't take long to convince most people that they are either! geniuses or martyrs. eggs and chocolate rabbits? mine, DIANA DILLPICKLES IN | (“FAMILIAR VIANDS ARE BEST ———d VIANDS ARE BEST" 1A 4-Reel “Screecher”Film “THE WAITER SAYS HE HAS SomE ELEGANT ‘SQUAB EN CASSEROLE? “w6LL, IF THEY'RE YOUNG ONES I WOULDN'T MIND. But THEY MIGHT BE NINETY THEN IF "”APA, How ry You Don'y ABovT Some ‘SQUAB EN CASSEROLE £* “NOT FoR ne — WE COT PIGEON AT HOME, POOR THINGS, AN (T SEEMS HEARTLESS,” WANT € SATURDAY, APRIL \COURTED BY LETTER| Vea the husband a lh on th jchanged photographs. |forsook the ay studios of London | City, B. ©, | your honor. WANT SQUAB, WHAT Do You 11, 1914 CENT ON THAIN® AND yee He’ s Smoking Ole’ s Campaign Stogie ° FINISH THIS! WE WANT TO SEE ese HOW THE LAST’ CITY COUNCIL STILL DEAD LOCKED ON MODEL QUITS [erie wno tert nussaN | WADOITY HUSBAND; HE. GETS DIVORCE ha Deaf Mutes’ a ton Bum Seattle Crew Distances Stan- F ; | ford and California in Meet at Berkeley. “Romance Ends| FRESHMEN BEATEN |Stanford Crew Wins First — Year Meet—Means Locals Will Go East. OAKLAND, April 11.—Wash- ington university carried away the honors with flying colors In the intercollegiate regatta on the Oakland estuary today, when her varsity crew outdle- tanced the Stanford and Califor nia eights. The race wi three-mile course. Washington's time was 19: Stanford finished second in and Calffornia third In 19:45, |Girl Comes From London for | Wedding, But Finds She Didn't Love Him. “Dear Albert: | have gone away. Do not try to find me. | have noth- Ing againat you but | do not love you as | ought to. ELSIE.” 8o the romance ended. On the face of It, a deaf-mute courtahip by correspondence is al risky undertaking. | The note was written by Elste| Thornton Hole to her husband, | Arthur E. Hole, less than two weeks after their marriage. Both are deaf mutes. Husband Gets Divorce The court wrote onaaess ghee at the run over © - ‘taee frou estuary land from aboard special t1 |the Southern Pacific, which ‘run on tracks that parallel shore. The first race, between the fi |men of the three universities, over a two-mile course. St won in 13:19 and distanced Wa ington over the finishing tape |three lengths, California fi lcame in last. In the varsity race the Wi |ton crew had an easy time in tancing the California and Sti | rowers. Blame Chang: of Stroke The California men at their defeat in a measure to fact that they changed their in the middle of the race. They had been pulling a new |stroke, but in the heat of the they fell back into their old stroke, a short and choppy one. After this change the Wi tonians made their biggest gain. was at this point that Stanford also began to outdistance Berkeley, The result of the race the last doubt that W: jcrew will represent the Pacifia | Coast in the big regatta at Poughe keepsie, IN Y.. this summer. NEWALL GETS 5 YEAR SENTENCE M. Newall, convicted of luring Mrs. Lillian Roberts, a young mar ried woman, to a secluded place in Seward park in February and at- taking her, was today sentenced to a term of from five to six years in jthe state reformatory by Judge |Mackintosh. Newall is a taxi driver. LOS ANGELES, April 11.—The ~ estate in California of the late {Adolphus Busch is valued at $1 884,676.78. sronnds of desertion. Hole is a young poultryman. His wife is a petite and pretty artists’ model. Friends here and in London arranged the match. fondly hoping, because of the infirmities the two shared in common, that {t would) prove ideal. | They corresponded 4 Elsie Thornton Hole OPEN LIBRARY PENDLETON BRONGHO AT STOCKADE| BUSTING CHAMP Dexo WALLA WALLA, April poe as 11.—Bert Kelly, 28, twice The educational plan of Chief winner of the bucking cham. G hs c r pionship at the Pendleton 3riffiths for city prisoners was Rounds, 1a: doab'as Paee put into practice for the first nix, Ariz., according to news time last night when a Mbrary reaching here today. Kelly’s room was opened for the use of parma neve bee my life, 4 is as injuries he received while the men fn the stockade berm riding caused his death. bers of the University of Wash- ington faculty are working with the chief on his plan to give helpful instruction to men in stockade, which is open from 6 NOME, Alaska, April 11.— unt} $:30 in the evening, With zero weather, and the proved popular trails consequently smooth and fast, the seventh all-Alaska sweepstakes will start Monday. Four dog teams have been en- tered. The purse will be $3,000. The course, from Nome to Can- WASHINGTON, April. 11.—8 booed bm Aikilsd » and Gove sub-committees # onference today relative to the rural credit bill, which 1s to be | submitted “to the country” for crit $25,000 RUG STOLEN SAN FRANCISCO, April Prof. H. Parker. the expert. wholf 11-—Five Persian rugs, val- eee the tentative bill, advised ued at $26,400, were sto! with Sen, Hollis and Congressman early. today from the heme Bulkeley. It was expected the e of Benjamin Kaisly. measure would be introduced in a rugs, said to | day or two, ex-| girl They The and Paris and came to America to meet her rustic lover. Live Together Two W. They were married In ri ‘on | » on October 18, 1913, and | | | | c have been owned by Sultan Suliman of Turkey in the 16th century, was valued at of less than two weeks left the note, The suit was not contested. get through a crowded divorce} “The principals are deaf mutes, & man found to act as inter-| fingers the story of his silent court signaled the fingers. Since leaving her husband, the} jclubs, She is fair of face and WALLA WALLA, April 11.— knife, a pipe, tobacco, a chair $25,000. came to Seattle the following day.| On the 29th of the month the bride} telling her husband that she had | gone away Swear your witnesses, Mr. At- torney,” said the court, in haste to| docket | Didn't Love Him | said counsel The court was nonplussed. But preter, and the strange case began. | Hole told with swifly flying ship and Sts unhappy ending. she | ause she did nat her and wish she would | come back to me.” |deaf-mute model has supported her- | self by posing before Seattle art| 4 figure, Accusing her husband of throw- ing a leg of mutton, a butcher It is no use to aim high if you and bad names at her, Christina divorce. are not a good judge of distance. Deseret News. ” SUBURBAN HOMES LITTLE FARMS ACREAGE Interesting bargains galore are presented for the reader's approv- al today on The Star's classified | pages. Among the numerous of ferings today are many of which ahy Star reader can avail him self or herself. Today the first bona fide offering of Lake Burien || property is made by A. K. Wylde. ’ realty dealers of Everett, Wash.,, offer desirable acreage and improved farms. To poultry fan- ciers and breeders are offered many desirable opportupities to | purchase anything in the poultry |line, from eggs for hatching to feed and’breeding stock. A peru- || sal of today's classified columns will repay any Star reader, "SH-H, DON'T CAUGH —— HE'S JUST ORDERED A PigcE OF CROCRERY. BRING HIM LIVER AND ONIONS AND C&T Ir “OH, JUST Some OF THE CASSEROLE wie Do “e— BETWEEN Two ASCGS oF i.

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