The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 15, 1914, Page 1

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dae poor, poor Electric Company. It only made a clear profit of $1,613,646 in the 12 months ending April 30. This was only $162,643 more than last year. or $413,782 more than the-previous year. Still, when it comes to raising the interurban rate The gross earnings of the company were $8,713,435, s, or selling tickets on cars, the poor company always is able to convince the state officials and courts it hardly has enough for coffee and sinkers MORE THAN 45,000 PAID COPIES DAILY standpat boys got together in the G. O. P. convention Saturday. Read _ WOMANHELD SAVE BABY! KEEP HIM CLEAN | BY JURORS IN | Seattle Experts Give Mothers Some Hot Weather Tips iB A mighty interesting subject to mothers this hot weather! The Star has been fortunate enough to obtain a series of articles on “The Baby—its Care and INQUIRY INTO | Need which it will present from time to time, Th stories, written by experts, should form the most valuable sort of reading for every mother in Seattle ' These articles represent the consensus of opinion of many medical experts. They were pre- ’ | pared under the supervision of the Mothers’ Training school, an organization of prominent Seattle club women interested in the betterment of the coming generations MAN § DEATH Throughout the winter the training echool conducted a free lecture course for mothers in the Bon Marche assembly room, The lectures will be resumed in the fall, beginning some time in September. | The first of the articles, which follows, deals with the proper dress for first-year infants uffy-r HE f ing out of f Mrs. Blanche Smith will be held by Prosecutor John Mur- phy for further investigation French-doll sort of baby is go « no longer gratify thelr own into the death of Michael D. | vanity at th baby’s health and comfort Samuels, the Nome merchant, Use the softest you can afford when you who came to his death from | make baby clothes, but make them up plainly and pret revolver wound June 3.in the \ Seattle hotel. The coroner's jury, In a ver- dict this afternoon, recommend- ed a further probe. The jury was unable to de- cide whether Samuels came to his death voluntarily or by “the tily | FEW CLOTHES In summer, don't dress your child with too much aper, a soft flannel or outing Mannel is enough to keep your baby comfort leaving hia diaper 2 to alip over bis shoulder from any tight bands, Don't ha ‘ ” : | pong laa vb en a edian jt that ake him bow-legged nat Sat | « diaper that b sotled and allow | That Samuels preferred death to | ary 8 aia r that has Q | Pe coer ius Wee vane | Diapers should be washed carefully and allowed, if eution under the Mann white slave Laan ran ba. waeteed saratahy and ohret. : act was the testimony given tod: f | before the coroner's jury at the ry each time they are used. j page “nO. fguees. Chiceao | | Never allow your baby to wear nt at night ; Sieecna aie <acue's tris @ ot] jit has worn during the day. Wh y ogre op el armeaaad | ble, let it be outdoors or, at least, in a the dead man. Told Him About Woman His testimony was the feature of the investigation today, in which Mrs. Blanche Smith. who was with Samuels the day he died, has been held for investigation. “I saw Samuels Thursday before Ms death, and he told me he and his wife had been reconctle: said Han- na “He mentioned his little daugh- ter Rose, and said he had determin- ed to live a cleaner life for her sake. He told me of a woman he had been intimate with, and that was the first I knew of a woman in the case. Denies She Threatened we Open | DON’T ALLOW A FLY ANY NEARER YOUR BABY THAN YOU WOULD A RATTLESNAKE, If your house is not screened, keep baby under a plece of netting all the time Don't put clothing on your baby that ts not perfect ly clean Although we have heen.told that slong. ness In next to godliness, it sometimes seema to the that some mothers think it ts next to impossible NEVER MIND FRILLS Put all your efforts on the cleanliness and hysiente care of your baby, and never mind the frills on tts clothes. During the summer, keep your baby out o much as possible don't let it be in th and see that its flesh fo pecially when it is axl Above all, study its health and its comfort before you feed your vanity by making it look pretty. f doors as hot sun, « cool under its clothes, es “Tam going to Nome, and am go- ing alone,’ he said. ‘But it’s going to be hard to get rid of this woman. I tried a money settlement, but couldn't manage It. She has threat ened to get me under the Mann act.’ “I saw him the Monday evening following, as I had a date with him at the Seattle. He seemed very much exercised over something, and said he would not have time to talk,” said Hanna. Mrs. Smith took the stand, declar. ing that she had not threatened Samuels with prosecution. She told of his getting a letter saying that she bad made the threat, and that she said to him You know I wouldn't, Daddy. You've been too good to me.” As the first witness of the day, she took the stand to add to her Previous testimony. She denied that she wore Sam- uels’ pajamas, and declared that vie Judge N. E. Nuzum was mistaken to when he testified, Saturday, that he ua and Samuels were together the An Admirabie cxampie of a Well-Kept, One-Year-Old Baby om evening of May 28 “Mr. Samuels and I were together| j all evening, and when we came} 0 10» home we went to bed,” she said. A Two other witnesses were exam-| ) a ined and the case given to the jury. 2) eee ODKIRK: HANDS = wison names | MASSAGE GIRLS ty toanvoony ay Our city dads are going to give| There the women “doctors” are ae ob the “beauty doctors” the once over | permitted to handle only women ap.|_ LOS ANGELES, June 15—Tem This morning the Hcense commit- | plicants porartly Insane, Judgement passed by the police today on a man giving ail ltee extended an invitation to mas Men desiring massages must ap. Nag Meo |seuses of all the varieties to| ply to masseurs the name of R dirk “ | visit the council chambers and Odkirk’s peculiarity became man- ON, J or agpaaea pe anemia amet tentn SeMaTANT, when Ep -enineniy vd WASHINGTON, June 15.—Prest-| licensed WIFE iS MISSING wolzed and kissed a pretty woman a3 dent Wilson sent to the senate to-| An ordinance will be Introduced pet se day the following nominations of|this afternoon by title, and after Then he turned and implanted a — members of the Federal sage eros beauty medicos make their) jacoh Rowley of Bismarck,|smack on the bewhiskered visage bank board, to serve for the term | spiel in the course of the next two) Woy a. asked th f a gray patriarch, who quickly A ‘aah 4 od the Seattle police |of & gray patriarch, quickly of years specified: Charles Ham-|or three weeks, the Dill will be es ie mn pid et : o7 | brought his cane into play lin, now assistant secretary of the| filled out and passed | to try to locate his wife, Bessie, 27,| “atthe Long Beach police station treasury, two years; Paul Warburg,| Chief Griffiths, addressing the|whom he believes to be mentally| he tried to kiss Police Chief Brown New York, four years; Thomas|committee, recommended the plan | unbalan Rowley informed the| and the turnkey Jones, Chicago, six years; Adolph|to regulate the auty parlors|police that his wife disappeared Miller, California, ten years; W. G.| adopted in Vancouver, B. C., where| about two months ago with a man ais Harding, Birmingham, Ala.. eight|Inspector Mike Powers made a re-| The Rowleys have a yo daugh Golden Opportunities are of- years. cent investigation ter. fered in Star Want Ads. The Seattle Star Penn WAG LIREMIAGiOS When he The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News about It on page 2. VOLUME 16. NO. 96. SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1914. ONE CENT @x,t%a0y3 Ase sath ete tacts Sibi COAST VOLCANO SPITS DEATH AST EDITION WEATHER FORECAST — Fair tonight and Tuesday; continued NEWS RPANIS Hundred Sightseers on California Mountain Flee Before Eruption; _ One Man Struck Down by Huge Boulder From Flame-Filled Crater and Body Covered With Ashes; Other Members of Party Bury | Faces in Snow to Escape Deadly Fumes. | REDDING, Cal, June 15.—S0 | far as could be learned here, 3 all but two of the sightseers on Mount Lassen at the time of ‘ were accounted for toany Perkins a Jonah; If He Won’t Get Out, Oust Him aped safely, though wsegeld tela G INCE men first split into factions it has been a rule of the competitive | qt ot, the two injured, Lance game to plant spies in the camp of the enemy. Se teas Gore aie meeie Gan chi Is George W. Perkins Big Business’ “ringer” in the camp of the “army ered lkely. Se of the Lord?” inabak bet tain Wan’ not verified If he is, he surely is a peach, for he is now almost the whole works. ral? Teurlate on Mountain | The progressive party ought not tobe handicapped by Perkins. There is Violin, « few mites from the mous.|WOrk in this land for a political party pledged as progressives are pledged. tale, where a doctor was called to _ Already its organization has been warranted by the indirect results it has Fava ‘Tipple, ‘also . of. Manton achieved. It has laid the reactionary republican party low. It has forced pro- who suffered a badly broken arm-\gressive control of the democratic partty. With such a record made in so brief a sebvene eee capected He. too,|time it should today be a growing, as well as a going concern. PRR VIN i as But Perkins means Steel trust, implacable foe of organized labor. tae at the time Grelaen ond Perkins means Harvester trust, implacable foe of organized labor. | Tipple were injured. For a time The Progressive party can have no hope of large or permanent growth on the basis of hostility to union labor. One by one all reached places of Even thoush dit Perki : ‘ Pee Ci . a deen Cote $0 reebok ee y igh we credit Perkins with complete sincerity in his progressive | E Weaneh by. Rendle eolnoen and assume that he is “paying the freight” without ulterior n gina. ants t hich Sires, he : realize, that the part-which cast. himeel; {itn tad ripple belonged wert" For Gn this new pol: ‘movement is coat to his ncaa os faa the an, at 9: 45|cause to which he pledges devotion. rerously close to the c yesterday's eruption by a. m. *. . : . . « i 1d tudaitasd womiie: earned Perkins can best prove the genuineness of his professions by taking a \them and they ran for safety back seat. | Graham's hat blew off and he|— ooo | stopped to chase it ] ty this time the outburst had be 9 : and hot stones were falling | thickly | One of them struck Graham and the fell A moment | Tipple | went down | Thinking them dead, thetr com panions continued their flight Bury Faces In Snow | The others finally reached a spot = | where a jutting rock protected It will be up to Judge Neterer of|the city, will attempt to have that | them from the shower of stones, | the federal court today to determine |!mjunction continued in force in- and p J |their Inngs from the sulphurie|on Fourth av ng into the snow to save| whether the city’s cars are to Tul fearres fumes which filled th until the er Its duration was about 20 min prce’s mc fordized tn to modify the Han-/attle, Renton & Southern at all ion, which prohibit-| events. As soon aa tt was over the party |e the city from in'any manner dis-| If the court should determine that WASHINGTON, June 15.— descended » mountain and made | Pe4sing = the eattle, RK on &/the company has a good franchise,| A Sensation rivaling that which for Mabanditn lane Gy ant halo he came up for argu-|the city claims the use of the tracks| followed President Wilson's ment today at 2 p. m because of the common user clause. a, Organize Search Party Scott Calhoun, recetver of the|If the court holds the company has| crargee of “an Insidious lobby” A searching party immediately |line, who was corporation counsel|no franchise, then the city has the| ‘* efeat the tariff bill was | started back taward the crater, hav-| of the city at the time the Hanford-|right to use the tracks without any| !aunched today by the president ing meantime sent word for the|ized injunction was ‘issued against! question whatever “| himeelf. coroner and an t taker. andesite | The chief executive charged that Graham was half buried by 4 combination of business interests jstones and ashes when the reseu was behind an agitation to compel - anled hin congress to adjourn without any leg | s chest was crushed in and his islation in regard to trusts. nd body were covered with | 10 KEEP FR He Will Stand Pst — i ERs Declaring that to delay anti-trust Dlg dy ng ey I oni TOLLS REPEAL OM legislation for several months, keep- ing the country meantime in a state 7 wandering about the crater, a ‘ . pratense and of uncertainty, would be the worst Bere ns Bayennely, S80 (Oe: 0t S| RLMETON) ‘dese tke | STRIKING A BOY possible thing for the national busi iaedl ¥ ‘ | ness interests, the president an- A second eruption occurred at| President Wlison signed the ad weensed erpncitaniy inet ae # tt was the seventh of the series | yon Sooo caiiet inloly J. C. Storey, 608 Northern Bank |not consent to Representative Un: since the first outbreak, May 20,|0°c!ock today. buflding, reported to the sheriff's |derwood’s plan for an immediate ad- Observera here said they saw| The Dill was signed without cer-| Office this morning that the auto-|Journment of congress until after | flashes of flame. emony. In affixing his signature,| mobile he was driving near Foy, on election and consideration of the the president used several differ.|the North Trunk highway, turned | anti-trust program then. ent pens, and these will be kept as, turtle this morning, with five other Depression Manufactured? } \ souvenirs occupants, when he ran into a| So far as business is concerned, - wastrenediety ditch to avoid striking a boy on a the president told newspaper men, bicycle. there is abundant evidence that the y VOTE TU ESDAY Storey said the boy became ex-| present so-called depression Is man- cited when he sounded the siren | ufactured in the hope of compelling and did not know which way to | delay turn, and he had to run the car into| Business really, he added, was in | OLYMPIA, Wash., June 15.—To lcounteract the road bill, which }forms one of the “Seven Sisters"| A warm debate Is expected to 4 | precede the vote on the Hinky Dink jinitiative bills, a new bill w harter Tuesday rs b he | the ditch a perfectly healthy condition. by Roy Rudio Saturday, re: | Seesseies retord Pg hs — The bicycle was demolished and| Wilson was prepared to stay in Jing the State Good Roads mao ne Raths-| the car damaged. | Washington all summer, however, tion nOLe, MEE = The boy and the auto passengers | he declared, if necessary, to put his The principal differences be-| escaped with slight injuries. program through. tween the two bills are that the| The Cooks’ union, No, 33, of Seat-} new measure provides a whole mill | tle, has passed resolutions scoring NO USE trying to keep up! Masters of dancing have declared for |instead of a half mill levy; work| the prohibition bill, and declaring | the “ta Chinese. It Is of short, quick steps. Fellows used by contract labor as well as by con-| prohibition fails to secure temper. to the girl's father’s tata at 1 a. m. ought to be able to somewhat grasp victs. | ance: the “tatao.” - — EST _ ‘T{were rie perl (Aue Richt A bo You REMEMBER No, WE LEFT } Don'T CARE | tom, ome YEAR AG OM THURSDAY WHEN Nou You ANEW pie ot aa LAST TwESDAY WE Fs Bil, Wart WAS KNOW THE. STARTED ON OUR f KNOW we GOT TUESDAY : P SNe DAYS OF THE FISHING TRIP? wWeewk? oA AVING TT TO THE WIFE TO DECIDE A BET 3223 | YES AND WELEN DEAR, We'Ve HAD OMe'Le SAY AN ARGUMENT. NOW WHAT THURSDAY DAY DID | LEAVE ON MY ‘Too G TRIP LAST YEAR? however, contends it has ' air, waited a right to run the cars of Division A| q pea gi adhe piAtsistant | Corporation Counseljon the Fourth av. tracks of the Se- i ;

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