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t and found and o on July f Then var ym HIS ts a story of love av love lo 5, 1911, Jones died, and tn his will ho left the en She had married Gwilym Jones in 1877, two years before he m labor lost—a story of human "Sontitet and devotion, a story of tire estate to Esther Jones ried Hather competition and selfishness. adits. Fh OED And he bad not obtained a divorce from hin first wife It concerns three 7 two women and a man tad he died pennile Kather Jones might have been saved the The story came out Thured ir Dykeman'’s cou For 32 years Gwilym Jones and Bsther Jones lived happily to: heart which was in store for her Gwilym had left the old countr l States short! xether, They had both come from Wales, and, becoming sainted i farm land ts worth about $10,000. And human beings the firet marriage. He wrote his wif of love a * sage eoes ane fight f Often they fight more keenly for property and her to come to him. He even sent her the money and teket in Scranton, Pa., 35 years ago, they marrt : cunay thule aay te hee thee sts geéneall a , Youn Tones worked hard in Pennsylvania, saved his money hontai to Jones’ will her Jones was appointed, by the Gwilym then married Esther nd migrated Wes ‘ae : , , ¢ trixe of the estate ‘+e oe Here, of the Coast, at Ravensdale, he co ee Hf . t elal against the estate must be closed The law in the law coal mine for a while, and later bought 60 acres of farm land Mr arab Jones of Merthyr Tydvill, W at all tin Rather Jones p 4 in and did yeoman’s work, clearing, & year was up, there came across the Atlantic and over Gwilym Jones’ wife, the ys, though she had lived with him bing, plowing and he « to make the farm pay, There was true the | ates an official document f the bhtre Of Mathes! a dee seis love. Esther and Gwil were true partners, The woman did her ydv Wales The a sya that Mra, Esther Jones, who li with Gwil share of the labor cheerfully It was a clatm by Mrs. Sarah Jones, the first wife. for 82 yea who labored side t ith him, # 4 with him in MORE THAN 45,000 PAID COPIES DAILY ' What kind of a Fourth of July is this we're going to have, anyhow? Not one championship prize fight for tomorrow. Shades of Reno, 1910! | MAN CHAIN ONTO HIS BED IN HOSPITAL!: Cémmittee From Humane Society) Rescues Patient; Board of Health |' Closes Sanitarium. Information that shocking renditions of brutality have ex- Isted in the Swick sanitarium, ‘813 First av., developed today when the Humane soclety made oublic a report in the case of Edward Fox, a patient In the in- stitution, who was supposed to VOLUME ing story was told by the 4 patient of inhuman treatm junder the guise of therapeutic gestion, of improper and tnsufficient food, deprivation of water, attack by four male attaches of the sint |tarfum, including Dr. E. G. Beek, the man In charge, known as ‘doc- tor,’ but found to have no license, |@ damaged rib over the heart as the have received treatments by (result of the attack by the attend t#, assault by a male nurse with Suggestive therapeutics. Fox a large, jagged plece of brass, in entered the sanitarium May 21. | which a blow on the head rendered Reports that Fox was suffering the patient unconscious from cruelty infilcted by the at-| “All of which occurred while the tendants came in from neighbors in | Patient was chained by both out- that district with auch force that | *Tetehed arms to the bedposts the Humane society several days Mother Sees Attacks “The last nit Was witnessed ago recruited a committee composed |by the patient's mother, who heard of Andrew Willetzen, an architect. the men threaten to kill her son H. Marchmedt and Mrs. Peter Bet-| unless he submitted quietly to their tinger . This ts their| demands. h Shimane Ps ee ey “The patient's story and his moth- ~"" “@tretcned Out-on Bed ge ict “athe y “The committee found the neigh-|charges were admitted by the at- Dors’ charges were fully subdstan-|tendants, and the committee saw the tiated,” reads the report. “Fox was man in chains, weakened by lack of exercise and improper diet, brutsed discovered stretched out on an ‘ron jand battered from his beatings.” each arm chained to a sep- Sanitarium Closed arate post. Black and blue marks) The Humane society removed Fox about the chest and shoulders, &/ to the Queen City sanitarium, where large swelling on the man’s head and | he ts rapidly recovering his health a broken rib were grim evidence of/ The Swick sanitarium has been the brutal treatment accorded him |closed by order of the health de by the male attendants In charge. was made that the pa- tient be released and permitted to exercise in open alr, accompanied by the committee. Treatment by “Sugestion” “In the course of a mile walk a at partment. Dr. Beck, who was in charge of |the institution, said today he had Say that HE THOUGHT HE WAS Goop. OLD LADY MISSES PRAYER MEETING FIRST TIME N 25 YEARS, PLANNING A NICE LITTLE JOB OF BLACKMAIL OS ANGELES, July 3.—A pitiful effort of Miss Mary Shuff, 65, to raise money, betrayed her Into the hands of the police, who are investigating an attempt to extort $500 from M. M. Meyers, an attorney, to which they say sh confessed. Miss Shuff told them she stayed away from prayer meeting last Wednesday for the first time in a quarter of a century to complete her pian. They say she wrote an anonymous note to Meyers, threatening to burn his house unle: e left $500 in a can in an alley behind their homes. When Miss Shuff went for the money, she found five men wait- Ing with sawed-off shotguns, She fied into her home, where the officers found her kneeling in prayer. Satan, she told them, had possessed her. Has it ever occurred to you that maybe we're too ready to ridicule the standpat doctrines? . For example, there is the “divinity of judges,” which 1 the standpatter swears by “Ho! Ho!” we're apt to say [here's nothing divine about judges. They're only human bei They don’t in herit their jobs. They're only elected by the people, and therefore it’s the people and not the judges who are the real thing.” We are convulsed with laughter, many of us, when the standpatter talks about “divine judges.” But really, the fel , - low who laughs last and laughs best is the standpatt : Take the case of Seattle’s franchise provisions -veral years ago the people voted that all railway frar must contain “common user” and other safeguard ion company, of course, didn’t like it } So at the next election the same question was put up fa and again the people voted to retain those franchise pr visions. A third election resulted the same way. Just that time the company made up its mind that the p really meant what they voted. So a court test was made, and the supreme court merrily came to bat and knocked the people’s votes silly They dug up a musty old precedent and ruled that while the people could initiate 1 referendum on other matter their tes and their voice counted minus nothing on fran chise questions Last Tuesday, the people of Seattle again voted to keep the original franchise provisions 3ut what’s the use? The council and the mayor are not required by law to obey the people in that respect. The supreme court said so Don’t tell me there is no “divinity of courts.” es: 16. no defense to make other than to} DOING IT ALL FOR THE MAN'S) The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News NO, 111 From the ethic, esthetic, etl quetic, and ecstatic points of HOW LONG 1S A KISS? Ax . ot Chica, After three feet of kiss, they hold, the oxculent actior to be a true kins excusable impr Arouses Protests ae cision to cut the kl the th f ,Thel r tim t tn " presented to storm of pr m, has aroused a | teat Mins Alice La Ac v was visited by and asked what proper if kissing w She declared first Ciiter—a small silver antiseptic material which is worn | by the lady, like a lorgnette, and "|inmerted between two paire of ap secretary of the a Star re would prohibited the kiss framed net of Proaching lips in ti >» avoid actnal contact The use of the kise-filter ts spreading rapidly It's Absolutely Essentia } It snow worn by me . jand army officers |the vogue of the kiss tang probably become as essential | the totlet as is the powder puff. | Those who believe that the tn jtervention of mechanical contriv lance spoils the true tatic soul fulness of the kiss are adopting the digital kiss. Very Delicate Operation This ts performed like the thrown kiss, but one finger only ts instead of aa whole ood effect of one finger ts much pith tt is held, in delicateness. Others have adopted the chin-) kiss. This fs considered much a perior to nose-rubbing. | Butowhy bibble about how long | kisses should be? Better fret about how long we have to wait between kisses. ISN'T IT TOO BAD, ‘NOW, ABOUT THE ‘POOR S.E.BUNCH? wives, ar >» wil to Picturing a dixma) condition of }financtal distress which would jovertake the S Electrie Co if the common clause were inslate on, James B. | Howe, for the company, today ob- | Jecte a resolution declaring it| |the council's 7 to grant no | franchises the “common |user” is properly safeguarded The resolution was agreed upon by a joint conference of council| and port commiss! members. The matter went over for one week | The Avalon franchise also was | continued for a week Howe agreed to “common user” in that but wanted the wording in it drafted by himself. The city| dads will study his draft to guard against any “jokers ANYWAY, OSCAR HAD AGOODTIME. WHILE IT LASTED. With $122 unearned tucked away franchise, in his pistol pocke Oscar L.| North, from somew in the country tributar to eattle, am bled Into town yesterday and start | ed to give a correct imitation of | The Millic Jollar Kid He dallied with the cold bottles and the live chickens until early | this morning, when he chartere | taxi to take him to the Snoqualmie | hotel, on Pike st | The safety pin that guarded the} remnant of his roll was missing So was the roll The chauffeur proceeded to col-| ect his fare out of Oscar's Just for that O rounde his visit, during which a vl pasant time was had by all, etting pinched MAC COMES BACK I didn’t! You did | 4 the substance of the an 1 reply of County C aT i Hamilton and R fl who sued the offi tal N ia tis’ ‘repty ‘tiled to: i he didn’t strike the first bl demands a jury trial of Hamil Golden Opportunities are of- | |fered in Star Want Ads. sell it quickly. |B 1k and Odd Fellow. SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1914 =~ CYRUS CLAPP STRICKEN ON _CAR AND DIES Pioneet Piiincler Attacked by} Apoplexy While Riding on Mt. Baker Car. |SUFFERED FOR YEARS Victim Had ~ erved Three} Terms in the Washington State Legislature. pretty girl does it on paper by & pair of rouged lips, While enjoying a pleasure ride on a Mt. Baker street car last night BU ‘4 _ S S Cyrus F. Clapp, 63, president of the a. Gi BULLY IDEA”—that's what The Star has been hear Cyrus F. Clapp Investment Co., and 4 resident of this state for 40 ye was stricken by apoplexy He was hastily removed from the park ONE CENT Chin-kiss and kiss filter displayed in circles above; the digital kiss ind, below, the imprints of a re ing on all sides with reference to this paper's sug- gestion yesterday to establish a municipal dance hall at Leschi city, mu car to the residence at 1820 Jackson City officials, park board members, and the general public st., where he died a few moments |are taker with the idea later And why not? Dr. Don H. Palmer was sum } \ . moned, but by the time he arrived It will be a splen lid finance proposition for the Mr. Clapp was beyond medical as-jand the best sort of social “mixe for the public wtante, : Cleveland, O., is reaping a neat harvest out of its ‘or several years he had been alyicinal halls. Seattle lo the same suffe from rheumatism and nicipal dance 1 eattle can do the same rhe tie gout Heres how: Ww Felger, his son-in-law,| The city already owns the pavilion. What is needed is a stated his sudden death was notiband to play the music Also a man to direct the dance pro- entirely unexpected M O0' anage Mz ae x o Ta s anc its. Giapp was bovn in} Medtore, |OT2M a floor manager. Maybe a kid to check hats and Me., and educated in New England | clothe 1en-——on with the dance schoois, and at Belfast, Ireland, and Downtown dance halls easily average 300 dancers a in Scotland. night. Many nights it's above that mark. Sometimes it’s When he came to Washington he |), pine r engaged in the hotel business at|°° ; ae ‘ Port Townsend At five cents a dance, there's $15 for each number. Tak With H. E. Lutz he organized the|ing a low average, the dancers usually dance 10 numbers Clapp Invest Co. here, oceupied him until his death He ved three terms in jstate legislature, was a Mason, which| That makes it $150 for one } The city can do that evening summer. He ts survi son and two daughters, the latter | living in Seattle. | And what will it cost the city? | The band—say about $30 or $40, or 2 1 boy, or two boys, be, fo SAYS WIFE HAS tcc) The city ought to he! able to clea I least A NASTY HABIT) bie Be fe worth while, especially if ea |popular demand, too? Rosa Blosl, according to her hus-| WE T HINK SO SHOULD thereabouts, another $1,000 r going $10 at a wee to the k at meet al band, Domick Blos!, has made Ife] ———— aa sable for him by her habit| owing plates at him has filed sult for divorce. a fireman at Sta be: Vance Gubble, tion No, 12, is a regular little FIND HE'S INSANE thorized by his !mpertal majesy, the czar of Russia, Kohanowski is act ing consul in Seattle. His letter fol imply great to be mayor of a, y attle, It's elty him a The congratulations were received| the best of friends forever, as they ty hizzoner from D. A, Kohanowaki,| have been friends in the historical on official documentary paper au-| moments of need on the both parts,” the pay rolls 124,202, during 1913 than 19 in 1913 “LET "EM HAVE IT CAP ANDERSON | GIVES DANCES | Over Portland they met lowe with brass bands. In Everett yes-| “On behalf of the imperial Rus-| terday crowned the queen, and| sian consulate I have the honor to} OLYMPIA, July 8—Figures | today Hi of Seattle ¢ alcongratulate you with the day of} piled by Labor Commissioner bouquet because tomorrow's Fourth| American Independence. son show the lumber Industr jot July “I hope our great nations will stay | the state employed 20% more | NOT SO WORSE com oO} y of men ‘What Chance Has Love Against Law? The Seattle Star D HOW LONG MAY AKISS BE AND BE PROPER? FORD STARTS - Movie Censor Says After One Yard It’s Scandalous; Suggests a Filter A Worth-While Idea! the f much business easily at the mu-| ,|nicipal dance hall—in fact, much more than that during the For it’s a cinch people will rather dance where the} yo. ed by his widow, a|lake breezes come refreshingly frequent than in stuffy halls. | a night, | . the men on| numbering | happiness and wept for him when the tide of battle went against him, was never his wife Property acquired after marr “ community property, under the Jaw of Washington 1 in ow are and share alike by hum band and wife So Mrs. Sarah Jonex of Wales will get one-half of the Jones The other half—G 1 Jone hare—will go to Mrs, Kather Through her attorney, Mre ab Jones claimed the whole em tate, uring that Gwilyr hould de, But the eourt held that the will wa 1, and therefore if of the property he had the legal right te © to Kather One can't help wondering “If Gwilym Jones had died penniless, would t ther Jones ever have heard of Sarah Jones?” oken-hearted Es. EDITION WEATHER FORECAST — Fair tonight and Saturday; cooler. Mod- erate westerly winds ON TRAINS AND NEWS STANDS, CONSUMPTIVE SANITARIUM Men Brought Back From Arizona | and Put to Work Gain in Health © and Are Full of Hope. By Otto McFecley (COPYRIGHTED. 19) a) DETROIT, Mich. July 3,—The most amazing thing ii] the Ford automobile works the ward for consumptives: THINK OF IT! A FACTORY THAT IS A TUBER- CULOSIS SANITARIUM! Only these consumptives work and are gaining health as~ they work! 4 While walking about the factory with Judge Neil, the mothers’ pension advocate who has just held a lengthy con= ference with Millionaire Ford on the latter’s methods, Ford sh yly drew a document from his pocket and said: “T have just received a teport which indicates that our plant here may cure its employes who have tuberculosis.” Judge Neil wanted to know all about it right away, $0 Ford sat down and told us. “It is known that dry air alds; men suffering from tuberculosis to recover. knew that we had a place in the shop where the air is he temperature is high and the yery dry. It is the steel tempering air as dry as in the desert ci room. The hot metal is laid out on | where tuberculosis paslents, age 4 ae the floor to cool. Investigations) en to"perdared."— * ‘ proved that the air is very ore Many of the men at work there. I consulted with the doctors evidently suffering of the di jand they agreed that the expert. | but gn their faces were soon |ment should be made. We began/hope, and the entrance of | the first of this year. their leader, brought smiles | Brought n From Arizona nods of familiarity and good will, | “WE HAVE BROUGHT MEN No Patients BACK TO THE SHOP FROM ARI- “t sha hopatal, very hopeful INA sanitarium: where they/ Ford., “We have more than 50 were not improving, In the steel| itn tubereul air tempering room, where we now Kive | 1a pment, ory bay on t our ‘HLAT TREATMENT,’ these i same men work every day and are| S25 died of the diseave. snd sacar ap gaining weight, strength and confi- them show leupeovemmall cm de |Fespects.” do. They get DISCOURAGED and Sue eSS05 JAPANESE FLAG — Shemiceratgs FLIES-OLDGLORY. IS NOT IN SIGHT of the idea is to have the “a work Sick Men Earn Wi THEY EARN WA J’ Reginald Kerr, a carpenter, at 941 29th av., called up The today to complain about the Cl ber of Commerce. From these furnaces the hot © metal ts taken and laid on the floor ‘ to cool a ce. At other sanitariums every one is sick. They talk about their trou- ble, for they have nothing else to jare a part of the working organiza- tion, and THE FEELING THAT} | THEY ARE GETTING BACK IN-| TO THE REGULAR AFFAIRS OF| LIFE aids in obtaining the bene- ficial results.” From the office of the plant, the conference, which included mem-| “They're flying a Japanese bers of Ford’s sociological and sur-|0® top of their building,” Be ‘and there is no American near it.” 4 A city ordinance requires that the Stars and Stripes must be flown above the flag of any foreign nation — displayed in Seattle. Kerr is not a member of the cham ber. adjourned to the steel tempering room—the tuberculosis sanitarium, if you please. It is a building 150 feet long. It has glass sides and is flooded with daylight when the sick men are at work The floor is of iron Temperature Is High Along one side is a row aling furnaces, WHERE TO GOTOMORROW]| BALLARD—Parade at 10 a. m.; oration by Mayor Gill, reading 7 of Declaration of Independence by F. 8. Carpen ds mu: : Wagner's and Eagles’ bands, all at 11:30, at grandstand. Sports at Adams school grounds from 1 p. m. on inciude ball game between Ballards and Eagles, races for fat men, pioneers, women, etc., sack races, greased-pole contests. Dancing after 4 p. m. at Junction hall, and after 5 at Woog’s hall. ‘ Take Ballard street cars. . gical staff, : Humbcict sails for North tonight i with bog tourist parcy of an- KIRKLAND—Picnic grounds open at 9 o'clock. Program at 10, Speeches by Mayor Gill of Seattle, Mayor Newell of Kirkland, Mayor Woody of Bothell, President H. G, Dahiby and Past President Geo, N. Roeh! of the Rose Hill Improvement club. Races and games, with z : in club how ind fi | when It comes to subduing flames, ai follow. Dancing in club house and fireworks In the bat when @ couple of stiokup. m Take Kirkland ferry from Madison park. Not guilty of murder on account| with black masks, last night stuck | ABOARD FERRY | ah yr ch of insanity wa he M , nder his nose at 24th s , of eumned today’ tn Judge Gilfiamee| av, and Washington st, Cubbie wae} BREMERTON—Beginning of two-day carnival. Visit of Seattle court in the case of. Jacob Konn-| strong for truce. ‘They got 60 cents Tilikums. Women's, men’s and children’s races, pie-eating contests | curt who slew his partner Jack | Most of us common folks have| and fire-fighting exhibition by fire department, beginning 10 a. m. | Mynte, with an ax ; In the U. &. there are 5,500,000| bounced on the bounding billows,, S8all game between Japanese nine from ‘Tokio and Bremerton Mas . i m pople over 10 years old who can't lidje e > tiffs, on Athletic field, 3 p.m, Beginning at 8 p. m., street Mardi He probably will be committed | people over 1 Ars 0 ho can't| but didje ever dance on ‘em “ SellaAaees toad or write rir Gras and three-hour display of fireworks. Municipal ball in city oe ie eooracicioieieniite or the benefit of those of us [| wharf building, 9 p.m. Band concerts hourly, Fraternal and mill. |who can't emit Cap” |] tary parade, followed by carnival parade, with $100 prizes for best ILATES WL Anderson, of the Anderson § maskers and characters; 9 p. m., masked carnival dance on streets | midnight | boat Co., has fixed it up so we can,.|f Unt! RUSS | Public dances will be given Take Bremerton steamers, leaving Colman dock, board the fe #saquah every : wee nga Ms Al Co Hed TACOMA—Annual carnival Montamara Festo, Montamarathon, hoat leaves Leschi at 8 o'clock and |{ Did auto race of Festo, on Speedway. Historical pageant In the Sta. from Madison park 20 minutes |} dum In evening. j The ferry ‘will crise the Take interurban from Occidental and Vester way, or Tacoma'| boats, Colman dock, or by railroad, m EVERETT—Kla-How-Yah celebration all day. Take interurban, Fifth av. and Pine st., or Everett steamers, Col- man dock * SEATTLE—Baby show, from 1 to 3 p. m., Lescht park, Ball game, 10 a, m. and 3 p, m., Seattle vs, Vancouver, Cricket match, 10 a. m., Woodland park, Portland vs. Seattle. Inspection of Japanese cruisers; visit observatory of L. C. Smith building; AIkI bathing} beach; any of the parks; cyclone cellar, see ee