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SPEAKING OF VACATIONS-- > | ROW ABOUT 7 MOTHER ? you today on page 3. Rea Make your plans accordingly CITY PUTS ON ITS GAY DUDS > FORPOTLATCH Tilikum Carnival Will Open Merrymaking Season at 4th and Lenora Tonight. | BIG TIME WEDNESDAY | Celebration Proper Will Be| Observed Last Four Days of the Week. “And, I say-you'll have to-— HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! The big Tilikum Potlatch carn val, opening tonight at Third ay. and Lenora st., will be rendered fa- mous by the barkers at the en trances. There will be all sorts of) attractions, supplemented by countless lights and lots of music pt 900, Thore will be no official king or queen. Says Tyee Kopa Konaway George Vraudenbarg “Every Tiitkum will be a king and every woman a que*u during the entire period. We have had a bloodless revolution and overturned a monarchy to establish the first republic In the history of carnivals.” VANCOUVER MAN HELD ON CHARGE OF $9,000 THEFT. On » complaint issued two years fo, Roy Hemphill, a member of lemphill Bros, Ltd., of Vancouv- er, B. C., a prominent contracting firm, i* under arrest today in Seat- mount of $9,000. e Abrahamson Brick Co., Seattle, ts the complainant. Deputy Loomis brought Hemp- hill to Seattle from Portiand, where he was arrested. Former Mayor John F. Miller and Attorney J. E. Willis of Chehalis will defend him. of THERE'S SOME information for | shortly after | Florence Carman, | sponsibility for the murder of Mrs./s0me one in the Carman resideuce | Louise Bailey in Dr. Edward Car-|COWld have known Mra. Bailey was OH MOTHER, GUESS TLL TAKE A Cour OP WEEKS VACATION SOME OF THE FELLOWS ARE GOING UP. To_TWe Lan | id it for you. today. You remember how, last Potlatch, The Star’s Golden Girl rode in an automobile through the crowded downtown district, and THREW MONEY AWAY? Or maybe, if YOU didn’t, you saw the others scramble for it. too, believe us. Well, this Potlatch The Star’s Golden Girl will distribute the cash FROM AN PLANE. We now will introduce you to our 1914 Golden Girl. Alys McKey-Bryant, step for- ward. YEP, FOLKS, IT’S THE FAMOUS IN YOUR POCKET. SECOND AV., FROM THE SMITH BUILDING TO THE HOTEL WASHINGTON, BETWEEN 5 AND 6 P. M. FRIDAY. VOLUME MAMMA | JUST GUT A LETTER PROM fe. AND SHE WANTS ME TO come AND VISIT wert! 16. Don’t Miss This! A Shower of Money From the Skies SAY, PEOPLE! The Star has some Potlatch surprise parties We'll tell you about just one of them Maybe you got some of it. Well worth scrambling for, AERO. MEAN MONEY TALE OF JEALOUSY MINEOLA, Long Island, July 13.) whi —Dvspite the fact that the prosecn- | tion was considerably disconcerted,| Pinion that the assassin meant to the arrest accused of re- tle, charged with grand larceny to| man's office, nearly two weeks ago,) by the apparent flattening of much | of the evidence on which the arrest was made, District Attorney Smith | said today he expects to present a strong case to the grand jury. Doesn't Believe Doctor Smith refuses to credit Dr. Car man's statement that the shot | killed Mra. Bailey undoubt. edly was Intended for him. It is his oft “Tare = be woman who actually was He added that In his opinion only }in the doctor's office Wife Has Long Been Jealous The story of jealousy that caus ed the wife of Dr. Edwin Carman to install a dictagraph in his office to spy upon bis conversation with | women patients dates back more than 10 years, This Information has been fur nished by District Attorney Smith - The flies began bu As I lay half silent street. / 1 looked out. zing early. It was a milk away again t A half hour passed at Hahn about if Stine Sst Que Mavs QDINTaV I lost my usual Sunday morning sleep yesterday. I left the window shade up when I retired the night before. wake I heard a wagon rattle along the} to It stopped at Brown's, just opposite my place. wagon out with an empty bottle, and the rig turned Another wagon appeared fi ped at Smith's, two doors from Brown's. Then it went away|ed holes bored into It had been supposed that Mra Carman's jealo yd suspicions were of recent origin, and the sto- ries related by the doctor and his wife indicated that they principally centered around the call of a train- ed nurse to borrow money from | the doctor. Saw Nurse Kiss Doctor } Mrs. Carman testified at the in- | quest that she saw the doctor hand | Money to the nurse, that the nurse kissed him, that she then entered the office, demanded and recelved the wioney back, and that she slap- | Ped the nurse's face. Then she had the dictagraph se cretty installed a few days later. Now the district attorney ts in- |formed that she made efforts to | *PY on the doctor and his women The driver trotted) patients in the days before dicta. graphs and such were known , ; | o years ago, the district attor t stop-| ney was told, Dr. Carman discover the cefling of modern | and rattled | devices | his office to make 4 again. | person in the it ponsible for a ey It had barely disappeared when another one #peared,| hear conv seutions: prove to over- Hi. and stopped at the house in between the two. This thing) Tho holes could ales die is was growing interesting. Then came another. This driver) peerboles i} made three deliveries in the block. shar ti gr 1a attorney was told { By the time my family was up I had counted seven| gnerret (er and hin wife had a i y y y | Quarrel following the discovery ie wagons that had driven into my block and out again And| " most of them served only one family. a At least five minutes was consumed by each rig; 35 TWO MEN ESCAPE a minutes in all Ls And the day was still young yy I began thinking of B. F. Shields’ statement last week| FROM STOCKADE ie / that dupli And I began thinking it might is delivered ion of distribution causes the high price of milk be true Shields is advocat-| ing a municipal dairy to handle all Seattle's milk, like mail! Dodging # volley of bullets fired by a guard, Joe Rivers, 19, and |Bob Stewart, 26, serving a sen- These deliverymen spent all day Sunday duplicating each} tence in the county stockade sfor other's trips over the city, ea One wagon should have in less time than it trict toc block I see it all now I didn't morning and sce for yourself. 4 ch cutting ik those se before. nto territory, traveling miles to deliver a few bottles of milk supplied our block en Get up early some| them second-degree burglary, escaped from a road work gang north of Ballard and are still at larg The two rolled a log to the edge one | of a thicket and jumped over a 10. | foot embankment just as the watch | ful eye of Guard R. N. Groh spied Groh fired with his rifle but failed to stop the fleeing men, the other's all our dis to the OW,MA, MR. Higa (3 GOING To TAK FRED AND GORGE OUT CAMPING FoR A WEEK AND INVITED ME TO Go "LOND SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JULY 13, 1914. WELL IF We invired You iguess You MAY GO, DID You “THANK § WELL HELEN | MANAGED To OUT A FRW DAYS OFF AND GUESS 1A GO FISHING Form LA LITTLE REST, | NtED A CHANGE a \'p Go TO he Seattle Sta The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News ON THAINS ONE CENT . HAVE YOU GIVEN THIS GIRL ADVICE? advice to “Lone- love dilemma, What's your some Girl,” whose based upon real romance, has at- tracted so much attention? Write to “Lonesome Giri,” care of The Star, at once. Tomorrow the best letter will be selected and awarded The Star's prize of $5. Because “Lonesome Girl” has al- lowed herself to become acquaint- ed with the rich young man whom she believes is her ideal, she must go through with the affair until it is definitely settled one way or an other, declares one Star reader, who ts the case from a paycho: logical standpoint. Another takes the very opposite view Here are their letters “The difference in financial mat ters between them,” says Dr. J Wurster, 418 People's Bank bufld ing, “does not, by natu affect the case, but, psychologically, it can be a barring factor to love. Her own feelings, as his state of mind impresses itself upon her, ap- pear to be guide, She knows from that ‘sure-to-be-right’ source that he does not love her, but seeks her company for selfish motives that will develop later if she sticks to him because of love for an ‘ideal she finds externally manifested in him. To become happy without ©, McKenzie, a conductor for the traction company, was fined $10 in » Gordon's court today on a charge of assaulting Pat Lynch, an old man, after he had tried to pull Lynch off his car and had threat- ened to “soak” him him, she must get thoughts that now afflict having permitted the acquaintan ship to occur.” Soni from ton, who “Lonesome Girl” ‘Forget it. You will live just as long.” rid of his her for castern Washing- signs “A Friend,” gives the following sententious advice to Ever since printing was invented we have read about the prattle of women's tongues. j | But it is entirely different with| | Mildred McKenzie | the ordinary girls you meet. In fact, she in incline to be a little! the opposite, modest and slow of apecch. | What she lacks in speech, how- Cruz. | ington. | of the tes fall. | night while | Mildred can write—and write SOME. She can write more than 125)! examination woras a minute, which is as fast, or faster, than the ordinary man can talk. “Impossible,” you will s Not at all. She really does it. It’s her Lusiness, Mirs McKenzie was born 21 years ago in Vancouver. Mira MeKenzie lives with her parents at 433 Broadway North nd is employed in the offices of the White Pass & Yukon R. R. Co. She has made all her speed rec- |ords upon the Underwood machine, and says she has never had a les- son in her life, “Picked it all up myself,” she said. “It is quite simple to write fast after you get the swing of the | thing.” jr the office, commissioner, north district, publicans JACK SPRATT GIVES AWAY DOLLAR; HAS AN ADVENTURE By Jack Spratt Shueks! There It, 80 to speak, Saturday afternoon when I stre was nothing to 1 out seeking some woman to present with one dollar as an evidence of my interest in the fact that she carried a copy of The Star. “The first woman you see,” are my instructions I had just passed Third av Union st, when down and the walk came a bright young girl, with the prettiest sort of a green dress, con structed after the prevalent mode By her side was a dapper young chap, with rather a expression “dash it all” The little girl carried The Star. I had to take the chance. jot of nerve, I had a myself should that swing on me with his cane. pieture o' It took a f dapper chap With half an eye on him, and one and one-half centered on the at tractive young woman, | sailed in “LT trust you will pardon me,” began I as the liner from Seattle, St he young man’s hand tightened on his cane and the girl looked at me inquiringly, No dismay. No j hysterics; just polite inquiry. Lift led eyebrows I got my second plained my mission. “Why, isn’t that Just too perfect ly lovely of him?” was what the girl said “Great stunt, by Jove!” admitted | the young man. “One never! knows, these days, what will hap pen in a five minutes’ promenade.” The young lady was Miss C. Smith, the Georgian hotel. I am no respecter of persons. This afternoon I may meet an old, crippled woman first with a jcopy of The Star, If I do she will | get the dollar. wind and ex petitions | Hamilton and Knudsen Mrs. May Ritter, who sued neigh: | bor for alleged theft of $500, found | | insane | accepted on signed cause names, It was House passes aviation service bill, ‘YOU Do NEED A ResT TOM some QuieT’ Ant NEWS STANDS, CHARGES HAVE WASHINGTON HE'S QUIET MISS, BUT YOU OUGHT TO SEE HER WRITE) W°SUNCTOS. 7. 3-aver, ty om LICKS OFF WORDS ON A TYPEWRITER FASTER THAN YOU CAN TALK in the two terms he ove: sheriffs office, and was nominated as the progressive choice for gov- ernor two years ago. feat he took up the study of law at working jobs in the daytime; and after three the and the city district. Both filed as re filed for } the naval court of inquiry, which had been investi- gating the case of Correspondent Fred L. Boalt of The |Seattle Star, will adjourn this afternoon or tomorrow. Before doing so, however, it was expected to : examine Ensign Richardson, from whom, among other naval officers, Boalt said he got his story of the She does not talk any faster than | shooting of unarmed and fleeing Mexicans can landing parties during the occupation of Vera Setretary of Navy Daniels has asked Badg ever, she makes up in another way. telegraph a summary of the court's findings to Wa It is understood the suspended deportation order issued against Boalt will be held up until the full text imony is received here. ‘ Chairman Padgett of the house committee on naval affairs said his committee, too, probably delay action until it has this testimony before it, | Ps “ ¢ Indications were that the committee report |favor the resolution’s adoption. } Government officials are reticent today conc ing the case. feeding” graft at the county jail|is much speculation today coi | when he became sheriff in 1908, will |{ng the probable successor to Ui jrun for the same ofiice again this He filed his eandidacy today on the progressive ticket. | Hodge made an enviable record upled the After his de- at manual persistent attempts, passed the bar Kris Knudsen, under recall fire, | and Mike Carrigan, who failed of jection after his have term in county in the latter in one former the VOLCANOES ARE EXPLOITED BY LOCAL CONCERN The celebrated volcanoes, Paviof, Shishaldin and Katmai, along the Western Alaskan sent a special matinee performance Victoria that route on a northern excursion coast, will pre. returns by if hopes of the tour- ists are fulfilled The Victoria Will go to Nome and Michaels, returning by way of the fire monsters as a diversion to the passengers. Chief Registration today offered to recheck the recall | against and Knudsen the discovery of suspicious discrep: | Rantenberg, member of the Com- Jancies in the original check A comparison the for noted by the regis: | tration officials, was failure of the ‘velopments within the week, of the petitions vealed 300 additional names which ligence,” re rejected on one petition GAINES OF RECHECK NAM Clerk Gaines Commissioners following Hamilton Sunday re but other, The as rejecting the 1" Goin To SPEND TW APTER NOON AND EVENING WER TO SISTER'S: ourss WEATHER FORECAST — We should worry about these clouds— Weather man says fair tonight and Tuesday fair and warmer. wao's Going TO |GET supper?) You CAN A ane AST EDITION by Ameri- to ash- July 13.—There tates Supreme Justice Horace — on Lurton, who died Sunday — at Acantic City of heart disease, Men, high in administration eit cles were strongly urging Attorney |General McReynolds today as suc cessor to the Iate Justice Lurtom of thé federal supreme court. His appointment was considered extremely likely. It was said Secretary of War Garrison probably would succeed McReynolds as attorney general. It is stated that the president is not considering ex-President Taft | for the place. § From the White House it was fm. timated that the appointment pareby, would not be made before fall. pee The late jurist's body was due to arrive here from Atlantic City at 11:15 p. m. today. The funeral will be held at Clarksville, Tenn. | Justice Lurton was 70 years old, He was appointed to the su bench by President Taft and office January 13, 1911, | WANTS WAGES | PAID IN CASH The Ministers’ federation fs be- hind the Painters’ union in ite ef forts to have employers pay wages in cash instead of by check, A res. olution has been passed and for. warded to the Manufacturers’ asso- ciation. A. B. McCoy, Spanish-American war veteran, joing Greek navy, FERS TO. {signers to register. Yet the very same names passed muster on the other petition, | “To say the least,” says Ted mercial club committee in charge of the recall campaign, “the check- ters have been guilty of grogs neg. Just what action will be taken, | by the recallers has not been defh ~ 7 nitely determined. a There may be some startling @>