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Pi JOSH. WISE “A [GE GUNS RO SAYS: dog census of Beeleyeport reveals 116 ‘Jacks,’ 28 ‘Jips,’ 1 *"Beesic’ none that don't bark all night.” hg rhe Judge announced he would issue an injunction forbidding the Rag y immediate action against je he hing ten't half so odious a8 Coward” Humphrey, will se of the perfumery emanating | principal speaker | in the way of fine traits and ay ie in wt minde@ to write an essay on THE APPLR, ‘My inspiration {s the movement started by the Seattle Chamber of Commerce and others to “Buy a box of ph! Epples, and buy it now'” Nog Browers of Eastern Washington are tn a bad ; Its the war. Just what the connection ts between a lot ‘Men committing murder tn Europe and a lot of sane apples in Eastern Washington. is not quite clear te the fact. he crop is bountiful, but the mar- ting, and the price is low. If you will buy a bor —you will help to steady the market and tide rowers over a ticklish period . ee . always been a hearty admirer of THE APPLE, first recollection of this finest of fruit is a painful & green apple. It had a bitter, though pleasant followed a great pain. Then another. For my if he ever caught me eating green apples, he'd— cider apples were the first to ripen in the fall. Yellow-green apples, and soft and mellow—#so soft bruised when they fell. And we and the honey bees for them, and fill our little bellies with them. And rT SMOKE fe on ageinet smoking on street cars. lequed yesterday by Judge Everett Smith, rengering a de “Gideon Milla Day, who recently sued the Traction yoo be ‘the company allowed smoking on its caused the disdrrangement of Mr. Day’s lunge ly to continue the smoking privilege. ¢ dames B. Howe, representing the Electric Co., sald today far as he knew the company hadn't decided on an appeal. He d the company would probably take its medicine gracefully. as we have not as yet) the court order, there wil! | GRIFFITHS WILL OPEN CAMPAIGN THURSDAY NIGHT ; | Day, who was award-| by Judge Smith, | positively that mat favor of placing a and that it prob-| the city council to E goeinance against car r Opening the congressional cam- Believes in Smoking paign in Seattle, Chief Austin E, they will find oppast-| Griffiths, progressive candidate for Gill, who believes congress against “God Hates a be the Thursday even- |ing at Masonic hall, 617 Kilbourne will take no stand/ s+ Green Lake. This will be Grif fing that’s done, but /riths’ first political speech since At by mental sugges |b. announced his candidacy. Other speakers will be State will mot affect Senator Dan Landon, Rep. Thomas F. Murphine and W. D. Lane, can- in bad for years, | aidates for the legislature from the way,” said Hiram today. | 42nd district, and the various coun let us smoke at all. ty candidates never has been any (Griffiths has been the | in the fore- bs in ples. the Madrona cars. J) front since his residence he what hafm a little smok- the fight for progressive princ om the rear end of the Gare Are Excepted | |RIVER-HARBOR in is decision, | ter fount tt soorers| BILL IS PASSED 10% of the traveling | a the majority is greatly) WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.—Car- 4 by this minority. (| rying an appropriation of $20,000,- Yt believe the working (000 Instead of $53,000,000, as was for his happiness in| contemplated in the original draft, he smokes en route |the rivers and harbors bill was cars. He urges the | passed by the lower house yester- to “yield his personal day. It will become @ law when to the welfare and ad-|signed by the president. Final ef- nt of society at large. |forta to get through amendments ‘open part of cable cars 1s |to lop $5,000,000 from the appro- priation were defeated. tion or two ago, If Uncle Sam had stood on the dock and to immigrants what was in the mind of most home-born 1 Imagine the address of welcome would have run something poor, unfortunate devils, I'm not quit the profit to be made out of you. here, remember th: You are wo by the greatest people that ever lived. ‘worthless as most of you are, | am letting you come tn mendous privilege. In return ly, grateful; and for years i it are that I want yor 4 ind |, whose parents came over on earHer boats, are from the late com: well as conferring them, has only recently gained much headway. the future is to see lei is of Chicago there is soon to be what the many races are bringing In teristics they are emptying into the melting pot. attempt is to be made to teach the young of th Sen tne good things about their immigrant neighbors, Ini g the acquaintance in prejudice and distrust. ie does well to set such a fashion, for it is good and timely. toward brotherhood! made a compre- to the life of our what nuggets of xt id one-sidedness on this subject. | VOLUME 16. The Only Paper in ——— A BOX OF APPLES! what we a We always had three barrels of cider for the winter. 1 the honey bees left went into the cider mill, Ove was soft, and one not #0 soft, and the third hard—ebso-lutely. | Once the hired man showed me how to put a rubber tube tn hired man dtd. ‘Then Halloween member? there were white and hard inside. the Ben Davis. what a anide w on the farms. . . Applesrowing was only a MADONNA IS SPARED FROM SHELLS OF roof ha len within a few inch the bung hole of the third barrel. My mother never knew what was the matter with me, but the was the russet We bobbed for them The sheep's nose was a good apple, too. - But, personally, I Mked the red apples best-the ones that shaded off from red on one side to pink on the other, and Madonna's image in a convent miraculously from the German cannonaders. I was ick for three days. That came along about in the tub of water. Re Iam no apple expert, in the horticultural sense, and 1 don't know their names, Yea, I do remember the name of one kind The Ben Davis was the fickle beauty of thé Orehard. Oh, Ben—beautiful to look upon, but tasting Iike wood. We always shipped the Ben Davises to the city, They looked good on the fruit stands, and the eity rubes bonght them. There are more rubes In the cities than ever were raised side Itne In Ohlo whan Twas 8 te at Termonde spared almost Part of the twisted Iron of the Image. NEW YORK, Sept. 30— Oliver Jenson of Philadelphia, who arrived yesterday from Eu- rope on the Mauretania, today told of seeing the allied forces and Germans in action at the beginning of the battle of Alsne, still being fought. He accident ally happened on part of the fighting forces while making his way from Rheims to Paris, to escape the country. “You have read in the French and English dispatches,” he sald, “how the German soldiers fear the bayonet, and I saw in English re- ports on the other side something to the effect that the Germans dreaded facing the French Sene- | gulese blacks | Sees Charge on Blacks | “Here's what happened when the Fourth Bavarian regiment found ig|themselves fronting a regiment of- |these black soldiers “Por more than an hour the Ba |varians had withstood their fire, giving and taking with a will, “Then, when officers told them ithat {t was black men they were ifighting, the Bavarians seemed to |go suddenly wild with anger. Roll Up Their Sleeves | ‘Despite thelr officers’ attempt to restrain them, they threw off GERMANS ROLLUP SLEEVES; AND KILL BLACKS CHARGE their knapsacks, took off their | ovate, rolled up thelr sleeves and charged that Senegal. regiment | with the bayonet. I saw It done. “It was tremendous, “They swept the blacks back un til there was nothing but a disor | dered rout.” . | |FISHING PACT IS CAST ASIDE OTTAWA, Can., Sept. 30.—Fal! ure on the part of the, United | States to subscribe to the regula- |tlons adopted under the treaty be- tween the United States and Can- ada, governing fishing in boundary | waters, bas caused the Canadian | government to serve notice that it | will resume liberty of action in the taking of food fish in boundary | waters, FAID LOSES HIS TAMALE MONEY The wages of hot tamale are not safe in sult cases, Fald Rasooch, 510 Terrace st, a hot tamale vendor, put away $325 tn a suit case and went out last night to sell some more tamales, When he returned the suit case was there, but the money Was gone, Seattle That D eee = NO, 186. SEATTLE, WASH,, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1914. | AT ANTWERP; AN LINE FINALLY BROKEN AAR AAR ne HELP MA boy, Nobody took it seriously gnarled, and were never trimm The Seattle Star ares to Print the News ONE CENT 0% TRAINS ano NEWS STANDS, Be The trees were mostly old and ed and sprayed The result was that the red apples reminded me of a rosy- cheeked country girl with freckles wind storm, when the apples under the trees, I've seen the And many 4 time, after a lay a foot deep on the ground pigs turned into the orchard to eat ‘em up, Just to get ‘em out of the way, Old Man Post was the only man in the township who knew anything about appl Of course he had the best elons, too, for that matter. ° ‘em. * © One moonlit ni He sprayed and trimmed. app! He had the best wa But he never got to eat or ight, Old Man Post appeared in hie nightshirt In the orchard, there was a loud report—and our family doctor picked rock salt out of me. slept on my stomach and ate standing up. ° after | For some time there- As an article of diet, I doubt if there ts anything in the World that can compare with a good apple. While I like my apples raw best, | do not sneeze at apple ple, apple dumpling, apple fritters, apple butter, apple turnover or baked apple. If you impale a small, hard apple on the point of a sharp- ened switch, you ean throw It a tremendous distance. If you are playing “war” and the apple hits the enemy on the head, it is not difficult for him to simulate a corpse on Should Wife Tell Shame of Her Love? CHICAGO, Sept. 30.—Neilie Higge is on trial here for the murder of man hated efter ruining the fife of the man ehe loved! She's a winsome little thing, Ie this girl wife ‘round who slim, white throat the law is trying to twist a hangman's rope. Through the heavy network of her cell two great, brown eyes look ed out, gentle as the ey of a fawn, and even though the shadow of fear lurks in them now, they are soft as the eyes of her own baby Tells Story of Her Crime Nellie Higgs is now less than 30, but she’s been a wife for 13 years and a mother for two vears. “I've been thinking a lot since that night last May when something here at my heart snapped and I shot my life,” she said “I was never much given to think- ing before 1 was the kind’ of girl, who never knew good from bad. They brought me up that way at home I was married at 17, and I never had any beaux, never kept company with any one but the man I mar. ried, and he's 11 years older than I am. “Then I met William Willis, He was our neighbor out at Chicago Heights “His wife and | were friends and our children played together. “He paid me lots of attention, and I suppose I rather liked ft, so few men had ever noticed me, and I didn't know any better. I didn't know the ways of men, and I let him go on giving me presents and being nice to me. “Any one would have known that he meant evi! all the time, But, you see, | had been brought fully, and | didn’t “They may hang me for it—take me away from my little boy! WHAT A PRICE TO PAY FOR IGNOR ANCE! Couldn't Tell Husband “| should have told my husband, but men are so terrible about those | things. | “They forget that women are | human, that the things that tempt men tempt us; they forget we have bodies, as well as souls, and that a woman may want to find something more in life than just washing dishes and baking bread, “So T kept still, but my husband found it out anyway “Then he divorced me and took my little boy away. Willis was mar- ried, and he couldn't marry me even {f I'd let him, so I didn’t know how to straighten things out Then She Killed Him “Then, that night last May, on an Minois Central train—Willis was a conductor, you know—something went wrong in my head. I killed Willis. “The wrong he did me was a thousand times greater than mur der, but the world does not think that way, and I am branded as a murderess.” LINDER KILLED BERLIN, Sept. 30.—Via Rome.) —Max Linder, the world’s most famous cinematograph artist, has been killed in the battle of the Aisne, it was announced today, William Willis, the man who ruined | ‘innocent | A the battle WRECKS LIFE OF KILLS FOR HATE MAN SHE LOVED | | | D THERE WAS NO OFFICIAL IN- formation today which could be In- terpreted as furnishing a basis for reports of the retreat of the Ger man right In France, On the contrary, the allies’ new battle lines announced by the |French government with unusual | frankness, indicated some gains by the Germans. Last week Peronne and Lassigny | were in the allies’ possession. They lreached the points closest to the |}German main defense that the |Franco-British forces had taken since the beginning of the battle of the Aisne, The new disposition of the battle front restores Lassigny to the Germans and moves the al- lles ten miles back of Perrone, be- tween Combi and Albert. This rearrangement shows that the Germans still retain consider. able power. THE GERMAN WING COULD | | force was expected, however; | e , | complete as possible. ——— eee AST EDITION WEATHER FORECAST—Maybe It will rain tonight and tomorrow, and then, it might not. The w. says probably fair r RKET OUR FRUIT || | field. This was our favorite game in green-apple time. 1 do not now approve of the practice, however. se eee Much as | have always admired the apple, | never knew what a perfect apple was until | saw a Wenatchee apple. Oddly enough, | saw it in one of the great public markets in London, My wife and | were shopping. A sign said: “Wenatchee apples, 1d.” “1d” means one penny, or two cents In our money. We bought some. We didn't even know then in what part of the world Wenatchee was. This “Buy a box of Washington apples” movement seems to me to be economically sound. The grower gets only a small part of your money, You get the apples at a low figure. They are good apples—none better. You eat ‘em and get.fat. The grower, saved from financial disaster, continues to flourish, and can afford to buy shoes for his children at your shoe store, #0 that you can afford to buy more apples and get fatter. Get out your cook book and find out how many inexpensive appetizing dishes can ve prepared in which apples are an im- portant ingredient. The trustees of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce yeater- day adopted a resolution to help the apple growers of the state by urging dealers and the public to “Buy a box of Washington appl and BUY IT NOW.” REPORT WING BEATEN BACK PAR Sept. 30.—That northeast of here was already In progress was Inferred today from an ment Tithe eirecth 9: ee aes Gen. D’Amade, attacking the win: aid to have been he ba reinforced, and was throwing every available man-against the Ger- mane’ line. ss Experts have already predicted that such a retirement would force a retreat by the entire German line to entrenchments said to be already | prepared between the Scheidt andthe Meuse. No rout of the kaiser’s it was taken fro granted that they vet es would draw off in good order. the allies were trying to split Gen. Von Kluck’s and armies apart so as to make the disorganization as WHOLE ARMY IS SWEPT BACK LONDON, Sept. 30.—At right, center and left, the the Germa ickward in France, according to all here from the western fighting zone. Experts predict the invaders will have been forced entirely from France by the time the allies’ movements are completed, They thought the battle of the Aisne was nearly ended. In the meantime, the Germans evidently were preparing for a su- Nies are driving iccounts received | preme effort to take Antwerp that they might have that outlet to the North sea. ‘GERMANS BOMBARD ANTWERP ANTWERP, Sept. 30—Germany'’s long range bombardment of Antwerp’s forts was abating, the war office announced this afternoon. To the Teutonic fire concentrated on them for hours, the Vaelhem | and Woevre forts were said to have replied so accurately that they finally | dismounted two of the German guns, whereupon the shelling began | abruptly to lag. | It was not expected the attack would be vigorously resumed until | the arrival of the Germans’ long range mortars. It is believed the kaiser has determined upon the capture of Ant | werp for use as a base for a Zeppelin attack on the British is FALL OF KIAOCHAU IS NEAR PEKIN, Sept. 30.—The Ger- Japanese aviators were sald mans’ Kiaochau fortifications’ to be giving the gunners their imminent today, the range legation here an- nounced. Japanese and British The expectation was that the German warships would at- guns were said already to have silenced the outer chain of land tempt to run the blockade of forts. The sea bombardment the port, and a squadron of continued and two of the har- Japanese and British battle- bor forts had been put out of ships and cruisers was waiting for them. commission. | ADDITIONAL WAR NEWS ON PAGE 2 DAILY ANALYSIS OF WAR NEW Jonly be routed at this time by the|situation is by no means satisfac- |appearance of strong Franco-Brit-| tory from the Slav standpoint. lish reinforcements, and such rein-| The Germans have penetrated forcements probably would have to| Into Russia toward the Nieman be supplied by the British. river 50 miles, maintaining them: Most of the British troops sent | Selves in force on the Russian side to France after the arrival of the|of the entire Russo-German fron first expeditionary force must have | tler. been used to make up losses and|_ Under these circumstances, Gen. keep the original corps up to full| Rennenkampf’s promise to Rus- strength. n soldiers that they should It is not likely that the eqoone | srend Chmetmne In Berlin was pre- The ne ie More conuntinacae Intense cold is almost constant, trained colonials and home terri.| the thermometer frequently drop. torials, corresponding to our na-|f."9 pees, bagi ~ Sie district tional guard, should soon be ready | t2roudh Whe je Russians must for the field pass to reach Berlin. Snowstorms } |and fog are sure to constitute fur. ther obstacles. DESPITE THE OPTIMISM OF !n short, a march, In the dead of Russian statements concerning the cy goer czar’s = operations ainst Ger-| cali for it superhuman quail. jmany's East Prussian army, the|ties on the soldiers’ part, tr