The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 7, 1914, Page 1

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JOE TINKER, manager of the Chicago Federal league club, has doped out the world’s series for Star readers. Tinker has written two articles. The first appears on today’s sport page. The second follows tomorrow. Tinker is a close student o: the game and is recognized as one of baseball’s leading authorities. Fans will find tomorrow’s chapter intensely interesting, for it is written around Bill James, the young giant so well remembered as a pitcher for the 1912 championship Seattle team. Joe says “Big Bill” won't be able to work with the same effectiveness as he did in the National league race. He brings to light a startling fact to bear out this prediction. s readers with the best world’s series stories ever published in Seattle. Remember that. The Star is furnishing The Tinker feature is only one of them. This splendid service will continue throughout the seri: . You can’t afford to miss The Star if you're interested in the big games. played. Watch for The Star world’s series extras, beginning Friday. (\°<| TheSeattle Star re | The Bc Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News | “Cale Dornick offers for sale | cheap a bath tub, havin’ no use for th’ same.” Also, The Star will give you positively the first complete account of each game a AST EDITION WEATHER FORECAST — F, light wings Sounds like a doesn’t it? \ He tonight and Thursday; 7 ter! VOL UME NO, 192, SEATTLE, WA H,, WEDN DAY, OCTOBER 7 1914 ONE CENT ‘orning, mostly spring morning TRAINS Ws STAN AND be : BEGIN GREAT STORY, “SHOOT THE SPY,” TODAY!} a=a3¢e¢ee SazeC¢e s2s<e<ee WOMAN SHOOTS INTRUDER IN HOME | GIRLS ON x y (HERE'S A FINE SORT OF| “ GEE ine orice VICTIM IS DYING AT HOSPITAL OUTER | on the Seattle police Antone Duddilas, 35, is dying in the city hospital as a result of a gunshot wound F. in the head inflicted by Mrs. Barbara Lukosky, a 22-year-old Russian woman at 1212 He is a policeman of the old schoo! He Is a relic . ’ of the days of brute force. He still Believes the way for a Ninth av. S., shortly after 12 o’clock today. The woman cannot speak English, and iceman to enforce the law |s to use his fist and his “bi: “ ao ‘ 4 ; TU Maes loot eho eee thet eos te new epirit of me until an interpreter is obtained, the police cannot get the woman’s version of the shoot- Lae Co ing. No witnesses could be found. Attracted by the shot, neighbors rushed to the house. The woman gave up without| PHILLIPS SHOULD BE FIRED. Phillips stands convicted in the two letters which follow. | a struggle. A hurried investigation by the police led to the theory that Duddilas had attempted to force his way into the house, and the woman used her gun. H. Evans, a painting contractor living at 124 Howard av. N. some time ago filed the letter printed herewith with Attor ney Olson, Lyon building. Olson complained to the police A | authoriti but accomplished nothing. A few days ago The Star printed another letter—a letter 1 from A. Anitrius. Evans saw it, and sent his letter to The ERE |s what Evans says in his complaint. H “1 left home at 10:30 p. m. and went to the King st. station to meet a friend of mine coming from New York. My friend did not come in on the train, so | left the sta Amounted to $2,000 in 1914. Hamilton asked for | Knudsen sald, “Me, too. | ed by the Hamilton Knudsen com Girls, be sane and simple in Star. It bitterly condemns Officer 106, who is F. J. Phillips. | bination in ae pone a auto po B Karl H. V Vo Wi ur re oe tne beard teens 0 ers 0 Senate’: for next year. This tem y ‘on Wiegand — hy BERLIN (By Wireless” |via Sayville), Oct. 7.—The” of education is upon you. The board is not 00 and But they ntirely pleased in which you ‘Shoot the Spy’ White th majerity of tion at about midnight to take a walk while | waited for the next | finaity agreed to make it $32,500. dongs ‘German capture of F . ” ry e train, at 1:15 a. m. : - girls,” remarks the “Seattic pyr, down Second av. and stapped at Second and eee, allowed £98,000 for the The Amazing N TUTE of aM ‘ager Sorel dBi he not . a sare grlamiy and appropriately Washington et. where two policemen were treating pe: sioner’s department. This ts an in me Germae Secret Est Services Tells How || sf _ “are girlishly and bapa: brutally, One who was the worst offende Officer 106. io a of $18,000 oa ror | ; bi Mh peti : Ps ne seeinins hana thie “WHILE STANDING THERE | SAW HIM (OFFICER 106) reane 000 « fen ; es eae. , KICK” SEVERAL PEOPLE GOING BY-AND°GAW HIM HET ” _ vf Tee are noe to be Wamed, sis, A YOUNG MAN ON THE SIDE OF THE FACE. This young set ip’ for ‘wishing to make yourselves at- man came over to where | wi anding and asked me what Malte: i. fed that ‘th : tractive. For this the board does F thought of that. was ‘ This ‘ { s bot condema you “i replied, “You must have done something PR a Ey one ee eee > seees ae | Ne OF forts was Ge And, goodness knows, most of “He said, ‘No, | haven't done anything at all, but | got his — same Mage in Feaneyivania. His story lacks literary qualities, but it | PTORTESS. ‘| tractingly pretty, no number and | am going to follow him.’ t The request of T. Brad. teresting and first-hand information regarding the early devel- * rh gh gg See * “| ald, ‘Don't you do it. You will get arrested ley, representing the Building Sa Mey Sienre my weg 2 Antwerp’s early fall was 4 greatest chapters Managers’ association, that the day, wor it . county commissioners fix a flat png rate of 8 mills for tax purposes | if in 1915, and to proportion the | i yet published about the present conflict if yoo aren't cireulation departmer DON'T WANT TO MISS A “Nevertheless, he followed the policeman on the other side of the street. | walked up the street to what would hap- pen to this young man. The two policemen saw me and came over to where | was standing (this was in the middie Simple Dress Prettiest / But, mark this, in the opinion of the board, you gain rather than lose by dressing sanely and simply declared a certainty. The German right Wing's sue | cesses in France were said to be uninterrupted, and the allies were ~ CHAPTER OF THIS STORY, “we | For, remarks the official pro- of the block between Second and Third on Washington st., on | necessary expenditures accord. - PART I | reported falling back nouncement, “It is noticed that the the south side of the street). Both of them grabbed me by ingly, was greeted by uproar- ROME, Oct. 7.—Mohamme- | ° | At several other points, it , the shoul and asked me | we girl who is suitably dressed is usu- ally in earnest as to her work and récetves the right kind of admira- tion.” A committee of women teachers representing the high schools has % and felt through my pocke what | was doing down there and what | wae following them for. lous silence this morning. (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) I was born at Insterberg in East Prussia. My father had] served in the Franco-Prussian war and received a medal of the second class for bravery. He was wounded twice Although very proud of his own military record he op- dane are maseacring Christians in Albania, according to a news | agency dispatch received h from Athens today. The slaughter was said to the throne- announced, the Franco-British re sistance was weakening. It was said the fighting was ex- traordinarily savage. In the eastern field of war, it That would have meant the cut-| ting out of many salary grabbers on the county payroll, and would] eliminate many political ward heel-| And, of course. Commissioners] “1 said, ‘I am not following you; | am just looking.’ “THEN OFFICER 106 SWORE AT ME PROFANELY, AND SAID, ‘You —— ——, YOU ——, | WILL TEACH YOU meng have begun with was asserted that the Germans been turning this matter of dress TO FOLLOW A POLICEMAN,’ AND KICKED ME SEVERAL or " = umption by Essad Pasha }posed militarism and I believe held strong socialistic tend-| Were on the offensive along their over in their minds, and they have TIMES IN MY BACK. | HAVE THE MARKS YET. THEN | Hamit pF ape Knudsen couldn't) prince Mehmed. That lencies before his death. Mother hated warfare 1 desired | entire front, and an immense bate iscussed the question with the} HE HIT ME BEHIND THE EAR. hink of I : : hea baacee ciel at, Aiuardd ath a warfare and desired | te. erpected . senior girls. “The other officer sald, ‘We will pull him in.’ | rs’ pensions, however,! a5 news here. when I was a child that we go to the United States that I aia ’ fi Seniors Are be . “Then they called the patrol wagon and brought me to | 4 from $45,000 to} An immediate investigation was|and my older brother might not have to serve ne Now, freshmen are kids, really the police station with seven or eight other people who were | begun by the Rome government Until I was 15 we lived at Insterberg, which is all 300 000 GERMANS . and their judgment has no weight taken from a gambling joint, and they made a charge against That was the only substantial! and, i¢ the reports were confirmed, |; mae 1a ries, eagannes abcd ugcen 9 Sophomores are Irresponsible and me of disorderly conduct. | was held until about 2:30 a. m., decrease in the budget approved): was thought an Itallan expedi. City with a large trade, and is located in Eastern Prussia, on FALL DURING WAR juniors are irresponsible. But peti my wife Leited me out. by Hamilton and Knudsen. |tlon would be sent to the scene of the Preget river. I was educated there. 1 suppose the loca- seniors! Seniors are sane and by 7. R | HAD BEEN IN JAIL A HALF HOUR, THEY Here and there several minor|the patchery tion of the city had much to do with my life. It is n ROME, Oct. 7.—German casual AFTE i no means simple, however simply | BROUGHT THE YOUNG MAN IN WHO HAD SPOKEN TO decreases from the estimates were : ties in the war thus far were Russian border, and what Tongues.” Most of the merchants speak German, Bohemian and many speak French in we Cardinal Ferrata, new papal sec call “The Land ss. retary of state at Rome, so il! his 500 was allow- attendants are alarmed they may dress, Seniors are dig-| nified and decorovs. Seniors, stag-| gering under the weight of the ex perience and erudition which took | 18 summers to accumulate, are made, but these were more than | balanced by tncrea An increase of ME ON THE STREET. HE WAS DIRTY AND SANK TO THE FLOOR AND DIDN'T MOVE AFTERWARD. “1 had not been drinking. | never get drunk and was cer- tainly perfectly sober when arrested.” placed today at 300,000, it was stat- ed in a message received here from Berlin. This includes killed and wounded only, and not prigome | ers taken by the enemy. p Polish, Russian, Thursday, Oct. 8, from 9 a. m. Jones’ friends are silent. THEY CAN'T! (Continued on Page 4 very, very wise. “adh slo Pia daa 3eing a border city we heard much of the “terror of the e ‘Phe teachers talked tt over with HIS is what A, Anitrius said in a letter to The Star: Russ,” which nation we hated as children. The fear of Rus GERMANS STILL ACT a the seniors, and then laid cown) “Editor The Star: Saturday night, about 11 o'clock, sia always was with us and from our cribs we were taught a the following dress regulations, Policeman No. 106 knocked a man down and kicked him, that some day og. te Eact “ : } which the Bulletin prints apparently for no offense, as the man was talking quietly to jthat some day we mu t them. Each rumor of intrigue) QN THE OFFENSIVE jam ea, another man. Seeing this, | remarked to a couple of friends, and plotting was brought ho me to us strongly I was inter- PARIS, Oct. 7.—In th to tht occasion, inronspleao rat ‘It looks like going back to savagery.’ ested in intrigue from the time I can remember and we chil-| ing zone northeast and ye 4 eater, simple as to trimming am: “THE POLICEMAN, HEARING WHAT | SAID, PUSHED fren played “Russ: oy or “Ruplistanv® tur , o- ve as to material. € playe NUSSIaN Spy nghish spy” for our games Paris neither side has gained a 4 ro middy blouses ME IN THE HEAD, AND KICKED ME IN THE RIBS, This eth } 4 a ak ails, or Peter cccurred on Washington st | t the death of my father we went to make our home ecisive advantage. The Ger- “1 went to report this to the chief, but he was not in. The pay ICALLY, Senator W. LORIMER J near Dusseldorf, with my mother’s brother, and there mother etait ee captain told me to see the civil service commissioner. | have | YPOCRITICALLY, Senato: R S Jones €X=| died while I was away in school at Paris It is denied at headquarters j ‘euf low Inthe har ea not been able to reach OO TT adie ec deaalnetaindisiche. ti | claims he did not vote to seat Senator Stephenson of| My uncle was a man of some wealth, dealing in laces,| that they had made any impor. ‘over two inches belo re ea , ) ie neck tn front. The sleeves should adie Pree iy tie ‘Policeman No. 106 comsvse tren the | Wisconsin, charged with buying his seat in the senate jand for two summers I went through the country, in Holland we in ate eott foes a ies a i, ig those who are recorded as “not voting” one way| Work: I received, in due time, the order to serve my time in| breaktthelr line “ ' Oe pln alee fallen ll *- ; Was among ” ie Ly «? |the army ’y great good fortune, as then I thought, the! No details have been received f not be worm, te) WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE ® or the other. See Congressional Record, volume 48, page 4009.! Oberlieutenant to whom I reported considered me undersized, Concerning the progress of, events suggested wa desirable hut off ete : F , o-visinity ofitaia Bs gechet be provieed for lunch monéy File rec caa btls bet But Senator Jones DID vote to seat William Lorimer) although I was of military height, but light ade anomed te ee oe at ae em. and Siet av. N. & aloo | of Illinois, whose crooked political operations were far worse He was impatient, and spoke sharply. My replies to his nonveshasin bay N. i ie at meet ttn jand more notorious than Stephenson's. Why doesn’t Jones | ‘NCS! “ah “i - bee As ude 4 cs ie = = aaah medenhy ey in y atne at pe Pe - . . : seemec Oo interes um nstead of speaking sha ) oO 2/° e 8 jes le of ¢ unica. HEAR GRIFFITHS mt. Inciting .[aureiniiny ot say something about that vote? Jones is silent. The standpat|*CC™4 t©_ interest him. Instead of speaking sharply to me | fit {he allies’ line o event them (Continued on page 2.) |organs are silent. ‘ . BUY TICKETS: DEFEND JONES’ VOTE ON LORIMER BECAUSE THEY CAN'T DEFEND LORIMER. silent on Jones’ vote in favor of Judge Arch ON HUMPHREY! cuina pan ewves uP And they're DAILY ANALYSIS OF WAR NEWS| oO was ved ed and kicked o7 fo , ‘1 Wai know why Congressman , eileen PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 7. bald, who was impeac hed Aaethe nig ut ¢ Bane for life f rl HAmphrépeis a public enemy? er of Lum, Tlekets for the first two games (trading court decisions for coal stock and other considerations Here's our chance to leasn wovernment tpess in the of the world’s series here be The vote came up on January 13, 1913, on the question| THE CRITICAL POSITION IN{panied by motor car artillery. | line. fet of *Polie Griffiths, progrem | Tape ¢ case, and| tween the Boston Braves and (that Judge Archbald “be forever disqualified from holding | Which the German western battle) This artillery, arecent German in-| The leaders who, in our civil pit ge. candidate for congress, Will | or whon been| the Phillies were put on sale |. ring any office of honor, trust, or profit under the | {Mt will find itself If the allies | vention, enables heavy guns to|war, revolutionized cavalry tactics, | tomorrow noon at the Good searching veral days,| at 9 a. m and enjoying a ’ ’ i \€| succeed in massing troops heavily keep pace with cavairy for the first | showed how disconcerting a rapidly ss cafeteria " nto the station to Despite an intermittent driz- United States. on the Franco-Belgian frontier was time in the history of warfare, moving raiding body can be to a . ) + Griffiths se gro up Hum do surrer himself, on| zle, more than 3,000 boys and | And Jones shamelessly voted against that resolution| indicated today by the appearance By turning the cannon loose|far greater number of less mobile ey's record against labor. Ot tie att men remained In fine all night. | x F A CROOKED JUD | of a large body of the kaiser's cav- before cavalry advances en masse, | troops held to fixed bases. inst humanity, against the best He refused to talh It was estimated that three AND IN FAVOR iO IR 1 ie = ge 1447 |alry near Lille, and the increased the horsemen’s offensive power is| The addition of equally mobile interests of . Seattle anda Kitsap tHe wag booked on-an open! quarters of those waiting to | see the Congressional Record, volume 49, page 1447 jviolence of the Teutonic attack greatly increased artillery must enormously have Ine county. harge buy tickets were bona fide fans | That's Jones’ record on three political erooks. He favor-| along the river Oise. The degree of efficiency shown| creased this power. ax and the rest agents for scalp. led two of them. He didn’t vote at all on the third Both these things have the same by these two opposite arms of the! The Germans at Lille, therefore, ers. Each person was entitled ‘ and slanations “ i purpose—prevention of a Franco- service, used in combination, will| though they cannot inflict anythin | egEORGE LOSES ROLL CHUGBIKES SMASH to purchase two tickets. And for all his WHOS 808 explanations, the fact remains, | British northern concentration, or | determine the effectiveness of the| resembling a crushing defeat = Two motorcycles, traveling Mamie McGee and “|nevertheless, as the New York Survey said, that Jones pri-|of an eastward movement by the German resistance to the allies'|the allies. may seriously interfere | George Mann, 921 Northlake, high speed, crashed nes Howell Olive Ernest stood in line all |yately opposed Mrs. Woodrow Wilson's comprehensive bill) allies to sever the German line of northern maneuvering. with the development of the late for @ companion last night, and 19th ay. today, and A. Lee night. This morning the male to wipe out the alley slums in Washington, D. C., and conse- | communteation ; on . UNLIKELY, HOWEVER, ter's northern offensive opera. found him. Both had a thirst.| went to the elty hospital, su fans gave way and permitted | “ ‘Fe bi 7 | at the allies are taking any seri-| tions, and if the allies’ line is thin hey drank, George woke up on a! with bad cuts and bruise quently a “makeshift” bill had to be rushed through on the| tHe GERMAN CAVALRYMEN ous risk of being flanked at the| it may even be forced back a few miles from Arras. 4 the girls to go ahead when the | sale of tickets began day of her death. near Lille undoubtedly are accom: | northern extremity of their battle! “WE GIVE HIM HONOR, QUITE SINCERE--- THE LAD WHO TWIRLS THE LITTLE SPHERE---BUT GREATER STILL HIS GLORY GROWS, THE GUY WHO SLAMS IT ON THE NOSE” Whence come these stirring lines? Ah, we see you remember. Yes, they're from the pen of Berton Braley. And under what conditions did he write them? That's right—at the front in the world's series last year. Everybcdy recalls how the famous Brainy wrote the story of each of the memcrable struggles in rhyme, while the battles were in progress, and that he sent the same by wire to The Star. BRALEY 1S GOING TO DO IT AGAIN FOR THE STAR THIS YEAR, Also there will be at the front for The Star HUGH FULLERTON, the ine ventor of “inside baseball.” Likewise HAL SHERIDAN, and a staff-of experienced baseball writers, The Star's service on the world series games will be as good this year as it was last year, Which means that it will be the best carried by any newspaper 7 yadly injure Prcant lot, minus $150 Belden wasn't jured

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