The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 24, 1914, Page 1

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AAR ARRRARAR AAR RARARARAR RA RA RAPA RADA A: NINE | OUT OF TEN OIL COMPANIES ARE FAKES; STEER CLEAR OF “WILD CATTERS”! SEATTLE BOY AT WIRELESS IS} HERO OF SAN FRANCISCO WRECK The Se attle Star [Home |LOSES HIS WEE OF ni oe Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News aon RT H 4 ed night and Wednesday cloudy, prob- What’s the Matter, Gill? WHEN SHIP SINKS Seven members of the council voted Monday for the bill providing $10,000 to He the city light service to the Duwamish Francisco was a Seattle boy, Loren A. Lovejoy, who valley. Two voted against it. Today Mayor Gill declares he will fire any one in the city light department, from common laborer eet ne an eS a cael Ge up to superintendent, who shall as much as take a plier into the valley to carry out the expressed will of the council. The mayor Gorn at Hillsdale, Kan., June 27, 1991. He grew up iil knows his veto will od overriden by. the council. So he has resorted to the Big Stick. this ity. Later, his parents separated and his father, There seems to an unreasoning fury in the mayor’s opposition to the council’s plans, and he thunders forth in maniacal ee Se cauak: sau ceuaaitar eet Yaar ae exaggerat io nto show some cause for it. There should be no extensions outside the city, he says, because 50,000 people in the A brother, Loum colioed Gy ts lone Heney city good clamoring for service and cannot get it rior Co, The Star broke:the news of the boy a ifty thousand people! One of every six people living in the city limits! The mayor convicts himself by the grossness of xaggera’ arias nal erage i j The mayor further rants about spending $10,000 when the city is recovering from sae stringency! That 8 ita bunk. That peat: is cro to raise ming pt opr geome Rearrange: i/o a PerThe Seattle It is = from oat ee of 74 pa plant pow — is to increase = ag bate raiere: 4 is infinitestimally small at all events. ing out the final ys “Goodbye. The Hanalei 0 " anh , kc With Ss d th in- " Boa Electric Ae por rand = — . obi _ on at ield for investmen y shouldn’t the city? Many residents in the valley are with- ing_paneengers. Lovejoy fone big torige fs Nrack al fou have a right to veto the council bill, Mr. Mayor. BUT DON’T GET DRUNK WITH YOUR POW ER. Your threats to fi ordinate wlio canvies Seen ar ceca tice tent see toga te < out the council’s will, should the bill be passed over your veto, are unworthy. Don’t set yourself up a a little tin god. GO SLOW, MR. MAYOR. DONT SLIP new Gil DONT LET HI ero.D Gu water OO AND BIGOTED OPPOSITION TO MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP. You have done well as the the waves when the house was capsized by a huge piece of wreckage in the surf. Operator Swensen lived in Astoria. 4 en Gate life saving station, abam SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 24. | AMERICAN ACTRESS RAISING RED CROSS FUNDS FOR ACTOR- SOLDIERS IN EUROPE —Probably 40 lives have been lost in the wreck of the steam schooner Hanalei on Duxbury reef, outside the Golden Gai according to telephone advi from the doned the effort after Wireless Op- erator Lovejoy on the Hanalef ha@ ticked out: “Good-bye. The Hale alet is breaking up.” Watch the Surf All along the beach life savers: Jand hundreds of persons | Bolinas scoured the shore all nigi REPORT RAINBOW scanning the waves for the sign PORTLAND, Nov. 24. reached shore on pieces of [that another piece of human wreckage. |sam was fighting for land and One by one they struggled [through the breakers : activities of the Can: . through the surf until shortly By sunup nearly a score of navy, consisting of th ' after dawn, when the terrific {passengers and crew had rej a 3 . boat Rainbow, has H m poundi the waves broke |shore on rafts and spars. ee ERAS ee | ; \ aboard the Hanalei as paseen- bodies were pulled out of gere and crew. ter. Ticks Out “Good-bye” Others were dead when All night long the life saving| bodies touched the beach. crews from the vicinity fought to Rr Shore and Die save those on the wrecked ship. The Hanalei went on the ~ ~up the: craft. to pieces. Fifty-eight had been | vived and died on the shore. T and Nurenberg off the Ore. in comet and escaped, ter a large number of her Speaking in low, soft tones, crew had been wounesd, Mrs. Alice M, Horton, widow of bo trata ft #. and ehe _Some were too-tar gone.tod information, she met the } only through the rel G Willlam = Horton, — whi ment of the French crulee: shot ra and killed pn ese. Lines from a huge mortar rushed| reef at noon yesterday. Monteaim. ber 7 last by James Evans, a by automobile from San Francisco Shortly before midnight she By Fred L. Boalt peng nage ws te Ger. deputy game warden, Tuesday Were chet again aad again, but not pec nse net heat M how TENINO, Nov. 24-—All Thurston ‘county, It seems, is en route to- man fire that the Rainbow | one landed on the vessel in such a e tig! i ou ‘A v4 was dieabled, the Montcaim || {2ld,the story of the tragedy way as to ald ’ day, by auto and horse-drawn vehicle, to the scene of the reported oll, ike near here. Early trains brought hundreds from Tacoma, to the jury in Judge Mackin- tosh’s court. Evans is on Finally Capt. Nelson, of the Gold- efi ale on Page 6.) being compelled to tow her into the Canadian naval in the Crescent company, which owns the well. base at Eequimait. Ge ria ta: This afternoon it was to be uncapped. She. fe seld.to be in dry Facing the man who is accused This afternoon the secret will be out. dock there now undergoing =f! or murdering her husband, the| Honestly, Tenino compels my respect and admiration. | Baty yp Peongetloec Brg ont Shine: weawer dcasesty: aittwed ‘hort In a few hours the residents of Tenino will know for certain—what|| 1 Mer crow wounded, are ia Ul ves to dwell upon him FISHERMAN IS they have wanted to know for yeare—whether or not they are Hving | There was no bitterness in her above an oc of olf, 7 food strict censorship To Tenino it mal the story was || Words, though they were of the all the difference In the world—the difference |] (iver made public most damaging nature to Evans. between affiuence and poverty. Dressed in somber black Mt But Tenino is cool about It. Cool and canny. Tenino is the wei tle widow told how tragedy enter catter’s despair. ed their little home on the very | ee day they had begun to live on the ISLAND HAN / visitor little ranch at Bartram station, Rubbed at rort The body of a man believed to Wife a College Graduate By lucky chance | wi BS a ‘ They wer emarried in 1904, inj The letective department at) “4 jat the home of J. B. Taylor, a fa New York, lived in the big city for} noon Tuesday, after Investigation | be Dave Evans, who lived at the led. but had not |mer near here, yesterday, veal L) : : | which failed to reve: otiv Kenneth hotel, was found on tha|been living with his wife, who : h failed to reveal a motive for four men called. They came in a They lived here abc ,|murder, came to the conclusion Fort, Lawton reserve tiy one of thei s Univeseny: of Colac graduate, | automobile. when they bought the ranch that William Dobson, a fisherman, soldiers at 4 a. m. Tuesday, There} for the past three years. | , On October 7 they took up thetr| Who died Monday night after hav-| was a bullet wound in the man’s} He had been working in | They brought into the pe LONDON, Noe B4—Patnette | permanent home at the rence, apajiag. Seen found severed with abdomen, and the condition of the| Palouse country last summer LC | comfortable home of Farmer Taylor! stories of the sufferings of jat 11 o'clock the same morning| ruises, in his Harbor Island shack, body indicated he hed been shot/early this ‘fall as a harvest ‘aaa a whiff of urban elegance. They! Beigium's famine victims were | her husband was shot had been injured accidentally CHICAGO, Nov. 24.—The acto: and. killed, then robbed. He - owned. land ;10 : Colors | | telegraphed to the Belgi oh || The police at first thought he G T-! ‘The case was reported to the po-|has been away from that state for - smoked four-bit cigars. And they| telegraphed to the Beigian re She declared Evans shot her| soldier and the Red . C. B he | some ti | lief commission here today by | husband after a quarrel, when By-|%®d been beaten to death. It de Toss actress| lice by Lieut F. C. Endicott, the | some time. | talked with easy urbanity of hun-| the New York Christian Her aus was ordered off the premises,| Yeloped that he had been on a pro] have found a staunch friend in) 4ay, chief of the fort Heading towards Seattle, Evaas dreds of acres, thousands of dollars| ms peprenentaiive ta Rete |oe Sd boremieet|ionged drunk Mias Rita Stanwood, a young act.| The body was found, face down,|met & man named J. W. Young a] : We it # sh f stock | dam. » Bn had been hunt: “it is believed he may have been . on a road leading from the row of} Lynd, Wash., Sunday, and, togeth= | Dear Cynthia Grey: We are | and millions of shares of stock In At Antwerp,” be said, telling.of| © ee" | struck by a wagon or auto and had|'e®* Who would now be with the) main buildings to the outer gate.jer, they came to Seattle Sunday, two sisters. | am 23 and my | the companies they proposed tO wit he saw ona visit to the |dragged himself to his cabin | Red Cross in France if a theatrical| Just how the man happened to be/| registering at the Kenneth hotels sister is 19. | have been mar- | Promote. stricken region to ald in the di It ie thought he had been iying| contract did fot detain her in| Within the fort's enclosure at that) Young says that Monday niga ried and was left a widow, | y held land, they said, many |trinution of supplies, “1,000 scanti |in his shack, injured, for three or| 4 merte: hour, ‘the police are at a loss. to) they ‘were, both “rinking, oa yo from Tenino. hat theyliy ciad women stood in the snow "our days. " * understand, ably, and Evans finally started out ~ J with a little girl. My sister | ed was land—only a little land, | awaiting food | A bird and a dog, which he kept | Miss Stanwood has issued a gen Soldiers are helping the police | himself searching for a bit of night | 4 ee ee See mies [ees nore naer Tenine At Malines hunger was so acute pets, were found dead, indicat-|eral appeal to American. actors to|#cour the woods near the fort in life. | and keep baby with us, so it was necessary, they explained, that old men and women clawed | ¢ they had been without food for| raise a Red Cross fund to b j{hope that the murderer may be Hear Five Shots started to work as aman four |enat they be able to say In thelr our hands ravenously as we passed | Niaal: date. | © be used) found hiding in the brush. Every| At 11 o'clock Monday night, at avid and boc mare it prospectuses that they held acreage | out rations to them, compelling us | exolustvely for the benefit of act-|thoroughfare leading from the fort|cording to Private Fellows at the ~ 3 getting along fine. We have | in “the Tenino field.” to use antiseptica to gua inat . ors fighting in Buropean armites,|is being closely guarded fort, and Mrs. Chapman, who owns ; our little home and baby, and if Fail weld Tense bo land! intection.” neptica to guard againat | WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.—A AL PAL ZER CANCELS and actresses working under tho| Evans was 39. On his body wasja store near the fort, they heard t It Is 80 pleasant, but | have 1 German alrehip dropped a bomb | Red Cross flag. Except when she's| discovered a draft on the Dexter] five shots. Will H. Parry was @ to them, they would g hich exploded f heard If a woman was caught | O69 shares of stock and a handsome| Women organize to support can-| Which exploded in front of the TACOMA, Nov. 24.—Bill Fagen,| playing the role of the society. | Horton bank for $150 visitor with Lieut. Endicott at the © ; posing as a man it would go |p on ig didacy of Mra, Nellie M. Burnside, American consulate in War- | Australian heavywelght, will be! sleuth in “Under Cover,” Miss Stan He wore two pairs of trousers.|fort and did not leave till about | 4 hard with her. Now, please “That,” said Taylor, “sounds good school board candidate. saw, breaking the glass in the |seen here Thursday night in a| wood ts giving all her time to the) A $10 gold piece dropped to the | midnight tell me if they can'do anything. | 6. me. and when will you start | office windows and killing and | four-round bout with Joe Bonds,| organization of the actors’ Red/ ground when the body was discov Had Evans’ body been there at 1am afraid my sister will hear | {9 0. On en County charity office moves to| Injuring several persons in the instead of Al Palzer, who Was) Cross fund, ever by Evan Evans, a cook for|the time Parry would have seen It, It and she Is not very strong. rilting for 301 Central building. | etreet taken suddenly ill of malaria, _Company B_ he says. A GIRL-MAN. The visitors laughed indulgently. be oP ot te AA i all eure,” sald A—There Is a law which forbids women to appear In public In men’s apparel; but since you have taken this way WHEN A MAN’S MARRIED (Continued on Page 2.) ey to solve your problem, and : have played the part of a man the attire of your sex. ense of duty rather Regardless of man-made [ Tom, YOU KNOW TODAY IS WHY (TS A SEWING TALE. a4 a rey ye NOW AREN'T You ASHAMED OF < laws, | admire your courage, } YOUR BIRTHDAY. COME IN IT 15 NOT OWN USEFUL puss Baty Sev anea. =| Nouesetr, when | WANTED TWe do not believe the court would and your true mother instinct THE OTHER ROOM FOR A BUT, ORNAMENTAL AS vert, WAT $2088 MONEN TO BUY YOU A BIRTHDAY deal harshly with you, If your that bids you walk through MINUTE, | HAVE A LITTLE true identity were discovered, fire, if nec ry, to keep your | | SURPRISE FoR you would be required to don babe, and h you succes | 1 = You The War Situation FRANCE AND BELGIUM—German attack stiffened all along the line; British warships bombarded Zeebrugge and Lombaertsyde; French claimed gains in Argonnes. RUSBIA—Blave claimed Germans In ‘Poland were retreating, their forces split, in two directions; German warships bombarding Libau. GERMANY—Claimed pause in Poland war not a retreat, but mere- ly @ strategic rearrangement. AUSTRIA—Ruesians reported bombarding Cracow, which was said | to be burning. TURKEY—Russians claimed gains in north and British In south of | Asia Minor. Latter in occupation of Bassorah. ee “The Star is inclined to be hysterical,” says a Star reader, sending us a letter in response to our invitation of criticisms. ‘Your editorials lack depth,” ther. We’ going to publish a lot of letters tomorrow in which readers tell just what they think of The Star. ee See ee

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