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Billy Sunday The Price of The Star Is Now, as It Always Was, ONE CENT ALLIANCE, 0.. March 25. —Relentiess prosecution of H. A. George, high priest of the “new love” religious cult here, who was arrested today, fol- lowing the death at his institu. | tion of Miss Amy Tanner, 23, lanned today by A. G. father .of the dead George. who was arrested with ten other members of the cult, inciuding five women, was charged by the coroner with responsibility for Miss Tanner's death through the use of a mysterious drug. “1 feel certain.” declared Tan- fier, “that my daughter was de- ceived under the mask of religion She went to live at the cuit honse Jast New Year's day. My wife and I thought it was a boarding house. Mrs, Tanner met George once, but T had never seen bim. I am going to proseente him to the limit.” | George testimony at the in} quest gave an unusual idea of mar.) riage. “Those whom God has joined together are man and wife,” he} testified. “Those whom God has | fot joined together may act as| ™an and wife to others who are not joined by God. They must obey God and suffer the conse ces of the law. We believe in teen! marriage, but not unless God Joins the parties to it A chemical analvs.« Miss Tanner's stomach showed no trace of polson An autopsy was then begun to determine whether she had undercone « criminal opera tion, | George was held on the charge! of administering to her some poi-| fonous drug. “Miss Tanner was run down spiritually,” said George to his tee timony at the inquest This home Was established to build up the Christian life and wae designed to enre for just such cases.” CAN'T GET DRUG; HE’S NEAR DEATH Unable to procure the drug because of the newly enacted federal law which has placed rigid restrictions on the sale of f o all forms of “dope,” Peter Ward, 57, a “fiend,” is near death in the city hospital Thursday. Ward was picked up on the street last night by Officers A. Tracey and D. N. Schoon- suffering violentiy J. }ed rubbish and refuse on Sweeney's | also actually increase the value of | Power B ducted by a religious leader in a newspaper. morrow The Star will tell you what he did in Philadelphia. The Only VOLUME 18 NO. 25. SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1915 Ed Sweeney's Lot, at Pe eR Ren ATT in Con mi i TOPS PN Ot Tek Sten top agar Ahmar Meee 9 Attention, Mr. Ed Sweeney! ENFORCE ‘SHIPS RUN | FULLCAR GAUNTLET SERVICE WHAT PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION SAYS A Hole in the Lot at Pine and Boylston is Badly in Need of Filling. “| Recherche apartment ‘house. oO. considers himself a good citi- zen and an asset to the com owned by Mrs. O. Wheeler. Mrs. Wheeler's te munity. Sw lon the side towards Sweeney’ [had a nearat-hand view of a stag jnant pool, heaps of shrubbery clip- | pings, tin can old shoes, LONDON, March 25.—Die patches from Athens today say ey until recently was the proprietor of the and other odds a hotel, Under the Sweeney Mee. Wh r wante the neigh No curtailment of service on | two British torpedo boat de- regime, we never noticed any | borhood of the Recherche to be a ee) ia ta and Ballard | hg ot pwr a rae San jeach lines, | rubbish lying around the hotel pleasant one to live in. So she Starting paint on Alki and running by the: entrones fu lobby and dining room, of in seeded the apartment house lawn, | in | and penetrating shortly be h ‘ d rooms. land rolled it, and set out pretty, Fauntleroy lines to be at Vir ped ? oween 4 wave kept the | flower beds Prey | ginia st, Instead of Ploneer Leah ib fietiita ef tharoniog’ cane hotel in apple-pie order. BUT THE SWEENEY LOT squa pee Bob vd pommbataeedet For one reason, Sweeney |NEXT DOOR GAVE THE ENTIRE Seats to be } to draw the fire of the forts. | On their return trip, the destroy lers ran the gauntlet of salvos from both sides of the straits, but es caped without damage. ‘Their ob: servations confirmed the reports of | CORNER A BLACK EYE. She set a man to work clearing away the rubbish on the Sweeney 1 | tot. Now the lot is passably clean. - | BUT THE HOLE REMAINS stantiatly all p “The law does not authorize the company to demand a re turn on its investment for ser- vice which i ly 50 per cent lived in his hotel. Rubbish and refuse aren't pleasant to the represented a business inv: ment. IT WAS GOOD BU: | Mee. Wh + makes this offer) adequa NESS TO KEEP THE HOTEL to Sweeney: “if Mr. Sweeney will) 100 per cent adequate and suf- [avistors that the forts were se SPICK-AND-SPAN |have the hole filled and the lot ficient.” verely damaged by the bombard see leveled, | will a it, park it and “A service which requires | iment 4 week ago. Mine sweepers Sweeney owns a corner jot at, it In orde: | patrons to stand for jong di are steadily continuing their work the southwest corner of East Pine. SWEENEY'S LoT 18 Al her safe, inside the Dardanell ES and Boylston It is a vacant lot. | EASE SPOT ON sean Sweeney bought {t, not as an in-| VEST.” quate service is not to be gauged Writer Stor of Her Life and danced again. vestment, but as a speculation. He} a venience of the publi |by rates, The rate question, the German Consul Mueller looked figured that some day the lot! If Sweeney will meet Mrs,/ {commission holds, is a separate | on longingly and commented on q would be worth more than he paid| Wheeler half way in this matter,| There will be no stub-line service | question Fh Rateite MR RE a ue nS t ce to two friends a for tt he will not only add to the pleas:|in Seattle which tends fo incon-| First of all, the commission holds |High Salaried Movie Star Lives Career Over Again for) fi. the wall Maneger Joremtae a So, after he had bought it, he|ure of folks living In the nelghbor-|ventence the public. Seats must be|there must be adequate service Her Seattle Friends. bent over his shoulder. They 4 forgot about it. He doesn’t have|hood and remove one of the) furnished to passengers. |Upon @ physical valuation of the| Sabie ere spoke a few words and smiled. |to live on it. He seldom even sees| “spots” which create an unfavor- The state public service commis | properties of the company, the com ir sent and out of the 10,000,000 people at Consul Mueller savs he wants © 4 | it. able impression on the minds of|sion has laid down the law to the| mission will then elther reduce or least 3,000,000 are girls, who, into learn it, too,” announced the 9% Careless people came and dump-| out-of-town visitors, but he will| Puget Sound ‘Traction, Light & | raise rates may be necessary tc thetr heart of hearts, are wishing ™&nager later He is a good Co., and attorneys and of lot. Sweeney didn’t mind. Rank| his lot |ficlals of the company are fairly | investment weeds grew high among the rub-| It wouldn't cost Sweeney much| dazed by the plainness of the lan-| Holding that the shuttle car ser bish heaps to make & park of his corner. If| guage used | vice proposed on the Ballard Beach There is a big, deep hole in the} he will do this, The Star will be] Charles A. Reynolds, chairman of|line at 24th ave. N. W. and 69th st lot. In the rainy season the hol lad to print a picture of it when |the commission, wrote the opinion.| would be inconvenient and inade. filled with water, which became) it is finished It was concurred in by Commission. quate to the patrons, the commis stagnant. A green scum formed - ler Spinning jsion Wednesday issued a prohib- on the stagnant pool. | Hot counciimanic contest in Ju-| Its keynote Is that a public utility |{tory order against this change, |neau, Alaska, with 17 candidates, |!8 required, above all, to furnish ade | The traction company is contem Next door to Sweeney's lot is the quate service. This right to ade-!plating an appeal to the courts GUESS IF THEY'RE MARRIED (VHAVE A Litvie surPRise FoR You HELEN OUT IN ) FRONT OF THIS House 1 THERS STANDS THE GREATEST~- pir The: (nee ATAXI Lave Billy Sunday Will Hold a Revival in Seattle Holy Week, Preaching Through Columns of The Star EGINNING Monday, March 29, the famous baseball evangelist, Billy Sunday, will preach ONE SERMON A DAY to the people of Seattle through the news columns of The Star, concluding with an EASTER SERMON on Saturday, April 3. Sunday wrote these sermons immediately on the conclusion of his great revival in Philadelphia, where, in 11 weeks, he CONVERTED 41,000 PEOPLE. This evangelistic meeting broke all records. Week” REVIVAL IN THIS CITY will be historically unique because this is the first time a revival was ever con- LOOK FOR SUNDAY’S FIRST SERMON NEXT MONDAY! The seattle Star Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News OF FORTS give the company a fair return on its |b His “Holy To- Billy Sunday IGHT EDITION | WEATHER FORECAST—Fair T1DKS AT BEATIN “High 2:04 wm. 120 ft Ott p.m, LES ft ONE CENT O8 THAIN any NEWS STANDS, Se ~ ROFBRAU IS AGAIN ‘PINCHED’ | | Gayety rioted in the cafes | last night the Rathskeller, | the Butler and the Hofbrau, Dancing between the tables | ts no longer an innovation. Even the timid are doing it— youth and age alik It isa Pleasure come to stay. Cafe Patrons now demand it. “rea Slate women began to gather in the Rathskeller and the Butler. They chatted over steins and waited. At ich new orchestra number the expectation on their faces became more pro- nounced, and faded out to im- Patience as the first strains told them it was not a dance. At the Hofbrau, the tables were filled to capacity early. It was a Falfferent crowd than at the Butler d the Rathskeller. There were some soft shirts in the crowd, There was a trifle more abandon |in the glances flashed between the jtables, perhaps, but there was no |vulgarity—far from it | | “tf they dance tonight at the Rathskeller,” said Manager Keyes of the Hofbrau, “they dance here, Yes, I expect arrest. But I'm go- Jing to have dancing between the tables if the Rathskellar has it. My patrons are as good as those of any other cafe iv Seattle.” | Quick Start at Butler At 10 o'clock the orchestra lead. 7] er at the Butler announced the | dance. The music was “Tip perary 4 There was no hesitancy. A q jyoung couple glided from their 7 jtable down the cleared aisle—a | gray-haired men arose from a far corner of the dining room, with a strikingly gowned young woman— eight couples swept out from an enclosed box—two young girls left their elders at a table and maxixed down the floor. | Everybody took it as a matter of They a encored to show their appreciation, Mary Pickford Tells Star | course, and everybody liked it they could be popular moving pic- Mixer. He likes the dance,” —- ture actresses and wondering how! And st the Hofbrau— BY IDAH McGLONE GIBSON _in the world they can “break in They are dancing at the Rathe: Buketew: What. must. « voung, woman Keller,” announced Manager Key 5 have. what must she acquire, ®t 10:30, “We shall dance heres . Copyright, 1915, Newspaper Enter. (yyy. AhO Wpal mune abe acauire: They danced. Miss Emylin Bare prise Association Ruebidvainsks cthar eh ines ryman and Billy Conley led, and Every night at least 10,000,000/° “And Miss Pickford told me other couples from the tables joln- 4 | people say “Hello, Mary across} Ghe does not look over 18. In ed in the merriment. Yet, there the footlights of the moving ple-| ner iethe black Valet. cleiien frown WAS an undercurrent of uneasiness, il Iture theatres—to Mary Pickford,/and her gray Tipperary hat, with, p{lofbrau Manager Arrested q lone white kardenia, In trout, end goto, detectives watched from the doorway. A bull-necked “harness liny streamers behind, she reminds gop" lurked behind » potted me in some way of that Priscilla wii N or Keyes suman described by Longfellow ing Bape ef smiled Her quaintness is one of her/gauce, en oeres tO stop thie er charms Manager Burnett called for his Off the sereen Mary Pickford di- hat and coat. He went out with vests herself of the Mary Pickford the plain-clothes men, puffing his curls which she has made the fash- cigar and chatting pleasantly, Few fon for all the girls on the Pacific’ saw the trio leave. coast They've got us both flow,” said She ties them up in a simple knot: Manager Keyes, who had been ar- behind, She hes the manner and) rested the even ing previous, when simplicity of a child, and yet) his partner had gone. “But we're aks with the philosophical di-, going to dance here just as long as rectness of a woman of 40 the Rathskeller permits it.” She is only 20 years old At midnight the last dance is ee is called, It is one of the conditions “It’s a long atom,” che aaft inder which dancing is permitted “this making of 2’ successful |Y city officials, that the cafes sagt! ubareaa,’ Pa vite kena ose that form of entertainment + must almost write the histor Drops At Aho DE of one’s life, for | am sure that a to be a successful picture ar | woman in any other walk tist one must have exactly the of life » attributes, the same tal THE GREATEST ‘THING, the same emotions and HOWEVER, IS TO HAVE A same general outlook on CAPACITY FOR AND LOVE the affairs of every day that OF HARD WORK 1 one must have to be a, success- | (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) 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