The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 31, 1915, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

in Nearly six weeks’ fhe construction of three sub- marines ordered by the navy delay Gepartment from the Seattle Construction & Orydock Co. been caused by the theft Moran ship yards, where underwater craft are be- ship yards, Is in the and was notified by Capt. R. A commandant of the found navy yard, that been suspended until notice pending charges torney Clay Allen. as it does, mysterious aboard United States men-of war in Eastern navy yards and oth-| | erqueer happenings hampering the department in getting into a/ Hon of military preparedness, m) officials and those connect with the Bremerton navy yard foclined Saturday to regard Bappening as most peculiar. Attempt to Harase U. 5. — Whether or not the present case | any bearing upon a possible Attempt to harass the Unit- | et Mater in preparing for interna- ‘ ‘Wenal trouble, is being thoroly {n-| a] oon at the county jail, Sat- | a Teplied to Capt. Coontz, after! fj notice of his discharge, he was in no manner connect- in theft of fittings for the ‘ew submarines. _ Ite aid, however, that several ® ten with certain @ stamp “U. 8. found in Blaisdell Two Weeks Ago was arrested two weeks a state charge of grand , bat the true nature of the was kept a guarded secret et. Mheconstraction of the three sub-| it is said, will be delayed duplicates of the missing parts| be ordered from the Eust. } SAYS EASTLAND WAS NOT SAFE the Eastland were empty could never have 1,000 passengers safely when, ‘#@arted on the Western Electric & week ago, J. L. Douty, captain of the boat, aed u Redfield today. Tie ship had 2.550 men, women ; aad children aboard when it over 4 drowning more than 1,200 Aa Properiy ballasted the East- d Was seaworthy,” said Douty.| the steamer was not seaworthy Sunday evening, when r ea Rot have the tanks full.” special music will again be 8G. Jenkins, designer of the! % a ‘ rendered Bishop O'Dea will Batana Appeared before the fed.| Five years ago “Dr.” Ralph De| Gerber, whom the Yor! has named] preach the morning sermon. A @al grand jury today presenting | Bit, fount of the Yoga cult at Beaux Is with adultery | special sermon will be preached tn of the hull . Arta, “Burbanker of souls” and, Mrs, Gerber's divorce is pending! the evening a aaa servant of humanity,” who {# fac-\{n superior court, and Dr, Gerber’s| ‘Tuesday morning the prelate will ren ling charges in criminal court asa habeas corpus proceedings to get| celebrate solemn pontificial mass DRIVE result of bis attentions to the wife possession of his b-year-old daugh-| at 9 o'clock at the cathedral, at the A NAIL? | \of Dr. Rudolph H. Gerber, of San/ ter Areal, are to be heard August 4.| opening of the convention. Arch | Francisco, was an $80-a-month for Various estimates place the for- bishop Christie will preach the ser Howls lke to | to help bulld a/ est ger in the heart of the Bitter| tune coming to the little girl some-| mon or Root mountains of Idaho. tei pe between and $1,| Monday afternoon 75 candidates a Is not a plea for part of} Two weeks ago, De Bit's former) 000,000 } will be initiated to the fourth de i Kk account, but didja ever wife, 4 Queen Anne ave. who It is the legdcy of the child's gree of the Knights of Columbus, eB Artal et resumed her maiden name of Jessie| grandmother, who lives in San| with Maurice D. Lechey, master of he New come on out to Ninth| Derby after her divorce from the rancisco, and was settled upon;the fourth degree, officiating. It! - and W. 87th st., Satu Yo t le f Oaki 4, just) the child a short time after a c % eluk T-! Yogi, left Seattle for fter Areal’s) will be at Knights of Columbus club S Week from today, with the in time to escape being dragged) birth house. A banquet will follow in Bh inzeh, ee i the kids, a basket | into the courts as a witness against Says Husband Wants Money | the evening at the Arctic club to | “hols nag Jammer or whatever | her former husband in the De Bit Mrs. Gerber, who says her hus-\the initiates, supreme officers and} | aa ppen to have handy Gerber scandal. 92 ptr e in seeking the cus| delegates . M ody of the little ada pi | ; They're going to rebuild the File Amended Complaint al’ ioees eee oe is solely to Tie candidates will attend mass 3 Hil! Methodist church 4| The Iatter affair presents as) oe pn of the legacy, dein St. James’ cathedral, at 8:15 Wanta have it in Veshevee many angles the facets of @ $1,001 the fortune easily worth |p m. LW. H. Leech, “ sany-sided diamond. wane ae ht He Pree | Ay sag feng pastor, can | ™ * Bit, in an amended complaint : Spe oe whi poses as a highly 9 You're on, notify [oe pits in a tternoon by Prose-| Sucked prophet in diapensing the | Qe S. WON T REFER | M8 Tones ave. Ww upek vniengd j A or Lundin, is charged, with Mre,| Y°84 teachings, was fighting for Ay 4 7 ve | + aed wes | e8t fires an a United Staten gov CASE TO THE HAGUE| | = a ernment employe at Avery, Idaho | H in 1910. Much of his time was perme | f Ph Y W t d t spent in the ac of the Bitter, WASHINGTON, July 31.—The| | A oO toot wandering over desolate! United States would undoubtedly j one our an age edadni ps nlone reject a proposition to ter the} : oday he is the great “l-Am" of| Lusitania case to The Hague. 4 The Star, Main 9400 the Yoga cult, writer of erndite Secretary of State Lansing today| i articles on such subjects as “Tilu-|said no such hint had been received i The Star ev ery day is read by a vast army of mat ae Knowledge The So-\and would, not state -whether It ee ereafter Mental Al-\ would even be consider a. E} People, and among them are bound to be a con- |\chemy” and “The Burbanking of Siderable number who will be interested in your | Souls HARRY OFF FOR FAIR Proposition, no matter what it is. If you have a | foom to rent; or want to rent one yourself, if you HE FOOLED THEM PITTSBURG, July 31.—Harry ve som ge. i youewant to . Thaw is en route by automobile to et ething to sell or exchange, if LOS ANGELES, July 41.-ny.|the Panama-Pacific exposition, He Bet 4 position or need good, competent help your- Sie Cacatanouak meds movig|!* driving «car owned by his moth . nent & comedy Movie! ey and acco: fed by Fre c Bit, your want will be quickly and satisfactorily || was neing staged when Patrolman | (open tn oe eee ork. anata K ; supplied thru a Star want ad. Just call Main 9400 | Garret rushed out of a cate today|Pendieton of Cornish, N, H 4 oa: and sprayed seltzer water on a pot and ask for the want ad desk. ted palm which had burst into] Bucoda bo a railroad station OUT WATER, GHICAGO, July 31.—1! the tanks carried | WOMAN WHOSE SOUL HAS BEEN : “BURBANKED” BY YOGA LEADER | | | | 1 “lgona,” the beautiful wife of Dr. Rudolph H. Gerber, of San Francisco whose soul has been “Burbanke ast Yoga book it, by “Or.” Ralph De Bit, the Yogi. “tsona” is Mrs. Gerber’s ual” name. Her true name is Mrs. Dorothy A. Gerber, tho she sometimes known at Beaux Arts, the Yoga village, as “Madame” De Bit. She and Or. Gerber are engaged in a legal tug of war for the custody lof their beautiful child, Areal, a $1,000,000 baby. || Where Woman Came Fron, as Told by Ex-Forest Ranger, Now Yogi An extract from the Christian Yoga Monthly, of which De Bit is editor, gives the following version of the conception of woman: te the Hinde lege ereated the wortd, foil tm the velvety softness of the Mowers, the lightness of the feather, Ge gentle ger of the dow, the frolicsomences of the sunbeam, the tears of the cloud, the In constancy of the wind, the timidness of the hare, the vanity of the peacock, the hardness of the diamond, the sweetness of honey, the ernelty of the : heat of the fire, the chill of the snow. the cack! ing of the tartie dove, All these he mixed togett: he presented her to mu: ‘FROM FOREST RANGER TO | YOGI IN FIVE YEARS; HOW | flames at the curb. _.||j real thing. | mans | thedral, DE BIT BECAME ‘PROPHET |: veers FRE EM vULUME 18, NO | O'Dea at | | Aunias Daniel Kelleher. George Donworth | P. | attle But it was the | again SEATTLE AWAITS KNIGHTS With the city’s business dis trict gay with flags and em- blems of the order, with one of the foremost Catholics in the United States here, ang with all plans completed, Seattie awaits the opening of the 32nd annual convention of the su- preme council of the Knights of Columbus, next Tuesday. At 6:15 Saturday morning, His Excellency, the Most Rev. John Bonzano, archbishop of Mititene, apostolic delegate to ‘the United States, and head of the Catholic university at Washington, BD. C., arrived from Portland, with his party, and will officiate as the repre- sentative of Pope Benedict XV. at the opening of the conven- tion. ne will be a guest of Bishop the latter's residence With him in, R v a i, profes: om mo: the Cathoille osiversity; Washington, D. C., and Most Rev | Alexander Christie, D. D., arch bishop of Portland, Ore. Farrell te With Party J. D. Farrell, president of Oregon Washington railroad whoee private car the party cr d) the continent, accompanied them. | They were met at the station by a committee of representative citt zens consisting of and Kolght 8 enan, of Seattle council; John Frank McDermott, J. Gorman, Raymond Turenne, George J. Danz, James P. Gleason, and Dr. Xavier while he Bernar law at re the} in de Donato Archbishop Bongano greeted the children of all the parishes of Se Saturday morning at 10 o'clock, at a special service in St James’ cathedral Presides at Sunday Mass He will preside at 11 o'clock high Sunday morning, at the ca when special music will He will preside again |Cholm R j have 134. SEATTLE, WASH BERLIN WILD WITH JOY; EXPECT FALL OF WARSAW BEFORE DAY IS _ OVER; RUSSIA C The lice aut law of MATT 1, SATURDAY, JULY 31, His Excellency the Most Rev- erend John Bonzano, apostolic delegate from Rome to the United States, who is in Seattle house guest of Bishop O'Dea, attending the Knights of Columbus convention. nvm NS LEAVING CITY: BERLIN, July 31.—Occupation ; of Warsaw by the victorious Ger mans is now believed to be bat a matter of hours The final sweep of the Teuton forces is irresistibly driving every The Russians have practically their entire line north and south of Warsaw Thousands of prisoners have been taken Field Marshal Von Mackenzen and Field Marshal Von Hinden burg hope to be able to report the capture of the Polish capital by tonight ‘The greatest enthusiasm pre vaifs in Berlin. The people are| awaiting final news from the front, , desiring to celebrate the fall of Warsaw tomorrow, one year after the declaration of war upon Rus sia | The kaiser, katserin and the crown princess are now close to} the front and ready to review the German forces upon their tri- umphal entry into the city Should Warsaw be entered by to. night or tomorrow. the program of yon Hindenburg will also be car ried out to the day, When the German thrust against the ctty was at its height the field marshal declared Warsaw would be cap- \tured by Aug. 1 . LUBLIN FALLS; OCCUPIED BY THE AUSTRIANS VIENNA, July 31.—Lublin bas fallen The eity which fs the key to the important rallway line to- ward which the Austro-German forces have been fighting for the past month was occupied by Aus: | trian cavalry last night, the war} office announces | Lublin is 88 miles southeast of Ivangorod fortress, which guards the southern approach to Warsaw It is the point on the Lublin. | R. toward which the Ger mans to the sottheast of Warsaw | been driving since the cap ture of Lemberg. It brings the enveloping (awh | Duke lers were |rines today movement to the south to ont and shuts off the Russians from the use of one of their railroads to the east. RUSSIANS FALL BACK ON WHOLE | LINE IN POLAND LONDON, July 31.—There were strong indications today that not only has Warsaw been abandoned by the Rus- sians but that the evacuation of the entire line in Poland is completed. The main Slav armies are now established along the new line of defen extending from Kovno southward thru Grodno and on to Brest-Litovsk. The latter point is 115 miles east of Warsaw, This would mean Nicholas has successful retreat front of 200 miles. For weeks work of entrenching and strongly fortifying the new line has been in progress While the forces spread out over the line from the Nieman river to the Narew and to the west and south of Warsaw have been hold: ing the Germans in check the Rus sian retirement has been conduct ed under cover of this resistance. Rear guard actions continue and will be maintained to the last to rasa the enemy and hamper the that Grand along a vast tonic advance. All dispatches |reaching here agree the country from which the Russians have withdrawn has been laid waste. Nothing ts left on which an army might lve, In the territory about Warsaw everything was put to the torch. $1.—Four German trawl su LON DO: July k by saved A PEACE MES WASHINGTON, July 31 The national peace council of labor and other organizations which their leaders declare rep- resent 8,000,000 others, today N. P. closed its station up last December, Town protested. tele phed Jane Addams in Chicago, for confirmation of in- REPORT JANE ADDAMS GARRIED SAGE TO WILSON formation they claim to have that certain belligerents com- missioned her to tell President Wilson how he might act as mediator and end the war. They claim the president re- fused to consider Miss Addams’ proposals, ficer typified @ It is by such brutal conduct ILK SHOULD GO. CHIEF conducted a! bma- | All of the crews were | SUSPECT PLOT IN THEFT OF | SUBMARINE VALVES HERE police department should rid itself of the class of police of- in F. J. Phillips and G. C. Collins. They believe po- ? hority is best exemplified in the fist and the “billy.” The mercy is not in their code was employed by Phillips and } Collins in arresting aged James Reynolds Thursday, that the dig- § nity which is supposed to clothe the police department is violated. } @ Reynolds may have abused the officers, The Star does not } know—or care. He may have resisted them. Reynolds is a small man. Phillips and Collins are giants @ When they dragged Reynolds thru the dirt of the street, they insulted the people of Seattle, whose servants they are. @ PHILLIPS STANDS CONVICTED OF PAST BRUTALI- TIES. HE AND COLLINS AND ALL OTHERS OF THEIR LANG SHOULD GIVE THIS 3} ER HIS PERSONAL AND IMMEDIATE ATTENTION. ; OX THAINS AND NEWS STANDS, Se KAISER WANTS ‘WARWITHUS, GARDNER SAYS By Gilson Gardner (The Star's Washington Correspondent) | WASHINGTON, July 31.—President Wilson | ‘has opened wide the door for war with Germany. | The last American note is to all intents and pur- | poses an ultimatum, On the acts of Germany de- } pend the issue of war or peace. Whether this is a wise policy or the reverse— and many who have regarded Wilson a strong ized peace man must regard his recent acts with amaze- 1 | 1915. ONE CENT ment—the one important question at the moment is, Does Germany want war? The writer disagrees with the opinion gener- ally expressed that Germany does not want war with the United States. The writer believes that Germany wants war with the United States, and he therefore views the present situation as one of the gravest ever faced by the nation. Following are some of the reasons why Ger- many, in my opinion, wants the United States added to the list of her declared enemies: @ The United States is so entirely without military prep- aration that any addition which the United States might be able to make within any reasonable time to the battle lines at the front need not be considered as affecting the strength of the attacking forces operating against Germany. @ The American army is not adequate to repel an invasion, to say nothing of taking part in any overseas fighting. @ The American navy. if added to the navies of the allies, would not in any material way affect the pres- ent status of the war-on-the-seas situation. But our navy could not be added to those of the allies since —, on Page 5.) KEEP BRYAN AMERICAN IS ON JUMP IN | KILLED WHEN VISIT HERE SHIP IS SUNK will be fair. | Sunday and Monday ly BY Cc. P. STEWART strenuous days for William J WASHINGTON, July 31.— Bryan in Seattle. He will speak! Another American hes tation here four times. An admission) Victim to the German subma. charge will be made to only one rine attacks. of his addresses, the main speech at the First Presbyterian church wey Tie a a leche Monday evening at § o'clock, when) gunk off the Irish coast, died he is to speak on “Fundamentals’ from shock and wounds which under the auspices of the Y. M.| he received when the vessel G..A. was shelled, Bryan's schedule while here is Consul Frost, at Queens. as follows | town, reported the sinking of Arrives Sunday morning. | the Iberian and Wiley’s death Lunch with Dr. M. A. | to the state department today, Matthews. | The time of the attack upon Speaks at First Presbyterian the big steamer was not men- church at 3 p,m. to men only | tioned, but it is beli | eved to under auspices of Y. M,C. A. | have occurred late Friday or Dinner with his cousing Miss | early today. Lillie P. White. The information gathered by the vii Tacoma Monday American consul and sent to Wash morning. ington, indicates the Iberian was Speaks at Hippodrome, 3 (torpedoed after having endeavored p. m, under auspices of King to escape and was not shelled un- County Democratic club. til after the signals of the subma- Dinner and address at Com rine, ordering her to stop, had been mercial Club, 6 p. m. disregarded Main address, Monday even- The crew was give! P Ing, 8 o'clock at First Preaby. eae araree given time to take terian church, under auspices How many Americans were in- ofe¥. M. C. A. Subject: “Fun- | cluded in the vessel's crew was not damentais, tated Iberian’s surgeon, Burns, an ‘ASK JIM FOR A LINE Amer states the submarine | did not shell Iberian latter | _— disregarded signals,” a second mes PORTLAND, July 31 J, J. Hill sage from Frost said Gave time ia asked to build 4 railroad so that take to boats Wiley died shock there.may be a direct line between and superficial wounds No other Portland and Klamath Falls, in a Americans injured.” letter mailed today by the Cham re Iberian was a steel vessel of ber of Commerce, 15,223 tons. —

Other pages from this issue: