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rt cry to Cygthia Grey man who ja standing by the girl Ke loves suffers, iss Grey’e answer. By Fred L. Boalt. NESS S$ CAMP, AMER- WAN LAKE, Sept. 10.~ H the United States should go to tomorrow St ft should be nec shape a great mass of raw sot Beaeteria. and do ft tn a hurry— "There are in the Northwest 100 who.do not regard themselves soldiers, either professional ur , who could, tn a pinch, as iteutenants and captains ‘@ Volunteer army with a const degree of effictency To this extent this camp, now tts end, has passed out of experimental stage. It has an undoubted success. visited the camp the first day, agai. yesterday, In three ing progress has been sary to whip that the war udents are of peace, business men, who, a hurry-up course In the sci of war, had never handled a Funny at First at first. They seemed to for which was the right and whi | Jett foot—at first. Never was a more awkward squad. Yesterday you read of a woman's 7 today gfad read the story of a p it, you must bear {n| more deadly than a foun-/ awkwardness was lud!-| Turn to helplessly And read war student under normal condi. tons wotld not assimilate in a year The result is that these hundred men—merchants, lawyers, doctors, clergymen, bankers, salesmen, what-not—could, If the need arose, take command of a company in wartime. They know, for tt has been im. pressed upon them, that an army, in the words of Napoleon, “travels on its belly.” They know enough 1. | BOW of the business of war to see to it that the men under them were well-fed, well-shod, well-equipped And they know enough, too, to |get their commands where they |would be needed, to co-operate with other small units, and to car. ry out their small part in the gen avg plan of the general command DK. Stomache Gone In the essentials of war knowl Jedge they are probably as far ad (hay came to this camp to| "anced se the average non-com loned officer of the regular m jarmy, tho not as well grounded tn the non-essentials. The three weeks In camp have ef. fected a marked change in the physical condition of the war stu dents, Stomachs have disappeared ‘bests have swelled. Men who the first day couldn't hike a mile over rough country can now hike ten TO RECALL MINISTER | | na |The case was put on tri Judge French, of Kitsap county, sit ting here. | McGill, who was sent {nto the | Derby on the night of Aprt! | the « attorney's 0 J Bitte whole theory of wa “ y three weeks they have glimps. y put that theory {nto practice) conditions approximating as possible war conditions. | have had the manual of} abe. They have had) id, platoon, company | in sq Pettalion formations. They Cook Own M. done outpost duty. They have fa extended formation—‘as wa." They have had tar- udied They ha istened to only. They ha crowded weeks what the average the Cedar river dam under the plan Proposed of having each contractor fbmit the plan which he thinks would be effective. This is the opinion of Corporation Bradford in a communica- sent to the board Friday. He mast publish notice of the fame in the city official newspaper, a4 must, at the time of publica- Public inspection, the Mecifications for the work mbiity and duty of Semises, what plan shall be adopt 4 according to which the work Bust be prosecuted. 7 cannot entirely evade either. Sottract, {t m Provision. The respons! Charter Wilty and duty {s yours; it ¢ |field in war. They cleaned their ‘on camp sanitation, ration | kits, broke camp. and hiked back cheaith, equipment, range-| TO SEAL DAM CAN'T FT TO PRIVATE HANDS The board of public works can-jnot be shifted in the manner here fot call for bide on the sealing of Sousht. ‘DUMBA KEEPING OUT OF SIGHT? 4 such a procedure would be “M2 Violation of the city charter, provides that before letting contract the board of public fon, have on file in the office of fhe board's secretary, subject to plans and, “In passing,” says Bradford, “it May be well for me to say that Beither the city, nor especially your Ward, can evade the final respon- ultimately de famining what shall be done ig the "You may postpone the time When such responsibility will be Carried or such duty performed, but “lam compelied to hold and ad- Mie that before the city calls for if it desires to do the work by ust have clear and Welidefined ‘plans and specifica- flons’ on file, as provided by said “They Don’t Want So | without turning a hair. | Yesterday the students went on practice hike of eight miles, carry ing mess kits and rations, blankets. pup” tents and rifles. Each ra tion consisted of bacon, two raw potatoes, half an onion, hard tack, door,” he said, “She ushered 1 tuto the parlor—it wae a typl parlor houwe’——where three ‘girls’ were seated. T in a low-necked dress, the skirt of} coffee and salt. They put up their “pap” tents. They built individual fires. Each student cooked his own meal, ex actly as he would have to do In the Camp life has its humorous side. One student was told, not by an tn structor, @ mess pan with the top clamped on was like a “fireless NEW YORK, Sept. 10.—Austrian} Ambassador Dumba’s whereabouts|mayor of Los Angeles, sence of C. E. Sebastian, who is visiting the exposition at San Fran- cisco. are known, but there is evidence that he is secluded in the St Regis hotel. While he left Wash- ington Wednesday night ostensibly for his summer home at Lenox, Mas it was stated thera today had not left tho St. Regis ZEPPELINS FLEW OVER KING'S PALACE NEW YORK, Sept 10.—Lon- don's exclusive West End was at tacked in Wednesday night's Zep- pelin raid. Tho London today still maintained the strictest censor- ship concerning the raid, the Ber lin official statement, passed by London, said that section of the city was raided. Flew Over Palace It was regarded as probable that the Zeppelins passed near or di- | rectly over Buckingham palace, the king's residence. jabout half way jand ankles into the “Turkish room,” softened with heavy draperies. | There were vulgar pictures arrang:| ed about on the walls, he said. lor Katelle Lawton Lindsey |for the first time in the history of the United States, and perhaps the) ern hemisphere, a woman in} |the chief executive of a city of the) ret class, with a population of} SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1915. ONE CENT &X.w2"4!%t 2°82 NEWS STANDS, be DERBY HOTEL TRIED AS RED- LIGHT PLACE Prosecutor Lundin revived Fri day his campaign against the red Ught evil, directing his efforts at! Jay ©. Allen, one of the foremost Attorneys here, a» owner of the Derby hotel, at Sec Pine «t., which he od ave. and eke to abate. Mildred Hill, alleged landlady, ts ned = codefendant with Allen before The testimony of Policeman J. T was ting in of the prose e. Met hy Mail A negro maid met me at the oo « e maid was attired which was very short. It ended/ between her ried “Turkish Room” McGill said he was then Invited Belle Owens and Grace Anderson ere named by McGill as being habitues of the Derby. Both, he said, have police records. ey Allen ts appearing as for bimectt. WOMAN MAYOR TODAY IN CITY OF LOS ANGELES LOS ANGELES, Sept. 10.-—-May- ore than half a million Councilwoman Lindsey {s acting It was the gallant action of Coun eitman Conwell that made Mrs. Lind-| ney the first woman mayor in Amer fea. He conspired with his colleagues to make possible the appointment of Mra. Lindsey as president of the city counctl. In this position she was automatically acting mayor of Lon Angeles 2 AVIATORS KILLED PARIS, Sept. 10-—Two French viators were killed in Alsace when in landing, they struck a harbed wire fence and their bomb cargoes exploded, according to a Geneva dis patch today Italy. consumes less tobacco per capita than any other civilized na tion ldiers in England, They “Professor” Has Been Both Husband and Wife and Was Prepar- ing to Marry Second “Wife” When Arrest- ed—Says She's Cursed } With Masculine Per. ) sonality — Has Worn Attire for 20 which was) ORDER TO RETURN PHONE Today,| WOMAN, POSING AS MAN, — ARRESTED ON WEDDING DAY: ‘MAN’ FOR 20 YEARS, Hiatt Special LOS ANGELES, Sept. 10— fore God, | have er harmed or done wrong to a liv- ing being. “Born with a handicap of strange personality, which makes me wish to appear as a man, | have done my very best with the life God has given me. “All | ask Is to have the right to earn an honorable live: hood, and to live in peace without hurt to any one.” Teaches Dramatics Tragic in her earnestness. pa- thetic in her disavowal of wrong: doing toward any human, and with jalmost a childlike faith in those friends who are standing rtaunch. ly by her in her present remark able predicament. Prof. Eugene De Forest.” noted dramatic teach er and idealist, frankly confesseq! to being a woman, physically, but a man in many natural tondencies Prof. “De Forest” was discovered and confronted with the charge of masquerading as a man, walle call ing at the home of a Los Angeles woman to whom she was engaged to be married during the present month. To Examine Her She is being detained now, under the supervision of City Mother confession of the strange situation, until relatives arrive from the East. At that time it is expected a men- tal SXamination wil! be ordered. ‘The facts gained by the officers who made the arrest are these: Prof, De Forest's maiden name |was May Bradley She taught dra- matic art in San Francisco in 1883) jand 1884, at that time appearing as a woman Married Twice Bhe has been married twice. The first time she w the wife ef a in Thy econd time she was the “husband” of @ woman. When taken into custody she was engaged to another woman to whom she was to be married this month, Then Takes Wife Following the death of her hus FEES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 15 Jest you walt, subscribers! When|she lived for 18 years, over 20 commission to the telephone com-/the 15th rolls ‘round, there'll be alyears ago. she took to men's at- pany to refund $55,000 held by the company as $5 deposit fees will not become effective until Sept. 16. The order was entered Aug. 20,| but was not served on the company It wan to become ef. The order of the public different story. The company years been requiring all subscribers |to pay $5 when having a phone put|ton Hawley in November, 1911, and in. If, at the end of a year you stilija divorce action was brought by| have the phone, the $5 is refunded in the ab! until Aug. 26. Hut if meantime you have cancelled | your subscription, bscribers are besie the telephone company to pay ‘em back their fives, and fail to under stand why the deaf ear to their pleas GAS CO. REFUSES MEN 8-HOUR DAY Co. has again, The company will proportion to time the deposit has been held. | | The petition to talk It over. answered with the curt information afford to make invited the company The company that tt could The Seattle . who headed the petition, was proclaimed the alleged fact that It | Thursday night dropped from the} is only-a few feet from a pauper’s | payroll of the company, Starting as a printer’s devil, John/| Christian Watson, now traveling {n | It has told its laborers that it is! Several days ago the | wish, | a men signed a petition, asking for|Canada, rose to be premier of Aus the decrease in the working day. | tralla Want Interpreters, ) by H.C. Fisher) from 12 to 8 SOME GUYS WE CAM MTR BSTAMD® J Tr we someD -o* CNT THe cerenans| Ty Fr WN een O% TMK TO MAY GOOD MAM, Wt | ‘You DI eM | { wise ro gowe THE Weve] | BRINSH Aemy. CAN ¥ mecr US TO A \ RECRUITING STATION ~ (* Lin vans, sin, | (av WUD BE GLAAD, S "lOuness Son, AFF TER } | B (it aw | ) | cincn Yo oot ? On, WELL He'g, SKOTCH. As SOON 5 we wIT OUR OLD ENGLISH COMPANY WE'LL BE ALL RiGHT UNDERSTAND] He KING NERDS | veR Noe You Too Sit, } SHOW YE LADDIES *E DOES sim, TO YOR COMPANY J *e Doe — or band, a, newspaperman with whom tire, announcing that she intended several|to dress thus in the future She married Miss Margaret Bar- Mrs. Hawley De Forest a short time later, For the last five years the pro fessor has been conducting large classes in elocution in Los) An- geles. “Ever since | can remember, 1 have wished to be a man. When | w child 1 liked to play with boys. | wanted very much to go to a boys’ college. “| married J. M. Hart years ago on the understanding that we were to be companions only. Soon after he died I took to wearing men’s clothes. “Then | married a woman because | think | had the nat- ural wish of a man for a wom. an's companionship, tho there was nothing gross about this ure you. It w, companionship | sought. Th woman understood, | am sure. Says JEFF—By “Bud” Fisher : Rabe “OFF 608 | ps Se fet ema eee fe 2st & tamer) (ey, QS ( araw ) in | gor \ KIBOSH Se/{rueao / | 9° pea pre Sik! | Seok oy 5) susyy/ )\e f ub, = rose } _ Jei* X J cxen\ een 4¢ eo) || Is strongly exempli- ee Hee T Senet FRESH FROM | fied in the ads in The | Aletha Glibert, who fitet gatned the | lon the Baltic coast, until her effects > FEAR U.S. MAY BREAK WITH AUSTRIA eer The Seattle Star : The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News : VOLUME 18. NO. 170. STOMACHS AT CAMPS Boalt Sees Changes at American Lake; Awkward Squad Now Efficient for Service. AST EDITION WEATHER FORECAST—Falr TIDES AT U.S. DEMANDS DUMBA LEAVE By Charles P. Stewart WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Relations between America and Austria-Hungary were strained today to the breaking point. The United States has asked for Austrian Ambassador Dumba’s recall because of his efforts to cripple American munitions plants in which Austrians are employed. The atened breach may cause severance of diplomatic rela- tions between the two nations, but this would not necessarily result in war, was the conclusion reached in authoritative circles here. Certainly, admitted high officials, the request for his recall is pregnant with possibilities of an open break. | Austria May Do Same If Austria refuses to heed the AMERICAN GIRL American request, and recall Dum- ba, the United States will hand him ARRESTED AS SP his passports. Such a course, it is belleved, would be followed by Aus- —— a's handing passports to Ambaa- |sador Penfield at Vienna. There was good ground for the belief that Dumba’s home govern- ment may back him up in his re cent activities. It was pointed out that he apparently was acting with | the direct approval of Austria, tho \the foreign office perhaps did not iknow the exact’steps he had taken in his munitions crippling plan. Hope for Compliance Should his. government. support him, officials sald, a more serious issue would be forced than the mere elimination of Dumbe as represen- tative--here. The administration, however, confidently hopes that Austria will comply with the recall request. Expect Quick Action This government is alfeady ar- ranging with the allies for a safe conduct for the envoy. The gen- eral opinion here was that Dumba will be recalled, but that Austria will not immediately appoint his suecessor. Baron Erick Zwiedenek, counseler of the embassy, will be —. eee d'affaires, it is be leved. rompt action is expected Miss rnett of San! trom Vienna The American te Francisco was believed by the Ger-| quest is already there. An-answer mans to be an English spy and! within two days is anticipated, be was detained at Warnemunde, |°#tse of a probability that Austria wishes to prevent a more grievous rupture th: y had been minutely examined be-ltwo mations: ney Confronts the fore being allowed to depart for; Dumba’s passports have been pre- Copenhagen. | pared and will be forwardea to him ECOND NOT plan to cal out German mutitions GETS S$ workers, as Dumba contemplated Miss Barnett has studied music/as soon at Vienna's plans are in Leipzig and Berlin for several | known. and shortly after the out German Minister, Too? break of the war, had a harrowing The possibility was suggested experience in the former city when that a similar issue will be raised her apartment was raided by a with Berlin on account of German | mob which believed her a Russian.) Ambassador Von Bernstorff's rela- Acquaintances saved the girl. jtions with Archibald, and the en- | voy'’s alleged interest in a German doing with Austrians. ie | Archibald, upon whom w BERLIN, Sept. 10.—American ere Ambassador Gerard today received gpa the telltale Dumba letters, Germany's second note on the eub-|* returning to America under an ject of submarine attacks, at 9|¢™mersency passport issued by this orclock last night. Its contents, government, and an Investigation however, have not been made of his part in the Austrian—and apie: perhaps German—plans will be tn- 8 a | stituted. Agent May Go Free RE-ELECT BOULTON He was quoted this week as say- ROCK ISLAND, Ill, Sept. 10-—| ing he had been made a scapegoat The general council of the Luth-|/by Dumba, not knowing the con- eran church today re-elected Rev.|tents of the letters he was carry- M. E. Boulton of The Dalles, Ore.,/ing to Vienna, If he proves: this, as one of the vice presidents of the |it is belleved the United States can ‘organization. make no case against him, WEST INDIA oO TTA. - 5 , TALC Star today. Seattle’s best business institu- tions tell about their choicest Saturday of- ferings. Clothing, gro- ceric fruit, shoes, millinery, furnishing | | | | whatever you have in | mind to purchase to- morrow you will find | listed in the ads today | and in every case it means a worth while saving to you. Make up your Saturday shopping list from the ads in today's Star and you will save a mighty tidy sum