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Did you ever hear of ‘er ‘em in tonight. Are you reading “Confessions of a Husband? tich, folks, they're rich Phone Co. > Again Is Delaying On the showing of the Pa- tific Telephone & Telegraph Ge. that it cannot conveniently gomply with the order of the service commission to to its subscribers the the 20-day period ft 2-day period a to elapse from the time order was entered, the com- mission has extended the time te Sept. 26. Subscribers made demands en the telephone company al! day Wednesday, and the com- pany had a difficult time prov. tag an alibi. The statute provides that the iter becomes effective within 20/ Ways from the time of service, but} to specifies that {f the company make satisfactory showing ce of ° ‘Mat time will work a hardship, the | tommission may extend the time. Chairman Reynolds, of the com- says the company will not the ficbtinto the courts. "He also safe the company agrees fefund the $5 in cash, or it may eredited on the telephone rent. @n agitation started by which contended the fee and unreasonable URA OAKLY 10 BE MARRIED swanses, 8 Sept. 15.—Laora Motion picture actress, who the position of police chief ‘H Universal City, the movie camp ‘Wear here, will go to San Francisco be married there within two her friends learned today busband-to-be is Milten Moore, q Seapttceracter _. Moore at present Tahoe. | IESPERIAN MINED, } WOT TORPEDOE “BERLIN, Sept. 15.—Conciuding @at the liner Hesperian was Mined, not torpedoed, the admiral Whas disregarded the alleged t of a survivor that he ‘MP a submarine just before the Teese! was sunk A teport has not yet come from fhe only remaining submarine then Meee. Officials are confident that ‘Wheo this arrives the mine theory | Wil be confirmed. The was at Lake 108 ANGELES, Sept. 15.—Hear. & band tooting “Circus Solly,” docile steed of Mounted Po- mC. H. Marion obeyed an impulse based on his youthful ex Wriences in the sawdust ring and ed dead” on Hill st. in the Bitst of the heavy traffic. Marion ed bruises. In his circus Wy8, it was the horse's duty to le and roll over when the band Payed “Cirens Solty.” CREW IS SAFE COPENHAGEN, Sept. 15.—The of the Norwegian 8. 8. Torter Was torpedoed in the North sea. A, TWAT 5 YOu To GO aa ION OUT BOS DUTY, THAT 15 Youre POSTED ALMOST my VERY “ae WITH THE ENEMYS, OUT Pest. Her 16 50 THAT Ain } CASE OF Arr acy WHE CAM AR en BECO YoU) WHICH | ‘aie Wann OuR TROOFS Verbal Reconnaissances! mentia and her husband have one ot The Pink edition of Wat enforcement of the order in) ies Tens) _ m? Argu- The Star r ‘he Pink's They're Ten dollars tuition fee semester, $5 entrance fee, matriculation fee (for fr fee, $5 physics laboratory tory fee, $15.50 for a cadet form (compulsory for men and sophomores), $5 dent registration particularly freshmen, ente | this year. | Figure it up for yourself.| Here's an expense of over before a freshman can e the university. tion fee. They also can along with last year’s cadet So they can get off with suit. something over $40. AND THAT DOES NOT The order to refund ts a result\ INCLUDE THE COST OF | BOOKS. In other words, it’s an ceptional case that ANY j dent at the state university" | can get off with less than | in various entrance fees. The $20 annual. tuition . lot of would-be student lation fee, imposed on time, takes the cake. the hands of the notorious last| legislature. There is another feature ROME, Sept. 15.—Ruma-} that should be mentioned. If, nia has ordered mobilization for some reason, a student against Austria, according to fails to register in the first! Athens dispatch received two days, HE IS SOAKED $1 EXTRA. If the University of Wash- ington is to be what it intended to be, a state insti-| tution where the poor can higher education as well as those who can afford to go to private colleges, then |countless number of fees their amounts must positively be reduced. matters stand now, THE bonds each Prosecutor’ Lundin|the elevator boy, who was ordered ¢ ‘ | ven SYSTEM AT THE, “ill file informations direct in the to remain silent Stopping, at the cutter ble mark of 94, and was still ‘ ’ 2 , superior court main floor, the other deputies | STATE UNIVERSITY IS A The fall of the Nippon club is| boarded the car. : | oi SHAME AND A DISGRACE considered by the deputies who) Reaching the bottom of the! NO RELIEF IN SIGHT TO THE PEOPLE OF THE) raided the place as a distinct coup,|shaft, they crawled thru a dark; WASHINGTON, Sept. 15.—The| 2 as the club had long been consid-| passageway and broke down a bar-| Weather man promised no relief to WHOLE STATE, WHO ered impregnable. Urgent appeals ricade at the end with their com-|day for thousands suffering from OWN THE INSTITUTIQN. from the better class of Japanese bined weight and wnprecedented heat wave, tho! that the place be closed by the| “Throw up your hands,” yelledjhe predicted lower temperatures | STATE- WIDE ARSON police had reached the office of|Wadell, as he stepped into the|for the Middle West and Great| Attorney General Tanner at Olym-|main gambling room Lakes re NEARTH D pia and had caused a caustic letter on Apreatad RING 4S U MRS eter. uses Ss] wy E'S ole gO Shee PORTLAND, Sept. 15.—Investi Wadell Led ‘Em his arms gation by the grand jury of an| Deputy Sheriff Ben Wadell led} “Stand where you are,” com ; arson plot resulted today in the the raid, Representing himself as;manded the leader. STOCKTON, Cal, Sept. 15.—| issuing of an indictment against|a building inspector, Wadell went) The dealers were lined up\“The irrigation congress on| Sanford W. Currier, a building con-| over every part of the building/against the wall and handcuffed! wheels” moved today. At § a.m. a tractor, who is In Jail, accused of|/days before the raid was attempt-|two by two. There were about 100) special train bearing the delegates was saved when the vessel setting fire to his House here inled, learning that the one possible, men in the room August, 1912 MUTT AND JEFF—JEFF Can't See Why a Little Thing Like a War Shout | men), $10 chemistry laboratory $2 or $3 engineering labora- fresh- fee—these/ and class fees, besides various minor fees to face, are the for-| midable array facing students,| the University of ey Upper class- men escape the $10 matricula- imposed by the last legislature was too much of a wall for a surmount, but the $10 matricu-| freshmen this year for the first The matriculation as well as! the tuition fee became law at VOLUME 18. |FURUSETH TO SPEAK | | ON SEAMEN LAW NO. SEATTLE, WASH., Congressman Mileage Humphrey | has been invited by A Sloan, president of the Public Own |ership league, to appear and debate | with Andrew Furuseth the merits! Jof the seamen's law and govern |mentowned merchant marine, at a masa meeting to be held under i auspices of the league at the Joseph Hippodrome, Saturday, 30 p. m. Friday night Furuseth, head of the Sailors’ unton of the United| States, will address local seamen, per $10) esh- -—| fee uni- atu-| ring| $60, inter get ex- stu-| sTicK TO 7eR UNCLE $50. a fee, WEDNE DID IT TO PLEASE LANG PLP PAPAL LLDPE PPP PDD DPD PPD PPP PPP PPPS PAP OLD PLL LD LLL LPP PPP PPP PP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP | The Seattle Star DAY, SEPT. 15, 191 | | SHERIFF RAID GAM Over the head of Police Chief was thru the elevator shaft Lang, the Nippon club, 612] King in the Alps ho- tel, wa Sheriff Hodge and his who broke up the Kobe and Yoka-| night, Wadell and Deputies | was! deputies, |third foo, The three dep Get ama lotteries, confiscated a truck|nal to seven other deputies load of gambling paraphernaila and llott, Toyd, Spalght, nea ee HOT IN NEW YORK arrested 22 alleged gamesters, in. Wiley, DeVecmon and Luts—who ig cluding T. Kaneko, president of| were nding across the street, Be ‘ . z : bs the club. then went to the elevator and rang NEW YOR Sept 15.—New = All of the prisoners taken are Use Gun REG Liane ear verde Bt: Japanese, and are being held in| As they stepped into the cage, a) 7 tn mercury touched 74, the county jall in default of gun was shoved under the riba All but chance of entry by a raiding squad|ordered to go, SBICG Rumania LING JOINT: Shortly after 9 o'clock Tuesday! not confirmed from any other Mad raided Tuesday night by den and Bruce got a room on the utiles waved a sig PHEW! BUT IT's” 22 were Is at War?) here today. The message was] j source, f o' while the humidity reached the in started south to Fresno, where an lother session opened today d Break Up an Old Friendship Trade Mark Reg. Pat. Off. High. low, 5. ONE CENT Siwt"eite*s chee bebe “1 BROKE THE RULES AND LET particularly.” were some things wrong in it, but|per time. We went by in an auto. Came Back Alone ltteer : |I did not see the chief or the Johnson, replying to questions) Johnson pointed out some of the} chief's auto, and did not know he of Corporation Counsel Bradford,| YT" ; was in Tate's ae thent told oF the oliee add his Wunle Noni these wrong things} “Did you use a police auto » published, were they No, it was a private auto.” friends leaving the cafe, and the| “%"e, publish . \ Sauna - atresia * No,” said Johnson. “So far as 1} “You did not stop to talk to the chief returning alone at closing) ynow, what was published was| chie chauffeur? time, true No, I did not even see him.” He said the chief wanted to! Sergt. Smart knocked the chief's} Imagine Him “Spying” make an appointinent with the! -detecatiff” alibi squarely on the} Sullivan is a big, strapping fel- jsirl. He wasn't sure whether the head when he testified it was him-| low, about 6 feet tall and weighing chief came in by a side door or/ self and three other plain-clothes | about 275 pounds. not men who were among the “cops"| “You didn’t hide bebind a tele. I am followed and I want her! who passed Tate’s cafe that night.| graph pole or something to ‘spy’ to meet me,” the chief is alleged) Sergt. Smart Is known to be close|on the chief, did you?” to have said to Johnson, according|to Chief Lang, a warm personal} Sullivan joined in the laughter, jto the latter's story Tuesday friend, and his confidential man in} The only other police officer who “Did the chief say he wanted her| investigations. Smart testified |testified Tuesday was Chauffeur for protection? there was nothing out of the ordi-|H. T. Papke. He was a good wit- “No, he didn't say anything.” nary that he or any other police-|ness for Lang. He said he received “Have you discussed this case|man not in uniform should have/a call to meet the chief at the with Chief Lang passed Tate's cafe that or any | Washington hotel about 1:30 or 2 Yes, I talked it over once,” other night a.m, It may have been 3 o'clock, “When?” Lang torney had been rant-|he said. He noticed nothing un- Rushed to Tell Chief ing policemen who had “t.came to the city hall and!passed Tate's cafe while the chief (Continued on Page 7.) apenas ican iment ot AST EDITION WEATHER FORECAST—Fair TIDES AT SKATILE THE GIRL DRINK WITH THEM, BECAUSE IT WAS CHIEF'S CROWD” SAYS OWNER OF TATE'S CAFE “I broke the cafe rule on account of the chief, and for that reason only. I would not have allowed the girl to sit at the table and drink there except for the chief. That rule has never been broken before or since to my knowledge.” So declared J. 1. Johnson, proprietor of Tate’s cafe, on the witness stand in the council investigation against Chief Lang of conduct unbecoming an officer. Johnson appeared to give his testimony unwillingly. THAT “DETECATIFF” ALIBI Both he and the amusement manager of Tate’s cafe, E. G. Woods, substan- tiated, tho reluctantly, the charge that the rule forbidding cabaret girls to sit with patrons had been broken for the special benefit of the chief. Chief Lang’s “detecatiff” alibi also suffered a vital blow when Sergt. Fred Smart, Lang’s confidential investigator and right hand man, was called to the stand by Corporation Counsel Bradford, who is conducting the case against Lang in behalf of the ci Refused at First | went In to see the chief to tell him !was there.” He asserted it was ex- Johnson testified that Woods The Star was going to print the taordinary and that the chief was came twice to him to tell him story. That was shortly after The being “spied on.” about the chief and the request Star men, Mr. Ritchie and Mr. Hur. You passed T: te's cafe on the that a girl entertainer sit at the | witz, talked to me.” night of July 227” asked Bradford. chief's table, Wood did not say) “You went to see the chief spe- I did. I and my detail of three the chief made the request jctally for that purpose. You had|™en. The four of us were in plain “T refused to have her sit with! no other reason to see him? clothes, Friendly to Chief “Did you spy on the chief?” “I didn't know he .was there, un- til one of the boys said, ‘Hello, | Jack,’ to the police chauffeur, and gout, one asked, “Where's the No.” “How many bottles did they jdrink at the chief's table?” “IT can’t say exactly. There wasn't more than seven bottles of ‘champagne sold that night.” “And most of these went to the chief's table?” “Yes, I can't say how many bot- tles, perhaps three or four, or may- be five.” Waiter Disappears them the first time,” Johnson tes tified. “About five munutes later,| Woods came again with the same proposition. I then said it would/ be all right for a few minutes.” “Did you say if it was all right with the chief, {t would be all right with you?" ed Bradford “1 don't rememb I may have said something Ike that.” Never Broken Before ou are friendly to Chief Lang, are you not?” Smart was asked. am.” “You are his confidential inves- tigator, are you not?” “Was that rule ever violated be 2 I do special investigation.” fore or since?” | “Who ts the waiter who served) “When were you promoted to “No.” at the table? | this position?” “Why do you have that rule? 1 don't know.” Last February.” ae tee date, Gant malanted* You never knew?” | ei Chief Lang's term?” PL BBS they drinking at) johnson testified that when the] “Did you spy on the chief that aneegne™ pap ies ord back alone, at 1 o clock, night, or did a y of the other three “What were they doing?” 1e (Johnson) told Woods to give) spy on him 7 ; 7 the chief's message to the girl Lang's “right hand man” laugh- They weren't different from 4 | y a The chief then left. In a few min-/ed and replied that he did not. others there. It was balloon night. | utes, the girl and Woods came out! That disposed of four of the al- The people threw balloons about/together, and at the next block | leged “spies.” and serpentine. Woods left ber. Charles Sullivan, secretary of “Did you ever tell any one the B ‘ord showed Johnson a let-|the police department, disposed of chief was as noisy or noisier than/| ter h had been received by/two other alleged “spies.” any one else in the cafe?" The Star, referring to the Tate'’s| “Your name and that of Serzt. “No, 1 can’t remember that I| cafe incident | Hedges was mentioned among the did. My recollection is that the} “You read that, didn't you |10 officers who passed by Tate chief's party behaved just like Ye said Johnson, “Mr. Hur-|cafe that night,” said Bradford. any one else hey may have wits asked me to verify the story.|“What were you doing there?” been throwing balloons about and|I didn’t say anything to him as to| “We went to Chauncy Wright's serpentine, but I didn’t notice it) whether it was true or not. There| place for a steak. It was our sup- fe Jere THE COLO o ) Dury. [ SeLets sos JOB, Cue OUT POAT AS k He OF US TO 60 OUT ON OUTPOST, 1 Dont Want To BE GONNA Let YOU ) Maver “THE MONOR® TTS A to “rue GERMAN : (aut me er | a rut eer ) || THeRe GET AS vou CAM AND WATCH HIM VY CONBCIENCE (6 KILLING WAS 810 DANGER TO (Ts TLe BET HE'S DEAD BY | sow. | SNEAK OUT AND Poor Lire verrt T TOLD Him THERE TIM GONNA Are You Reading the Ads? 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