The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 14, 1915, Page 1

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your duty to under dier, so Jeff to prove it How did he do it See today's Bud Fisher cartoon on the sport page Police Seeking | Man Who There Used to Be a Bar in the Moose Lodge Room But lew Iv s Gone! So ve the Cards! Tekiada’ Bronson and His Boys Dangerously Wounded Woman, Then Robbed Her of Money. Little hope was held out at the city hos- pital Thursday for Mrs. Eugene Thomas, the woman who was attacked and stabbed at Eighth and King Wednesday night, by a man suspected of being the man. who brought about a separation between herself and hus- band. After stabbing her in the breast, in the abdomen, under one arm, and behind both shoulders, he snatched her leather bill purse, containing $55, extracted a pair of turquoise earrings from her ears, and ran away. | The woman managed to stagger i # by Secretary of State land, and gives his consent [whe declared she did not know the ‘man who had attacked her, but PLAN ARMS EMBARGO, later sald he answered to the }seription of a man who had been WASHINGTON, Oct. 14— |the cause of separation between tion upon the grim “First he came here, and has m Chief” has been drafted, and = “!reats on her life She described him as Secretary Lansing plans to is ht inches, weighing 190 pov fue it during the day. clad ina long, gray overcoat and He will send copies to all wearing a black, soft hat American dioiomats abroad to include an embargo against arms wing the American line to Car Yanza's enemies, coupled with an syauncement that America will re fard as rebels all anti-Carranzista factions When head trust J]. Gustafersoa: Delay in recefving the approval! ang Deputy Jin tr 3. Gu en ved of Guatemala was the only hitch in| }esaxtast. Thureday soe apr the recognition plans. + ergy irsday morning to 4 . Fred Starr, interurban bandit, held Carranza’s report in a black hole at the connt il Guaymas, Villa's only . . . d capture of port, is a gel al too /he smashed Gustaferson over the aking the arms embargo, 5° head with a pot, inflteting slight effective, for, with communication ary + by sea shut off, the rebel chief has! ‘Starr was placed in the black .When an embargo has been} covered he had clamped tightly by the United/ par, which he ev States, Villa will be shut off en-jeq off hie bank There wae dine tirely plece of pipe taken from the bath , William Loeb, jr, agent of the! tut | Guggenhetm interests, came here to| Starr, A. W. Williams, A. C. Haz mee Secretary Lansing regarding! zard and M. Harris. tne es of the Villa's reported threat to seize Gug-| county jail, alrea » one charge genheim mines in Mexico. of attempted j ing Their 1 - case come re Justice Gor } don Thursday afternoon | L_From Ensland | saigon sussTiTuTe LONDON, Oct. 14.—Co-oper. — ation of Russian troops with PORTLAND, Oct. 14.—A the allied forces in the Balkans four-story building, to be fitted “the moment they are avail out with reading rooms, music able” was promised by Sir Ed al instruments, a gymnasium, | ward Grey in the house of com baths and beds for men who, ons today. It is supposed he | after saloons are closed, Janu {meant the moment the road is | ary 1, will have no place to go, opened for getting them to the | was provided for by the city ki _fighting zone. yesterday ADMINISTRATION . WILL “SHOW UP” | SHIP COMPANY WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.—The administration is preparing to “show up” the Pacific Mail Steamship Co.'s motive for dis banding under the plea that the La Follette seamen’s act forced them from business. It was learned today that the commerce and treasury de Partments had collected a great deal of evidence to controvert De claims that if the company complied with thig law it would , lose money. Justice Wardell, surveyor of the port of San Francisco, con ferred here today with Secretaary Redfield Werdell’s figures showed that the Mongolia cleared $128, 000 net every trip, while the estimated earnings of the Mongolia and Manchuria were $11 per mile net mAQUIDATING PACIFIC MAIL COMPANY ‘ NEW YORK, Oct. 14.—The Pagific Mall Steamship officials be; today to clear away the last obstacle in of Hqut compan A special meeting of stockholders had voted capital stock from $20,000,000 to $1,000,000, and to change of shares r ‘om $100 to $5, gan jation of the reduce the par value 1, this is to tip you not to do it. J F YOU ARE planning to buy a lot of booze before the dry law becomes effective, becomes effective? know, for instance, that liquor dealers must have all their fixtures OUT OF There are a lot of things in the dry law that most ot us don’t know who knew their business. If you think it's a joke, you're going to get a lot of heavy jolts. of all its puzzling legal phrases and verbiage, This digest of the law has been prepared by Seattle attorneys who understand the law. thoroly tand this law. Don’t miss reading tomorrow's Star. gce".] The Seattle Star B™ the derned fool wouldn't * believe Jeff was ‘a German sol The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News : VOLUME within 10 days after the Some folks are laboring under the delusion that it is going to be a sort of joke. going to tell you all 4 Wake up, folks. We will explain it to y ‘ and who know how to explain it The law was dr2fted by prohibitioni it. It will be stripped man will get it I will understan SEATTLE, WASH, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14 ONE CENT NEWS STANDS, be | ZEPPELINS KILL 41 IN LOND | WOMAN STABBED AND ROBBED IN CITY STREET British Public IndignantBe- cause Government Does Not Protect Them; De- mand Reprisals. LONDON, Oct. 14. tive Zeppelin raid of the war, Germans last night, over London, killed 41 and wounded 101, it was officially announced today. Of this number 14 killed and 13 wounded were soldiers, and the others were civilians. As has been customary, the official state- ment withheld the actual location of the dis- aster, tho it admitted the raid was “over a portion of the London area.” No public buildings were damaged but several fires were started and extinguished quickly. to ber home at 671 Dearborn st hospital, Thursday she was ration. | al only at times. GEN CARRANZA The city hospital authorities say | ' an operation will be necessary, but Mra. Thomas refuses to submit to! Formal Proclamation Prepared !t until her son arrives from Port-| twenty-seven jdeath list in this raid $5,000,000 Damage |raid on England thus far Sixty-four men, thirty women and children. were. wounded, ‘announcement the one given shortly after midnight declared one Zeppelin was seen when fired upon and drop to a low supplementing When brought to the h it. Lansing. ght to the hospital} original dozen members of the Boys’ Benevolent league and (below) the Empress theatre, founder of the order, Kush Bronson, manager of which holde ite meetings and has its existence under the aus of the: Moose lodge. Gabriel Mohoaise, who helped Bronson start the league, Is the second boy from . In the top row Last night's raid left Britons an ptier aerial defense. By Fred L. Boalt. Loyal Order of Moose has a memb [ Schellichi tribe, But his philosophy lives on. a boy named Rush Bronson and found it who imparted to the boy that sink in Denounce Government was called to his fathers more than rship of 680,000. This indignation found expressic in titer denunciation of the ehrera: making ready Formal recognition of Carran- (her and her husband, from whom za by the United States as (she is now divorced HI Maxican srevisional president She said this man chok her ae once when she K oy impended today. The procia ington, Oregon says mation conferring this distinc- lived with him for a time. I ate! a quarter of People who went to busines It was fated that his p: something Francisco, “Indian Louie,” shattered window Should cross | silosophy. measures to Americanized 2, who likes to play See es Cl ohebk tt DISCUSS PLANS FOR A BIG ARMY | President and Chairman Go Over Secy. t did not defend u Gi and to the foreign embassies t ute here. A baseball. ‘The proclamation was understood |wind and the » adequate prote perhaps trivial. Resolutions Passed American citizenship. the hand of reprisal raids “I do not like to think about the life I led as a boy to ait ue enemy WASHINGTON, The army's part in the new de was discussed to day by President ing on the meeting only the border source. hole Wednesday when it was dis that we to us Mall Gazette adds this nis out) So roe Hat. We: Oren x companions, and back to the rmissible to hope that we| » a corps of naval gin ‘ners who can really distinguish be-) them two} military affairs committee reorganization plan was before id followed in the wake of Bronson’s north fork Financial were uppermost, considerations as both were |darkening the city . ALL RETURN SAFELY BERLIN DECLARES traveling over roposed addition of 2 SERBS PREPARE TO DEFEND NISH arian invasion | rex lars would b (Continued on Page j heavier guns Zeppelins last stated today ~@ ENTIRE CREW OF SCHOONER SICK ' TOWNSEND. \ eo ———————_——— Ex-President Taft attending a family A clergyman’s lit opposite the ex occupant of the White House The host explained that he had hen that laid an egg every and important es. hope to keep the army | ‘@blishments of from $50,000,000 t » Hampton and Woolwich with and shrapnel bomb: | and great ex prevailed on imber of mili ns who would form ravages of the peling all returned |tho vehemently BOB ‘BRIDGES A CANDIDATE FOR THE U.S.SENATE © amount to be asked for navy appropriations this.) will be around $240,000,000. This amount dreadnaught would materially strength and efficiency wan towed into ustro Germans were foundation stone once a week!” NAME RECEIVER p removed to the martr their advance bers of the crew were so weak the ae | BATTLE RAGING | mmissioner and mayor of tow attacks and recaptured ¢ from Callao en route to th Sound her ¢rew was Port Commissioner Robert B. Bridges will be a candidate for the United States senate on the democratic ticket, according to information conveyed by close Bridges could not be reached today for confirmation announcement To those who have followed asignmenta of Wages of other total sum of over aceording to a ‘e TWO DIE IN. FIRE! SLAVS MASSING SANTA ROSA, Oct yuit aero" GAS CO, IS SUED and property loss estimated at $60, who think that plans to land forces on the Bulgarian coast, » belief of those in aviation plant 4 didacy for the senate is no sur ontesano Gas Co. on mo He was frequently men lof here, today. Did vou ont IGHT EDITION WEATHER FORECAST—Fair Dis AL sKATILE low 18.6 ft. 2:81 a m., 10 ft 12.0 1. 4:02 pom. OR ft -In the most destruc- in Zeppelin Raid? - BY CARL W..ACKERMAN. B vise’ Oct. 14.—The last grezt Zeppelin raid on England pre- vious to last night's start a fire near the biggest arsenal in London and burn- ed $5,000,000 worth of prop- erty, an Americin traveler told me today Reb MYSTERY IN ; SCEMIDT TRIA LOS “ES, Oct. 14.—Sup- ported by friends, Chief De- fense Counsel Charles H. Fairall, in the M. A. Schmidt murder trial, tottered into court this morning ter suffering all night from a mysterious malady Doctors stated they did not know what the cause of his suffering was. Defense Counsel Job Har man did not eral parties out to search for him »pear in court. Se’ r the defense went It was predicted one of the big- gest moments in the trial would occur today when a demand for a new jury and a complete starting over of the trial might be made by the defense. Fairall was deathly pale and mumbled his words in an under tone. I can't hear him.” sharply im terrupted District Attorney Wool wine, AFTER CONVENTION President A, N. Henderson of the International Association of Dairy and Milk Inspectors, of Seattle, will urge at the Washington, D. C, con- vention that the 1916 convention be held here. EXONERATE DRIVER Sleanor Brunner, 9, run down by an auto driven by H. Deyoe last Friday, came to death thru an lent that w navoidable, ac cording to a coroner's jury, No charge will be made against Deyoe, SEN. JONES SPEAKS enator Wesley L. Jones showed ster yticon ews of Washington C,, to fllustrate an interesting y,{talk at the Press club Wednesday I night tioned for the democratic nom: * ination in 1914, but tho urged to run, kept out of that fight. Since then, Bridges has been figured upon as a decided pos. sibility in the 1916 race A rumor was also current that Sheriff Robert T. Hodge would be a democratic candi- date for governor, but Hodge denied it. He said he might run as an independent.

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