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—_ ri. t R. IS ONE KIND OF COLONET THERE'S AN YOU CAN NEVER I D ON GEORGE, THE OTHER COLONEL, HOWEVER, IN EVERETT, AND WEATHER MAN. JUST AS WE AR 1G ALAy HES RUNNING POR GOVERNOR THEY'RE DIF. HET UP OVER THE CITYCOUNTY BASEBALL FERE NT YET ALIKE. READ ABOUT HIM ON PA GAME, HE TRI TO KILL THE JOY OF LIFE BY TODAY RRR RRA RRR RO BAYING TONIGHT AND SATURDAY, SHOWERS.” THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS BUT—THE SHOWERS WON'T BE ON AT 6 P. My WHEN THE GAME'S PLAYED. by THE COLONEL! Sou cer we. Nerves —_— w ne soln VOLUME 19. rien = ponent a SEATTLE. WASH,, FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1916. ONE CEN Folks, Meet Editor Batwell! Villa's on iA Star reporter seeks out the man who talks to thousands of | Seattle Electric patrons thru columns’ of-the “Electrogram’”’; } an excellent method of getting acquainted, she thinks. it’s not the sort of story that Cornelia Glass impossible It was all done in a few ems that There were plaining prot transportation of Seattle's public from place to place, and telling ex actly hs aambady fait it oa Sins ts ant nett tnd for the 0 Jution of those prot HEN there were letters from Gausething. wien abd eotme from persons who wanted to say something mean One of the letters ‘was from a aad seen a gripman on Bs cable save the life of child by a cool nerve and a glort ous braver The company thanked hb for caring enough to w and assured the an’s credit Anoth This is a story about the Puget matter of fact, ex whol BY CORNELIA GLASS mes pri Sound Tr The Star has » it’s entire different action me plained to him why i way enough the r gain ictor’s number investigate. ERDAY | went to the of fices oo” the Puget Traction, Light &@ and hunted for Mr For he, I found, is editor in-chief of :he Electrogram Mr. Batwel yt—well, say petite—but ie was as ‘hard to fi the proverbial needle I chatted affably with several ecrotaries, invaded the c A. L. Kempste and r nd it Beaton's Super-Zeppelin Fleet Will Carry Passengers Soon From Germany Across Atlantic BY CARL D. GROAT I! United Press Staff Correspondent 4 carr BALTIMOL Mi, Ju zers, wil Letween ( pt submarine 1 States, ¢ Koenig Deutsch yuilding such lins,” he said, “and the enough sold 6 Will they come was asked “They might,” he a wered, with 6 knowing smile nager Hilken of the Deuteche Ovean Rhederei echoed his sentiment 1 knew it the Deutschland six months befe it arrived en € n € ¥ cantl vert thet the Zeppe m v it car freight Koe nig was asked maki quite a fe ene peling all e time. Previously, Koenig had suggest ed strongly to Baltimore city offi elals that the airline is in contem plation, ea, isn't it—ship a 1 Hilken at and da for Germany drew nearer toda Her ers sr ly filled with nickel and rubler and ever thing was roan 1 whereb he could make a wift and safe get awa Capt enig confide sooner or late } gt fed ships oft the Virginia the laugh, and 8 way with his million doliar cargo U. 8. WILL NOT INTERFERE WASHINGTON, July 14 Following the report today of the neutrality board, which in vestigated the status of the submarine Deutschland, Acting Secretary of State Polk said he did not expect it would be necessary for his department to make a formal decision in the matter. This means, it is understo.d, that the Deutschland will be considered a merchantman and allowed to clear, big enough to try to see: bot! The other day, on a street car, I picked little tin box marke Take One At the top of the neat folder ay i a “bulletin of tual servi I read it thra Every item in ha say that something One department pa It was a s individual H It told each of n partic be had been investigate ere z and assure im t ' er woul ¢ Rampage; Has Army El Paso Hears Bandit Has De- manded Surrender of This photo shows the Ger. man submarine, the Deutsch. land, the firet merchant U-boat ever operated and the first sub- marine to cross the Atlantic without a convoy of other ships, a8 she looked when she arrived in Baltimore Monday morning, after trip, of 3800 miles, which 6 da The aqreat length of the , U-boat is shown by comparison to the tugboa the Timmons, ubmersible up Chesapeake bay from the Vir ginia capes, and was standing alongside when the photograph Find Body of Victim x: of Shark’ Boy's Mangled Remains Taken | From Creek Where ut that mpany Chihuahua was taken, The Deutschland He Died | 1 The Srar hope iwe are! rpeyINo Is SUSPECTED] ment ol about 2.000 tone ed's | > SUSPE ment of about 2/ ons ani q of proposition ic el treed of 14 knote an hour, the 'SEA TIGERS TRAPPED| ‘ } PASO, . y 14— | Oeutschtand can go down 300 ectrogram” « the ane Pi oe ee a font, ahd, abberutr ta. tar eae MATAWAN, N. J., July 14.— render of Chihuahua City, ac tain, stay down four days, if Terribly mangied, the body of 2 ‘e that it . cording to a well-founded but necessary. Two tall telescopic Lester Stillwell, victim of the | unofficial report here today masts, which carry wireless man-eating shark, was recov | Gen. Goebel, jr. commander attennae, are to be seen; also at Fort Blins, stated that he at the rear the flag of the new ered from the waters of Mata- — é received reliable information merchant company owning wan creek early today. . . . of the defection of Gen. Tre vessel Great jagged wounds in the | vine, commandant in Chihua a abdomen and breast showed | hua City, from the Carranza 2 where the shark's teeth had ‘ government, ' closed over the 12-year-old boy's reader Gen. Bell, in command of the body. | tilar complaint of n| ‘foepe here, had also heard re- | Harry Van Clies, an engineer on} his personal +. Ports of Villa’s demand for the the Jersey Central railroad, and ; say surrender of the Chihuahua William B. Clayton, Jr., who had remedied, or if that were capital, but had not received é ec é been patrolling the bank of th Ville te eaie to have inforn ed | creak, at 6:20 6. m. today saw the ES PR andi gh ae anpe | body rise to the surface not more Fo ih sia gatas caieee thar 00 feet from where Stillwell | h ef, He wa ated behind | woutd magpie Lig wget or enc attacked Wednesday They his sie tees etal ues’ weneeh hue ’ he body ashore and sum h I t in « door as th v a pt fibre ' ; 1 the county physician he had uot refused tO/ his officers with denth oe nplete autopsy will be per eal tell ha Itke _ Gen be Loals yen peated Cleveland Will Succeed the shark must have t about 12] M Viktenhod and ante defection amt the eurvender of Hughes or 16 feet im length, ca- | hor! Guthuahua Clo to Villa tion of the terrible wounds shows, | Wh irmured no today revoked his orders; WAS DISTRICT JUDGE they believe, that the fish seized | ‘ orto detain rafiroad shipments of the boy across the middie of the| th Juarez to the Ameri WASHINGTON, July 14.— body, rather than striking at his 1 ti n °. The nomination of John H, | feet and legs | put ‘ ca n of 31 cars of provisions| Clarke, of Ohio, for associate All other cases of attack by| sion ¢ admit-| Was allowed to go to Colonia Dub-| Justice of the supreme court, |*harks so far reported have shown | ted ; lan | to succeed Justice Charles E. |that the man-eaters have struck for ade you thik of bach — | Hughes, was sent to the senate the legs of their victims . er?” 1 asked him this afternoon by President pws of the recovery of little Well,” he ihe tae have PRINCESS SUZANNE Wilson Lester Stillwell's body aroused all Pa Apo he sai ty order When Judgo Clarke recently was|Tesidents of this section to re ihat’ te’ tase ae tad entae ointed distrie by Presi./doubled efforts to capture the man stand us, and t we may be able dent son, the nate approv eater, : @ can. It's reall tion of the charger t he was a/ adjacent to this hamlet numbered ‘ort of a " railroad attorne 1 friendly to| hundreds today per—a th that the the railroad interest There were professionals and on our cars had strongly advocated the passage | (ous visitors, sportamen and scien. It's a nice t handshake of the two-cent fare act in Ohio. tiste—-the latter seeking positive The e hands But She Didn’t Love Him Judge Jobn Hessin Clarke was | Proof of shark attacks, since science by born at Lisbon, O., September 18, oes not yet recognize that a fish Rvids cauhd ie aoe 1857, and is a bachelor | will attack a man | He was graduated from Western] The mouth of Matawan creek is| » CHASE FOR ECHO ON SHE WANTED A Reserve ersit nd was admit no ee netted, Volunteers ted to bar in 1878, practicing} Worked today to put in a planik : v expert oustios ee , bad vent escape of the three sharks from Nes “York s in : eat he AN ADVENTURER! been a United States| Which have been seen in the upper Borel gs seh 2 , uF judge for rthwestern district/ Teaches of the ¢ ile Sym pg gues bar (And Saxe-Oldenburg was f Ohio since 1914, In 1908 Judge| The . out about aie thesis fon trom ten| full of them.) Clarke wa democratic nomi-| noon, and when It reaches Its lowest fondle rye “peighl ancl F vane nt nee for the United States senate|ebb the hunters think the bers for $2,900 and guarantee them ainst the late Mark Hanna, He! W!ll be so shallow that sharks can ugainst further acoustic troubles But you must read be che rt n xt Phage ‘ in} he located and killed siheie sctay deatatted . The Little Gray Shoe, form and is vice president for Ohio} Ar 1? they Wick tie way Ban a in next week's Star of the Anti-Imperialist leag iB | they will, the walls of other room eer He holds membership thax een say dg fr lhc anos START MONDAY. —|jand and Now York clubs aria GOING TO HAVE DOUBLE Lafe Hamilton's fourth weekly political machine meeting to goad voters into line for t hand-picked glace,” will be held under cover in t janitor’s room, on the first floor neh in th “ County-City building, Friday, at 4 p,m Driven to desperation by The Star's expose of his previous meetings, Hamilton quietly sent notice around that the door would be guarded inside and out, that only those friendly to gang politics may enter, HE’S LAFE CALLS “THE BOYS” TOGETHER AGAIN: HE’S GUARD ON THE DOORS rhe however, will have a and will give a full account of what paper Those who attend Hamilton's 1 penters, plumbers, painters, elevato about the court house and in his openly informed he will discharge for his machine candidates, representative takes place at the meeting, in Saturday's neetings are r men and road district, unless they his janitors, car others employed whom he has go down the line This picture shows. Dr. ©. R. Rorat aah of the ‘snababa squad of the city health department, preparing to give the test to a tle girl who had just arrived in Seattie from Chicago, is seen in the upper right-hand corner of the picture, wears a | expression as the doctor and Miss Li her child. Her worry, however, cei girl being pronounced in good health, they were allowed to depart. DUNT FORGET COUNTY-CITY BALL GAME! DUGDALE'S PARK! 6. M. TODAY! BENEFIT MILITIA AMES FUND! The Seattle Star LAST EDITION hildren Held Up at Seattle R. R. Stations Doctors Guarding Against Disease Germs Furst Photograpli of the German Super-Submarime Dewtschilamd im American Waters Tests Given All Youngsters Arriving by Train Or Boat From Cities in East; Preparations. ‘Made by City Health Department to I olate Cases of Infantile Paralysis. picture was taken at the O. & W. ¢lasping her dolly. * * health officers hed guard against possible influx of infantile paralysis cases into. Seattle Friday, when Dr. ¢ R. Rorabaugh, assisted by two nurses, began combing incoming trains and boats for chil- dren affected by the dread plague ’ Fifteen small children and ba bies were examined by the physi cian on the first train to arrive at the O-W, station It required the efforts of several persons to round the mothers and their small ones for exam tion, How Tests Are Made Dr. Rorabaugh would corner a small child, and after explaining to the mother the reason for her detention, would examine the star tled child ly feeling its pulse and forehead for fever signs and heart action Providing the child was slightly feverish, the reflex test of th knee would be given, In this test the child is seated and the knee is tapped This tapping is used in develop-| ed cases where the paralysis has} gained a start | be | have instructions,” Dr Rora The mother, in E. Jones, a city nurse, d a moment iater, when, the station. The child is seen ti * * * baugh said, “to take every child that shows the slightest sign of an” ailment to the special room nrovid> ed for us in the depot for a more” complete examination, ‘ This room is fitted with every, necessary instrument for examin’ the children. The children we examined thus far today , were especially healthy. It was not even necessary for me to take the ad- dresses of the newcomers, Children Are Startled “We are not paying much atten- tion to children coming to Seattle from other cities in the state. The | most stringent attention will be 7 paid, tho, to those entering from the F os Four children from Chicago passed thru the test Friday. Twe of these, Charles and Roy Denny, young sons of Mrs. William Denny, passed thru the ordeal perfectly, with the exception that their ad- vent into the city startled them somewhat Every mother agreed to the ex aminations without any trouble and appeared relieved when the phys» cian allowed them to pass, Interested spectators, ineluding members of the train crew, gath- ered around the medical corps while they worked. Little Elizabeth Dalgity, year-old baby quarantined near Auburn with infantile paralysis, reported doing well Friday, the 2th was “Play ball!” Promptly at 5 o'clock Friday afternoon, at Dugdale park, Judge Rhea Whitehead will an- nounce the batteries for the city-county game, the proceeds of which will go to the me fund for the Washington guardsmen at Calexico. Said batteries, it is unofficially stated, will be thusly City—Bob Hesketh, and captain, pitcher; Councilman C, -- Councilman Bob Hesketh and Prosecutor Lundin Picked to Pitch City-County Game Today | | councilman | moons, there'll be some brand pew Allen Dale, catcher. County~Prosecutor Al Lundin, pitcher; Judge King Dykemam catcher. Will it be some game? Verily, even so, The price of admission ts 26 cents, Resides seeing the city dads and county grandfathers doing one of the hardest day's work in many illustrations of rooting,