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HAY CITY. Mich. Sept IK, Jatwu M Snyder, aeeond cousin to | t gmil Taft, I* <h>ad here today from apopiev Snyder's widow la a ftr»t cousiu to Wood row VYllaon, democratic candidate for president. GIRL-WIFE MAY ESCAPE ON UNWRITTEN LAW TRIES TD ATTACK HIED 111 COURT Oftly i •««'*' 1,1 "" " "M aslllff* presented an open d-mon | !t™rioa **alnst AlUTiir* Palton in j«d*» Ronaid a court thin morning < ITSM DMI Pf l«><? I'*'' 4 f » ,h * r ° f " wok* Ctrl «l-'> pr.-r rr.tl a »t*ti» ( o rr cb*.f "••'"•I John 8a bo#. * mK sailor . . I Halts* wrw*ly UTtllMfl the parent* ot tk« youuK girl for allow j to nw about the without proper assort. and plat-Ins t*»#Wl" e ** h * r cons-aot flrt.* tioM in the pa'h of young uifti He rrfamd to the fart thai the iclrl M Wen for sonic time under the olxwrttttl' " v f the Juvenile officer* »ad the VOX l '* ■!)• you think this boy would I kite roomittted any wrong aaalnat I tie (Ctrl tf ike **» properly behav edf asked Dalton of the Jnry. skioh la composed of : hr»— women tad aIM men Would there have keen thM trtal If the parent* had Sane their duty to the girl* l>re*» , ti up i» flddy color*. Dora *he not look ttte a mature young woman V | ThaJafh'!' of the girl. who claim* | it* trSht 11. aros< from hi* Mat lfl <TUr'»wf* itartNf to aar some thle«. whra the bailiff* ruahed to Wat ud Wk *iim out He j>ac**.l ike wrfidort. MMIHu to hlmaelf. i <uri*f the rent of Dalton'* arftu »et>t. *tfce <**< went to the jury at mt SO.OM MOURNERS AT NOGI FUNERAL TOUO. Brpt ll—With 50.000 mtanm hohlnd their coffin*. rh«> Mix at Otn. Count No|tl anil his rt!». »bo comraitt'-J haraklri her* tartac tIM funeral nt Ktnperur Slut wkltr wrc borer fmrti t*>*tr mot! *« rw!4enr<- in Akasakl today i.nd tarled in Aoyiu.j cemetery Tke tkfoaK which watchwl the f» •ml >u oaarly as gr<-«t ** thai trlkh attandrd the otwe«|ii'c« of tV M atkad<> A* sh. r*n rar naft. on which Nogl's bod« was lam to tl>« tomb, was followed th«m*h the ttrvfl« .vf the city by Hw >wn« contain.nt the remain* of hit 4»*oted vife. hundred* of Itam* flood in dead silencj a* Ui« COlteße i**S*d ZOO GETS POLAR CUBS AND FOXES Two polar bear euba will auoo oarirk tbe Woodland park too. ac cording to a latter r*c*i*-<l by Hoi Ml CotiertH. at«r>tar. of the park boart. fr*» t) Cram of the *o*- (moral #«rv,re at Potm Karrow The tatur wr» that Capf Andrew Ohra of th«> wboom-r Tranult casibt thf Cuba hut tprinic In the Betrta* mi* and will offer tbem to tto local too TV too vreterday r*ev{▼«■*! a pair of AlMka red foxea wblch canu- In OB tk» HMArr Victoria. CANT GO BACK ON OWN CONFESSION OLYMPIA. H'a*b . Sept llt Tin «w» mefcMton soatain* the convtc of tUm« Dnunmood In the count; »ui»rtor court of a ** fnn <l fcgrre mutder charge. uc torthn to a dacUlon r>f the aupren»* *wt DranwnmM had a change ot Wart after tbf nxilrmton and con tesdcd that ifw evidence dl I not fc»tlfy tha verdict. Won't Let Hamilton More Warrant* attempt of Commlsatnneri Haailtaa and Rutherford to get the •auction of th«- Mate board of ex uuaen to the overdrawing of road jiaq warrant*. failed yeat«-rd»y Mter i ixmterencr with County Aud Jf* .*** * n, l ">e examlnera. ' aon *" U>e fundi have already jjjsomdrawn to the extent of B»,W, Hamilton and Itutherford «« a Kheme which they believed Zu*7 P*n>>t'- the legal drawing of •"HJoaal warrant< ( oi St- Bankruptcy Claims 'J,**" 11 * ''"-operative filed Its acheriulr- In the i S'ates dlitrict court yeater "atoiltie* of 17,891.5e An Imolqntary petition of bank IMu-i out claim* for k T a "J!* 1 ' n 'he aame court Z** l ''T r k *>«*. th " Puget rsr 011 company agalrmt K a tUßton merchant. H Le*« Man Drown to an * h>mt * r * h,J had fold them hi> .k ?' not Interfere with "fored their cries for U«e £ m 10 80 t0 th * ,r «aalat kou«* launch, Robert Wood -4ro*iw.,il I.** 1 Wr<l *"nner, waa Wnioß rJ" rt,y rr ' sl< *nd » com ntrrowly earaperl dr a th. t ant tifrAias OF STATE - (Contined on patre 2) VOL 14. NO. 172. LIGHT IN THE DARKNESS MOTHERS' PENSION LAW SAVES BROKEN HEARTS Father of th« Illinois Mother*' Pension Lav* and Secretary National After three year* of continuous and strenuous work for a pen*ion for mothers of dependent children we succeeded in get ting the Illinois legislature to pa-s such a law last year with out a dissenting vote. I.ast month in Clucago .W) mothers with I.AJfi children received 58.145 toward the support of their children for one month Next month these »ame moth er* will get the same amount and more mothers will be add ed to this pension mil of honor, a roll of good mothers aiding the Mate to keep their children out of charity institutions. 8lnc« thUlaw »»* |muw«hl Id Illinois. I h»»e tIiIIm) tbr rhtt dren'a court* In tb« larn«< cIIIm In many other Including Indi- HENRY NEIL Hundreda of caa«a practically like thia are being trted: A widowed mother with ler ala children la brought Into court. Sh« la behind in her rent and the landlord haa ordered her out of the houae. Having atruggied for five yeara to earn enough money to provide for heraetf and family, the overtax on her atrength haa broken down her health, and ahe cannot entirely aupport heraalf and children. So her home ia broken up. each child ia aent to a different Inatitu tion, and the mother, heart broken, hertelf becomee a charge on the community. t'nder the new law In llllnola. the mother la no' aeparated from her children Kather ahe la hired by the *ute to take care of them In her own home —thua Riving hope, happlna**, heal'h and atrength to the mother and bringing up the children under normal home coti ditlona at half the coat to the taxpayer that it take* to bring them up In an Inatltutlon tloea Washington want the molher'a help In bringing up her depend ent children? Keep in mind the economy of the mothera' pIan—WHICH IS HALF OF THE COST OF THE INSTITUTION PLAN—even If the humanity of the mother plan la entirely left out of conaideration. The leglalaturee of a number of *tatr« will wreatle with thla propoaltlon early next year; aom* few atatea may pnaa aurh a law, but MOST OK THEM WIUj NOT liecauae nrgunlx<-d Charities will Inftiat that the fund* be distributed by them or under their aupervlalon. I'nder the mothera' penalon law every cent the taxpayer contrib ute* goem to the mother Cnder organlxed charity tbree-fourtha of all the fund* contributed go to "admlnlitratlon expenaei." SOME SPECIALS IN THE NEWS At 57, Miaa Charlotte Swarti of Athena. Pa., haa entered Keuka in atlt at Penn Yan, and will no through collide. She became Mra. Amada T. Wymore In July. But In September ah« evidently derided that alngle blla* haw certain ndvantagen over matri monial life and. without bidding her huahand "good-bye," ahe loft 8e attle. Ho Joeeph Wyniore thla morning began divorce ai l lon. Ma/be Eve waa made of Adam'a rib, but 12-year-old Adeie Weinberg of Philadelphia haa had her aplne patched with part of her own leg bonea. Binghamton, N. Y.—A bottle containing 120.000,000 diaeaae garma, enough to Infect a large city, hah not Im'n opened by thoae who have examined at the police atatlon II I* auppoaed It waa being ahlpped to a laboratory for experimental purpoaeß. Officiala of a Chicago atreet car company, aued for damagea by Will lam Relnhardt, who fell from a car, aaj he mulcted them of once before hecauae of hla ability to throw hla ahoulders out of Joint at will. It waa two very obliging men who held up Mike Pouloa laat night. Mike la the proprietor of a fruit aland at lfith av. N. and Oaler at. lie •eked the hold-up men to leave him enough money to make change, and they very kindly dropped .'ls cent* back Into the drawer and then dlaap|>eared. Eva R. Allen doea not believe In "aeeing America firat." Eva la traveling In Europe now. The late*t heard of her by her huatiand waa when she waa admiring the Alp* from the Switzerland Bide. Alien came to Seattle In 15*08. Ilia wife refuaed to follow. Now lie wanta a divorce. Suffrage aiatera will note that Mra. Kate Sparrow of San Rafael, Cal„ an election clerk. loHt her Job when ahe waa (even mlnutea late becauae Hhe waited to fri/z her hair. " O Loa Angelaa.— Miaa Margaret Neill, 16, la 14 ouncea lighter, follow ing an operation at Columbia hoapital. The child had a habit of chew ing her hair, and thla amount waa removed from her stomach. The Seattle Star By Henry Neil. Probation League. ana, Ohio, New York, IVnnaylvanla. lowa. Michigan atd Mlatumrl. and found In each of them practically the name condition* that prevailed In llllnola prevloua to the paaaaga of thla mothera' penalon law. THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE SKATTLK. WASH.. WEDNESDAY, SKPTKMBER 18. 1912., JUDGE BLACK THE WINNER Judge W. W. ftlark of Kverett la the probable nominee of the deuw> rralkr party for governor Cnoffictal returna gtve him ■ lead of almael t SM on flrat and aecond choice voter | combined over Hugh C Todd, the wrond high man Krneat Muter ol ! Taroma haa dropped to third place Notwlthatandlng thla lead. Todd ta confident that the complete rta vaaa of the rvturna to be ma4a by the aecrctary of atale will give him the nomination. The unofficial fig urea gtve Mlark 7.356 votea, Tudt] MM. and Uater «.TU. HERE ARE THE LOVE EXPERTS WHO WIN PRIZES IN STAR CONTEST < l«H>rge Mellen. of Briarwoo4, Mercer Island, must be an *cct>m> plished lore-maker. At any rate, he wins tbe first prlte. a box at the Moore theatre for the production of "The Heart Breaker* Thursday. Friday and Saturday. In tbe opinion of The star's moat expert lore specialist. o<-nrge's 'Cupid Commandment" Js the best of the many hundred which Stnr readers submitted l.isteu to tbhi: "Thou shalt not mske of thyself s graven image—for svsn a quiet girl abhors s dummy." George pulled that one, and It's a dandy. The longer you think about It the better It gels Hut It's an awful slam at those pomi>ot» lovers. We're handing June Cleveland the second prise, and she < we're a hunch she's a she) gets six seals at ,I he Moore June, who doesn't give her address, puts this one over. "Remember that, though hope de ferred meketh the heart sick, a kiss deferred maketh the lover stick." You've got to hand It to June for knowing a trick or two in the love Kb me. We suspect that William Pavlee. of 612 Seventh av . Is a ssd chap Hill gets third prlxe for his. four seats at the Moore. He comes to bat thus: "Thou shalt psrtake of no high scented swsetmests before thou mskest thy csll, lest she say, 'Lo, I have snared me a win* bibber.' " We are lay lug odds that A. H. IF YOU GET STUNG ON A HORSE TRADE. DON'T GO T OCOURT, STING SOME ONE ELSE When you buy a horse without a guaranty, believing It to be a good horse, only to discover that yon have been stung. It will not do you any good to court aliout It. Sting somebody else. This may not be good morals, but it Is good law. John and Jane Oop Ek had n horse. The May llros. bought It. It was testified before Judge Tallman yesterday that the horns was de scribed to the purchasers as a mar vel of strength an<t Willingness, ami sound In wind and lltnb It could,, the May llros. said Kk said, pull two cords of shingle holts with ease, lti not only could, but would. Like to,' ONE (TNT °* a*n Wl '» |( W | te ABJECTION TO • COUNTING OF j THE BILLOTS j Pbrmal objection has hern filed b> .fudge John K llumiilirli h to the I reuniting nr the ballot boxes In or der to get the total number of votes Waal In the nonpartisan Judiciary lon Several other candidate* W»T tak» similar action. Judge Humphries contends that unless Ihe re Is a bona fide election con test filed by a candidate the ballot feosea must remain undisturbed. Judge lohn it Yakey, of Kitsap County, to whom the recount peti tion filed yesterday waa referred, tlila morning tlg»>«t an order citing Sit It candidate* to show cause on Hftsrday why the boies should not b* opened and the ballots counted If the bosea gre not opened none •of the Judges can be de< lared elect «1 The number of nominee* will be 11, Instead of a smaller [number, and In November the nine rwewtvlng the highest votes will be elected Wants Lights Out, So Hit Hens Can Sleep OKLAHOMA CITY. Oklii . Hept. It- John Hherwln ha» aakod the rlljr commlaalonera In have the Miw«i ligUta turned of at midnight fr>r n rather uncommon reaaon "I want ih<- Unlit* turned off." tajr* be. "ao 111jr cblrkena ran get Mi alwp." fiherwtn declare* that every nigh' ila chlckena iu> out Mtidcr the , bWf elect rl< light at the corner and on th« grMahop|>era that are Attracted b> the Id* lamp that twillM over the middle of the Jtrwt H« baa made repealed at tump'* <o drive them bark to rooat, Vit 'hey rannot be Induced to leave tk« feaal Burglar Ptyi Victim Back {?> SPOKANE. Waah. ft. pt Ifc, —A tjMll dreaeed man who railed on J lA\ Hnnc.il anrprtaed him by an nkMuictng he *a* a burglar who had Mfetetril the iiwroi home two year* '•»». robbing It of He pre (•MtMl an eavelope containing the jpßMtaf. Haorai had told the ;.i»MlMao*a« of thievery, while hl« ,pla.. wn being ranaarked. and the fbiAii aald be had changed hla way of Hvlng after he thought the talk ■nr. IHehnlta. of Kaatlake a*.. Is a mnrrteil man. He )n*t miaaed get ting third prise, but he gets a coaple of seats anyhow If this (toes not sound like matrimony we lose "Thou ahaH not call thy future mother.ln-law an old hen nor thy sweetheart a chicken; for when tttou art married It will bo up to thee to do the scratching." Hehult* Mr.d sit other exports get two seats each Here are the com mandments of the six: H. H. Stone. Alkl theatre: "Thou shalt not nibble at peaches, but par take of the apple, as thy ancestors did before thee." George Thompson, 4436 38th sv. S.: "Thou shalt not bear false wlt nees against thy rival. Hs may be a coming white hope." F. C. Cahoon, Hotel Washington Annes: "Thou shalt not run after • girl—for, like a street car, there Is slways another coming." Blanche Christy. 342 IMh sv.; "Thou shalt not boast of personal brsvsry to a girl, teat at some fu ture time she talketh with someone who knoweth thee." Miss M. I. Warren, 839 East 31st av.: "Remsmber the opsra snd how she loves it; for while thou mayest call and be entertained by her for six days, the seventh day it is up to thee to pet busy." P. C. H.: "Thou shait not covet the position of her poodle dog. but endeavor to deserve it" The winners can get their prises by calling at The .Star office. In fa<;. So Ihe Hay Bros. paid $225 for the horse. The Hay llros. said that, when the horse was theirs It showed an unwillingness, or an Inability, or both, to pull two cords, or one cord, or anything at ail. It seemed, they said. Incapable of more than five minutes of sustained exertion. This absence of enthusiasm, they said, might be for the fact thiu the horse ha«l the heaves. They did not know, they said, the horse had the heaves when they bought it. Judge Tallman said the Hay Bros., having no guaranty, liought the horse at their own risk, lie dismissed the action. GIRL- WIFE WHO HELPED HER HUSBAND KILL STEPFATHER WHO WRONGED HER Wealey BrowneM and hla young wife. who walked a hundred milea, from Idaho to Colfax, With., to kill A. Naavea. the woman'a utep father, who waa accuaed of betraying her. Thla picture ihowi Mra. Brownell with har hair cut off and wearing men'a clothing, aa ahe waa dreaaed during her long tramp. The picture waa taken for The Btar juat after thay had given themaelvea up. MY CONFESSION By Florence Haze! Moore "The Woman Who Did Not Care" Th< ct'!,.-: mil- (f 111- n!<ir- hru tn-i-n 'nld Now I 1 nun*. I shall no one. least of all. In making thla. my confeaalon. t am appealing. frankly for aympa thy Ood know* I need It" lam ap|ieallng. too, for that mjtiare deal ' of which w«- hear ao much and aee ao little. Hut you will not understand and syni|>atbtte unless you go back *ltb me to the beginning, years before the events in which I figure! as the notorious Hazel Moore, "the woman who did not care." I waa born in taulavllle. Ky . 2« years ago In babyhood I was adopted and my foatermother put me Immediately In a convent For the first 14 years of my life I lived the elolstered existence In which the whole worll ended at the convent wall. Guarded by the g.-ntle sisters from outside Influences, knowing nothing of the sin of the world. I was happy for 14 uneventful years 1 ran see now that It was a mistake to send me to the convent, though my foster mother, a devout woman, thought she was acting for the best. But It was a far greater mistake to send me. an unsophls ticated. convent bred girl, out into the world at the age of 14 In the convent 1 learned much of music and books and the domestic virtues Hut I learned nothing at all of life. 1 was at once eager and afraid to go. I cried when the time came '° **'' g'wd bye to the sisters. Yet 1 could hardlv contain myself I was so eager to be gone. And two hour* after I left the convent gate I waa a wife! My foster mother came for me and took me homo There was a young man there, scarcely more than a boy. a neighbor of ottrs. He seemed a voting god to me. He was Romance personified. His name was t lyde ( Hurley. I remember that my foster mother, having lunch to prepare left us together In the parlor. 1 remember, too, that I wondered why 1 was blushing and tongue Med in the presence of this slim, smiling bov who waa almost a man It "" love at first sight with both of us. He stammered his love, aud, trembling and amated. we stole from the house By noon ne were man and wife. v. .X lydP . '""w N>W York Mo - ,oc - >u to see Life Neither of us hart ever been to New York, but In fancy we pictured Its wonder* We wanted to tee theatre*, restaurants, crowd* . , F "T O ™ shiws. 1 became stage-struck. Though only 14 I looked older. I haunttd the managers' office* m. v!""'. nev ' r <leveloi>cd tuberculosis. and bla i*ople sent Wm to ArUona. I wan left In New York alone I never aaw my husband again. And then our baby was born. When well and strong enough to fend for myself, I gave my baby to my foster-mother and secured an engagement with a musical comedy ■bow For three years I lived the life of the Great White way. Clyde and I exchanged letters, and occasionally I managed to run over to I.oulsvllle to tee my baby. When I was 17 years old my husband died. For a year longer I stayed In New York. No one who has not been through the mill can know the apprenticeship I served. The scales fell from my eyes I saw life as it Is Hut there was no going back. The convent child was dead The show girl had her way to make. 1 danced and sang and smiled In the front row, and took the world as I found it. Wbra I was IK 1 Joined a road company. (Continued Tomorrow.) Kansaa City. Mo.—Andrew Powell was ahot dead by J. F. El am aft «r ho had kicked Elam's 12 year-old son When Elam asked him why ho had hurt the txiy, Powell naked htm what he was going to do about It. Elam thought Powell was about to draw a gun anil he ft red three time*, killing him Instantly. SAYS REBELS WILL TAKE MEXICO MEXICO CITY. Sept. 18.—"I ahall capture the city of Mexico and force Madero to flee If the I'. S. Intervenes. I will kill every American within reach. Join my forces with the government soldiers and fight the common enemy of the North." This is the statement attributed to Oon. Emilia Zapata, who, with approximately 5,000 Insurgents, la threatening the capital of the Southern republic. ASKS TO TELEPHONE, PRISONER ESCAPES SAN' FRANCISCO, Spt. 17 L. K Kuapp, convicted of forgery In l.os Angeles, Is fit liberty todnv alter escaping from the custody o; Deputy Sheriff George Keym, wliilo en route to tho state penitentiary. Requesting that ho bo allowed to telephone Former Polleo Cummin hloner Harry Flannery, Kmipi> step ped Into a booth at the Palace hotel while Keym stood outside. \ mo ment later Keym. who had turned away to IlKht a cigar, found that hits I prisoner had disappeared. HOME EDITION EOITEO BV FRED L. BOALT Chapter I. ADVERSITY assails us when we least expect it. We must, then, be prepared for the unexpected We must make every opportunity to better ourselves count for something. The Want Ads present not one, but a great many op portunities each day—chances for someone to step up a few rungs of the ladder of for tune. Are YOU making use of the "Wants"? Are you studying them? When you allow the "Wants" to slip past, you are simply denying entrance to oppor tunity. Star Want Ads are the essence of what over 200,000 readers have to offer. Downtown Want Ad Office, 229 Union St. (with Souvenir & Curio Shop). Over 40,000 Paid Copies Daily Portland, Or.—Mrs, C. G. Hunt came her'- from Madras, Or, end put her 7-year-old son in school. Then she forgot where she had left him and called for iiollce amtlstsnce In locating him. SYMPATHY FDD HUSBAND AND YOUNG WIFE COLFAX. Waah., Sept. 18.—That Mr* Winnie Brownell, the 17 year old child wife who aided her hus band, Wessley Brownell, 25, In the murder of the girl's stepfather, A. Neeves, will escape punishment by invoking the "unwritten law," is th« general opinion here. The plight of tie girl and her young husband, who tramped 100 miles for the op portunity of avenging a wrong which they claim Neeves has been guilty of is arousing keen sympathy. "When the full story of the abuse and the shame to which she waa subjected la made known, no Jury can condemn her action," says tho hurhand. The girl-wife is equally surf that her husband will be ac quittal and restored to her and her two babies, Samuel. 14 months old, and Marie, four months old. Winnie Hrownell waa born in Wiilla Walla. She ha* had a hard struggle ever alnc About two year* ago sh<- was married to young Wesitley Hrownell at Asotin. Waah. Ntevea. her stepfather, formerly lived at Colfax, but for the past four yeats has been In varioun parts of Idaho and at Walla Walla, lie made the girl go with him. and it was then that he Is alleged to have trafficked in her shame. When Wensley and Winnie Hrownell commenced an action against on« of the men who had wronged her In Idaho, their own lawyer was bought off by Neeves. they assert. Ho, when their case failed, they deter mined to revenge themselves. The Ctrl had her hair abort) close and she dressed herself like a boy. Their children were left with Mra. Steves at (jlpj»en. Idaho, who had separated from her husband They then commenced their tramp through Idaho and Washington. NVeves was living temporarily with his daughter. Mra. Charles Ixmg on a ranch five miles south of Colfax. Neither regret their action. Hrownell ahot five tlmea. three of 'be bullets taking effect. Mm. Hrownell ahot once. Her bullet atruck her stepfather under the left Jaw Mrs Neeves arrival here today with the children and will arrange for her husband's funeral. FIND MAN WITH HIS THROAT CUT Patrolmen Morris and Nelw n thia morning found John Tceple. his thn>at slashed from the left <-ar to the front of hi# neck, lying In front of a Japanese jioolroun on Maynard between King and Weiler As they were helping him Into the patrol wagon thev saw a negro run from Yatea' saloon down King st. They followed him but he disapi>eare4 near Sixth av. They went hack to the saloon but found everyone Rune. At the city bosp'tal Teeple refused to nay any thing concerning the cutting, but the police believe it resulted from a fight over a game of card* In Yates" saloon and that the negro did the cutting. 'GYP' AND 'LEFTY* WANT TRIAL NEW YORK. Sept 18.—Demand for an Immediate trial was made by I.efty IxMtle" Rosenzweig and "Gyp the Blood" (Harry Morrowiu) before Juttlc Goff here today in pleading not guilty to alleged com- . plicity in the murder of Gambler Merman Rosenthal. Both were re manded to the Tombs. Louie" and "Gyp the mood" were arrested in a Brooklyn flat, where they were living with their wives, having evaded the po lice for several weeks. SUES AUTO OWNER Vivian M Hedstrom. 5 years old. this morning began suit, through her parents, for $20,000 damages for Injuries caused by an automobile belonging to James H. Itavis. The complaint alleges that the car was driven at 35 miles an hour. ************** -*** * Fair touiKht and Thursday; * * light westerly winds. Temper- * * nture at noon, 62. * *****************