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te SCRIPTS NORTHWEST HS, Telegraph News xk Breas Assoolation, Entered at the pestofficn, Seattle, Wash, a second ixae matter, Published by The Star Publishing Company every evening except Sunday WHO EXPOSED THE STEAL? The Clapp docksite deal! Who is responsible for it? Why, the very same crooked bunch that is now attempt- ing to gain control of the port commission by means of | Proposition 4 Who pr county was made to had not obtained clear title to the site? Was it the gang which is fighting Bridges? deal, by which the 2,000 to a man who} tested the Clapp profit of $ against pay Was it| the Port Pirates? Was it Commissioner Hamilton or Com- missioner Rutherford, the lackeys of the Port Pirates? | No! 3 | It was Commissioner Dave McKenzie—yes, the mans. jove grow cold one springtime who is referred to as Bridges’ partner—who informed Prose-| day, cutor Murphy about the shady Clapp transaction as long ago| abil Re Fae fault—tho mera Then came a chilly, steady ratn, — | ctober last. pe Oe Her love had on light underwear. And what did the crooked gang do? What did the newspapers who froth at the mouth when P : | wr Bridges name is mentioned, do? mmun mudr ses to paw, They helped put over the Clapp deal—they helped mulct| Paw slung down the papr an then the people of King county, Tommy Explains ix the wekr sec , my 1 he ses Haw Haw How bowt them skurts fn tn They denounced Commissioner McKenzie—that’s what giund an thon he laft agen the gang did. And they lauded Commissioner Hamilton to | The — = res Pb pape wots the skies, praised him, protected him, championed him. And by their lies and deceit, by their conce iment of the Clapp docksite transaction, they succeeded in foisting Hamilton on the people of King county again. Pe Bh i m a cere i Yes, the same Hamilton who engineered the courthouse | saw it aw! poar felr he didunt . fake, the Barbee $5,000 rake-off, the Clapp docksite deal, the doo a thing. Crematory scandal. Who is responsible for the Clapp deal? Bridges and McKenzie tried to kill it. | Now lisn hear, My maw wur jus yew shut up yewr jaw I woant sez he an ge I fellt sow! sory foar poar paw ar His t Wimmun {2 the wekr sects my mudr sez that nite Wimmun {2 the wekr sects sept wen she haz too fite, Hamilton and Rutherford, and the Port Pirates, put it eee EVM over. A maid and a man, a man and a maid The story will read on for aye, I'm afraid It's love in a castle or love in a A VOICE FROM BOTHELL fal correspondent from ii Sentinel, and tells T ut, For we n Is foolish and man ts a This editorial was not written by our sp Bothell, but by J. D. Gregory, editor of the Be bout the modern prodigal son and moose meat In political circles much Is being sald about the return of the “Prodigal Son,” meaning, no doubt, the predicted return of the progressive party into the ranks of the G. O. P. It is in no sense a paralie! case. This modern-day, prodigal found that the home of his father was but a verita fobbers’ roost, and after repeated efforts to show the old gent the error of his way without avail, took his rightful inheritance, an honest heart and a clear co ind came West. Being a progressive, he soo a following which In numbers and influence soon exceeded that of his father. The old gentieman was full of bluff and bluster and threatened dire calamity if the boy didn’t return to the fold, but the boy had the best of the argu- ment and in a few months—nay, a few days—the father took stock " marry and dle, some Inugh and some sigh, Now, why du they do ft, oh, please tell me why? oe As wo quail beneath a dozen sav. age files, we become more Impress ed with the waste of paper and ink in writing those elght million “Swat ‘em” editorials . In the spring, in the epring, I can} never start a thing; I'm 80 awful lazy ev'ry spring; An’ all I feel like doing, is to He and he found that all he had left of a once great house was a right down and sing badly crippled elephant and two smal! sections of country which (‘Neath an oak tree, like «a king, fn didn't join. the spring. ‘We are going to leave it to any sane man or woman If It | wouldn't be more sensible for the old chap to pack up and follow | his very progressive son and spend the remainder of Ale days In | M Here again Is seen a striking dis-simiie; the high cost of living | would eliminate the “fatted calf”—the best the boy could do would Be moose meat—he would not fall upon the old man’s neck, for he did last fall, and the “biow almost killed fathe The boy is under no obligation to his father. The old “Prod. | Michael McBroon was killed tn igal” has too little voting strength to notice and his reputation le | ar aera seven years Ago. musty, but out of t to the party that was once noble and | 9,17." Murder aroused the big state good, the boy will allow him to spend his deciining days in peace. lgocley bad to’ bb. peotanted, doe know, The slayer was apprehend-| Hie watch saved Seattle attorney from gunshot. Timely protec oy tried conv ree¥ an pon to ae Gon, that. penitentiary > : The law was satisfied. The big) nm tt was Bridges’ partner, Commissioner Dave McKenzie, who state of Ilinols had avenged the) _ showed up the Clapp docksite deal. death of Michael McTireen. And left his widow and three! If you have registered any time this year, you are entitled to vote | babies to starve. } tomorrow, And be sure to vote. Thousands of doliars wero en thusiastically drawn from the pub- Vote against Proposition IV., which Is to increase the membership lic funds to avenge the dead ‘@f the port commission. Vote tn favor of all the other propositions. | Michael McPreen. The law pro } vided for that. But not ore cent Eastman, head of the kodak trust, being sued, says he'll readjust.|was provided for the living Mra.| ut darned if he'll dissolve. Such honesty indicates that Eastman is|McPreen and little Ruth, and really no trust. | Michael, and Jimmie McBreen Jimmie was less than a year old, Paris doctor has got up a telephone through which to talk with/an infant in arms. What was Mra Both nose and mouth. But Frenchmen won't be happy till they get to| Mclireen to do? telephoning with their hadns. | One thing she knew. Sho could |not bear to live any longer in Chi Parasites are killing those Kansas grasshoppers the million, but cago. The alr waa atifiing there. #f you want to see hoppers cleaned up, just wait till California fleas she must go away—away from the earn that they're good eating. |place where Michael McBreen’s| |death was avenged and his family Atlanta ,Ga., Journal says it’s tough, but anti-Jap California will left destitute. fhave to stay in the Union. Ob, yes; California will stay in. She re| She sold all the little relics of a Members what a botch Georgia made of trying to stay out. more prosperous day, packed up the r remainder of the household | oods, and came to Seattle m It was Bridges’ enemies, the Chamber of Commerce and the Port) g¢ Pirates, and the newspapers which tried to stampede Seattle {n favor| Here in the land of the Golden} of the fake Ayres qcheme, who supported Commissioner Hamilton and) west Mra. McBreen hoped tol thereby helped put over the Clapp deal soothe the poignant grief in her! breast | United States supreme court sets aside the fines of those turpen-| Mrs McBreen ts a plain woman. | fine trust officials and denies that the Sherman law is so indefinite as | py ducation was limited to th 4o be unconstitutional. Oh, we guess that Sherman iaw suits—the|three rs, which her parents were| €aptains of finance. Anyhow, nobody dissolves or goes to jafl under It. rortunate enough to afford b n Ireland. How was she to feed the Notice how the gang disclaims any responsibility for Ayres? three little ones? How was she to That's what they did before the last election, too, when they said.| give them a better schooling than “Let's have the terminals. We don’t care who Boticed, didn't you, that they insisted that Ay: th is the But You) she got? »8 should build them? Ruth was old enough to chool Mra. Mc mh was goin Knowing that they can get nothing from the port commission as it\t, sce that ube ol a ool educm ko to @tands, the Ayres gang has nothing to lose and everything to gain by | 44, So M McBreen it little getting the port commission increased and {te control chang it to Shcceint ahs Cuenta “tema ib Up to you to keep what you have by voting against Proposition IV, ‘Orillia, and went out to work, by sherwoman. . As long as Commissioner Remsberg wae under the Influence of the|""® 247, 98 ¥ stampede which the Ayres press agents ged, he was satisfactor to the Port Pirates. But now that he has thrown off that influenc and refused to be stampeded by them, but is willing to look after the people's interests, he naturally becomes a target for their abuse, — | she has been calling home for six years, She pays $5 a month. You }couldn’t even call ft a shack, this jhome of hers. | Early in the morning Mra, Me- |Breen rises, prepares the scanty |breakfast for her bables—Jimmie fe back with her now, and going to school. She gives them each a/ | neat little packagé*thelt noonday \lunch—and off they go to their) studies. | Mrs. McBreen is then free to} spend the day at work, when she} lean find work. There were times |when Mra, MeBreen was quite for- tunate, when she made as much as} | Out in the north end of the city, on the edge of Green Lake, Mrs. McBreen found a little place which $2 a day. But there weren't many “Doughnuts need not be grease soaked, tough, indigestible, Look to the shortening you use and the frying fat. Swift's Silver-Leaf Lard best for had ave the laundries are mak both uses. It is the secret of doughnut success. | Use it and you will ing gush terrific competition,” Mra. | have ae of having your friends say, ‘Delicious, I mut try McBreen # “They are washing your 20 pounds for 50 cents. What Pie Roomate tat neta eer Set |chance has « poor widow? And I |nin’t 80 young as I was—past 40| j}now. And what with tho little childer growing up, and the way| they need shoes and things, I don't} |know what would become of us. | |Last week I had work for only two} | days.” | PAS ‘Draiu om . | But if the laundries are mak- | | | Ing competition keener, there Is a Providence thag is kind, says Mrs. McBreen. Today she was one of the 40 who applied in Judge Frater's court, at the Juvenile home, Ninth and Jef- sony AsD “acer FUSS THe vEeroicy) ‘a -” ‘ He sued to break his father's will, He'd left a fortune great The young man got the verdict and His lawyers the estate, Missus Conroy Always Knew Where to Look for Her Jimmy n.y., wensdy =~ there's nuthing like a goods THE STAR—MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1913. PHONES “*Kacting’ witha” dopartmente. RATES Wy malt, daily Abe; ax mow, By carrier, i | e b Tho free and unlimited coinage and the type wy: bag Msn lat of words descriptive of the great apprenticeship « on wee dy benefits of the Panama Canal ae te tne 16 yeas 1 He P? G ratio of at least 16 facts to every when he was 19 xe ars He & "4 = laingle pa aph is now absolutely - et Legge in ad WOU s 3 assured. Richard Lee Metealfe has anges and when Br pe. — Jame ~~, | been appointed governor of the that he met Bryan and when I _— it Veen ae wan editor of the paper he At midnight, in his guarded tent, Richard Lee Metcalfe hap spent toe eyae Bryan's personal re ye Turk awoke and howled did) M0*t of the last 20 years working ‘ative at the nation he }the thunder mili he Nehtning sentative, & It wae he who f 1 He thought he'd been stabbed by a| fasber behind the scenes while iim ecativer plank iaid (6 fon wo nome picturesque Ajax performed he free he party that year against vara turned out and found|"!® great act of defiance on the SE ine ee oe. It wae he flea. ¢ stage before large and more tremendo dally in that ¢ ee " Jor less enthusiastic audiences Shp helped meter ends of the One could very well desert Loe a ap Faai taeues berore Metcalfe as the silent partner of ee oo Soe. nano? iam Jennings Bryan. One could them. When I 7 a ba excribe any partner that Mr. Bryan warn fr pee Ie ee the ¥ might have had thusly, for the very corded him as editor of the World. ed at the hea Herald. He re obvior on that silence . ’ Like csargdnt, brady, for instgyéee, over at combination that the est 1 soc Co a lt i Pn s ae the 8th street geation E rotary of state would leave for his which he has since conducted. | always tr¥tym to be nice edd %hgughttul and [partner And Me » has been And why F Reap Gow i * kind to pesgte ghay ope 8 tf mim lan frubbel [aie naa best so. siltired: stieal Words colned to describe the the Ather Rita Ap was on CBe/Mdok adout LO fa iets are millions of peopl ding of the Pacific and the Atl o'clock Aken fp rake mre. Jase; oonroy know Bryan and ow and their family Ife that will make arg. \conrog Yb -aady whose huhbend has moner that don't know all other similar documents dryet been a freht help “In keeping fhe pppiitce station is the editor ot that paper. and tauatior thas ne - gto dm from ever being moved away tr ; ee t aah hart et Satbre We was: apominied. boas, oF authors possibly could do “well, mrs. conroy was fey d ery ba t Canal Zone elvil government about sumthing this evening . which was just the other day JOSH WISE SAYS: and the sargent he says yor by, very kind Richard I Metcalfe 1s one of “Cale Dornick’s lawyer won a and gentle Uys me reany TAS men of thie qoutiey |$100 verdict In Cale’s sult for $50, 8 (4\. who has hidden himself behind the $100 y caneaaed now, mrs. conroy, what ip the hattor sabeceaiity af annehae saniie tae 000 damages against th’ railroad. boo hoo, says mre. conroy, it'd my Jimmy man. It is probable that few be rer anh, plea redeg gr he ain't come home, and /i spoge\ you've got [sides Mr. Bryan realize how big a v lll him here / man Metcalf fs. He is one a nn | of the fey edite ono pe c vening when Tommy, a& no, says sargent brady, Just ae ponsoling {iol fit hy thousands ot peo. | 5, was having his daily bath, his and kind as can be ~ |ple without their knowing the nurse was trying with small suc- no, ars. conro we ain'€ tThim, but you identity of the man who impresses cess to scrub his grimy little kn : ve - y ‘ her for some time, Just set down and make yourself cumfertable, we hes } ‘4 sie niger hited | Born near Alton. . 62 years e said, pi 3 ; ere expecting him any ainuto nKO mt Bs’ boyhbod ta. al Never mind, nurse, Don't you Johny farm 1 #till a boy he felt the| know that’s' the dark meat, any> ait avenues pre Fa Mes P |farctnation of the printing office ” | Gladys Mason, who boasts that The cow is cooing on the | The floes are flowing on the sea; The flee is fiying up the flue, And what should cock-a-doodie do? The little bugs their bugg! In aable stole the shadows ; Nits tend their knitting in the giooi And swallows swallow, flitting home. “The world owes a great deal to! medical science.” And !t will be paid,” declared the what bittert the last ferson, for a mother’s pension. Under the pension law, Mra. McBreen will be entitied to $25 a month. 8 and mothere will y to work, because the rich city is going to pension them.” Mre. McBreen wi tears from “But it ain't tru 1 never wanted to ask charity—always worked and always will. A pen sion of $25 means a great lot to us.” wiping the Applications for mothers’ pen sions will be received at the juve nile detention hom Jefferson. Rev J has been appointed A. Sigurdsson examiner in Lilburn Merrill charge, under Dr Copies of the applications are serv-| ed on the county commissioners DR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8, When a patient will write to us and say our work gave pertect sat- isfaction, there {s nothing more to be added, We can show you a number of such letters of testimony, Tho work is painless, ant as to| disease of the nervous system. price—well, we have cut our com petitors’ prices In two Regular $10.00 Gold Crowns, .$4,00| blood of all eruptions, pimples, .. ..$6,00 | blotches, boils and catarrh, and Regular $10.00 Plates .. Dr. Clark personally oversees all work turned out of this office, and for this reason we are able to give you a guarantee that is bona fide. Regal Dental Offices Dr. L. R. Clark, D, D, &., Manage’ 1405 Third Ave, N. W. Cor, Un NOTE—Bring this Ad with you. A Place to Eat Cabaret Vaudeville, 8 p. m. to 1a, m, Table d'hote Dinner, with pint of wine, The Godt 000,000 a year on doctor, some- | country. OTHERS’ PENSION? SEE WHAT IT HAS DONE FOR MRS. M’BREEN |Judge Frater is to hear the case, }if she has but one child, and $5 \ehiidren must live with the mother. jwhich the pension ts granted, she fs a vegetarian, intends to wall — THE GREAT PIANO PRICECUTTINGSALE IS IN FULL BLAST National Piano Mfrs., 823 3rd Ave., near Marion. from New York to San Francisco, ; If who's a really enthusiastic vege tartan, whe will walk most of the way on the grass orge B. Cox haa been freed on A technicality, Somewhere, ° day, somehow, we hope to hear of & poor man with no pull who ts freed on a technicality, . . Somebody figures we spend $600, wic in this much on rag And how time? and prosecuting attorney, Ten days; after the application is made, which, if found meritorious, en- Utles the mother to $15 a month more for each additional child, The That ts the prime condition under YO LIke To HEAVY CUTS ON ’°EM ALL , Ninth av. and) Something New From la German Specialist lall Nervous Disorders, Mental EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS AT THAT! 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