The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 18, 1913, Page 4

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MEMNER OF THR SCHIPPS NOnTHWReT LEAGUR OF NEWSPArh Tele News Bervice of the United Presse Assoc! fottion, Beattie, Wash. aa second shed by The Publishtog Company every evening except ! The said slaughter took place as per schedule. “X” marked the spot all right, and the voters hit it hard and often. These be sad days for the old gang. one darn thing after another. It’s just The vote was light but it was heavy enough to kill the Port Pirates’ proposition, two to one. | There must have been a bucket of whitewash | concealed somewhere about the court house attic, where the grand jury held its sessions. | The grand jurors suggest that McKenzie, being unable to buck the Hamilton-Knudsen combination, should resign. That may be good logic, Mr. Grand Jury, but it’s mighty rotten morals. | Maybe the Port Pirates now will let Seattle’s harbor developments proceed. One year’s delay oc- casioned by the Pirates has been costly to Seattle, | but it has taught the voters a much needed lesson. Wonderful grand jury! cided the courthouse fake, they forth with a denunciation of the same. fuse to take up the fraud charges in Propos the bribery of milk inspectors, etc. on A,| Well, that $5,000 mystery is still with us. The grand jury confirms The Star’s charge that the county was buncoed out of this amount on the/ Clericus dock site deal. But the jurors controlled themselves nicely. They didn’t use any harsh language. The logic of the grand jury is pathetically humor-| ous. The probers criticise the loose, unbusinesslike, | extravagant methods of Commissioners Hamilton and Knudsen. And then they recommend that because McKenzie isn’t working in harmony with them, .he ought to resign. Ha! Ha! After the court has de-| also boldly come; But they re-| = “Name him, name him,” shouted the Ayers to Commissioner Bridges. And Bridges did name him. And now comes the grand jury and re- fers to him as a prominent citizen. WHY DIDN’T THE GRAND JURY HAVE NERVE ENOUGH TO NAME HIM? | What was the matter with this grand jury? Commissioner Knudsen’s recall is recommended be- cause he favored warrenite instead of brick, for the North Trunk road. Didn’t Hamilton vote exactly | as Knudsen? Why was the grand jury so anxious to let Hamilton off easy? 6c eae ea ermaemareatr es ered | The logic of the grand jury is pathetically hu- morous. The probers criticize the loose, unbusiness- like, extravagant methods of Commissioners Ham- flton and Knudsen. And then they recommend that because McKenzie isn’t working in harmony with) them, he ought to resign. Ha! Ha! | We still have the $5,000 mystery. The grand jury makes it clear that the county was stung. failed miserably, however, to explain why one S. H. Barbee was tipped off that the county was willing to pay him a handsome profit on the Clericus dock- site, which the county could have bought directly. 1 Clapp and Bystrom are scored by the grand jury. A mysterious $11,000 could not be traced by the probers. But not one word from the grand jury why the county commissioners paid 85 cents a square oe | } | | | | * 1913, a law omes effective re foot for the Clapp site, when a better and more con- quiring all rmen to procure (he, explained ‘ 3 Par lcense, which costs bir c es given out at a venient site was offered to the county commissioners |°* ee eee a tage a for 62 cents. day's ow 8 beau claimed the Indy whe © pt Ee « eee ees tiful course have bs very tently “I i’ “Jalil for Rent” Is the sign out In Isle of Wight county, Virginia, to 5 in the Enq au dogs @hich leads the Buffalo Enquirer to ask why we cannot have this con © same in pgp nb ey fition evurywhere, nus good be vee havior.” It is nice rate an A — behavior doesn’t con ‘ bene Of Imposition that’s offered. Some r ana by which the me & free people. : usual, wanted to . her hands fu j u 7 “woe | Just Pay the Drayman and ¢ In Cleveland, the 3-cent-fare town, the es the street car!‘ SEATTLE % remenit or that your ‘ pompany to run on certain lines a limited servic persons who live ¢ t pe aaa tele ae s q on An At Pits ete Promo meme oe oO OO Take Any Piano You an ; A “Itmited” can't run faster than an ordinary car, since tt has to ee | ee oe a ” fun on the same tracks; but in rush hours it ts a cony wey fn Be r) eyeg Margaret slipped from the table | Bedoesn't discharge passengers until several miles out mount of people 0 a To get them out of the way of the carpenters, the plasterers, the paint- wishing to go only a little way tak . nd pa cranny ee tin ee i ym. “3 : ‘0 only a ay take other cars and passengers on the Le n't . walk tf 00.00 > ke th ffer: J h ingi: H Maites” have elvow room yet von by JOYRIDERS, 00% J liy, and then fixed herseit a small ers we make this offer: Just pay the drayman for bringing the piano of their lives by D plece of bread tr H . § ‘. These limited cars are plainly marked, the sign also telling 1 rave Genel (he escnioe ied 108.50 re (depict sea scot pga from the store to your home—that’s all. We appreciate having the piano ee letters where they ke their first stop. The service has b oe Philadeiphia 108.80 » he ve her big, brown . 4 fe, i going a number of months, You'd therefore suppose that persons who! tq te beds Daten bony wey where, Pitteburgh rai BE Pegg a cared for, avery B pros nag and damage. If you decide to keep it, you get ‘ fan read would know enough to look out for the “Iimiteds” and not the fish license t ‘ St. Paul, Minn, - oy nr onika 4 little pup ff the sale price and pay for it in any reasonable way—as little as a dollar e: eas they wished the limited service. hes * 5 ¥, toc udge ‘ P : flim into them unless they wished the limited servic Seis Ge ahak ? Want ti he Sioun City, lowe and a quarter a week, if desired. It is not so si Ute WR TE tee belne 4a oot Toronto, Ont. ... . “ Every day, with unfailing regularity, from a tenth to a third of val se jashington .. oe re ~~ The store * fl mon people will have to acquire a Iking buried 6 i the occupants of the Iimiteds frantically’ signal the conductor for im faonine ts, GH. an pauls etresta| W foicee becca eases King buried his torn and tumbling And Here Are Some of the Pianos end Some of the Sale Prices: p stops, , under the rules, he dare not make; and of the! with « number hung on their backs : J so, ‘ me Tu by ne a . | NG Get thee fovea! that they Giant notice what tar they © with 2 ar Parade rehcrs ; = City and St. J) i nd d amen bered edifice. Spencer, oak, used Sunith & Berece, mihen Was. nate onndiclt madly ne jash the conductor and threaten him) aie. greo with Ng P man ae nm to Many Other Pointe in the uu mean, young fellow? hat At on, sage used 4 Smith & Barnes, walnut, new .. $400 ’ ; } mee tinues to say this is a “free coun-| f East. Return may be mado Young Reporte Krebling, mahogany, use Smith & Barnes, oak, new 1 Are you ever guilty of not looking, of getting “stung” and then of|tee™ Ww. " 4 porter — T-er-the flood 3 f ae Papal 4 4 T/ try. Where 1s the freedom? through California at slight! washed Patric al’ Schirmer, oak, used ... Smith & Barnes, mah . mating Seog trying to blame on others @ responsibility | D. F. W., Tukwila, Wash higher fares ehtly hr Mae tanec Ke Dougal’s | jonnston, mahogany, used Steger, walnut, ‘aie viet tele es a ; Going Limit 18 Days, : : | Leland, oak, used ... : Adon, Sak, Ne ; : Do you grouch easily when caughi ' smith & Barne 5 ie, new... * tare @éging the situation with a cinta aii erree Aeaeed of ReERIWiiA HUMANE, WARDEN Fruit RETURN LIMIT OCTOBER 31, 1919 True story about a schoolboy in| seri) EO nteny:,. lers, oak, new.. : 213475 A jublic coaveysnce, you'v “ ‘ i i" Editor The Star: It seems to me Aberal stopover privileges and a Cleveland public scho This | sg gedaan cd lers Orche , oak, new 7 etnde Public convey sncey Toure DBO doubt noticed. te & good place to) every article, such as the one pub-| | choice of diverse routes ofered. | boy brought homo his rool, This | Hoffman, Colonial, mahogany Johnston, vertigrand, ‘mah ly stir up a heap of excitement, to say nothing of annoyance. ain !the way J. C. Sanders, warden of ‘’ over and noticed a blank in the bas om vee ge ai Nelson, Corinthian, mahogé 4 Don't be a sorehead when you travel; be a Sunny Jim. — |the Iowa penitentiary, handles cor 10 THE CAST DAILY place where the mark for “deport Pe hanhinn Shiwcade, Wel Marshall & Wendell, walnut 7s Wevel; 0 viets, alds in others doing the same. “The Ol lan” Deut” ahoulA have Reon gachenhases AONB OE Lym Marshall & Wendell, mahogan It {9 certainly an established fact “How Is this?” asked the fathe Rreniag, Wainul, User. . Smith & Barne tyle Alias for prairie romance! Rev. A. F. Glover, aged 22, marched 25 that the betr you treat any ymplan 4 this?” asked the father. | Kensington, oak, used de se Bik tenets ‘ slotous cowboys to jail at Debeque, Colo. sak ths tatve-aood {t brihks ov THE FINEST TRAIN hark for ‘deport Jchilling, Circassian walnut, new Johnston, art style, mahogany —_ — - aL. A taal of Mr, Mandews’ tree acn THe er a ith & Barnes, mahogany, new Kimball, Colonia naan pie! Our Philippine army Is out trying to tree the sultan of Jolo, |doon n gre at good to humanity, aod ee brightly, “Wo don't take ‘thet|fy Smith & Barnes, oak, now Billers, art ntylessrssenss * 2 pgp eee wed Ueaditan sonviote’ Tes ine “The Columbian” subject this year. That comes in Smith & Barnes, walnut, new ' Smith & Barnes, exposition style. .$550 Ss, John Hays Hammond iy eaitan bi Wad iinatddl anilinsions ot way of handl ne oor vie *. The lec ne xt prenrs course Cleveland If you cannot come during the day, telephone Elliott 4377—ask for Mr. Geor id whiose alms 1s to get for women more power of selection in choosing a| ONE Wil0 STUDIES HUMANITY GA NAREE Thais MILWAUHEE SERVE ‘ | make an appointment for any h ‘ ; ames ‘ er husband. Just think of your wife going gunning for thisigs like that! | | WILMAUKEE EWPLOVES rr ey a ae iim! eke an app ny hour any night that suits your convenience, s tec di alata Pioteiccie oe f : ALL THE WAY ACKOSB THE CONTIN io story is told of a college | a pray is G : | | Editor The Star: Please accept ern professor who was noted for his| ___ Every article in this Great House of Music, except contract goods and Chickering Ww PS JOBS W \the. tha ¢ poor old taxpa For additional. {information re. concentration of mind. | Pianos, is reduced. \ of right. I s yery much sur car reservations, oto. call on or B |home night from a scientific} AND NEARLY LOSES LIFE prised and greatly plens pi |: ORR a as te meeting, still pondering over the : recelved my paper last Brida ack Laan Ponteniees Biot pubject.” He had reached his room |f = 7 _ - cb 7 The headlines, in Ci the J.L. CRIBWELL, City P ‘Agt. jin safety when he heard ,a nolse hole fror c was nothing but i c eee mo | E ° co”hy, Kas June 18,—~-A pro-,and her husband started In to wash | headlines, © ning the Pe iJ Pi CHICAGO a te oe ral sy Payments on Any- posal by A.C. Ball, a farmer living|the dishes, In cleaning a glass | rates’ ate fr. Editor, k right | “Ie some one there?” he asked. | thing You Want. ond bere, that ne wen a ae pitcher he severed an artery In his|on in the good work you have be MILWAUKEE & ST, PAUL “No, professor,” answered the | 8 Z shes for his wife if she would|wrist and nearly bled to death be-|gun. Right always wins in the end ntruder, ‘ow of the profes. = — masrow “tags of ground nearly |fore his wife ard his calls for as-|and I assure you you will reap your sett AtLWAY pieeun te ances w of the profe tost him his life. tance, A brother, who brought| reward 7 abel d “That's strange, I was positive Mrs. Hall accepted the offer and|him here for nent, said he| Wishing you success Seattle Pd was undad my Dale een alt went to the field to begin her work | will recover. It THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1913, Main 9400. Private exe necting with all depw PHON RATES "se" Ry carrier utiy, one mos, O18 tn etty, the ‘OLD PAT CUSACK’ SAW THE FIRES THAT SMOLDERED IN LITTLE WOMAN'S EYES THAT’S HOW, WRITES FRANK PARKER STOCKBRIDGE, HE PIERCED THE WEB OF MYSTERY AND SOLVED THE GREAT BURDI°K MURDER BY FRANK PARKER 8TOCK:|tho day before his death, had be-|firmed her "husband's statement! BRIDGE sun a sult for divoree--on_ the that he had retired early the night Dead, in his “den,” with his skull /only ground for which New York of the murder, had risen early and ushed in—so they found Edwin |grante div . 1 had named as gone to Niagara Falls on businer L. Hurdick on the morning of Feb, | co-rexpor Art \ Ho had telephoned her from the 8, 1903 HERE WAS SCANDAL UPON Patia, asked if there whe any news Not a trace of a weapon, no sign | MYSTERY in’ the papers, expressed his horror] of a struggle—no clow but an open.) Why jen were friends, |at the awful death of his friend, tr desk and some scattered papers. played «ec ror—thetr wives quir if ther As any other news No one h heard a sound nor |W frienda, Mre, Burdick, a!and had tnvited her to rome down could anyon keost a motive for| plain, unattractive woman of 40, to the Falls and have lunch with the crime-—-at first mother of t children—how him, which she declined, It did Before the newsboys had fintsh-| could she have lured the wealthy not seem aa if the detectives had ed ery their “wuxtrys” came an-| young lawyer from his own charm: got much out of that 1 f in other revelation to shock the peo: ing wife of the calm blue eyes and quiry—BUT TO ONE OF THEM plo of Buffalo, already stirred by | radiant presence? ‘The devotion IT WAS FOOD FOR THOUGHT the mysterious murder of one of of the Pennells was almost a joke Shrewd “old Pat Cusack,” the the most popular and prosperous |among their wide circle of is.| veteran chief of ettves, had business men of the city. Burdick, Questioned, Mra, Pennell con- | talked with the widow of the mur LAUGH AND GROW FAT That Awful Moment! |The Height of Devotion. wELL, Slama, Jabs, Boosts and Acenoss! Most Anythi Lacenens ost Anything ’ Editor Most Anything | If people would only place food | out of doors where the files can! ¢ reach {t easily t # would not » ko to the troubl nter “PAT LOOKED TO WHERE BANKED FIRE@ SMOULDERED houses to find pr fer, a IN HER DEEP, DARK EYES would be no such K ns th | nuisanc For ! Ing letters that would have {Pennell took his wife for a drive have acted on this theory ar r| proved a husband's unfaithful- | At the Jamerthal quarry the big have been bothered by tho files ness?” | rie machine swerved and Every Ing and evening Ts at | The old detective measured the|Plunged into the pit. Pennell died or crumbs in the back yard at ~ae mind of the man he suspected—| Under the car—his wife never am rewarded by tho little | | Ss? thtowd, keen. caleulating, cold.{#poke again. How it happened no se il Pay pl = {1 thor | He matched his wits against Pen-| Pe lived to tell ReuaGhend Guilds MAY Gated mae Aad man, Others had secn just |nell’s, to see tf he could reason out You never con S00 aa nia et yp on Monin mmiddle-ared little woman|@ proof of the crime at the latter's} @f they slipped or jumped, then thousands of hungry files b ON, nas tet Cocca waa | mused Pat Cusack. an th e “arg te a +) looked beneath; looked to where A shrewd murderer chooses a| It took weeks to plece the whole 6 me for me} a fasted fiven alae nd in her| Weapon he {s NOT known to pos-|S0rdid story together. ian iow eatkd tame ts deop, dark eyes, fires that this|sess, Pennell’s revolver was in its|_ The letters of Pennell to Mrs, The files grow quite tame in a ae ee ee, EN |tisual place at home—where Pat|Burdick—they had been in the | panne Alen y ey become |» : ; “pg co Cusack expected to find ft, al-|/a¥yer's safe and not in the dead ig ; . some one who “knew ho lthough he had mage up his mind|™man's “den”-—revealed a story of no fear ar {Melt love springing from an acck Burdick wounds bad been Gee! Nine hou flor quarter.;on 4 a be i in nendeh sal gies [on = Pa ‘ ed with a revolver-butt dental meeting on the Yale cam eat for & nickle?” ’ t | some of the * ee which But he searched the gun stores | Pus, and which had been going om ‘ the er the at Cu nd —_ for PENNELL HAD} for years. eee I carry th mand rest there Ever Play Golf? et ca oF at ANOTEEE PINTOL | Pennell’s wealth was stolen— OF ne CterentA ente,| A shrewd murderer hides bis|fnds intrusted to him for invest The Better Way. FP. W. when Win Sie si here it cannot be found—|ment. Insuring his life for the full trast to his ordinary, | wea s, cai, galbeuatared | What, atte + van Ni.| &mount of each embezzlement, that was ortg | » self-centered | what better hiding place then Nl" !had long planned suicide venaetal nous York fi a Week wont by, an-|nell had stro! ‘to the cataract’s| 2 got to the END of his rope—suk ae wa a igen Tabatty «cee, (nae ih the- abet clde that would look like accidewt, Pre Secor of investigators followed} A GUARD HAD SEEN HIMm|80 THE POLICIES COULD NOT & es “ an clues. But uppermost in| THROW SOMETHIN INTO| BE CONTHSTED. t s ie b Pat Cusack’s mind were the ques; THE RAPIDS SOMETHING| And he had taken his wife with 4 t the Amer tions | THAT GLITTERED. him—the only unselfish deed he when % sells at “Why was Pennell so eager at would have hap-| ever did—because he would not ? to learn If there was any news |p af spell had accepted | leave her to a life of sorrow with =—— | in the papers? her hngband’s invitation to lunch?”|her ideals shattered. The Scotchman sang that old-t | his schedale “What news was he expect- thought the detective. “It's time SHE had loved and trusted him. song dispat ing? to make a pinch Mrs. Burdick still lives, under an And sang it with a sigh, | but we thin one ¢ The man was old and worn and| “Did the opened desk and It was past time—for the |assumed name—and the hidden "For Bonnie Annie Laurie I oF one volume, | gray fires still smoulder in her deep, Wo lay mo down and @ie."| Resurrecting a tittle piffie,|,, His step was weak and slow. | dark eyes. “Roe Goria,” said an Irishman, permit us to quote from a speech | “UP these links,” he said, “1! “Catch me at no such trick, by that eminent states drove delivered FY toste Hoga: w, in the A ball some years ago. Am hustling wid a pick Jan. 24,|!t flew away I know not where, . . | ection of sen.|. And, to decide a bet What has become of the old-| . I started then to find tho ball nt president who was al 4 wo are all| I'm looking for it yet.” ing to surrender or com at the lobby a ——_— vo. giet win iottvie ont | Best Short IN EDITOR'S | 0 i cic oats | STORIES ot the of the Day Sir Leopold McC ck, the Are THAT HUNTING AND FISHING | tle ex rer, Was ng an LICENSE LAW. amid Faltor The ar: On June 14, vo tray ARMINDA CHRISTMAN, mented the learned man.—Judge.

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