The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 4, 1913, Page 7

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~~ THE STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 4, WHEN THE CRIMINAL HEARS HIS OWN VOICE SPEAK WORD THAT DOOMS HIM cont of headaches can y our glasses. pEciAL LOTS OF HATS 50 and $5.00 en MILLINERY FRONT ARLORS $92 Arcade Building DANCING HIPPODROME a ¢ Printers 9 THIRD MAIN 1043 PS:ATILE THEATRE Phone Main 43 § Tonight—All Week Mig sos Hilliard as Kayton, 4 t ive; r Ine, f THESHORT CUT” | Sr yitiey the murderer, in the POPULAR PRICES wonderful scene where Hurley hears the reproduction of his own voice speaking the words that wii! sen dhim to death! EW YORK, June 14.—When ges Theatre. Vaudeville Means Pantages Vaudeville” Today and All Week | words, refuge? Until re “stool pigeons police agents who got their confidence and thelr by confessions—then betrayed them The victim of this system could defend himself by claiming per jury on the part of those who had trapped them. Con where can he turn then me) ontly men were trapped | You see what he will do in The Argyle (i a crime play n whose authorship Burne fig-| ures as a collaborator and which has scored one of the season's! longest runs. You see Robert Asche Kayton, read to Alphonz Ethier, as Hur ley, the counterfetter and mur-| pr, the notes of a conversation | Hillard, as) the detective, fate. They 1913. Markets Closed As usual, all day Satur. day until 10 p.m. aia an 4 0 anal i heart ATTHE SANITARY PUBLIC MARKET FREE DELIVERY A 100 Lbs. Sugar $4.80 Carnation Milk Mt. Vernon Milk Mendowbrook Mill Searchlight } doz don doz boxes ! oorle oe Corn Tokio Tea Store STALLS 24 AND 36. A Full Line of FISH Alaska Herring, 3 for 10¢ Norway Herri 3 for 25¢ Bricks genuine Codfish, 2 TH ce cicccewbevenss Ow Freeh and Bait Wate LWAYS DEPENDABLE Special Best Cantaloupes, 5c each, 6 for. .25c (Large size.) Raspberries, per crate... $1.75 Cherries, Strawberries and All Fruits for Canning. M. ROOT & CO. 1516 Pike Place Sanitary Mkt. REMOVAL On about July —. C. ROLOFF Now tn the Pike Vince Market Wit cooupy Staite 116-118-121-128 6 #anitary Market ute, Money NOTICE Frost and Dried Fruits, and Vegetables. Nee ee “Better Goods for Less PUBLIC MARKET CENTER Public Market Pike Place Public Market Sanitary Public Market \Pike Place Public Market New White Potatoes, 2 Ibs., GOLD DUST I8c¢ 15e ats. Sauerkraut, 2 qts Schram Frutt Jars, Chicken Dinner, NAVY BEANS Fresh Plums, 15¢ basket CLOSING OUT THESE LINES Wig Savings in Dried Fruits White Mission Fig regular 100 I now, 1Se Heodions Raisins. 6 special, & Ibs Black Pigs, regu 4 Ibe regular 2 z 25e iar 8 for 26¢, ape romular 2 for 26 10¢ 25e delivered 81.00 Fancy Pea special, tb iolden I 4 tbe Yakima Burbanks, 100 tbe (while they last) 10¢; 39¢ SUGAR ONLY Booths 201 - 54 -40 Rates every day as cheap as for a ton wholesale. 6 Ibs, BEE. «+. 0s cseisees ven GOLD DUST Stalls 201 EVERY DAY AOe doz. 25¢, and other apec 6. Small white, 23¢, wheal de CANDIES BRITTLES— Peanut Brittle, Ib... Cocoanut Brittle, Ib. Brazil and W. alnut Brittle, 156 -20¢ Ib. -30¢ Then came the dictograph. cealed in a room, it transmitted ev ery spoken word to listeners who might be far away. A stenog- Hurley's ded by aph. You laugh scornfully E. C. ROLOFF 62—Lower Floor PHILADELPHIA FISH CO—STALL 10 CHOCOLATES— Hand Rolled Chocolates, NEW YORK, July 4-—When | the erfminal hears his own voice, | repeating his own incriminating of a Hurley means hear Money” ‘The Finest Fruits to be found on MMA CARUS me ae Ib. in the 25e Gayoso Fabric Letter Paper, a Pound, 19c—Rear Balcony MAY MANTON PATTERNS. PHONE MAIN 6035, ANTON & | onoON Co. Economy Store’’— Second Ave. Bet. Spring and Seneca A BULLETIN OF QPERB VALUES FOR SATURDAY If superiority of values counts for anything, business hum with the energy of an electric fan here Satur- . We have slated a splendid list of crowd bringing, building values for your consideration tomorrow. know your needs and have provided for them. MADE TAILORED SKIRTS $3.98 eminute models, made by the best of tailors, from materials from our own Dress Goods stocks. Don't fall these beautiful, good-fitting skirts now on display in a good on our Second Floor, in the Ladies’ Apparel $3. 98 at the very nominal price Of.....-..-+++++ee++ H DRESSES FOR JUNIORS the popular Middy Suits and coat effects in white galn- Band novelty ginghams. Styles, fit and workmanship cannot | @icelied. Besides those already mentioned there are over Models in percale, chambray, lawn, gingham, galatea, linen, ‘and cotton crepes, piped in contrasting colors and other- fe trimmed with lace and embroidery collars, patent leather sik ties and buttons. Very reasonable prices rule through- Pate Me As couees th L120 10 $098 LADIES’ $2 LOW SHOES AT $1.49 SATISFYING RGAINS IN UNDERWEAR Main Floor. high neck, long sleeve cotton Vests, coh each... 15s nd 19¢ sleeveler of fi fine combed cotton, trimmed and 1 1 taped, each . ‘ & 3 Elastic Under- zoees buttons on tape arms. Ages 2 12. Price, each i ladies’ brilliant mercer filed fine dot Hose in as Wetted colors; very dressy ‘WMarter sellers at, One great lot—hundreds of pairs—on sale—patent nd dull finish—strap Pumps and 4button Oxfords in the very new styles. Moderate Mili- tary heels. Our regular $2.00 grade on sale at the special rice, & $3.50 AN ND “$4.00 ‘BUTTON BOOTS, $2.95 Choice of several different kinds of the latest shoes are included {n tans and an excel- lent assortment of patents, in cloth and mat top this season's mo¢ —all sizes, Pric COMFORT JULIETS 98c Rubber ae patent tip or plain toe. Vici kid stock; $1.25 quality. Our “O8e CHILDREN’S BAREFOOT SANDALS Turn the kiddies loose; get our Sandals at these special prices: 49c Bizes 6 to BE ccccczcde © Si: 1 to Silk Gloves Main Aisle. 16-button pure silk with double finger tips. Colors: tan, brown, gray, pongee, pink, blue, navy, black and white, Prices $1.50, $1.00 75¢ and oe the get a pair endera free with each The prices are $1.98, $1.00, 75¢ 48e 2 WAISTS in white, blue, INDIAN’ SUITS ON SATURDAY AT HALF PRICE MENS HOLEP RooF|] 1 HOSE—6 eAInS A BOX TO LAST SIX | PNTHS—SOLD BY THE | AT 28, OR BY BP 91,50 | eckwear 25c Main Floor. Very Pretty Robespi®rre Col b Btock Collars with Cas extn Jabots, some Ladies Gloves, trimmed buttons and lace inser There is also > & very Betty line of separate Inbota med with ne Ladies’ regular length, double tipped Silk Gloves—a big value number in all the lead- ing colors and all 50c sizes, a pair Children’s long doub He tipped Silk Glov all sizes, Se in white or A pair 7 6 Regular lengths as above Price, per pair fapher could take down all that |was uttered. | Even then the criminal could make a defense; he could say that |tho stenographer made false notes or ascribed some one else's words to him. No such defenses availed in the various cases in which De tective Burns used the dictograph and made it famous; nevertheless, jthey were possible | But what can a criminal do when j confronted with teh dictograph’s |newest attachmen the roneo phone? What can he do when a detective seta a phonograph going! and it repeats to him the words that will send him to his doom? ‘SIX GUESTS SMOKE AT DEATH HOST ENDS HIS LIFE ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 4.— (Spl.)—Arrested here for murder ‘atx Chinamen sedately shook their heads and said calmly that not by ‘the Rising Sun had they any hand in the death by bullet wound fn the head of Ho Why, tor. They had been the guests at Ho Why's suicide party. They had, as by honorable custom, sat and watched their brother kill himself “honorably,” they said, shoot himself in the head and “honor ably” die. | Ho Why had been tn this country 120 years. He had done much over the wash tubs—20 years of hard |work. He had sent much money back to China to the glorification of his ancestors, the aid of his rela | tives and the support of the revolu laundry proprie- | You think you can bluff me with frameup thing lke that? scoffs at the detective. “Do you expect anybody to belleve it? I don't.” “Well,” replies Kayton, “perhaps | you will belleve your own voice if} you happen to hear that.” He places on the phonograph the record that the roneophone has |made. Hurley collapses His eyeballs bulge; he throws trem biting bands before hin face, to} shut out bis own fatal utterances, | | voiced in his own tones, He is through. Hoe {» led out ot | the room, a tottering wreck, knowing that no defense remains. FEAST AS |tion But he had coughed a great deal, he had become wofully thin, and he knew that his revered an- cestors awaited his coming. And also he had been a fatlure; he had no son. Under such cireumstances It was perfectly “honorable” to die. His friends were lighting pipes with long, thick bamboo stems and tiny silver bowls, They watched) him serenely | Ho Why put the revolver muzzle/ against his right temple. His friends removed the pipa stems from their lips expectantly. The shot was fired, His friends watch- ed him sink to death; looked at one another, nodded, puffed again, and then Shu Nan got up and caught Ho Why's corpse, lest it should fall to the floor. ‘DEAF ATHLETES IN TRACK MEET were the feature of today's pro gram of the third biennial conven tion of the Washington State Asso letation of the Deaf, which conven ed in Seattle Thursday, at the Chamber of Commerce. The hundred delegates who at- tended Thursday's session were augmented by 75 additions! gates, the majority from ho and Oregon, today. P. L. Axling of Se attle, the principal aker day, urged a movement for estab Mashing a home for the deaf in this state, In the evening the delegates TAIE’S A Place to Eat Cabaret Vaudeville, 8 p. m. to 1a. m. Table 4’hote Dinner, with pint of wine, 75¢. AT THE Angeles Cafe 1422-24-26 First Avenue Our 25¢ Regular Dinner Our Special "30c Chicken Dinner Served from 11 a. m. to 8 >. My Are Unexcelled in Seattio Oysters, Dungeness Crabs, Flen, Steaks and Chops FREE—1ATEST MOTION PICTU Vocal and Instrumental Concert Afternoons and Evenings Y- Prof. Nape’s Haw tian Ore —Or— O—Artirta—o Athletic events at Schmitz ih dele- | Thurs. | lwere entertained at the Trinity Parish church. Sunday, after a trip to = lton, the convention will adjourn. |She Ragged Out of Man’s Heart SAN FRANCISCO, July 4.— “It's regrettable; yes, deplor- able, but {t's most unfortunate- ly true that my w and I are | separating,” says Hugh M Webster. Rag dances and all other varieties of social galety } and the company of the seat | terb ed devotees of such a life—these fascinated my wife, | and repel me, for whom bust- ness and the home are the real | things of life. ‘It 1s a modern condition of things In society that I blame for our troubles, a condition that 1s growing rapidly worse and {s# resulting in the wreck- ing of many beautifully happy homes.” ‘lL have nothing says Mrs. Webster. ‘Bar ‘September | Morn’ Bath Suits to say,” DENVER, Colo., July 4.—A skirt, bloomers and a walst that comes close to the neck Is the official bathing suit of Denver under the) commission form of government, as| tentatively designed by Otto F. Thum, commissioner of property, and therefore in charge of the park department, incidentally all the city beaches. “1 certainly believe it is not right for a woman to appear at a public bathing place clad only in tights,” he sald. “She hasn't on sufficient) clothing then to be decent in her own bedroom.” ‘Hits Wife With Broom; Jailed » DUBLIN, Ga. 4—In a fam- ily quarrel here, W. H.’Swain, a! barber, knocked his wife down with a broom, injuring her severely but not fatally Swain, it is claimed top sweeping, as #he en the baby, and ap she did not stop he attempted to take the broom from her. Swain claims that |the lick was struck accidentally |She says it was done intentionally, Swain was arrested and Jatled. told her to would awak E. H. COLLINS Stall 28 Always the Fest and Cheese tn T Freah Ranch By Recet ve Butter, Bees wh “a 1 Dally the market every day week Quality Always W. W. Crenshaw 1517 Firwt Av. | Corner Public Market — $1.50 SPECIAL 980 Seif Oliing Polish Mop The Beet M te Cotar P t6 Oana Poiiate no. STALL 102 Fresh Dressed Poultry At Lowest Prices Ears not over 3 days old, ‘Pa fic Poultry Co. Top Floor. Up the Inoline. doz PRINCE HAS CLASSY | COMING-OUT PARTY ‘she dares him. John This is the way His Royal High-| ness Prince Edward Albert looked at the first big diplomatic function he ever attended in an official capacity. It was the reception of President Poincare of France by the English royal family at Bucking ham palace. PAYING THE PRICE Pearl Tamley, , the girl who claimed to be hypnotized by Peter Barbaros when she com- mitted burglary, {8 again in trouble with the law. Pearl, who is the mother of a baby 2 years old, was paroled by Judge Ronald on condition that she Hive with either her hus- band or her parents, She broke this parole, and when brought before the judge, he sentenced her to one to five years in the pénitentiary, but again suspend ed commitment, turing the girl over to the Lebanon home, She again violated the parole, and was arrested Thursday as a vagrant. Daily Healthogram. WHAT DO YOU suppose makes 80 many persons drowsy in church? Lack of interest? Not necessarily It may be lack of yure air in the building. Why hot’ make it your business to see if the latter is not true? If {t 1s, ask some one in author ity to alter the condition lter, a chief of section, who was ac- | doctor's office, found five men, two Pure Cane Sugar, 20 Ibs. for ........$1.00 Mason Ball Fruit Jars, 60¢ doz; pints, doz .. Large 25¢ can Shrimps Come and see flour and other specials. SUN GROCERY Stalls 106-112-114—Main Floor Entrance on First Av. qts., hoice Jersey Butter, 2 Wisconsin Stall 204—Lower Floor Annex Fresh churned local Butter, % Ibs oes deserves vee - 81.00 Inenl Ranch Begs, doren ...... 306 Moliand Edam Cheese, each...75e MT. VERNON BUTTER STORE 1521 PIKE PLACE Vanilla, Strawberry, Maple, Peach, Mint, Pineapple, Orange, Lemon and Nut and Fruit Cen- ters—all included in this 25¢ special also. Cherry Chocolates, Ib.....25¢ Cream Wafers, assorted, lb.25¢ Mints, Wintergreen, Lemon, Chocolate, Maple, Pistachio, Lavender. Hood’s Candy Co. 1509 PIKE PLACE New Rainier Meat Co. 1527-29 PIKE PLACE. The Old Stand, But Under New Management. First Quality Meats and Lowest Prices. Pay Us a Visit—It Will Pay You. Kiss 0 on a ‘Dare Not an Offense WASHINGTON, July 4—It's all right to kiss a pretty young girl) with whom you are associated tn the government employ, provided So Frank D. Hes- cused of the osculatory diversion | during office hours, is back at his| desk. Gaylord M. Saltzgaber, pension | commissioner, suspended Hester) upon learning of the affair and un-| dertook an investigation. He dis- covered that the young woman had “dared” Hester's evidence of affec-| tion Hester therefore was reinstated. The young woman, who was a tem porary clerk, and whose name was carefully concealed, has left the! pension office service | ‘Eight Balloons Start in Race KANSAS CITY, balloons will ascend here today in an elimination race to determine | which three shall represent the United States in an International race in France for the Bennett cup. The balloons will be released at 5.30 p. m. The entrants follow: Softa IL, Million Population, Berry; Goodyear, R. H. Up son; Kansas City II, John Watts |Dusseldorfer, G. L. Bumbaugh; | Drifter, Albert Holz; Overland, Roy Donaldson; Kansas City Post, H. FE. Honeywell | Earthly Bliss. When the corn {s on the cob, wife, And the butter’s on the corn, With the salt and pepper fresco Which the outfit should adorn, Tie your apron round my neck, dear, And I'll be right on the job. Gee! I'm glad teeth were Invented When the corn is on the cob, Wm. Assman; TWAS POKER “CLINIC,” CHICAGO, July 2.~—Doetectives who dropped in on a “clinte” in a} of them physictans, playing poker. Hot coale—Welsh coal king's | daughter has been arrested as a} militant firebug. Before buying Water Front Investigate VENICE On Bainbridge Island Albert B. Lord Northern Bank Bldg. % to % off on everything ex- cepting contract goods. Carroll’s, 1102 First We move to our new location in Joshua Green bullding, Fourth and Pike, soon, BANNICK ANSWERS KICK ON HOLDUPS; WANTS MORE COPS “The council has refused to ex- tend any aid to the police for two years. During this period, we have had but 11 men added to the force. The average patrolman in Seattle patrols a beat of two miles. The residence districts are without adequate police protection, speak- ing from a numerical standpoint. So replied Chief Bannick today to the public eafety committee, which yesterday shifted to the mayor and the police department the complaint of 22 citizens who, in a letter, pointed out burglaries and hold-ups in the past few weeks. “We do not know,” say these cit- izens, “whether it is because there are not enough policemen or whether the trouble {s in another numerous | generally admitted. It is an open secret that at least three council- men will vote against any recom- mendation of the mayor on the slightest provocation, Police Chief Bannick has asked |for 50 additional patroimen, but |the council is apparently not dis- posed to treat his proposition kind- ly, The same request was turned |down flat last year. ‘Raw Stuff, This The secretary of the department of commerce has remitted the fines recently ordered imposed upon the steamships Jefferson, Latouche and Buckman, on account of their t July 4-—Bight | direction. But it ought to receive |faflure to obtain Mcenses for their immediate and adequate atten-| wireless operators during the re- fon.” cent strike. The secretary noti- That the council and the execu-|fied Collector of Customs Harper tive department have been at log-|that he would not be justified in gerheads on the police question, is|enforcing the penalty. HALF SOLES AND HEELS Best by Test—Established 24 Years KLEIN’S SHOE HOSPITAL, 613-2nd Av. Meat Prices Cut for Saturday The Middleman Eliminated Frye & Co.’s Markets The following big specials will be ottenied to- morrow, Saturday: CHOICE FRESH DRESSED HENS, per Ib. Roast Cholce Steer Pot Roast, per Ib.......4. 1226 Rib and Loin Mutton Chops 5c (This mution is of a’ sapertor quality, Try it.) 19c Loin Pork Sugar Cured 1 Bacon (backs) sereeee ATSC Choice Leg of Mutton vee AOC (This mutton ts of a superior quality. Try it.) 1226 The above prices will prevail at the following market OLYMPIC MARKET, Second and Pike. SEATTLE MARKET, Occidental and Yesler Way. WESTLAKE MARKET, Westlake and Pine. AMERICAN MEAT CO., Third and Jefferson. WESTERN MEAT CO.,' Western Avenue and Spring. CASCADE MARKET, Lower Floor Westlake Market. BALLARD MARKET, 5443 Ballard Avenue. Our Motto: “From Packing House to Consumer.” GOVERNMENT INSPECTED MEAT, Look for U. S, Purple Stamp. It signifies purity and quality. Shops Open Until 10 p. m. Choice Spare Ribs Page aoe eee Card shanna cao

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