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"NO MYSTERY ] MUTT AND JEFF, THE WORLD'S GREATEST ' COMEDIANS IN PEN AND INK. WILL HE SEEN RAILROAD TRAFFIC MANAGERS = 4 AGAIN TODAY ON THE SPORT PAGE OF THE STAR OVER THE POSSIBLE SHORTAGE AFTER GIVING THEM THE UP AND DOWN, Yot HAUL WASHINGTON PRODUCTS > a HAVE NO CAUSE TO WONDER WHY “RUD LIGHT-HEARTED GEORGE SALISBURY 8. FISHER, THEIR MANUFACTURER, IS THE HIGH WEATHER FANS NEEDN'T WORRY FOR A EST-SALARIED COMIC CARTOONIST THE WORLD THE ONLY P. ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE THAT IN SEATTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE | NEWS ‘< OF DAYS OVER A DROUTH OF GOOD WE, HAS EVER KNOWN AND HE PROVES IT BY ANNOUNCING: “FAL. be NIGHT AND FRIDAY 4 VOLUME 19. | Caught Wearing | Men’s Duds, She Is to Turn Girl An affair of the heart made : a man of Mary Dell. 3 And after wearing men’s clothes for six years, | While she did men’s work, and “rode the rods” on freight trains until she landed in jail here late Wednes-| » @ ay, she has decided to try and make a woman of} W herself. " For an hour Thursday morning, she mapped out HP hher plans with the aid of Mrs. Edith D. Saunders, kind- hearted philanthropist, and Mrs. Blanche Mason, super- i ©intendent of the women’s police division. | Mary is to let her hair grow, wear skirts and ie ©« things and go out to Mrs. Saunder’s home, 3661 Whit- man ave. } There's a big yard out there, with fruit trees, and Mary is to| out the way her advisors believe | t will, a woman as MAN GUILTY — OF SLAYING 2 she will soon be as woman-| she was a m: Doesn't Want to But I don't want to give up the life I've led,” she said, with tears! jin the corners of her eyes, “if any body is planning to make a _—— Horse horse out of me. That's what m women are—truck horses. They | can work, work, work, and carry} Dudley, avenging the all the burdens—but few of them | murder of Mr. and Mrs. Henry ver have any fon | Muller, for which he was con- Then she would look at the} vieted Tuesday. amazed, matronly women who were ~ aroused Sheriff Car | listening to her and Jawgh aloud. rol about midnight and de | Mtary is a big. strong, healthy manded that Dudley be release | 21.) | ed to them. He refused. She has the womanly lines to her 5 “Better let us have him,” | body. but a boy's face, and a boy's! gaid the leader; “we are pre | taugh | ‘ pared to take him.” And the heart of a 17-yearold Fe The men cut loose with a girl,” commented Mrs. Saunders volley of shots and the officer j afterward yielded. But Mrs. Carrol had Jied in the meantime with the | jail keys. Ha Led Clean Life led a clean life id Mrs. Mason. It was to these two women, and a Star reporter that she told about her affair of the heart 1 can Determined to get their man, the mob battered in two jail doors, and when the fire de- partment attacked the crowd with streams of water, they 1 was engaged to marry a man forced the firemen to retreat [when I was nearly 19.” she said at gun points. | “Another girl took him away! Seizing Dudley, the mob hurried |from me. I determined to be free | 4 him to waiting motor cars, thre |then—to have some real fun.” | a rope around his neck, sped a The girl was living near Logan, quarter of a mile to the Frisco | Mont., then, on a ranch where she depot cared hanged him to a tele had grown strong, and often work phone pol ed in men's duds Dudley, P white, was convicted of} Her parents were dead degree murder, which carries| One day she “rode the cushions sentence of life imprisonment. |as she tells it, to a near-by town © The mob evidently thought Dudley and got work in the harvest fields “| deserved death and administered | She didn’t tell anybody she was a it. girl, Her strong mus de L. 8. Lathrop, coroner, automat-/termination carried he | , feally became sheriff of Johnson| “It was easy after that.” county, following the lynching. “lL always was able to make friends It is provided by the Kansas! Men thought | was just a good-na statutes that when a lynching oc- tured, laughing boy, I'm 23 now curs in a Kansas sheriffs territory,|and must confess I'm rather set in the coroner automatice'ty becomes | my way of living.” sheriff, At the end of ten days She declared it was easier to suspension, a hearing is held be- make a living. and more comfort fore the governor ond the deposed ab in trousers, 4 sheriff may or may not be rein-| “Most men | met were honor stated by the governor. able.” she said; “some were just like animals Dressed in overalls, fe Hi a blue cost Jack George simply can’t lose Dell get into Seattle on a freight King county democrats will (train Wednesda meet Thursday night at the Mary walked up King st. Wed. Good Eats cafeteria to elect a | nesday afternoon, snd a uniformed county chairman and a state (officer “spotted her § committeeman. Candidates for You're a woman, ain't you?” he the first office are George A. ud Custer and George Harroun, Yes,” she answered while the candidates for the So he took her to jail ] committeeman are George Mur. And it's the first time I was phy and George E. Ryan. er arrested,” she declared and George it must b |the last time, I guess i ‘sand why. | s and fig what our native cit BY TED COOK Al doesn't # Mr. Lemuel Kennedy, retired ; ures as well might, but h corm r from Livingston | 7ete Mt ide Rags county, [Minois, alighted from a FN ee ane Great Northern passenger train | '°" fa iat from Portland, car sick and Head rips Sg Mg eal dye weary 2:45 p. m. Wednes Pai «ty Page fay of visitors se > Sew Boars later he depart Two hours over 25 r Se ed for his native Fairbury, iin tate eg Sa SES TL herbert meee $06 Gey. _ | bled at the depot, as he conducted | He was a ene | SUINOF Mr. Kennedy into the seat next to; tourist, one of the last of the _— Twenty-four others had already He Learns Answer paid their $1. We started up Sec Puszzle—What made Mr. jond ave, Al kept us looking first Lemuel Kennedy joyous and to your right” and then “to your gay’? left,” a8 he unfolded the where Answer--A ride bout town abouta of “Seattle finanel. dis. in a rubberneck « trict,” “our leading movie palace The reason | happen to know is|and the offices 9 ur leading that I sat next to bim in the big sight-seeing compan green auto, & the gloom melt Pulls a “Dead” Joke from his soul, and heard Al Brew-| Nobody would have suspected ster, the world’s champion rubber-|that Al was the humorist he ts neck lecturer, give new light on! from looking at his scowling brow ' SELECT FEW TO HEAR TAGORE IN LOCAL LECTURE Sir Rabindranath Tagore, the poet of the Hindu peasants, and holder of the Nobel prize, in all leave Probability will with his me western ma: Despite the fact that there are several thousand persons In this city who would be will- Ing to pay to hear the famous poet of the Orient, he will not speak to the general public The Sunset club, an exclusive organization of some 300 mem. bera, has obtained Tagore for itself and a few selected friends. The assembly commit- tee at the University of Wash ington considered for a while inviting Tagore to address the students, but has decided that it would be useless. Several protests have been made by interested Seattieit but at present it appears as if Seattle their objections will be of no avail Tagore plans to speak at Ta coma Friday night, He will also speak to the boys at the indus trial school on Mercer island. TEUTONS SHIFT | BALKAN ATTACK) BY —D ‘ ~ KEEN United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, Sept. 21.—Halted in hie invasion of Eastern Ru- mania, Field Marshal Mack- enzen hi ahifted hie attack and is attempting to carry the war into King Ferdinand’s country by @ stroke from the northwest The German war office today an the AustroGermans nounced that have won victories on both the Vulean mountain pass, the gateways on the northwestern frontier ing the Rumantans back after ted a retreat in this region, lared the R and are defending themselves hind a new fortified line The Bulgarian war office admits! the defeat of German and Pulgar-| fan attempts to penetrate the new! Russo-Rumanian front, in the Do brodja Has Ashes Buried With His 2 Wives SEATTLE Rumanian driv-| 10 miles.| The Rumanian war office admit-| but de-| umanians have halted be. THURSDAY, SEPT. WASH.,, 1916. This Girl Is K ! | | Does any woman~-ever—get enough kisses? “No!” says pretty Phyllis Gordon. “Not from the man she lov oe 8 8 ® | a NO WOMAN EVER GETS ENOUGH KISSES FROM THE MAN SHE LOVES —MISS PHYLLIS GORDON, | a whole lot of times ‘comes home at night | “But the woman must keep her [elf dainty, and sweet, and fas [efnating—with a little touch of jPowder to take the shine off her Beware, young man, of this whin: he son's debutante, unless you are an ardent kisser! it has come to thi: “One hundred kisses every not enough for mi Miss Phyllis Gordon. | nose; yes, and a little color on her “and { am speaking now for [cheeks if they are pale. Then, if all womankind. jshe meets him in a nifty little Mie Gordon is Seattle's house drees and ha a well-cooked most kissed young woman. dinner waiting for him—that's the She “does” three shows a dy, way to own a kissing husband.” and four on Sundays. Miss Gor Should Be Always Kiseable don 's the golden-haired prima don-| “Rut how many times a day na with Monte Carter at the Oak should a man feel obliged to kiss Kissed 160 Times on Sunday his wife?” Miss Gordon was asked In each performance, she has None,” she answered. “He WASHINGTON, Pa. Sept. 21 counted, she is kissed just 49/ shouldn't feel obligated. If she in James 8. Stocking. former leg-| imes—not counting encores. That | always kissable, he won't be able islator, county clerk of courts,|makes 120 kisses daily, except Sun-|to resist Civil War veteran and one of the|day, when her osculations reach And I should say 100 times a| girl's arms would scientifically de-)er she had cau are adjusted, a general strike will wealthiest men of this city, was | 160 day 1s not enow It wouldn't be |termine her age | Marie Wilson, 2001 Seventh ave. | he called Frid buried under the provisions of his| She was fussing with a bit of/for me—not from the man I| Today Dr, Bateau produced the X-| declined Thursday to prosecute her AT will, which are extremely unusual. |Irish lace in her dressing room! joved ray, and testified before Superior| divorced husband, Charles, When ortion of his will relating to|last night, seeming very satis) She grew serious. Judge Ogden that the formation of| Justice Brinker agreed to dismiss| What Would Aida rial follow \fied just after her last batch of! “I'l tell you one thing,” ahe|the bones in the girl's arm scten-|the case, she caused a mild sensa I direct that my body whall be| 40 kisne |naid. “It every husband kissed his |tifically proved her to be at least|tion in the courtroom by extract-| Be Without Emmy cremated, and no religious services| “Do all women enjoy being | wife 100 times a day, there would | 18 jing $6.60 from her stocking to de-| - shall be held on my body, ashes| kissed?” she was asked be no more divorces. Why, they | jfray the costs | Frisco Folk Ask? or grave. | direct that my I should say #0,” she answered | wouldn't have time, now, would | JOBS AT BREMERTON WEA SNe LENE SED SENT | shall be divided in two parts and| Quickly, looking up. “Provided, of | they? and was to have been tried Friday|~saN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21— ed in two strong and air and| course, it is the right man, the one i Sa |had his former wife not put a stop |Great is the consternation toda: water-tight urns, one to be burled|the woman loves | | The Recorder, Board of Labor | to the proceedings |among the executives of the mo in my first wife's grave and the Where should a kiss be put?” DROP GERALD CASE Employment, Puget Sound Navy | ster open-air production of “Aida, other in the grave of my second Right on the Lips Yard, Bremerton, Washington, an ‘ASK CHEAP PHON Emmy Destin, prima donna, instead wife | “Right on the Nps,” said Miss WHEN WITNESS DIES |»: nounces that there are needed at of being on her way here to assume Gordon, with much emphasia« yard at the present time one As the result of the recent notifi-| the leading role, is interned in Bo- ENGLISH 60 AHEAD Friendship kisses are all right on heard skiniat, two drillers and two cation that the telephone rates for|hemia, and wires are being sent all the forehead or the cheek, but real} J. R. Nelson is dead and Clar. shipfitte schools would be increased, the Se-|over the country in a frantic effort love kisses must always be on the|ence Gerald, charged with selling attle school board decided Wednes-|to secure a substitute, so the pro- LONDON Sept 21.—Pritish | lips him liquor, cannot be pros A FREE CONCERT AT “Y” day to join the Spokane school | duction can be staged September 30 troops advanced south of the Ancre No woman ever gets enough On the advice of Deputy Prose-| Want to hear a free phonograph | board in a petition to the public| without a postponement. The sing- last night, despite enemy resist-| Hubby should kiss her when he|cutor Helsell, Presiding Superior|concert around an open fireplace?| service commission to ask that the|er, who has pro-ally sympathies, ance, Gen. Haig reported today, |goes to work, and when he re-| Judge Dykeman caused the case to| There'll be one open to all men at/schools be given a spectal classifi-/ has also been working zealously for The Germans made strong coun-|turns for lunch, and when he|}be stricken from the court calen-|the Y. M. C. A, library, at 7:30 p. m. cation. the release of her fiance, Dinh ter attacks against the New leaves again—-three or four|dar Thursday Saturday, {t was announced today| The rates in the Rainier valley | Gilly, baritone of the Metropolitan Zealanders, but were beaten off|times, 1 mean, on each occasion.| Nelson was formerly an investi-|by Milford K. Kingsbury, social sec-|schools have increased from $1.50] Opera Co., who, as a Fr rench zouave, with he losses. "Not little stingy kisses, elther. And gator for the prosecutor's office. | retary Ito $7.50 a phone is an Austrian prisoner. The Seattle Star HEART AFFAIR DRIVES GIRL TO LIVE AS A HOBO | ed 120 Times a Day | Secret Service Men Move - Witness Out of Danger Just in Time to Save His Life + | | COME WITH US AND WE’LL SHOW YOU CITY OF SEATTLE AS THE TOURISTS SEE IT Star Reporter Takes Rubberneck-wagon Jaunt and Laughs Along With Lemuel Kennedy at All of Al Brewster’s Old Jokes About Chief Points of Interest of the City miles of paved streets, 300, Kennedy ) He told of the state university churches, 64 grammar schools, four rhis is Leschi park,” droned/“on — our YP. exhibition high schools, ‘31,000 pupils be-| the lecturer, “so named after Chief | grounds,” with “3,500 pupils—most- ~ ’ Leschi, who wi hanged on this|ly ladies,” and the “largest log we eoue weet” spot for attacking the whites. If/cabin in the world,” meaning the (Skt ican) you want a park named after you| Forestry building. \ ; in Seatile, just start something.” | Then he explained the Lake Musta Bin Some Lake | Washington canal project. We followed the lake which| “Uncle Sam's goin’ to bring his |"goes down three inches every warships in them lakes you've day,” and Mr. Kennedy figured |seen,” he said, “and all the sea- that “she musta bin some lake a/ weeds and barnactes will drop oft ‘few years ago.” ‘in 60 hours. They won't have to Cireling thru the Mt. Baker park |go to no dry docks.” district, we viewed ~ beautiful It's a Dry Town homes, and well kept lawns, most) In a few minutes we were back tween the ages of 6 and 21, and|iBteresting to the carload of vis-/at Pioneer square. Bie aby itors “Say,” called Tourist Kennedy, 1,700 school teachers between the | st’ one point, we stopped t the rear seat—-himsslbneee % " 01." r, point, we stopped rom rear a mse| ua ages of 16 and 1 Reacon hill ‘loomed up to our bling by this time, stimulated by Women Raise Racquet left. The open Sound, backed by Al's wonderful jokes. “You better “Notice the tennis courts, to your the Olympics, and the silhouetted take that voice o' yours t' dry right,” he commanded at Madrona, skyscrapers of the business sec- dock and git the barnacles scraped where the men reach for bigh tion, were before us out.” ills and the ladies raise a) Under the enchantment of the; “They ain't no dry docks here,” racquet! vista, Al opened up and made his|came back Al, right off the bat. Great stuff, this—for Tourist ‘supreme effort. . She's a dry town.” or bending an ear to his hoarse | twitched Jist Kennedy enunelatic He xettled hack to tell me that | Life Preservers Along But Al fooled us all—suddenly, the agent In Chicago routed him} We bowled suddenly to the brink . home by way of Seattle, and when | Of @ steep little hill, The tourists On your right,," he Saled Sera | att Aneclen. the South. |&asped, some of the women squeal megaphone, “are the Honriey-Wat-| io Oot ‘ ‘here's (ed, AB We started to go slowly and son undertaking parlors. People|er Pacifie guy toid him “There's : aarhineto ln dente carefully down it, in the general direction of Lake Unton But I had to como this way.” he} «none git alarmed,” called Al explained because my ticket if the brakes should slip, you'll called for Seattle, So I'm goln’ tl ring a jife preserver under every take a look around from this bus | sent and then pull out Lakeview cemetery loomed up to We went bowling thru “one ofthe left | ttle’s many 1nfllionaire resi How Many Feet dence sections (on our right), and| “1¢ covers 160 acres,” came from into Volunteer park, by this time.|the megaphone, “and nobody | “To your left etands Willism| knows how many feet.” Seward,” announced the lecturer,| We went onto Interlaken boule on the monument, He bought | vard Alaska off'n Russia for seven mil-| “You are rounding the dollar just die to go there every day lion.” sign curve,” said Al, “we call it This was the first sbot which Now the children’s wading pool. |that because It's so hard to make tended to break up Tourist Ken-\cniidren are safe in it! Can't) Funny thing—a man named Turner nedy's grouch. drown. It's only eight inches | planned it.’ Lemuel Likes 'Em | deep.” | Between points of special in’ The corners of his mouth| “Good ideo,” editorialized ‘Tour-'est he announced Seattle has NIGHT ONE CENT After He Tells of Gang’s Operations. WASHINGTON, Sept. 21.—Disclosure of a plot to kidnap or murder a witness named Frank Crocker, who has made a full con- fession regarding the workings of the nationwide blackmailers’ syndicate was made today by a member of the department of justice investigation bureau following a two-day session attended by division heads from New York, Chicago and Philadelphia. The plot was discovered in time for federal officers to trans- fer Crocker to another city. Crocker’s testimony according to of- ficials, is essential to successful prosecution of the cases. STAR CHAMBER told all he knows. In this connec tion, It developed today that one other man under arrest has shown | signs of weakening, having told | Owing to the several other meas- ures to be placed on the ballot next November, in addition to the coun- ty, state and presidential ticket, the certain facts regarding operations of the gang which corroborats | what Crocker has told Give Evidence to Prosecutor A Bruce Uielaski, chief of the de-| partment’s investigation bureau, convened the sersion today after the case against the men and wom en implicated in the Kilpper kid naping had been completed, Later in star chamber session at “et |. Owing the city hall Thursday morn- ing, five counclimen quietly |the woman, Hoey sletont Attarnes General Wat.| aseed an ordinance to sub- | jitney bill wiil be practically buried, lace, who will draw up the prosecu mit a jitmey regulation law to it is said tion's plan with the help of Assist.| the vote of the people at the Considerable ill feeling was occa- ant District Attorney Knox, of New fall election. sioned when it first became known York. The latter will have charge Thomson, Dale, Hanna and that a star chamber sessi ee te cones te ence Haas voted for the measure. (been held, it being pe 3 Another development today was Moore opposed it. Bolton, Hes (the ordinance would pe keth, Erickson and Fitzgeral |have been lost with fi m .abers <, identification by Division Qbief Offley of New York of the man ar rested in Chicago as “Doc” Dona hue, who has been the object of «| search in New York state Chief Bielaski today told of the two most popular methods employ- ed by the blackmatlers, The first | was for one of the women to meet | confirmed friends of the jitn men, had not been summoned and knew nothing of the session until It had adjourne Tat SAYS HUERTA DESERVED U. S. AID \of the council opposed to it A special meeting of the council will be held Saturday to work out ithe wording of the bill e STRIKE ra the intended victim, gain his com plete confidence and “listen to any proposition he might make.” The PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 21.— woman would keep her pals {n-| gy-president Taft would have formed and at the proper time they | would break In on the victim and | powe as federal agents, poth recognized Huerta had he con- tinued in office, he declared in a@ copyrighted article inthe Oc | tober issue of Yale Review. NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—New York's protracted traction Strike approached a crisis to- and arrest + 1 “It was amateur diplomacy | day. The last day which la- X-ray Proves Girl | and statesmanship which led | bor leaders have allotted the | Mr. Wilson and Mr. Bryan to | traction companies to accept Older Than Mother assume the right to convict the proposals of Mayor Mitchel Huerta and declare him ineli- for further gible to become the president negotiations was ushered in with increasing vio- Claimed She Was) } 1 | | of Mexico,” wrote Taft. “The lence and with no sign of wav- OAKLAND, Sept. 21.—The complicity of Huerta in the ering by elther side. Xray today disproved a moth- killing of Madero has not been | Unless their demands are met. er’s testimony regarding the established. Huerta himself (union organizers are prepared to age of her daughter. denied it and there were res- jcall tomorrow for the greatest Two gypsy tribes are battling sons for attributing the act to | walkout in the history of the city, in court for pretty Amelia others.” a sympathetic strike of 500,000 Birtchel. Her mother declared | union workers. Amelia is 15, and that Frank a a ae ie j Shonts Won't Yield Adams, a member of another {DIGS CC IN FROM HER President Shonts, of the Inter tribe, kidnaped her at St. Louis, STOCKING TO SAVE | borough, announced that the posi- Adams declared he bought the | |: ATE F ; tion of the company “will not be girl, and that she is 19. | EX-MATE FROM TRIAL altered under any circumstances.” Dr. H. 8. Buteau said that an X -~ Organizer Fitzgerald declared that y photograph of the bones in the| Suffering a change of heart aft) yn) h nen’ ray phi p of hie erred dite unless the carmen's grievances 4