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t G..0. P.LEADERS ARE CRACKING THE WHIP ee ONE CENT NIGHT EDITION ADVANCE GUARD OF THE FAITHFUL GATHERING AT CHICAGO —VICE PRESIDENTIAL TALK WITH FAIRBANKS SAYING NOTHING — OPPOSITION TO CORTELYOU HAS DEVELOPED @ CHICAGO, June 18—With the any ma nthe administration wants gontinued inpouring of Derby Jay | Senator Fairbanks opened the d Visitors and convention delegation ' ations of continued # let Chicago today took on an animated | “There's eason why ! should Qppearance, and the immense y anything,” remarked the sen¢ @owds checked the intramural) ¢ The sentiment app to transportation an ft ag “ . 2 whe a ' Politics warmed uy at | mh Dee . . horse talk rather had the i oS wet he newbs mets ancy. Among the conspicuou - wee Sit Deans Sate Sot snweae egations to arrive was that fr oe tle ee Ee California on a spectal « eel ee mans, and one car of | see ee Tn the delegation can * . — Knight, who will make — strongest argu seconding speeches nating | a eae s i President Roosevelt. Knight ts | Sioverner Is ~~ . candidate for the California member sored ae ° of the national committee, and he bene . . will be elected ee te The Californians organized on the | “Si, ee a : way to Chicago, and elected Judge| "|, Beggs 3, W. McKinney of Los Angeles a8) ing. the ‘ . chairman of the delegation. A cau. the president cus of the delegation will be held at the California headquarters on| o11CAGO. June 18—If Cortelyo Monday ‘The delegation’s arrival was re ceived with loud acclaim, because of the goodfellowship that follows. and the additional fact that the Califor Blane monopolized the interest so te ti ted chairman of the na tioan! committee it is absolutely o sential that come here immed ately, is the substance of a telegram that has been gent to President Roosevelt by Congressman Lita far as pertains to state delegations. | of New York. after a careful sising The word had been passed around | up of the opposition ¢ ortelyo of the coming of the Californians | ‘This call for assistance shows the fm grander style than usual and that ® carload of wine and fruit valed ‘at $10.000 was with them. This was distrted to visitors at the elab orate CMaltfornia headquarters at | ator Lodge and Cornelitin Bliss, both the Auditorium } of whom approve of the president's When asked for the preference of | choice of Secretary Cortelyou. are California for vice president Knight | expected here tomirrow. Their ar sald: [rival may create a chings in the “We have none: we wil! vote for present sentiment PLAYS HIDE AND SEEK WITH JAPS intensity of fecting among the mem bers of the committee, who belteve that practical politicians should be chosen to run the campaign. Sen VLADIVOSTOK FLEET CONTINUES TO HOVER ABOUT STRAITS OF KOREA, A MENACE TO JAPANESE PORTS AND STEAMERS IN TRANS. —_—-_ SEA The Seattle Star ‘LE, WASHINGTON, SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1904 | Bg | Gov, Murphy, of New Jersey, for | mally proposed a compromise in the national chairmanship muddle to day by advocating the selection of & | chairman by the and th board of onal committee an advisory | iF} with Cortel-| hairman, Klthu Root said] | he viewed the proposition favorably BALLARD MYSTERY mber Ha man, a 16-year-old ome te in Bellingham. m the home of his and uncle, Mr. and Mra. A. I don, at Ballard y morning under cireumstances wh ead his relatives to fear that harm | have befallen bim boy sustained of his right ankle ident about months ago and since then has been low spirited and despondent, and at times alight y irrational, His injured ankle has given him much trouble and a sur on was to mine it yesterday ning. It is thought possible that the boy ran away in fear of a surgical op eration, | he Hogdon home ts at Brig and an away may The apound t BaD ne Garrett street, in Ballard, in the skirts of the town. Yesterday morning, when the boy's bedroom| GugAT EQUESTRIAN TABLEAL was found empty, the * wear by were searched and the police in| Ballard and in this city notified.) - but not race of the missing lad has been found. The boy i# small for bis age, has light) rown hair and eyes, is sien der and wore a close ing biue serge suit and blue cloth cap, He wore no outer shirt. He had no! money when he left. SUED FOR LIBEL Frank B. Wiestling, a Seattle law published @ malicious and untruth-| der Heather has given up the search | * h meritorious cases that Sujerior| prinice THE INTREPID KING OF THE P Vv THE NEW G. 0. P. ONE-RING CIRCUS PO BAREBACK RIDERS WILI | WERE BADLY AIMED yer, this afternoon filed a 00 THE WOES OF MANY WEDDED LIVES WERE RETAILED IN DI- Nbel sult against the Times Print- ing company. Wiestling alleges VORCE COURT—JUDGE WAS KIND HEARTED that In a recent issue the Tim ful article in which he was charged with having indirectly aided J. B.| The divorce court was more thanjthan Georgia or South Carolina . Prince Rubet aa jccerrtar > Shear oy “yew knee usually crowded th rning With} nere eome month: jail ee = ee Oe 7 | would be grass widows and €ra=*! poliee forced him to leave the city ‘ ateatiatt Riaitinds widowers and their friends an¢/) Poster charged his wife with hav The United States lighthouse ten- | t?#mles, Strangely yugh all hadi ing become infatuated with the pd maid that he bad such «a TOKIO, June 18—A Japanese steamer was attac ue. [fOr .a0 lone amish head bell-|J¥dee Hatoh, who presided, wa"! nad influence over her that he en- San Viadivostok squadron last night, but It escaped, poche, ea buoy. capt. McGregor states that | Obieed to grant every decree a coursmed her to pull the hair of her the harbor of Fokuyammn, and another steamer, the lako Maru, was | th¢ buoy has gone out into deep wa be nn hs Od wees endl Grerhauled by the Russians, but the latter were evidently afraid of | tf and that further search will be), In name tauee the women told such | the head with « poker ‘io the approach of the Japanese warships and released the steamer useless. erty oe ar agli nd Foster told the court that his wife TOKIO, June 18.—A report Was recetved here this morning that Rev. Thomas McGuire, @ retired | "ted Ju | pone Fay —— . | was go jealous of him that she three Russian warships appeared early today off Fokuyama. They |Presbyterian minister, who had li |}ow witnesses to testify in their be-| ruine@ Bis business ae « clairvoyant \ were going north. . ed in Seattle 14 years, died at bis |! simply anying ningly to the) very fie a good-looking woman oh ae home inst night, aged 71 years bi mes ig or ‘ ee me = ne office to have « few KDEN, June 18.—-Wounde: a ere, ere. darn Neve! minut chat with « relative large numbers from Vafangow “4 gO mmap tet g Raper A The Whiton Hardware company |Your story. No firther evidence in| friend Who wae not lost but gone arrived. They report that @ retreat was being effected in pertect or- | has filed # caim for damages with | P*€ mary. Take your decree before, he said Mra. Foster would der when they left. the city council, asking for Mre, Emma Lawler. the pretty! create Bach @ seene that his clients | | the amount claimed to be lost in the| Youngs wife of « priae fighter, who! would be scared out before they had u wtock of hardware by the flooding |CSll* bimeelf “Mystertou Bitty | paid the fe he charged them for per 2,000. jangow at |avenue south, zy the bursting of @| tht stand. She was very bashfull| unknown, Foster ¥ was sub \ | water main on June 15. and had to be admonished to speak | stantiated by witne Judes ne | louder several times before the| Hatem fold him he naider | Judge could really understand exact himmetf divorced y what her troubles were, The) My, Jennie Hartley, whose hus | gladiator, whe testified, had made her| band, Albert, uneratefully tried to j life most minerable, and hee had a/ kill her with a knife after # had bad habit of practicing hie knock-|sapgorted him in luxury for several out blows on her before trying them! years, war afforded relief from on opp jonte in the ring. When she| bends @f matrimony; also was Mra objected to helping earn the family! Mable “Martin, who testified that | living tm this Indirect way he de-|her Busbend, James Martin, was so i* h she teetified. ah was! cruel te her that he not only refused © ia orce in double quick) to buy her medicine when she was ‘ 1 and believed she was ing, but | The ease of B Foster, a spir-| threw im the atove all the pills and | itualiat agninet mater was! powder that her friends bought her j called next and took some time, as! When Ge divorce sult of Carrie | lengthy depositions were read. The! ‘Trimm agninest Edward Trimm was allege the were sensational. The! called Glee looking young womar ¢o-respondent in the case was| took the @tand and told the story Prince Rubel, @ dusky clairvoyant,| her unfortunate matrimonta n who claims to be an Bast Indian by ture birth but was in reality never any When he firnt ‘ hearer Indian in his early youth Trim ghewald she THE LOWER PICTURE SHOWS THE CRIPPLE CRE novan PICKED M Poter 2 Mutty's diamonds, ed at 0, n recov. red. They were found on Colum- bia wtreet, near First avenue, Inte Thursday afternoon, within a few minutes after they were lost by Mra. Mutty, whose home is in Port) ‘Townsend and who returned to the| Key City fully convineed that she had been robbed by one of the clever pickpockets who have come| to Heattle to attend the races and| nin cae 1M Ag BL, : RIDERS (CITIZEN ARREST gather up a little y money NG UNION MINERS NEAd GOL D FIBLD. ABOVE AT THE RIGHT 18 SHOWN GENERAL BELL J. lk Bvane, whe hae charge of| Gan: IAT "hae 1 c ie aon? s a. AKFAST AT VICTOR THE OTHER PICTURE SHOWS the butter and eg@ counter in the) 4 > ND MEN TRYING TO LOCATE THE AMBUSCADE ON THE MARCH T Fulton market, wee the lucky! GILLETTE. GENERAL BELL STANDS ON THE bs an ‘. TREME RIGHT. ‘finder, and will olaim the $400 re- LOST DIAMONDS ‘THE PAVEMENT UP ON ward offered by Mrs. Mutty. Evans was on his way from the market to} Western avenue and noticed the lit tie casket containing the jewels lytog im plain sight on the pave- ment, He picket ft up and being in a hurry dit rot examine until he went home at night. When he opened the little box his oyen were dazzled by the aight of a rr een nees teveseccoees seerseesenens i THE ONLY PAPER IN SEATTLE i THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS « OL. 6. NO P UNIONS SAY HIRED DETECTIVES DID IT 10a 25 CENTS PE SPECIAL DISPATCH RECEIVED AT BUTTE FROM CRIPPLE CREEK SAYS UNIONS HAVE EVIDENCE TO PROVE THAT THEY WERE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR INDEPENDENCE HORROR 4 (Special to ‘The Star.) , at the time of the 1 ence BUTTE, Mont., June A spec-| horror, sald today that he had talke ial telegram from Cripple Creek ed to one of the men who had beem cleved by a local paper, #ay riven district shortly ‘One of the most sensational #to-| after the explosiin, This man wae ries in connection with the dy ! from his bed and was r miting trage at Independence | fy ermis to even put on his leaked out here prematurely today. | ») Mem of the local branch of the] ‘The hounds were first brought te | Miners’ un aay that they are in|} and after giving them his dence that the da deed wai he explosto | the rk of a a 1 T 1 directly from him te by the mine ow th ne Of Detective Bemore, and was assinted in & wa the back door of ¢ | tatle of the der t eniden { Oscar Holman, member of the Cit alliance " and a anti-union mam | “The re of # committee se Here they leontain ne charges. WERE CHOKED OFF | miner divulge the n land put on the « | tatively stated that the nd ards saying ™ | which, were put on the trail of the | "cre story about the explosiom at a datastten t | being ed by the discharge of @ | following the sce the| uo ! tity of powder ie | anton als led the he! hs ntry ws Sore 06; freee st Soe Sasents beh ties viene aa hee ge ed ground, so that {t was imporstble to pon . te t how the charge was touche | had heen pope ey ying bi slay — usly oppo ‘One thing, however, 414 rematn, er ee ee jIt was a wire which led directly A SIGNIFICANT FACT | from eat of the exploston to @ |xcab hiist, which was guarded byy That the tw n, Holman « deputies, and therefore inaccessible more, had b used by the min-|to union men. This wire was sever- ere of the ! tous to the trail- | al hundred feet long and brand new, ing of the hounds. The union men| It id not have n obtained freely ansert that they can fasten | from the co-operative stores they the crime upon agents of the mine! har nothing but food necessi- owners.” tle Attneh to the ond of the Referring to the above Aispatch,| wire where it entered the ore holst ©. P. Mahoney. secretary of the| was a heavy pick handle, which wae Smeltermen’s union. who was at-| evidently as a lever by ¢ tending the convention of the West-| miscreant who bluste:) more than ® ern Federation of Miners at Denver! doren men Into eternity.” MUCHLY MARRIED WOMAN IN TROUBLE but soon he k to drink, and for & year was intoxicated most of the time, He finally reformed and t ssn as he wae having a wholesale re confessed her that she | his real wife and that h had duped her into marrying bh (Special to The Star) RITZVILLE, Wa. June 1&—On June 21 there will come up for trial Spokane, will appear as an unwilke ing witness against her mother a the coming trial. He had « wife and children living Logan died several years ago, an@ in Texas, he informed her, and his|@t the summer term of the Adams | according to the Adama county of newly awakened conscience told him| COUnty superior ourt the many * the present defendant to the that bie Gest Guty wee to them. He Sided and rather sensational cases Bigamy charge married 6 mulatte went back to his first home and left}of Sarah McParren, popularly | bawea McParren. her alone in the city and unprovid-| known as the “muchly married wo-| Life. it seems, with thie husband 4 for. She has not heard from him| man,” charged with bigamy, and A.| was not all bliss, and Mra. McFape since, and Judge Hatch, in annul Meigs, charged with knowingly | ren sued for divorce. the illegal marriage reetfred to ber, marrying another man’s wife While this divorce sult was still |her maiden name of Carrie Rinck ‘The married life of both defend-| pending the comely Mra MeFarren The next plaintiff (o take the| ante has been rather unusual, ac-| met Meigs, and that meeting hae stand was Mre. Elizabeth Edgar, a| cording to the information in the| resulted in all the trouble mere child, who eloped last year| hands oof the officers here. Meigs| The prosecution will attempt to with Joseph Edgar, who was not yet! it seems. had a wife down in Ore-| show fn the trial to be called nex® 21. He turned out to be shiftiess| gon, and according to bis story he| week that Mra. McFarren and Mr, and would net support his child-| lost bis spose in a strange manner! Meigs did not wait for the granting wife her parents put up the| while driving from hig Oregon home| of her divorce from McFarren, but her to get a divoree acroms the country to Oakesdale,| in their haste to become man an@ Mra. Badger, who is now only 17) Whitman ciunty, Washington. He! wife they rushed to the county au- yea age, told of her husbend’s | claims that she fell into a camp) ditor’s office im this city a1 pro Gefections with considerable warmth and testified that he began to neg ject ber and leave her ell by her- well the " @ wee kafter their marrt When he ured a marriage Pager ew that his bride was 18 ye of age. a Judge Hatch stated that he Heense e the young fellow should be arrested and m to anewer for it However, he said it would prob ably be of no use as he would only swear that he did not know her age and the jury would aequit him. “The thing I can do im the matte said, “Ie to grant a decree of ores,” and the rest is in. the hands of the prosecuting attorney Other divorces granted this mort ing were: Ada Cr Jonepr Cratg ground port Mra. Ida Whitley fr ley, on ground of de @rson from J. BE. Bmernc of desert Joe Hor nile Hort ground and Eliza th f on grour non-suppe DOG BIT HIS HIP Attorney Tom Page is suffering better this afternoon fined to his home, FIRST SINCE WAR BEGAN The Nippon Yusen Kaisha compa, ny's steamer Kanawaga Maru is although con. | due to arrive at this port from Jap- an next W inesday morning. Thie Will be the first vessel of that line to arrive h nee the war began She will bring a large cargo of gen eral oriental freight star and orescent brooch, set with eight stones; splendid solitatre| ring and @ pair Of earrings, set with! rubles and diamonds ie reported the matter to the police this morn ing after reading the story of Mrs, Mutty's lowain the newspapers lust evening. Steam Rainier, L. H. Gray & Co., satied for n Francisco this afternoon from Bellingham with a foll list of passengers and a cargo of lumber and general freight Higball won and Rapid W ‘Gan derby, Woodson was ond r third ia the Amer- ‘Tine 28a from the result of a dog bite on his hip and it is feared that hydropho- bia may follow, His face is badly} swollen and he suffers considerable pain, He was reported to be some | fire during the journey and was so severely injured | short while later Though 45 years of age Mrs. Mec Farren is rather a comely woman | }and appears to be much younger than she really is. Her married life began some 20 years ago, when she| jtook a man named Logan for hus band, by whom she had five child-| will conduct the prosecution, while jren. One of them, a pretty daugh-| his brother, 0. R. Holcomb, will de jter 20 years of age, w es in’ fend Mrs, McFarren and Met ROBBED A SICK MAN cured a marriage license, giving the town of Sprague a dress. They were married in Rits- ville by Rev. @. Rushing. They returned to Onkesdale, and were subsequently arrested om the complaint of @ 16-year-old daughe ter Prosecuting Attorney Holcomb that she died a | their home ad- } P. H. Keating, a discharged rev avenue and Cherry street, late } sday night. The usual gi j enue cutter sailor, now a patient At} nigy and intimidation figured | * : , + ay, | the deal Providen hospital, was held uy For reasons best known to the pea j and robbed of $50, by twi highway-|,'° Rn Ao mg was suppressed ag | race ees gt Yealee war, jv The police have apparently done! j ton, about 11 woth R wigh highwayman committed both rob- | Keating is convalescing and is in|) t |the habit of taking a stroll abo ei the town every evening. He was a “eave .- little late in returning to t o MISSOULA, Mont, June 18.—The pital last night 1 was hurrying |"vnt for the baddits who held up along up the avenue, when a big bbed the North Coast limited gun was poked out before his face|"e4r Bearmouth, Thuraday night and he wa anded to be qu has been fruitless, although Have you got anything?” asked | 8° f deputy sheriffs, cowboys tLe thug with the gun, in threaten- | 44 b are engaged in the ing tones. an bur The pursuers are cons I have a little,” answered Keat what Is belleved to be ing, meokly 8’ traf! leading into th ‘Well, we want It, quick,” was the ‘eek country Tt te feareg resly ever, that the bandite have His pocketbook was taken, but} ™4de good their em |the hold-up meu failed to me -—— | small chang Mayor Ballinger today appointed The robbers quickly disappea J, B. Meikle and B. O. Burdon ag after getting his money, while Keat | delegates to the mining conve ing went to the Hillside saloon, | to be held in Portland on July 22 ta near by, where he was advised to! 97, ‘The delegates were appointed report the loss of the money to tie | upon the request of Mayor Witliamm polle Jor P d Seattle be B, W. Shreve of the Orpheum the- | Of Portland, that Seattle be reprey ater claims to have been a victim See a Jot the highwaymen who make a/ specialty of holding up theatrical] PARIS, June 18.—Ambassadoa men, A report on file at the police | Porter was today presented with the station states that he was held up/ grand cross of the Legion of Honay eahhad of ABA 24 tha aon me Mimtatar Pratanan and hee