The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 20, 1905, Page 1

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dj “NIGHT EDI WILSON AND PILES GAIN 1 VOTE Fifth Joint Ballot for Senator EXTRA! SEATTI WASHINGTON, RI DAY, JANUARY The Seattie Star _ The Qnly Paper in Seattle That Dares to Prist the News VOL. 6, NO. 466 yHREE BALLOTS WERE TAKEN TODAY AND THE FIRST BREAK |8 SHOWN IN THE DEMOCRATIC VOTE — OTHER | TOTAL VOTE F E } QWITCHES CAUSE SURPRISE 194 NECESSARY TO CHOICE os | eee ———~ | } } , | —_-—-——- FOSTER PILES | SWEENY WILSON \SCATTER'G\GODMAN-D | pla Bureau from the democratic ranks ator ' ATE. SENATE. } SENATR. SHNATH. SENATE. SENATE. Seattle Dally Star, es of Whateom and Representa. | Bronson, Baries, 0. (Baker, Condon Olympia, Wash, Harper of Ferry voting for him. | Christian, Hemrich, Bratt 10’ Donnell, pBoone, Moore, D. The fifth joint ballot followed the | Clapp Hunter, {Browan, Reed Rasher, D0. Qtalf Correspondence by Dan Dean} fourth in a few minutes and was | Davis, Kennedy, {Henry Russell, and Will Windom marked by more changes and more | Hammar, Kinnear, tHutson, jeurprises, Foster again dropped LeCrone, Palmer, jPauly — The a back to 44, losing the vote of Sen- | Pomue, Potts, tanseil, OLYMPIA, J The thlG! stor Maries Of Wheteom county, whe Picks Rande ven, tor ke t Pile . . tewart, Smith. J. 7 ballot f taken at! voted for Piles, and Representative 3 J, fotat : Geo. L. Davis, who switched from | Sumner, Smith, 8. 'T $ goon today showed no change from | the Foster camp and voted for Wil ~. Tucker, + of veaterday, | #08. No other changes were noted, | Wilson, Van de Vanter, ‘te—the solid | the Joint session adjourned tmme USE soi . ‘othe solid | aintely after the fifth ballot, The; HOUSE. HOUsE, mouse =, HoUsE. House. HOUSR. th soe haus | Yote now standing as follows | Bartlett, Alien, { “74 ga at nplimentary }. Foster 44, Piles 34, Sweeny 27, | Bassett, oes {Bowers, perm > ¢. Litem eee, Be ay ay siving. the | Wilson 17, Jones 7, Godman 7 | Bishop oo {Coat, : pare, Weathherford, D. | vote se third ballet te ie w that the break hes come, tt | Bradiey, tetted rane Kenney ar, same ee Daye a, ™ | is probable that several ballots will | Byer! Yok Doolittle, son, | M _— * Sreate ensh: ins be taken ¢ day and it is also | Crandall, (see bed Fancher, Johnaon, Chas, William, ‘There ee | highty probable that there will be a/| Eldemilier, Dehson, Hoch Morgan, ter choke ‘ nod dea! of awitching from one | Fenton, . SHuxtable, . fourth ballot was taken | & s | Rrickson, Roth, The fow column to another. Fulton, ? (strobridi ely after the third And} | Heason, Strobridge, immediately vet significant break| TOdAy's changes indicate leas | Griffin ne ee y Vogtiin, ae ee Ore, x probability of a deadlock than was | Hamilton ee Linsley, im the demioernt} de a gain of two; | Predicted this morning when dead-| Herper, D. aeine, Lon) Foster rove] at 83; Sweeny gain. | 20ck talk was tn the alr Hog aan” MeGr or, ; Tie ceking him 27; Wilson heid| Many members are pairing oft| Johnson, L.A, fr yong ret ; bis 16, while Jones, who received’ | thelr votes until Monday, which He} pert, McVay, oa” ea the third ballot. lost one, and | means that tomorrow's vote will be MeCop Morrill, Rtevencen, Godman lost two, leaving him 6. | Hehe McNicol SRentok U lab, ’ There were still 194 votes cast; | The democrats will hold a caucus Mog if Theurer, Weber, necessary choice, 68 | tonight to consider the advisability | Meicher ‘odd The surprise of the fourth ballot /of showing thetr hand tomorrow | stilier, | Twitchell, ; came when Representative Long of | or Monday, and casting a solid vote | Minard Mag ; Garfield county switched from) for one of t ominent republi-| voldstad, ‘or, Jones to Sweeny. Foster's gain was | can candidates Olson. / Poyns, Reid, EEEEEEEEEEEE EE EEE ERE EEEEEEEEEEE SEES ESEEREEEEEEES | Roberts, . t* | Rudene, / PEACE IN THE FAR EAST : =: & | Shulte, = * it Gince the fall of Port Arthur there have been clear signe. | guilt. = = : ; ~ that the temper of the world is in favor of an end of the fear- | BM pore, ‘nuscte nad Jepon 7. om "| LITTLE HAPPENINGS | % There ie no question but that the chief diplomats of all the # + En pent BALLOT # se a7 15 6 4 * nations have exchanged confidences on the subject during * RST JOINT BALLAY yy as 27 15 oJ BLETHEN two weeks and that feelers have been thrown out @ * : . - wes a 7 W. W. Fletcher i» being tried in 4 bern = plan to be pursued to bring the belligerente inte seme # | SECOND JOINT BALLOT 4 33 26 16 cS o TRA the superior court today on the f hich will result in peace. * " charge assault with intent to 3 MY Gir hes eccured tue notable articles bearing on thie in- & io Ree lag wre pie my 4 4 4 7 | murder. ‘The prosecuting witnens In A Dject, che hy. Amork ® [Fou OINT BALIA RH. Wilson, The men run rival 4 ‘ ondigesa poe nay age Beet: 4 pbs # | PUPTH JOINT BALLOT. 46 a4 a7 7 ° be arber ebops and poolrooms at Hill- i pong will appear tomorrow; and the other by General Nelsgn A. & al » City and h been bitter ene- ; ra America’s greatest warrior, General Miles’ article willap- ® ee for months. Pletcher is charged { f Miles, " * e with having attempted to stab Wil- ; ® Dr. White will suggest a conservative plan for peace. * ~ after . — encounter. ; il ex hy 9 that peace will be forced. ® luper udge T nan is hear General M will express the opinio pe wi . ing the sult brought by the Amert- } MusueuanenuuuueererTCCeTrrrcctre rrr trier i irl li, an Ba Bank & Trust com- : pany againet the widow of former ———= pa ae - Po City Treasurer Adolph Krug to re ® k 2. Mra. Krug’s defense to the inhacietitiiinnaiiii th, formed her name t the : : THE AUTHOR OF “FRENZIED FINANCE” BEGINS THE REAW | -* Spotter f 'F nkie Linney, who was arrest s| STORY OF “AMALGAMAT ae ' , rankie ney. who arreste< * AMATED” AND SAYS HE HAS A “REM: 2 @ n the charge of bel ‘9 . i prone on the ¢ of being m prostitu E AXE b 4 . 3 oeps Will be called out to with | was discharged by Judge Gordon in Eby” RIOUS STRIKES AND RIOTS DISTURB S&T. BURG, disturbances which may be 4 osrssesrorerceecesecese | SERIO pore oon Goidiens are | the police court yesterday afternoon - —_— MUCK ped mere, § |The evidence in the case showed ee Watch this hand—It moves and WHILE MINERS IN GERMANY RUM ANUS now « apt Dentanarters under | chat fiticns ‘above the tine are ol ~" or ure | a ‘eady to answer "1 - 4 ° ori » Bede a — aie BRIDE APPOINTMENTS | wen = ~— temperature for rm. Seeaiiin. $6 to learned, will very” Gor nved, bet et tent ovi- | : In the Februa y in tallment of faleely inflated prices these gentry HAVE BEEN REFERRED TO. : BOM afiaree mosting tonight St |not'be produced. |Magasing, ‘Thomas Lawson begins | IE purposes, Iustead of gathering GOVERNOR MEAD oe and Saturday, Probably Oc-} or PETERSBURG, Jan. 20—|to allow the printers to quit. A] ynish futnrep rogram will be! 7 Pasquelle, of the Cosmopolitan |the real story of Amalgamated and in the savings of the tollers, the | ai Rain; Lig jo inde. force of strikers marched through bakery Rainier boulevard, re-|he deals the same telling blows ‘System’ had to part with some of — — The weatherman Striking workmen who have been the Vasell Licetroff district, com- ported to the police that two men | against the crimes committed by the its roll. For once the people got (Special te The Star.) | says there will be put for several days bh pelling the owners Of,oll workshope entered his bakery early this morn- | “system fearlessly, relentlessly the money and the ‘System’ had the 2 ail Aineed of umbrel- R | wwelled by large r eympa-|and stores ck their establish-! which hes been gradually spreading |'D&. bought two loaves of bread and |and suggests for the t time that ks. Under the stress of tremen- OLYMPIA, Jan. 20.—Former Gov- tins in Seattle to th tod a numbe s. The strike has spread (© the] throug#out the mining distriets of | When he asked for the money they |he has what he believes will be the Gous selling the price of ‘Amalga- @rnor McBrides’ appointments, cov- | rrow, of the parades we ‘aed. Bs spinning trade Gergartg has resulted in further|knocked him down and went/only remedy for our present un-| mated’ was shattered. Other fren- @ring two typewr 1 pages, have ext day, anyway ore age jared that they ald) The employes of the Sangallt 2n4) bloodshed. Over 250,000 men aro al-| through his clothes. They secured istable financial and industrial na-|zied finance stocks declined in sym- Been referred by the senate to Gov- not conce thers’ demands, Kojlakia mille quit work thie after-! rea@y tgyotved, and their ranks are | 20thing tional structure. What the remedy’ pathy. The power of publicity had @mor Mead, who will apply the big and at once pr fone bema m- | noon. being dally added to A fs he does not indicate, but says, been triumphantly vindicated and Mickersnce. It is believed that the pe, . ing. Bimilar demonstrations are + Workers on the Jeft side of the] gertogs riots occurred this morn that he will before he completes his | the cries of frenzied financiers, their new chief execut! 2 ois wouldaye We ported from other cities. It Neva are joining the strikers. It I*}ing tq fhe Mount Canis district series of articles mouths full of their own fish- lean sweep and + rs bad bunch, for j feared that should the parades reported that a man is endeavoring} when @ squad of police charged a In leading up to the story of} hooks, resounded through the "p and down the | t's going to pour jt riotir fl reault o”8 to obtain the co-operation of the] crowd of miners Amalgamated, Lawson tells how its | land Governor Mead is in Portland to hen it gets atart have bee to the Butiloof ks | employes of the rman war mate Two men were reported killed and promoters rigged up the famous bull | | Lawson introduces “The Story of Gey and wil! be the tl M ed good to protect ther rial factories, with the object Of] sore than a score injured market, pushing the stock up to 133 nalgamated,” part 2 of “Frenzied day to attend chamber of com The thermome- As the afterr progressed the | forcing the government to stop thé! Pherethave been many minor dis- in order to unload it onto an unsus- nee,” by going into a very Illus Merce banquet. Lieutenant Gov- or 36 ott on te strikers be r bold war. The ranks of = strikers ons turbances tn a number of districts pecting public and clean up millions | minative exposition of the rene @mer Coon now has a free hand rw A4a @ They broke tn t swelled by the addition of 000! ‘The sentiment js drifting in favor —_—_—_ by the dirty transaction. structure of the country, which, during Mead’s « ¢ and could the mercury stood 1 the state printing works workmen in the Kharkoft and Kief] of ghey giiners, because the owners Lawson says clearness and conciseness, has 2@ up in bad e if he at 39, the lowest forced the ¥ to districts | associatinn haa refused to negotiate | GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS IN| “Before my eyes, with a blind and | equal in Iterature. It is run 1 that he 3k hours. The 5 ed t agers | There ts a strong probability that| wien them. MOSCOW DYNAMITED BY audacious defiance of my warnings,| Jumping into the story of Amal- 4 - 1 convicts, | Ps =_ | the old, old game was rigged in full |gamated he compares the workings fon © al convicts, mark in the past — a ations have been unfa-| le — — 1 view of the audience and the old of system” with that of the Yorably considered by Mead. Mead| death 1 he was still alive. In] REVOLUTIONISTS players began their venerable an- | Louisiana lottery. 24 Goon are not political friends 1812 Smoot moved te vo, where ~ tics. In the meantime the ‘System’| He says “Morally, legally or 4nd Coon might do it to take a slap he has lived ever since. was! (By Scripps News Ass'n.) attended to its own role in the con- | ethically, the Louisiaua lottery, with at bis chief | | nae to President Smith tor| spiracy—supplying out of its banks | al! its attendant curses, was a far —— | five ye and in 1900 he became BERLIN, Jan. 20.—The Tages-|and trust companies the public's | better institution for the people to | | PPPs er enenee sane THE STAND: I took no oath as much,” 7 ‘ Fae ee pis wut. | Money for the gamblers to mak bump up against every month than = *} |he declared, “and when f later took att reports that @ serious oUt! same with. Then began the s is the ‘System,’ against which the ‘ case then 15) sees mee $i] Wek. £1 h ae United States senator there | t of revolutionists has oc-| Process of working up the market; | whole people are now directly or in- Feceived this morning for The * | | al reservation and| Fae el stocks gradually climbed higher and directly dealing every working day st on the question: * SAYS HE WAS ADMITTED TO) n nothing in my past| urred at Petrocgeonje, in the prov- | higher. Amalgamated ascended |of the year. Startling this state- an the supreme ® —— |to hamper my work here y aro from the forties into the fifties and nut may be, but not more startii 4 | RCH, BUT NEV- Two hundred and fifty arc 1 | from y 5 y artling ‘ of Home benefit will eres peer Up to 1864 he had been a demo- F: poe eae ow, Russia, in which |the sixties and even into the t-|than the facts. The records of the ® The contest will close this # a eine deut| ER HAD MORE THAN ONE|crat, when reading and thinking| which Were used last summer in tw dynamited several of |ieg: steel assumed the appearance |lottery company will show how Pevening at 6 o'clock and all * a tet | mnverted hisn to republicanism. | the government buildings, The chief | of iite and grew from 10 slowly ma dollars it took in from the $ Meters al ied before that hour * nie sales |. Wire a ~ iiumiaating the world's fair | of police, Pott, was shot at 4 Magis- | ward into the twenties and thirties. | p how many were returned in 4 e contest. # | UP thes, mage t trate Peus was wounded. The rev-|pyery day in the Stock Exchange es and expenses; and*how man: * # | the services of himself and his or ground@, Will soon be blazing away | ojutionista were finally quelled by fehbet is of tho: wands of pr orn into the pockets of the c he» § COR e daha k hhh ht heh | eanizat the arrangements and| wasHINGTON, Jan. 20.—-Senator Pe nrg, wo ei darkness of | government troops jchanged hands back and forth records of the banks, corpora- —-- the ntribution of talent for the} gmoot took the stand in his own 8 @ greets hey are now on - a 4 ustt! trust a ot 4 : | Smoot k , - - ‘ Re MRERERRARARK Ke | 2mMONG the professionals who lustily rusts and stock exchanges THE SERPENT TURN 1s Sram scse, orolbts ene vichh |e ee mernine. He stated be - - Oe min ahha yeneggerdl ng . % |played their parts in this fina hibit how many dollars were Ei An ea date, probably one night! was born in Salt Lake on January . . 0 "At: ; 3 re. . ;, melodram The good old myths of paid inte the ‘System’ by the peo- or inn Mae ye gen \ K )RTLAND, Ore., Jan. 20.—K. W.| Fifty mere are to be purchased * SALEM, Ore., Jan, 20.—Sen- * ja & atter par nen 110, 186 f Abraham and Anna K t 1 C. Ragsdale, of Med- # ator Mitchell the subject #|&Teat fortunes made by lucky fn-| ple; how much they received back — -— will be set for the benefit. Watch | orn both Mormons, and the lat-(VAiter and © haters cod tie —.. money that was paid | ag 5 oo amelie lS te % | Vestors began to reappear in the pa-|in return therefor; how much the 1 in th fiied| The Star for further announce-|ter a plural wife. He said he was| e% inner be -| for the lamps, however, the public] * © — i ad pers, Sales increased; values jump- | ex of conducting the busines . 1 his mornin Both een . | hen Re W. H. Selleck, p ® | ber Sal n ‘a alues jump a ng th ness ating Mackin-| ments, and meanwhile stow away &| married on September ol a ctard at dea Birabulent ear peril | co dpvcomeifpa car Bo Senet iene M. EK. church. ot @ (ed rather than climbed. The trap | was, and how much profits went to M few nickels and dimes towards the e temple at Lo to Alpha . c ” a orn « able “ ae - se < arke ade The the votaries of the ‘System Jom- ‘ ( : : sureniine tt & tet ae-aee tae te o Fay * ba ao Py age of Miller and Kincart, timber | reason, #he board of works refuses |* Sunnyside, Portland, before the & | ¥as . ral ee pr He -adl erie age a _ Baur ae Rusee|) - t ybody else will be| Aron ead that he had no other wife | cruisers, being located on worthless! to @ivulge the price paid for the|* house this morning, prayed God # | Wily, nro alate id rab Fate rg dal pa aD eg $n \ vody else Nl be | dren a bat he had no other C 4 nasal ith the ands gleefully he pub yegan | there is annua c e ‘Bys- New Paris + you will get your money's|nd had cohabi with no other | “aims | Honola, of Medtora,| A™B% Ag to who got the contract 1%. to entcw ene r _ ‘tee barton z cabs tr Ges. ti Wen then-only & from the people ten thougand flet brother, for tt ‘ w and at the same time be do-| womar When 18, he stated, he| ©" BE. Ni om 8. oO a a for fursiishing the lamps; how the § a be igh Oh % ee * | matter f sizing ur s"weol crop |t 5 than the I 4 se . des editor the Southern Oregonian, 1rough which he 6 passing er of 6 » the wool croy ¥ he Lo Years. ‘Th - ng a good turn for Mother Ryther| took the endowment ceremony at|@diior of ihe moulhert Mteimee | idea of Bringing them from St.|¥ on “Mie ability to clear his #| before beginning the shearing , tained in the $6 Blanchard street. As and he « brood of younsters out | pis father's urgent request, but had|°" : Se Louis Wal conceived; why the en : J " &) Manes t debatl ems deaee 3 riod ecuting , Denny way. never taken {t since and could not|*8® before the grand jury explain-| ting qeqh Gas been consummated so|* character of stain Zito aeeean ten Sen tr * phos ee. they have prone Fs “ Be bive the-detalls if-he would ing how he came to acknowledge al-| quigtly amd, as far as the average jto an a ‘ 8 n ap oe yee Wien thauil : sai Pierson. ‘The Ruvs 000000000080660000000000|" Having been, @olicited by hie| sed freuduleit entires, The Jury | Geaietumewas wihout « call for) ¥* 4 *¥¥ 4 ¥ ¥¥E¥ EY ¥ ¥H tom, I should oxplain that Mls s forious, and for » ret bs @ | friends, mostly Gentiles, the witn n the case of George Sorenson, | bidg, the taxpayers must, for the| Ga teen sh tania of ted w tumed aga * Editor The Star: I have been | said that in 1902 he decided to be a| Charmed with offering of « pg 'O] present at least, remain {gnorant not brought about by any honest TO FIGHT THE years ha ® in the but a short time, @| Candidate for senator and so an-|Mormer District Attorney Hall. is) phey muse rely solely upon the vir anal cteietiee day Thel spowit © but have been ply interest- @| nonn ange public meeting. Prior | til! out at a late t this after-] gin honesty and the business acu me ho‘ 8 oF eal ima ; causes ui MEAT TRUST procur # ed in mother Ryther and her @/ ¢o that he had asked the presidency | "2", men of the members of the board - quantities of stocks Iions upon | ing ar ®.home. 1 noticed in your yer- #| of the church {f It had any objec sat ee ie ee called the | for protection from graft seilinas of Charen’ Gai Oran tan . oes him § terda issue that a benefit | tions and for leave of absence so) /'ty 0 MNS ley —— Pee San tha cole ae RUSSIAN POLICE INVESTIGATE | poopie during the past two years | (Special to The Star.) pre * was being planned for her and @ » {a duties as senator would not — a0. = jurglare enter he store o were compelled to throw them ove! } ponite for « long » her little orphan brood Sl teretene with ‘the Gution OF thol - - G. Johnson, at 1524 First aven THE SHOOTING AFFAIR AT) er ot iavghter prices. By om.| EVERETT, Jan. 20.—A movement < — * Please allow me the honor of és The request was granted. | some time before 4 o'clock this A sloyine one of the oldest swindling | 4 ’ » off what aesietance f can © eho Bi. caue tty ecmmeaee WILL SAIL ON morning. Bight dollars was stolen | THE EMPEROR'S PALACE ne 7 . Rete gers tale ing | is under way to form a company of IT $ ALL OFF ° , p aoe with which the church had nothing THE MINNESOTA aoe ee Semioter. a # — — bid prices to any figure then de: bo$1 000 capi WASHING iain 2 eal ness said: eg 45% wae under a pile of plank-| Pree veaterdays shooting atfatr, {tactics of the manpulators and de-| pacyrecet meat tru ‘This is the v y, 2 iplo i igate yesterday's shooting affair, les € e " ¢ or he NGTON, Jan. 20.—Diplo 7 oes i lved this} “As a senator, T would vote Just) y. B. Clark, general traffic man- {08 Yesterday afternoon at the cor-| Hl Noh nee oe owty escaped {clared the high quotations unjustt-| torgne, 9f the testimony given 3 Matic negotiations have been broken |, The above letter, received this! "vay 1 thought best for the|agor of the Great Northern com.|¢? Of Kilbourne and Phiney ave- |ih Will tie Neal Dale et ae a{fiable and unreasonable, stay in the trial of Cha = off between Miniate: on’ at Can eee: 1s om |S young, ore ‘ot the business of| pany: Robert nues. He was removed to hig home, | ued. by “At this stage Of tis game thake » Who have -. S = een Minister Bowen, at Ca-|and talented violinist, of whom Se-| country. It is not pany! Robert Hill, Mra, Blabon, | 599 mirty-pinth avenue north, and|*#lute. ‘The belief is more general ae Ld Snohomish Sedalia: 5 a8, @ad President Castro by the|attie’s mysical circles will hear| the church how I vote, and I would | wife of former Fourth Vice Presi- 7-2 Dr. Ghent. No bones |today that the loaded shot was felt sure immediately preceded the| 80 per aud pedalis leparture of Castro from the cap-| much in the near future, Miss Bar.| not submit to any such dictation,” | dent J. W. Biabon; Mra. Hersey and | Sttended by Dr. Ghen No ones | raced in the gun by design, Cap- {unloading signal, I determined to! dna ‘tal. Fen ae yan ‘born in Holland, came| Smoot knew President Sm@ith had! Mrs. Myde arrived in Seattle thie | Were broken. cs gh a Was | Peed dnydioft and. Karkete aba {test whether the people had-really | Chapin c Bowen notified the state depart-|here from San Francisco a couple | several wives, but did not know his! morning on a private car and wit) | sisting carpenters in building a) et soutaissoff, Peretebon- | digested as well as absorbed the cold | peddling ‘ Ment that he had rejected Castro's |\of months ago, but on account of a| relations with them since the mani-| take passage to the Orient on the} *tore bullding. be off and Miller, were on duty | facts I had been ladling out to them } pealed. en to refer the asphalt dis-| jong illness has not been appearing | festo, At the time the menifento | Minnesota on her first trip, BREMBRTON, Jan. 20—Admiral |with the artillery which fired the|!n my story of ‘ rrenaied eee Phere, court sok iititration, | publiciy. Her playing mas satee her | was fe wo Bap hd be dy. nip ard ES Barclay this morning as notified |salute. ‘Those officers have been | Whether | they, Bigot aon pon Castro let fracas. name well known in the Poppy | understanding bet that the battleship Ohio had left | rigidly examined, but nothing has | enough to 3 Segway State, where she has won laurels on | Mormons that existing cases oil OFFICIALS WERE Sen Brandeco at an early hour and |been. learned to throw any Aght on | Monday, Derebets BS mm Two J the stage and in concert and sym-| polygamy would mot be désturb perineal" would probably reach Bremerton on|the mystery. ‘The incident 1s now | Prepared the 3 - HAD THE GOODS | prony work. Sho bps studied under | and the practice would be allowed eater; completely overshadowed by the ap. | ment, which was published Tuenday | 1 1. ig) such masters of the violin as Ber-| to die out A number of the officials of Gthe The Ohio will go into @rydock | prehension caused by the spread of morning In the great papers of a ene eae oo seg nara Mullenhauer, the famous in-| smoot denied that there was any-| Northern Pacific railroad arrivi for repairs. great cities of this country, an 7120 Le here H. B. Powers, who was suspected |structor and soloist, and Willlam| thing in the endowment obligation | Seattle this morning. The 9 - later in Europe.” at ae Of having robbed the store of H. B.| Frederick Zech, the leading San|in regard to vengeance and said he| consi of J. M. Hannaford, y YORK, dan. 20.— Tee appt| SAN FRANCISCO, Lawso& then tmtroduees the #fa-| store | q ) at Maple Valley, a few|Francisoo concert and symphony | was surprised that such a systement | preaifeme ef tae Northern P or the intmeat of a) tteweer = Moeotn meus ad, witch Pho St@r publ! ‘ bo) 80, was caught this morning |and concert director, ae has ap-| should _— been made, © 1d, | Gomera mon to ta¥e charge of ti erowntuy trem they Wig. full we edo is | peared in concert work with 8. Ho- as Josoph Smith had formulated the wore wd J. tate of Brodie L. Trl, 4 fn his with the stolen good: a ™ jon, by the Newcastie inty a, He Poo fe oR tate ae noe te ee aoe mer Henly, the mougs baritone, | obligation (an@ it he® never been or eid VOomMet changed) would hardly cali ay 28 em! of Lie own (Maw sable ~ to lay, has been ‘ve been @uin te Rahiare ste ett

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